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Health & Fitness

Stanfordโ€™s Fred Luskin Preaches Health-Inducing Gospel of Forgiveness

'Forgiveness is one of those ways where we wipe clean a major threat to our well-being. That causes the body to have more time to repair.'

Asked how he became the poster child for what he refers to as โ€œforgiveness therapy,โ€ Forgive For Good author Dr. Fred Luskin says, it all goes back to his desire to have a better understanding of practical spirituality.

โ€œIโ€™ve had a longstanding interest in spiritual matters,โ€ said Luskin prior to teaching a class at Stanford Health Library in Palo Alto. โ€œIโ€™ve been reading spiritual books since high school, but Iโ€™ve always wanted to know if this stuff is true. Is it teachable? Does increased spirituality lead you to be a better person? Does it improve your health?

โ€œFrom my point of view, if something is true, itโ€™s true. Itโ€™s not going to be true on a theoretical level and not be true on a physical level.โ€

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Some 20 years later, Luskin, a Stanford-trained psychologist who spent 10 years doing research on preventative cardiology, is convinced that increased spirituality, including the ability to forgive, does in fact make you a better person and improve your health.

โ€œForgiveness is one of those ways where we wipe clean a major threat to our well-being,โ€ he said. โ€œThat causes the body to have more time to repair. Immune function goes up, blood pressure goes down.โ€

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Luskin backs up his claims with plenty of data. His โ€œForgiveness Projectsโ€ โ€“ an ongoing series of humanitarian workshops โ€“ have afforded him the opportunity to test his methods on a variety of populations exposed to extreme violence in places like Northern Ireland and Sierra Leone, as well as the attacks on the World Trade Center on 9/11. In March he is headed to Northern Canada where he will provide forgiveness training for the native population in Inuvik.

During last monthโ€™s class in Palo Alto โ€“ a course Luskin has been teaching under the auspices of Stanford Hospital since 1998 โ€“ the focus was less on health and more on our innate desire to โ€œdo a little peacekeeping in the world.โ€

โ€œThere are billions of people telling themselves that somebody was a real [jerk] all day long,โ€ said Luskin. โ€œThatโ€™s really easy for human beings to do. Thatโ€™s swimming with the stream. To create peace, you need to swim against the stream sometimes, in fact, often.โ€

Of course, changing directions mid-steam is usually easier said than done.

โ€œThe idea of forgiveness still makes people edgy,โ€ he said. โ€œTheyโ€™re afraid of giving up the resentment, like somehow theyโ€™re not safe, if they canโ€™t resent and hate and dislike. They think that some of their weaponry or their protection is being removed.โ€

Luskin also notes the need for good examples.

โ€œThereโ€™s very little encouragement to practice forgiveness or compassion,โ€ he said. โ€œSo we donโ€™t get to recognize what theyโ€™re like in ourselves.โ€ Asked to offer up a positive role model or two, Luskin was quick to respond:

โ€œNot to be ridiculous, but Jesus would be a hero of mine.โ€

An obvious choice, perhaps, but one that is too often forgotten in a culture cluttered with what Luskin describes as โ€œone dimensional action [figures] who shoot people.โ€ Recalling the Amish group in Pennsylvania who, in 2006, responded to a violent attack on their one-room schoolhouse with an outpouring of forgiveness, he said, โ€œThey actually believe that itโ€™s their responsibility to practice what Jesus says.โ€

The good news, according to Luskin, is that such a response โ€“ and the benefits that go along with it โ€“ is not reserved for the Amish but is accessible to all of us.

โ€œI believe that whatever there is in us that is touched by the spirit, or Spirit, or God or whatever it is,โ€ he said, โ€œthat it is active, separate from what we call it. Thatโ€™s just what I believe.โ€

Eric Nelsonโ€™s columns on the link between consciousness and health appear regularly in a number of local and national online publications. He also serves as the media and legislative spokesperson for Christian Science in Northern California. Follow him on Twitter @norcalcs.

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