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  • What's the most important part of your health?

  • What do you think?

  • Is it eating a balanced, mostly plant-based diet,

  • balancing your hormones, daily exercise, getting enough sleep --

  • What do you guys think?

  • Taking your vitamins, seeing your doctor for regular check ups?

  • (Laughter)

  • These things might all seem like important, even critical, factors

  • to living a healthy life, but what if I told you

  • that caring for your body was the least important part of your health?

  • What do you think?

  • I'm a physician, so if you'd told me that five years ago,

  • that would have been total sacrilege.

  • I mean, I spent 12 years training,

  • because the body is supposed to be the foundation for everything in life.

  • But what if I told you that the medical profession had it all backwards,

  • if the body doesn't shape how we live our lives?

  • What if the body is actually a mirror of how we live our lives?

  • Think about it for a minute. Think about a time in your life

  • where you weren't living the life you were supposed to be living.

  • Maybe you were in the wrong relationship;

  • or you were in some hostile work environment

  • doing what you thought you should do;

  • or you were creatively thwarted, you felt spiritually disconnected.

  • And what if you started getting little inklings from the body,

  • little physical symptoms?

  • You know, the body's trying to tell you something and you ignore it,

  • 'cause you're supposed to do what you're doing.

  • And then the body totally decompensates.

  • Can you think about a time in your life where something like that has happened?

  • Yeah, I see a lot of noddings.

  • Yeah, me too. Same thing happened to me.

  • So this is what the body does, the body is brilliant this way,

  • the body speaks to us in whispers.

  • And if we ignore the whispers of the body, the body starts to yell.

  • Millions of people in this country are ignoring the whispers of the body.

  • We are suffering from an epidemic

  • that modern medicine has no idea what to do with.

  • People suffering from this epidemic are fatigued,

  • they're anxious and depressed, they toss and turn at night,

  • they've lost their libido.

  • They suffer from a whole variety of aches and pains,

  • so they go to the doctor, 'cause something is wrong.

  • And the doctor runs a whole battery of tests,

  • and the tests all come back normal, so the patient gets diagnosed as "well".

  • Only the patient does not feel well.

  • So she goes to another doctor and she starts the whole process over again,

  • because something is clearly wrong.

  • And it is wrong, it's just not what she thinks.

  • I used to work in a really busy managed care practice,

  • I was seeing 40 patients a day.

  • And I would get so freaking frustrated with these patients.

  • They would come in and it was so obvious they were really suffering.

  • And I'd run the tests, everything would come back normal,

  • I'd diagnose them well, and they'd look at me like:

  • No, I'm not well, something's wrong.

  • And I felt so frustrated because I couldn't come up with a diagnosis.

  • And they just wanted, please God, give me a pill.

  • And there was no pill, there's no pill to treat it,

  • there's no lab test to diagnose this epidemic,

  • there's no vaccine to prevent it, no surgery to cut it out.

  • It wasn't until years later that I realized I was suffering

  • from the same epidemic my patients were.

  • By the time I was 33 years old,

  • I was your typical physician.

  • I had succeeded in everything I ever wanted to achieve in my life, I thought.

  • I had all the trappings of success, the ocean front house in San Diego,

  • the vacation home, the boat, the big fat retirement account,

  • so I could be happy one day in the future.

  • I was twice divorced by that point.

  • I had been diagnosed with high blood pressure.

  • I was taking three medications that failed to control my blood pressure

  • and I had just been diagnosed

  • with precancerous cells of my cervix that needed surgery.

  • Even more importantly I was so disconnected from who I was,

  • so totally disillusioned with my job, so completely spiritually tapped out,

  • that I didn't even know who I was any more.

  • I'd covered myself up with a whole series of masks.

  • I had the doctor mask, like when you put on the white coat,

  • stand up on a pedestal, pretend you got it all together,

  • you know it all.

  • And I am also a professional artist, so I had the artist mask,

  • where you've got to be, you know, dark and brooding,

  • mysterious -- starving, that wasn't me either.

  • And then I had gotten married a third time,

  • you know, third time is a charm.

  • So now I've got this dutiful wife mask I've gotta wear,

  • where I've got to get dinner on the table

  • and make sure that I've got the right sexy lingerie on.

  • And then I got pregnant and all of sudden

  • there's this huge mummy mask you're supposed to wear, right?

  • You guys know the mummy mask.

  • You're supposed to instantly inherit the gene

  • that makes you capable of baking the perfect cupcake.

  • That's where I was, wearing all those masks,

  • when my perfect storm hit.

  • And at this point in my life, it was January 2006,

  • and I gave birth to my daughter by C-section,

  • my sixteen-year-old dog died,

  • my healthy young brother wound up in full-blown liver failure

  • from the antibiotic Zithromax,

  • and my beloved father passed away from a brain tumor, all in two weeks.

  • I had just started to take a breath, when my husband,

  • who was the stay home for my newborn,

  • cut two fingers off his left hand with the table saw.

  • Yeah --

  • They say when your life falls apart, you either grow, or you grow a tumor.

  • Fortunately for me I decided to grow, there was something in me.

  • SARK called it my "Inner Wise Self", which I call your inner pilot light.

  • It said, "It's time to take the masks off. It's time to stop the madness.

  • It's time to stop doing what you should, and start doing what you feel."

  • And in that moment I knew I had to quit my job.

  • Now, this was a huge deal, right? I spent 12 years training to be a doctor

  • and hundreds of thousands of dollars

  • and we had all the trappings, you know, the house, the mortgage,

  • all the doctor stuff, right?

  • My husband was not employed and I had a newborn.

  • I also had to pay a malpractice tail to buy my freedom,

  • a six-figure malpractice tail, in case I ever got sued in the future.

  • So I decided to do it, and God bless my husband, who said let's jump together.

  • And I quit my job and I had to sell my house

  • and liquidate my retirement account and move to the country;

  • and I spent a few months painting and writing and licking my wounds.

  • (Laughter) (Applause)

  • It wasn't until about nine months later, everybody was like -- nine months!

  • I'm an OB/GYN!

  • Nine months later I realized you can quit your job but you can't quit your calling.

  • And I had been called at a very young age, I was seven years old,

  • to the service, the practice, the spiritual practice of medicine;

  • and that calling hadn't gone away.

  • I had gotten so wounded by the system that I didn't even notice it anymore;

  • but it came back after I had rested and healed after a little while.

  • But I knew I couldn't go back, I couldn't be seeing 40 patients a day,

  • 7,5 minutes with my patients, that wasn't why I went to medical school.

  • So it began this quest, that turned into an almost five-year quest now,

  • to rediscover what I loved about medicine.

  • So that also meant I had to figure out what I hated about medicine.

  • So I started by blaming everybody:

  • it was the ambulance chasing malpractice attorneys;

  • it's big pharma; it's managed care medicine;

  • it's the insurance company's fault.

  • Then I thought, oh no, it's the reductionist medical system,

  • we're so, so sub-specialized, you know?

  • I'm an OB/GYN, so I was seeing these patients that had pelvic problems.

  • But I knew that there was something bigger than the pelvis

  • that was causing their issues.

  • But I hadn't been trained to really look at that.

  • So I thought that's the problem, like you go to your doctor,

  • your pinky finger hurts and he says, "I'm sorry, I'm a thumb doctor."

  • (Laughter)

  • Nobody's looking at the whole picture.

  • So I thought integrative medicine was the answer.

  • And so I joined an integrative medicine practice,

  • and it was so much better; I got a whole hour with my patients.

  • I really got to listen to my patients,

  • we didn't accept managed care medical insurance,

  • so it was really so much better.

  • And then I still kept bumping up against something though,

  • because now if you came in and you were depressed

  • we were giving you herbs and amino acids instead of Prozac.

  • If you had other physical symptoms --

  • but it was still this allopathic model,

  • where the answer was outside of you,

  • and I had to give you something that you could take.

  • So I thought maybe that's not the problem, maybe I need to look outside of that

  • and find new tools for my healing toolbox.

  • So I started working with all these complementary

  • and alternative health care providers,

  • whom I love, acupuncturists, naturopaths and nutritionists.

  • And I started treating my patients with needles in their energy meridians

  • and raw foods, and that was great.

  • But I kept bumping up against the same thing:

  • patients would get better from one symptom

  • and if we didn't treat the root cause

  • of why they had that physical symptom in first place,

  • they just wound up getting a new symptom.

  • So at this point I was both really frustrated and really curious,

  • and I started down this path of trying to figure out

  • what really makes a body healthy,

  • and what really makes us sick.

  • And I dug into the medical literature and spent a year researching

  • all of the randomized controlled clinical trials out there.

  • And I decided this is it, I'm going to figure it out,

  • I'm going to find the answer.

  • And I spent hours in the library, researching, reading, studying.

  • What I found blew my frigging mind,

  • stuff nobody ever taught me in medical school.

  • All the things we think of as health, all the things we think matter, they do.

  • It matters that you exercise, it matters that you eat well,

  • it matters that you see the doctor.

  • But nobody taught me that what really matters is healthy relationships,

  • having a healthy professional life,

  • expressing yourself creatively,

  • being spiritually connected,

  • having a healthy sex life,

  • being healthy financially,

  • living in a healthy environment,

  • being mentally healthy,

  • and of course all the things we traditionally associate with health,

  • also matter, all the things that nurture the body.

  • The data on this is unbelievable.

  • Lots of it is not in the traditional journals that you read,

  • that doctors read, a lot of its in the psychological literature,

  • the sociological literature.

  • But if you look deep, this is in The New England Journal of Medicine,

  • it's in The Journal of the American Medical Association,

  • it's coming out of Harvard and Yale and Johns Hopkins.

  • This is real data proving that these things are just as important,

  • if not more.

  • I have this patient, she's a raw vegan,

  • she runs marathons, she takes 20 supplements a day,

  • she sleeps eight hours a night, she does everything her doctor tells her,

  • she's got a chart this fat, and she's still got multiple health problems.

  • So she had heard about my philosophy I had started practicing with my patients,

  • and I have an intake form that's about 20 pages long

  • and it asks about all those things, relationships, work life, spiritual life,

  • creative life, sex life, all of these things that make you whole.

  • So she came and she filled out her form and she said, "Doctor, what's my diagnosis?"

  • And I said, "Honey, your diagnosis is you're in a freaking abusive marriage.

  • You hate your job, you feel creatively thwarted,

  • you're spiritually disconnected,

  • and you haven't let go of that resentment you have against your father

  • who molested you as a child.

  • Your body is never gonna get well until you heal that."

  • So if taking care of the body isn't the most important part of being healthy,

  • what is?

  • It's caring for the mind, caring for the heart,

  • caring for the soul,

  • tapping into what I call your inner pilot light.

  • Now your pilot light is that part of you, that essence,

  • that authentic, deep, true part of you, that spiritual, divine spark

  • that always knows what's right for you.

  • You're born with it, it goes with you when you die,

  • and it always knows the truth about you and your body.

  • It comes to you and whispers; it's your intuition;

  • it's that beautiful part of you that is your biggest fan;

  • the part that writes you love letters.

  • And that is the biggest healer you can tap into,

  • better than any medicine, better than any doctor.

  • So based on everything that I learned, I developed a new wellness model.

  • And it was based, not on the pie charts and pyramids

  • that many of the wellness models I had studied were based on.

  • I based it on the cairn.

  • Have you guys seen these things around San Francisco?

  • These stacks of balanced stones, I love them, I've always loved them.

  • I'm an artist, so it appeals to me visually.

  • But I love the interdependence. Every stone is dependent on the other;

  • you can't just pull one stone out without the whole thing crumbling.

  • And the stone that's most precarious is the one on top.

  • That's the body, that's where I think of the body.

  • The body is the stone on top.

  • When any of the facets of what makes you whole get out of balance,

  • the body is the first to start whispering,

  • and the foundation stone is your inner pilot light,

  • that true essence of you, that vulnerable, transparent part of you.

  • So based on that, I created this model, that I call the whole health cairn.

  • And this is what my next book is about.

  • An it's taking all of the facets of what makes you whole;

  • it's about self-healing from the core, and once you recognize this,

  • then you have all the tools you need to start your own healing journey.

  • So all of the facets of what makes you whole are surrounded

  • by what I call the healing bubble.

  • This is love and gratitude and pleasure.

  • And science proves that all of those things

  • are good for your health as well; they are the glue that hold everything together.

  • So I challenge you. If you have any physical symptom,

  • if you're suffering from the epidemic that plagues the developed world,

  • I want you to ask yourself, "What's the real reason I'm sick

  • or suffering, what's out of balance in my whole health cairn?"

  • What's the real diagnosis and what can you do about it?

  • How can you be more transparent?

  • How can you open yourself up to more possibility?

  • How can you be more honest with yourself about what you need and who you are?

  • If any of you were lucky enough to see Brene Brown's awesome TEDTalk

  • about the power of vulnerability --

  • I feel a lot of nodding heads, I love it --

  • it's so fabulous, but it talks about the science behind being true,

  • being vulnerable, being transparent.

  • It generates love and intimacy which increases oxytocin and endorphins,

  • and reduces harmful stress hormones like cortisol and adrenalin.

  • When we let our true self be seen, when we let our inner pilot light radiate,

  • we heal from the inside out

  • and it's more powerful than anything medicine can give you from the outside.

  • So I challenge you to write the prescription for yourself.

  • No doctor can do this for you. We can give you drugs,

  • we can give you surgery, and sometimes you need that,

  • that's the jump-start of the self-healing process.

  • But to heal to the core, so that you don't develop new symptoms,

  • so you don't need another surgery -- you gotta write your own prescription.

  • So I ask you, "What is it that you need, what does your body need to get healthy?

  • What is it that you need to change, What needs to be tweaked in your life?"

  • If you knew that stripping off all of your masks

  • and letting us see that beautiful light within you,

  • was the solution to your health problems, would you be willing to do it?

  • I dare you.

  • It just might make your body right for miracles.

  • Thank you.

  • (Applause)

What's the most important part of your health?

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【TEDx】TEDxFiDiWomen--Lissa Rankin--關於你的健康的驚人真相。 (【TEDx】TEDxFiDiWomen - Lissa Rankin - The Shocking Truth About Your Health)

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    鄭乃銘 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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