The more I encountered the concept of the elements early on
in my acupuncture studies, the more I became fascinated by the idea that the
same energies which create the universe also created me and will continue to go
on giving me life until the day I die. As
acupuncturists we are not always aware in our everyday work with the elements as
we treat our patients that these elements are symbols for universal aspects of cosmic
life. I have therefore always been
intrigued to realise how much this understanding of the work I do forces me to
confront the deepest of life’s mysteries.
This has led me to the belief that each of us can be seen as a tiny
thought in the mind of whatever god or universal force we believe ultimately
created the universe.
I am therefore always thrilled when a little more light is
shed into the deepest of life’s mysteries, where science tries to make sense of
how human life appeared and, even more mysteriously, why it appeared in the
form it has done. So here is a further
offering to my curiosity from the Guardian a few days ago with the headline: “Perhaps we are alone in the universe after
all”. The article describes a paper written by
three Oxford
University philosophers in which they surmise that “the probability (is) that we are alone in our galaxy, and perhaps in
the universe…. There is quite probably no one out there to rescue or to care
about us. What happens to our species is
in our hands alone. We had better get on
with it.”
This has prompted me to look up some other quotations I had
collected over the years on much the same subject. Some are by Martin Rees, the Astronomer Royal,
in which he says, in lovely poetic language:
“We are composed of
the language of the universe”
“I think it’s only
life which gives the universe any meaning.”
And, most memorably:
“Perhaps it could be
said that the universe was made for Man”.
Finally, in an article about Leonardo da Vinci, the writer,
an art historian, said the following:
“I once heard a
scientist remark that perhaps the principal function of mankind was to bear
witness to the universe, to be here precisely to see in the night sky the light
of long dead stars, and in so doing to give completion and meaning.”
All these are profound thoughts for us all to ponder
on. But I don’t think we can understand
the potential power of what we do as we harness the energies of the elements
through our needles to help our patients if we ignore the deeper implications
of our practice.
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