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We have human bodies. We
are governed by cycles as the earth is governed by
seasons and cycles. Just as the earth travels
through summer and winter, day and night, we are
also meant to live by seasons and cycles of dark
and light, activity and rest. We are biological
creatures living on a planet that has many cycles
of repose. Our health and well-being requires that
we too take regular periods of retreat and time
out.
Let's look at some basic
physiology. Think of the difference between a car
and a body. Without gas in the car it doesn't run.
When we don't put fuel in the body it isn't like a
car, it runs anyway because it has a backup system.
When the proper fuel of water, sleep, nutrition,
and relaxation is not given to the body it
activates a series of hormones that are related to
what is called the sympathetic (or stress) part of
the nervous system. When we skip meals, when we
don't drink water, get enough sleep, or take time
to relax, the body perceives this as stressful and
stress hormones are released. This system was
designed for use once in a while when we had to get
away from the tiger in the jungle. We were meant to
have intervals of rest in between relying on this
system. We were not built to meet up with a tiger
in the jungle every day. We have lots of sayings
for a lifestyle that relies heavily on our backup
stress system: burning the candles at both ends,
burn-out, on overload, burning rubber. What we are
burning is our stress hormones. This consumes a lot
of our vital energy and can be thought of as like
dipping into our energy retirement fund. We are out
of touch with our basic human cycle needs and using
up our sympathetic nervous system to the point
where it affects our daily energy levels and
longevity.
When we hear the word
"retreat" we think of something we might do on our
two-week vacation or for our 50th birthday, or we
might have images of being lazy sitting around
watching T.V. We are a culture that is obsessed
with doing, going and performing, and we take very
little time for the thresholds of rest, relaxation,
sleep, winter, and dreamtime. A constantly 'on the
go' life relies heavily on our stress backup system
and is very depleting to the bodies' energy
reserves. As our energy levels begin to decrease,
we often turn to coffee and sugar to keep us going
and then alcohol and other substances to relax. We
start to depend on external addictive substances to
go through life cycles of being energized and
relaxed. Settling into a stress-based life-style,
we disconnect with our natural internal rhythms.
Our demands on time, energy and even food and
medicine become unbalanced. We lose the ability to
listen to what our bodies are telling us and we
forget how to nourish and really take care of
ourselves.
A great example of how we
just keep going in spite of the nature of cycles
really shows up during the Christmas season.
Christmas takes place at the time of winter
solstice. Most other inhabitants of this planet
slow down in the winter. The plants and trees loose
their leaves and take their energy underground. We
all know the animals slow down, just watch how much
more your cat sleeps. During this natural time of
rest and retreat we have created the Christmas
ritual, which has most of us busier than at any
other time of year. The winter solstice is a time
to vision, dream, and rest and we are running
around with more obligations than ever. We burn
right through the winter like it was summer
solstice.
All of this shows up daily
in my herbal consultation practice. I see many
people forced into honoring the winter season by
getting a winter cold that puts them into bed for a
couple of days or longer. My observation in working
with my students and clients is that most people
have very high levels of stress in their lives and
that we are constantly trying to ignore and cheat
our basic human cycle needs.
People come to my office in
Vacaville or we work together over the phone on
various health imbalances. About forty percent of
this clinic time is spent in helping women
strategize how to pay attention to and honor basic
life cycles such as eating regular nourishing
meals, getting enough sleep, drinking water, and
taking time for relaxation and restoration.
When you ignore your body
cycles and needs it is like eating junk food; you
do not instantly drop dead but twenty to thirty
years of it increases the risk of developing
chronic ailments and diminishes vitality. The
stress complex that we are locked into as a culture
is making us sick. Most people know they need to
relax and reduce their stress but are not sure how
to really do it. Taking time out becomes just one
more thing on the 'to do' list. Where to start? How
to make changes that can be incorporated into a
schedule that makes sense? What reflections can we
find within nature and within our bodies that can
guide us toward healthy, sustainable retreat times?
What I have discovered over
the years is that when we listen to the female
body, it provides us with a model of how to live
life more in balance. The menstrual cycle in
particular is a powerful gateway through which we
can reconnect with our cyclic nature and
needs.
Our menstrual cycles wax
and wane with the moon cycles. The moon shines full
and bright and then it is dark, teaching us about
the constant change between light and dark,
creation and completion, ovulation and
menstruation, activity and rest. The new moon
waxing to full moon can be associated with the
pre-ovulation and ovulation phases of the menstrual
cycle. We can compare this to the earth cycles of
spring and summer; the flowers are budding, our
hormones are rising and we are more active in the
world. After ovulation the uterine lining fattens
and can be thought of as similar to the autumn
harvest with the ripening of the crops. At the
onset of menses the moon goes dark again and our
hormones drop. What was an extreme concentration of
structure and buildup of energy in the female body
turns into total formlessness, flow, and release.
It is now wintertime in our body; a time for
dreaming, healing, releasing, resting, visioning,
regenerating.
As women we have forgotten
these powerful teachings of our female cyclic
nature and how tuning into our body can offer us a
lifestyle that incorporates times of rejuvenation
and restoration. There are many factors that
contribute to our detachment from the guidance our
body offers. It is sometimes difficult for women to
find their way back to the wisdom of this natural
internal rhythm when much of the cultural
programming is to deny, suppress, and pathologize
most female cycle changes. We were not taught that
our cycle has importance and plays a valuable role
in our health and well-being. We were not inspired
with a sense of sacredness about the female body
process. No one initiated us into the mysteries of
our body, telling us that menstrual blood is the
source from which all human life is created. We
weren't taught that the female body cycles through
many changes, each of which provide experiences
that can be cultivated into wisdom and experience
that can help us in our daily lives. We definitely
were not told that the female cycles hold
tremendous spiritual power and healing.
Menstruation is
inconvenient at best and to be drugged or ignored.
Unless you want to get pregnant, fertility is to be
totally controlled. Most birth control methods such
as the pill, shots, and the patch alter or
completely suppress ovulation. There are 60 million
American women taking birth control pills even
though it has been linked to high blood pressure,
cardiovascular disease and cancer. Then menopause
is pathologized into a bunch of possibly dreadful
symptoms that need hormone replacement therapy
(HRT). Most conventional HRT treatment keeps women
at a level of hormonal balance similar to that of
the pre-ovulatory spring and summer phase of her
cycle. Long term HRT is also associated with many
health risks. An astounding 600,000 hysterectomies
a year are performed in the United States. 60% of
American women have a hysterectomy by the age of
65.
I have listened to hundreds
of women tell their stories of how they relate to
and handle the cycling changes of their bodies.
When I ask women about their experience of menarche
(first menstruation) there are basically three
answers. Most women say, "I don't remember". The
next most common responses are that, "It was no big
deal, or "I hated it and wished that I was a boy".
These are dangerous answers to such an important
time in a girl's life. Most American girls are
initiated into menstruation with shame, hiding, and
"It was no big deal" This creates an environment of
disassociation from their bodies, leaving them
susceptible to poor self-image, unconsciousness
surrounding other major body changes, painful
menstrual experiences, and disconnection from their
cyclic nature.
There are cultures
throughout the world that have held menarche as a
sacred time during which a girl is to be honored
and celebrated. How would our menstrual and
menopausal experiences be different if we were
loved, celebrated, and educated during the time of
our first menses? In honoring our menstrual cycle
how would this change the way we approach other
body cycles and needs?
All aspects of our female
cycles are related. Menarche, menstruation, and
menopause are a continuum of interconnected
experiences. Our relationship with the cycles of
our womb begins with menarche. How we are initiated
(or not initiated) into menarche has a profound
effect on how we understand menstruation. The
attitude with which we menstruate for 35 years or
more sets the stage for our menopausal experience.
We call our menstrual time curse and the rag. These
negative image names create neural pathways in the
body that shape our physical experiences. We can
start to heal our relationship with our cyclic
nature by changing what we call our menstrual time.
Some of the names my students have come up with
are: Moon Time, Sacred Womb Time, Sacred Moon
Blood, Red Tide, and Magical Moon Time. Women often
leave our Women's Wisdom workshop saying things
like, " I can't wait for my next moon
cycle".
In her book Women's
Mysteries, Esther Harding writes, " In
primitive communities seclusion was often
prescribed for all women, who did not have to
become ill (PMS) in order to participate in the
advantages to be gained from a period of quiet each
month"
As we begin to honor our
female body changes women can move into a new place
of knowledge about their physiology and respect for
their cyclic nature. We will find a new balance in
our ability to take time to reconnect with
ourselves. We will find new ways of retreating to
restore balance by finding what truly nourishes and
sustains us.
Deepening the connection
to your female cycle:
1) Get a moon calendar and
track your menstrual cycle in relation to the
moon
2) Create space during
menstruation to allow your body to do whatever it
wants
3) Try to schedule some of
your days off in a way that supports and reflects
the needs of your menstrual cycle
4) Give yourself a lavender
footbath when you begin bleeding each
month
5) Give menstruation a name
that has positive meaning for you
The denial of the female
cycle has vast social implications and if women
were more connected with their body cycles the
culture could begin to entrain with them and we
might all find more balance in our lives.
Kami McBride has taught
herbal medicine and women's health since 1988. As
Director of the Living Awareness Institute in
Vacaville, Kami provides a sanctuary for women to
transform their relationship with their body and to
bring the use of herbal remedies into everyday
life. Kami has taught herbal medicine at UCSF
School of Nursing, California Institute of Integral
Studies, UC Davis, Solano Community College and
American River College. Her two most popular
classes are: Cultivating the Herbal Medicine Woman
Within and Women's Wisdom: Understanding the Female
Body Cycles. For information on classes or
consultations, Kami can be reached at (707)
446-1290 or http://www.livingawareness.com
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