What’s Good about Our Health Care System?

It’s easy to be critical of health care professionals. The pedestal of “life saver” that their position represents makes them vulnerable to public criticism, as well as to personal boasting.

Although I’ve avoided going to hospitals and doctors until absolutely necessary, I have often been surprised by the attentive, loving individuals who have come to my aid in times of extreme need. It makes me realize that the vast majority of health care professionals in this country are inspired by a caring interest in serving the needs of others. They appreciate the opportunity to respond to real needs of individuals who come to them in vulnerable circumstances.

It also seems apparent that most individuals facing debilitating symptoms are open for guidance and help to relieve their distress. We may not like it when something is “wrong,” and we may resent that we need to ask for help, but when we finally recognize that something is needed, we have the option to look for good advice and care.

While every health care technique, method and medicine has helped someone somewhere, it is also true that every health care technique, method and medicine has hurt someone. They may be useful in the relief of symptoms and perhaps they support healing to occur, but techniques, methods and medicine are not the underlying healing force.

What is the Universal Healing Solvent common to all healing?

Love & Intelligence. Love is the quality of being where the primary orientation is toward understanding and intelligence is the open-minded attention that listens, observes, and recognizes the right idea when it appears. The orientation toward these qualities of consciousness in both the caregiver and the receiver allows healing to occur.

It seems self-evident that when the primary orientation of individuals is toward understanding the presenting issue, and seeking intelligent solutions to problems, the better the solutions, the better the system, the better the living. It also seems evident that most individuals go in and out of this orientation.

What Interferes with Good Health Care?

Caregivers have been trained with the idea that they need to “fix” whatever complaint is presented to them. This approach is also at the basis of how health care is rewarded. They get paid to “fix.” Therefore, the faster they fix something, and the more “fixes” accomplished, the more rewards received. This is an unhealthy system as it does not encourage or reward in a practical way the use of Love-Intelligence.

There is a tendency to look for a system that does not need individual consciousness – a mechanism that “anyone” can apply: a “pill” or “procedure” for instance. Yet, loving consciousness is the source of and solution to our problems and there is no way around that. Tools and techniques, when seen as an extension of intelligence and love can be immensely useful and valuable.

Patients are afflicted with the idea that someone needs to do something to make them better and take away their pain. This idea robs the patient of their capacity to discern between potential treatments for themselves and often blinds them from learning and growing from whatever disease they are experiencing.

A Solution?

As we accept the idea that health and healing require a context of love, intelligence and attention, our health systems will reorganize in healthier ways. While this may be a long arc for the whole health care system, individuals can see the wisdom of this idea immediately. Love-Intelligence does not need a prescription. It helps to know that it is available to any receptive consciousness no matter how challenging the circumstances.

Divine Guidance and the Law

In Sonia Sotomayor’s acceptance speech yesterday morning as the new Associate Judge of the Supreme Court, she acknowledged the importance of Divine Guidance in making decisions that interpret the supreme constitutional law of this country.

What does this mean? How does Divine Guidance play a role in interpreting law?

Divine guidance is often thought of as direct answers to problems and situations provided by a Universal Mind/God that bypasses human consciousness and acts directly in human affairs. It is seen as a power beyond human thinking that will answer prayers, supplications and questions.

The MetaView defines “Divine” as qualities that make up the underlying non-material substance of life: qualities such as intelligence, understanding, love, compassion, clarity and truth. What makes these qualities “divine” is that no individual can create or destroy them; they cannot be bought or sold. They are part of the fundamental order of Being. They are omnipresent – meaning that they are always available, yet non-interfering – which means that they do not impose themselves in a situation. In their presence life flourishes. In the wake of decisions made without them, life diminishes.

“Guidance” refers to what “guides” us. If an individual is guided by intelligence, understanding, love, compassion, clarity, truthfulness, etc. one is being Divinely Guided.
Individuals can recognize that these qualities are accessible and be receptive to them.

When confronted with a legal case, human consciousness can both be attentive to the details and issues of the case as well as be receptive to divine qualities. Individual consciousness under conditions of attentive receptivity can understand a particular situation through the “eyes” of divine qualities. An answer, an approach will then reveal itself. There is an awareness of inner peace. This is Divine Guidance in Law.

MetaView asks the question: What is Health?

The road to creating good National Health Care may well begin with first answering this question.

 There has been much confusion, conflict, money, airtime and fear surrounding the debate on national health care reform and this has a meaning.

Clearly this means that we are confused about the fundamental nature of the problem we are attempting to solve. 

The basic questions of health care reform depend upon a valid understanding of health: what is it, how does it happen, how is it lost.  If we have a clear idea about what health is, then we will know how to support it.

The first challenge in answering this question is that the answer may not be instantaneous.

I can hear someone saying: “Yes, this is a great question, but I don’t have time to answer it now, as I’m in too much pain and I just want relief.”

This is the attitude that is often reflected in the current approach to health care reform.

It reminds me of a recent conversation with someone in a whirlwind of “to do” tasks saying: “Once I’m done with these tasks I’ll be able to relax.”  She even laughed upon hearing herself say this, as she recognized the fallacy of ever being done with “what needs to get done.”

So, engaging with the question: “What is Health?” means first of all, to consider this question as we face the health care crisis as consumer, leader, provider or decision-maker. This does not require us to stop the activity of reforming health care, but if we include this question in our inquiries, new useful ideas and directions may emerge to help us find the right answers.

The MetaView on Gates-Gate

The MetaView does not ask the question: “Why did these men go after each other,” nor does it ask “Who is to blame?” or “What should they have done?”

The MetaView asks the question: What does it mean that this incident triggered such intense national scrutiny, going immediately to the top of all news reports and dominating the national interest for several days, and continues to be the subject of essays and opinions?

Such intense interest means that every individual has suffered with what we saw going on. Just about everyone is interested in racism. It is an unhealed open wound of our national history. Who has not wrongly judged another and been judged themselves erroneously based on a superficial appearance such as clothes, skin color, sex, education or political affiliation? This universal human experience of judging/being judged by how we appear to others is at the core of many current world tensions.  Racism is just one particular, challenging form of  this human habit.

Perhaps in this relatively small situation between 2 intelligent, highly educated men, we can see more clearly the ignorance of judging others by their appearance. And, perhaps, in observing the outcome resulting from the way President Obama backed off of an initially “racially oriented” reaction to a “friendly” response, another piece of this historical wound can be healed.

The immediate level of tension that arose from this event and the subsequent redirection of that tension is a remarkable learning moment for the nation and perhaps the world.

The Miracle of Awareness

The miracle is how gracefully and easily both Prof. Gates and Sgt. Crowley responded to the context of friendliness that was offered by President Obama.

While it’s very normal and very human to judge another based on superficial appearances, it’s enlightened to catch it and see the truth of individual uniqueness.

This is the miracle of awareness. Becoming aware that the provoked, immediate reaction is not the best of who we really are, allows a more intelligent, enlightened and friendly response. In this incident, cooler, wiser awareness did prevail, abolishing the tension that in the moment looked so dangerous. Perhaps the same inspired wisdom will be received in other situations.

Thank you President Obama for your enlightened approach to this universally challenging situation. And thank you Sgt. Crowley and Prof. Gates for responding to the invitation to understand and heal. All of you are models of enlightened leadership.

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