6 ways to take healthcare into your own hands

By: sandra j.s. bean
Edited date: November 20, 2022Estimated reading time: 8 minutes

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Healing the world within

Nearly everywhere you turn, you hear people with concerns about health, both their own and that of those they love. How you respond to those experiences of illness can have a tremendous impact not only on your individual health but also on the health of the whole planet.

A yogic lifestyle lends itself to wellness. The combination of spiritual consciousness balanced with a physical practice gives you a great advantage.

As a mindful person, you have an interest not only in preserving our own health, but also the health of the world as a whole. Protecting and preserving it ensures you will have a healthy environment in which to thrive.

By definition, holistic healthcare considers people as whole individuals, greater than the sum of our parts. Humans are, like the planet on which they live, comprehensive beings and any method they use to heal themselves should reflect that.

You have a responsibility to your mindful lifestyle to consider this bigger picture as you make choices in consideration of your health. These choices can have a trickle-down effect which impacts wellness across the globe.

Organic products, alternative health treatments and fair-trade products for health are all over the marketplace these days.

People often evaluate such products, wondering, “What will this do for me? Will it satisfy my needs?” Although many have asked themselves these questions and chosen in favor of natural products, it is far less often they ask themselves, “Will this choice help others?”

Much of the press for alternative therapies or organic products stresses the ways in which they will benefit individuals. It is rare that the emphasis is placed on the greater good.

While the environmental impact of what you purchase may be the furthest thing from your minds when the baby has a fever or you have a bad cold, by thinking about the ramifications of our decisions when we pull that supplement off the shelf or choose organic fruits and veggies, you can feel good about extending the benefits of a mindful lifestyle to cultures and areas of the world in desperate need of preservation.

By choosing the right products in your search for the healthiest lifestyle possible, you can broaden healing beyond your individual scope.

A wonderful way to do this is by not only choosing natural methods of health and wellness but also by choosing the products and services from companies which specifically work to heal you as they heal the planet.

Natural, holistic, and traditional methods of healing have deep roots in human culture, and for good reason – most of these methods consider the balance of body systems working in harmony, as well as sustainable ways to achieve this balance.

Chemical-free methods of enhancing wellness are not new. Western medicine has largely ignored the balance and spirituality components of true wellness; people are beginning to see how negatively this impacts both themselves and the planet.

“There is no health without environmental health,” says Dr. Todd Pesek, M.D., a Cleveland-based holistic physician.

“Without that component, there can’t be true wellness. We are all connected to each other, and we depend on the earth in more ways than most people take the time to realize.”

David Crow, an acupuncturist, herbalist, activist, and founder of Floracopeia, a source for therapeutic aromatherapy oils, discusses the problems of the mindset of western healthcare.

“While modern medicine has made great advances, iatrogenic (caused by treatment) illnesses are among the leading causes of morbidity and fatality, and treatable chronic degenerative diseases have reached epidemic levels,” he writes in The People’s Pharmacy: Creating Grassroots Healthcare Systems.

“Holistic medical systems offer significant benefits in the treatment of symptoms arising from these root causes. Every clinician, however, is well acquainted with the limitations of what natural medicine can do when these root causes are not adequately resolved in a patient’s life.”

Many of these root causes lie in our environment. By concerning ourselves with the state of affairs of the planet, you can help address many of the illnesses faced in modern times.

“Most health problems in modern America can be attributed to five causes,” says Crow. “They are nutrition, environmental pollution, socio-economic stresses, spiritual emptiness, and medical treatments and drug toxicity.”

Living a balanced lifestyle and feeding your spirits as well as your bodies makes sense. Doing so can counteract all of the circumstances that contribute to ill health.

By making conscious choices as you purchase health care products and services, you move closer to a world devoid of these concerns.

But can people truly expect quality health and wellness options within holistic healthcare and traditional healing methods?

“Absolutely,” says Dr. Pesek. “Traditional healing methods have been passed down through generations and tested on many, many people.

The cultures that practice their unique forms of indigenous medicine – from the Maya cultures in Belize to the Ayurvedic medicine of India – have insight and experience that western medicine simply doesn’t have.

The treatments they use are powerful and effective. Most people aren’t aware that a great deal of modern drugs used to treat illness is derived from plants and traditional healing knowledge.”

These paths to wellness utilize natural therapies and the ability of the body to heal itself, as well as the connection of the mind and body to the spirit, and to the environment.

How can you consciously choose health- and wellness-promoting products that will do the most good? Can you find them around the corner?

Here is a crash course in conscious healthcare:

• Know your options. Research your natural alternatives not only for common treatments but also for more complex healthcare issues. Complementary therapies exist for just about everything from headaches to infertility to AIDS.

• Consider supplementing your diet to prevent illness, rather than simply treating yourself with chemical drugs when you get sick.

• Eat your organic veggies (and fruits). Not only will this minimize your exposure to harmful chemicals, but you will send a message that you don’t want these in your food, your water, or your earth. You will also promote land conservation because many organic farmers also use sustainable practices to grow their bounty.

• Purchase products that are indigenously prepared when possible. By doing so, you not only reap the benefit of the healing knowledge of the culture but also you help pay a wage to those producers says Dr. Pesek. Be sure the product’s revenues go back to the areas from where it came.

Dealing with companies that buy cheaply from small farmers can’t guarantee a market for that farmer for a lifetime, nor can it promise a decent wage. Pesek’s company provides a label for its growers to supply healing supplements in the global marketplace. Read your labels. If a company does this, it should mention it somewhere.

• If that’s not possible, look for labeling that mentions fair trade. “Fair Trade illustrates an equitable, financially stable and fair partnership between marketers in more developed countries and indigenous peoples of the world,” says Pesek.

“Fair Trade compliant interactions and businesses ensure fair pay in their respective local context, provision of equal employment opportunities for all people (the most disadvantaged come first), support of environmentally and culturally sustainable practices, and the development of healthy and safe working conditions within the local context.”

All of these assure that the cultures that respect the environment will be able to continue to do so and still make a decent living, and provide you with effective healing.

• Remember alternative practitioners in your choices for treatment. Local holistic physicians, acupuncturists, naturopaths, chiropractors, and midwives incorporate many of these beliefs into their practice and can utilize them in your care.

They are also great resources if you have questions. “There are companies out there that go beyond fair trade and beyond organic, and more are beginning to follow suit,” explains Pesek.

These companies, such as Floracopeia, Guayaki, and Earth Healers give back to the areas around the world from which their products come. They help “tether economic benefit to our world’s natural places and the cultures in these areas,” he says.

We need to give communities a strong bottom line to motivate them to walk away from destructive practices.

Businesses like these provide direct financial benefits to communities in need with something to offer the global community in terms of health and wellness by giving actual partnerships to indigenous suppliers and paying them what they are worth.

They push for organics, sustainability, and fair business practices. In return, the very best of what they have to offer is available to you.

By voting with your dollars and spending consciously, you send a message to practitioners of western healthcare, pharmaceutical companies, and farmers (and anyone else who hears the voice of currency) that you want to live well and be well.

The next time you walk into the store looking for echinacea to ease illness, to pick up an herbal supplement, or some nice organic berries, feel good as you place them in your basket.

Somewhere, a world away, the small sustainable farmer tends his echinacea knowing his family will be fed. The indigenous healer gives freely of his knowledge in the true spirit of healing, knowing that generations of healing will be safely preserved after he passes.