I was leading a weekend workshop in the original California Gold
Rush country, at a center just outside Coloma. The workshop was titled
"Dreaming a Life with Heart." In the first morning session, as
always, I had people introduce themselves by explaining their intention for the
weekend. A man in the circle could hardly wait to speak up.
"I got this flyer in the mailbox." He held up the
workshop flyer, which I had not previously seen. My coordinator had chosen to
embellish it with a picture of a jewel-bright hummingbird, because the text
referred to "hummingbird medicine" for the heart.
The man continued,
"When I got out of the car, I noticed there was a hummingbird inside. I
ran to call my wife, because of the amazing coincidence - the bird on the
flyer, and then the bird in the car. When she came and I opened the door of the
car, we found that two hummingbirds had somehow gotten
inside. As I released them and we watched the two hummingbirds fly away, we
knew the two of us needed to be in this circle this weekend."
He explained that he had an additional reason for coming. He had
recently undergone quadruple bypass surgery. He hoped that the workshop would
be medicine for the heart in several senses. I supported his hope, reminding
the group that the hummingbird is said to have the strongest heart of any
warm-blooded life on the planet. Its strong heart is what allow it to remain
still in the midst of constant beating motion. In one of our meditations, I
invited everyone to visualize a hummingbird in their favorite colors hovering
before them, and then open their hearts and take its strength inside.
~
We now have academically-approved evidence that spiritual
retreats in which people shift consciousness and explore the deeper life are
medicine for the heart, on the physical level as well as emotional and
spiritual levels.
A University of Michigan Health System study found that taking part in a
non-denominational spiritual retreat can help patients with severe heart
trouble feel less depressed and more hopeful about the future. Heart
patients who participated in a four-day retreat that included meditation,
guided imagery, drumming and journal writing saw immediate improvement in
tests measuring depression and hopefulness; the improvements persisted six
months later.
“The study shows that a spiritual retreat like the Medicine for
the Earth program can jump-start and help to maintain a return to
psycho-spiritual well-being,” reported study lead author Sara Warber, M.D.,
associate professor of family medicine at the University of Michigan
Medical School and director of U-M’s Integrative Medicine program. “These
types of interventions may be of particular interest to patients who do not
want to take antidepressants for the depression symptoms that often accompany
coronary heart disease and heart attack.”
The study used a number of standard benchmarks to assess the
success of the program. The spiritual retreat group went from a baseline
score of 12 on the Beck Depression Inventory, indicating mild to moderate
depression, to an improved score of 6 immediately afterward, a 50-percent
reduction. Their scores remained that low half a year later. The control
group’s score started at 8 and went down to 6.
Hummingbird medicine is truly good for the heart.
Reference: “Healing the Heart: A Randomized Pilot Study of a
Spiritual Retreat for Depression in Acute Coronary Syndrome Patients,” Explore: The Journal of Science and
Healing, July 2011
Hummingbird photo by Meredith Eastwood
If more doctors would start prescribing this kind of medicine it would greatly improve not only the life of patients but the life of service providers as well.
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