In
the sacred psychology of the Malay bomoh (shamanic healer),
the natural path of our energies is determined by inner winds (angin).
We are born with these. They are part of our basic character and identity. They
also connect us to larger forces, to the world of living myths and archetypes.
Our power to create or destroy is conditioned by these inner winds. When they
are blocked, we are in trouble.
As
anthropologist Carol Laderman explains it in a remarkable book, Taming
the Wind of Desire, if people cannot express their inner winds,
"their angin is trapped inside them, when it accumulates and
produces sakit berangin, or sickness due to blockage of the inner
winds. We recognize this problem in artists and writers whose creativity is
blocked, or whose art is insufficiently appreciated, and would not find it
difficult to understand why Malays say that musicians, actors and puppeteers
are attracted to their professions because of angin and could not succeed
without it."
Releasing
and directing the inner winds into productive channels is the aim of dramatic
rituals of healing. These involve drumming, fiddling, dancing, play-acting,
theater with shadow puppets and calling in beneficent spirits.
In
our Western nosology (the science of classifying diseases) we might gain by
borrowing from this shamanic diagnosis of types of sickness that result from
"blockage of the inner winds". In our approach to healing, we have
even more to learn from the shaman's prescription. Release the inner winds
through movement, drama, dance, ritual, group energy, laughter. Then
"farm" the inner winds through creative action, supported by the
community.
Art: John William Waterhouse, "Boreas" (1903)
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