Aromatherapy and the Mind. Julia Lawless

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who saw all knowledge as built up from bodily sensation, emotion was purely physiological. For the healing arts, the direction given by Descartes’ work was a turning-point – mind and body were conceived as having no relationship to one another, and the concept of ‘soul’ was eroded.

      Throughout the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the emotions were given a visceral location, though controversy became acute at this time over whether disorders of the mind brought about physical changes in the body or whether physical disease upset the mind. In 1763, the physician Gaub wrote a response to Julien La Mettries’ essay ‘Man, a Machine’, which he summarized in the following way:

      1) The causes and occasions of a great many affections of the body arise in the mind.

      2) The mind can be a bulwark of health.

      3) In many cases of bodily disease treatment must be directed against the mind as the source of the bodily complaint.

      Fourier’s notion of a cosmic olfactory foundation to all of life was to anticipate the results of contemporary astrophysicists by nearly 200 years. Results of the recent Arome experiment carried out by the French National Centre for Scientific Research include one highly important discovery:

      A MODERN MARRIAGE

      Human consciousness has moved forward and the individual perception of the universe is very different today from that of 6,000 years ago. It is fruitless simply to try and return to the primitive magico-religious approach to healing methods in an attempt to compensate for the materialistic approach of the previous era. Yet some type of integration is required and looking towards the East can perhaps provide an inspiration. Some of the oriental traditions, such as the Indian, Chinese and Tibetan medical systems, have not suffered from the same mind/body split as has the Western approach:

      The Indian medical system, which has its origins in the magico-religious vision of the Vedic literature, has evolved into a sophisticated evolutionary classification of matter and spirit based on Hindu philosophy. Life is regarded as the mutual interaction of body, mind and soul, where the mediating factor is the life-force or prana (in Chinese chi). According to this system, there are two primary principles, known as purusa and prakrti (similar to the Chinese yin–yang system). The former is passive and connected with the spirit; the latter is active and represents primordial matter, which in turn gives rise to sattva, rajas and tamas – the essence of thought, energy and matter. Indian medicine is consequently divided into three parts: Unani, which uses prayer and invocation; Sidhata, which includes knowledge of the chakras, the means for the transformation of energy within the individual; and Ayurveda, which is the knowledge and use of medicinal plants for healing purposes. In Ayurvedic medicine, a form of aromatherapy has been practised as one element of holistic treatment for thousands of years. Many aromatic plants are included in the making of medicinal oils for massage, or mixed with wine or honey as internal remedies.

      Since aromatic essences also contain the life-force of a plant, they can help re-activate or harmonize the prana or chi within an individual, which is vital to the overall healing process.

      Some remedies, on the other hand, are most effective in the form of an incense, fumigant or inhalation, especially for the treatment of psychological disorders.

      The Tibetan remedy ‘Aquilaria A’ contains 31 ingredients, including eagle wood, clove, cardamom, myrrh, sandalwood and nutmeg, and its inhalation is especially recommended for insomnia, anxiety, tension, hysteria and other psychological symptoms. Like the Indian approach, the Tibetan view of medicine is that a permanent cure can only take place when spiritual, emotional and physical factors are in harmony. A physician’s prescription can consequently include advice on specific spiritual or ritual practices, as well as the administration of physical remedies.

      The Western approach to medicine is beginning to change. Current attitudes reflect the growing recognition that disease is psychosomatic in nature and that it is not enough to treat a person simply on a physical or chemical basis – the individual as a whole needs to be taken into account. The twentieth century has seen an enormous growth in holistic forms of medicine and a vast increase in the use of natural remedies. Many ancient forms of therapy are enjoying a revival, but in a modern form – including aromatherapy. For although the term ‘aromatherapy’ is new, the practice itself is founded on a system which has been in use for thousands of years. When the French perfumer René Gattefossé published his book Aromathérapie in the 1920s, describing the physical and psychological benefits of using natural aromatics, particularly essential oils, in therapeutic practice, he was simply reviving and updating an ancient healing system. In contemporary aromatherapy, we are in fact witnessing a marriage of the traditional and the modern, the spiritual and the scientific, although the integration is by no means complete. The conflict between ‘orthodox’ and ‘alternative’ types of treatment is still being fought, as Western medicine struggles to find a more balanced perspective.

      In recent years James Lovelock has popularized the Gaia principle, named after the Greek goddess of the earth. According to this theory, our whole planet is itself a living being with its own spirit or intelligence, in which all of existence participates. This new approach, which reconnects humanity with nature and re-endows matter with consciousness, heralds a return to the primitive yet transformed principle of an inherent sacredness or spirituality within the universe. It is significant that the latest advances in biochemistry and molecular physics also corroborate this vision – that of a universal ‘mind’ or ‘consciousness’

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