As a young physician fed up with the disease based health care system, I was ready to quit medicine when I finished my internship, some decades ago now after Medical School in New York City and Internship in San Francisco. Somehow then, I felt that wellness and prevention had to be more important, and they had to be tied into the personal development and maturity of the person and the play groups (family, work, friends) a person is associated with. But, this kind of perspective was and is nonexistent in the big teaching centers, and I was too self limited to do anything about it.
Thank God for the American Museum of Natural History across Central Park, and I found my solace in the 100's of dioramas depicting this very concept of growth, whether a solar system or small worm in the soil. It is about evolution. In fact, it is about multidimensional evolution of mind body and spirit.
And after decades of experiences, I can say only three things really count in a human beings life: Relationships, finding meaning in work and play, and seeking and discovering your own Inner Being or "conscious" center.
I am a-religious in the sense I do not belong to any organized religion, yet I would argue that this inner awareness is as much a part of us as our liver. It is irrelevant to me if some one's belief is religious or atheistic: it is about your core values and awareness that define a dimension of human life that is alive and transcends the personality.
Call it what you want. Discover your own.
That is how I ended up in Meadowlark after my internship in San Francisco. Meadowlark sadly does not exist anymore, but it was the founding Holistic Health Center for the country under the founding principles of a Quaker Woman, Amy Loomis, and her Physician Son and visionary, Evarts Loomis. The sign that use to exist at the entrance defined Meadowlark as a HEALTH AND GROWTH center
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It was a quiet ranch property in Southern California where a few guests would come at a time for several weeks to immerse themselves in a healing environment with good nutrition, fitness counseling, art therapy, journaling, fasting if you wanted, and various forms of growth counseling along the lines of the ( I would argue) American Museum of Natural History motif. People were encouraged to self examine their lives in an evolutionary way and view relationships, work and play, and their own Inner Life as a multidimensional project in evolution, like a living diorama of their own lives. Many movie stars came there.
The work of Ira Progoff's Intensive Journal and the discipline of Psychosynthesis reigned at that time. They are even more valid in today's fast world....
Subsequently, my concepts of a Personal Care Community really come from these two main experiences: hours spent in the American Museum of Natural History and the Memories of Meadowlark. More will follow but I hope to direct Wellness.com to become the virtual equivalent of a health and growth practice Center where you can explore and discover good medical nutrition, fitness opportunities, and your own multi-dimensions.
It is about health and growth.