Unani medicine's theory of healing crises—acute symptom flare-ups during recovery—parallels Buddhist teachings on purification; understanding this prevents practitioners from abandoning treatment prematurely.
Both Buddhist and Unani traditions recognize that genuine healing often involves temporary intensification of symptoms. In Unani medicine, when excess humors are mobilized for elimination, patients may experience acute discomfort—increased heat, discharge, or emotional upheaval. Dipa Ma's teaching on the purification process explains this as the body's accumulated patterns rising into consciousness before dissolution. Without this framework, patients interpret healing crises as treatment failure. By understanding that purification is a necessary stage, not a setback, practitioners maintain faith and correct course. Islamic physicians described this process precisely: the body must expel its corrupted matter through various channels before restored balance emerges. Dipa Ma's fearlessness becomes essential here—the capacity to remain present with intense sensation without suppressing symptoms through secondary medicines. This integrated view transforms medical crises into medicine themselves, honoring the body's inherent wisdom.
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