The framework that understands disease as disruption in relationships—with land, ancestors, community, and self—rather than as isolated individual pathology.
Buddhist understanding that suffering arises from disconnection aligns with Indigenous diagnostic frameworks that locate illness within relational networks. Rather than viewing sickness as private bodily malfunction, Indigenous healers across the Americas and Pacific understand disease as evidence of fractured relationships. In Andean cosmology, illness indicates disconnection from Pachamama (Earth) or neglected relationships with ancestral spirits. Amazonian traditions similarly read symptoms as messages that relationships require restoration—perhaps with plant beings, with community, or with one's own ancestral heritage. Pacific Islander lomilomi and traditional healing recognize illness as system-wide disharmony requiring collective restoration. Dipa Ma's teaching that liberation comes through right relationship with reality parallels this understanding. By treating illness as relational, healers shift from symptom-suppression to comprehensive restoration. Healing ceremonies and practices become opportunities to repair broken relationships, honor ancestors, reconnect with land, and realign individual consciousness with community. This framework transforms the healer's role from mechanic fixing isolated parts into facilitator restoring wholeness within interconnected systems of belonging.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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