From Crisis to Consciousness: Reclaiming the Soul of Healing

From Crisis to Consciousness: Reclaiming the Soul of Healing

For centuries, medicine was guided by a holistic understanding of the human body, mind spirit; a recognition that health is not merely the absence of disease, but a state of dynamic balance. Traditional healing systems across cultures acknowledged this interconnectedness, focusing on the terrain of the body rather than simply eradicating disease symptoms.

But something changed. Western medicine, which initially sought to heal, became increasingly reductionist, mechanical pharmaceutically-driven. It evolved into a system that views the body as a machine, the mind as secondary the soul as irrelevant. Today, that system is in crisis the symptoms of its impending collapse are all around us.

So how did we get here? To understand why Western medicine is collapsing we need to understand the key stages in the development of the allopathic system we see today.

The History of Medicine

Ancient medicine

Holistic beginnings from 3000 BCE. Ancient Egyptian, Mesopotamian Ayurvedic traditions laid the groundwork for medical practice, often blending spiritual and physical healing. The Greeks notably Hippocrates formalised medicine as a profession, emphasising humoral theory; the balance of bodily fluids (blood, phlegm, black bile yellow bile) as esseEdit Postntial for health. Medicine was holistic and bedside-focused, stressing observation, the patient’s history the bodys natural healing abilities.

Roman and medieval periods

Integrating philosophy and healing from 1st century. Galen further developed Hippocratic medicine but introduced a more anatomical and mechanistic approach. After the fall of Rome, Islamic medicine preserved and expanded the Greek teachings, introducing systematic pharmacology. In Medieval Europe, medicine was controlled largely by monastic institutions often incorporating religious healing methods.

The renaissance and scientific revolution

Rise of empiricism from 15th century. The dissection of cadavers transformed anatomical knowledge. Paracelsus challenged humoral theory, advocating chemical remedies over balancing bodily fluids. The scientific method promoted by Francis Bacon and Galileo relied upon empirical observation and reductionism, setting the stage for experimental medicine.

Separation of physicians and surgeons, germ theory pathology from 18th century

Surgeons, who were previously seen as manual labourers gained prestige and were integrated into medical institutions. The Germ theory of Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch replaced miasma theory, emphasising microbes as the cause of disease. Rudolf Virchow introduced cellular pathology, shifting the focus from systemic imbalances to disease at a microscopic level. The development of anaesthesia and antiseptic techniques allowed for safer surgeries, increasing the role of interventionist medicine.

Standardisation and the Flexner Report from 20th century.

Following the publication of the Flexner Report in 1910 the American Medical Association systematically eliminated medical schools that taught holistic, herbal alternative modalities. It standardised medical education based on biomedical science, pharmaceuticals and hospital-based training. This solidified the dominance of allopathic medicine, aligning medical schools with pharmaceutical and industrial interests.

Expansion of biomedical technology from 1940s

Antibiotics revolutionised infection control. Advancements in imaging (X-rays, CT and MRIs scans) enabled precise diagnoses, reinforcing reductionist perspectives. Medicine became increasingly specialised, shifting from general practitioners to specialists and sub-specialists in cardiology, oncology, neurology, etc. The pharmaceutical industry expanded, leading to concerns about corporate influence on healthcare. Genetics and molecular biology further pushed medicine toward reductionism, focusing on disease at the DNA and cellular levels.

What does ‘TRUE HEALTH’ mean to the OCP team?

What does ‘TRUE HEALTH’ mean to the OCP team?

True Health & Our Conscious Path

When we reference true health on OCP, we have a shared understanding of what this means for us. We each have our own health journeys, which led us to look outside of the mainstream Western medical system for answers. We also found out that not all ‘alternative’ paths to healing led us somewhere helpful.

The Western Medical System

The mainstream Western medical system is structured to make us dependent on external health ‘experts’ who diagnose and treat our ailments. They treat the body as separate from the other, non-physical aspects of our being.  They also treat dis-ease in isolation, locally, rather than looking at health holistically.

This approach fosters a disconnection from our bodies and their innate intelligence, as well as a disconnection from our own intuition or inner knowing. The latter give us instant access to Divine guidance that can help us trace and identify deeper root causes of our illness beyond the physical symptoms.

Discernment & Health Sovereignty

Treating health from a purely physical perspective, and dis-ease as a collection of symptoms to be treated with a chemical fix, takes the power of discernment and health sovereignty out of our hands.  We have placed it squarely in the hands of a system that depends on us staying sick for it to succeed!

herbs in true health
Sticking Plasters

Pharmaceuticals have their place in extreme circumstances but in most cases taking medication is only a sticking-plaster solution to mask symptoms that may be trying to communicate a deeper truth to us about our health needs.

Similarly, herbal medicine can also be used to mask symptoms, rather than as an aid to help us manage those symptoms on the greater journey to establish the greater health issues that lie beneath.

The OCP Team acknowledge that the true picture of health is multi-layered and includes all the non-physical aspects of our being; the mental, emotional and spiritual. 

We understand that often a physical illness or disease has its roots in trauma and unresolved emotional wounding. Dis-ease may also be linked with self-limiting beliefs and habitual patterns of thinking that need to be identified, challenged, released and/or re-written.

We also recognise that while making dietary and lifestyle changes can have a very supportive impact on health, these are only a part of a much bigger picture.

Listen to YOUR body

We are passionate about encouraging our community to become more and more accustomed to really listening to our bodies and interpreting what the symptoms are trying to communicate about our overall health.

We champion health sovereignty and self-referencing wherever possible, seeking to establish root causes rather than just patching up the uncomfortable symptoms.

Western Model & Alternative Therapies

The Western medical model offers half-truths and incomplete solutions, and there is a considerable amount of both deliberate and naïve misinformation available on matters of health.  This clearly makes the task of finding helpful answers to questions around true health a real challenge at this time.

As mentioned before, there are also dangers within the ‘alternative’ or complementary healthcare systems, which we will do our best to expose and discourage. One example of this is the very popular work of the Medical Medium, who promotes excessive consumption of coriander/cilantro to support the chelation of heavy metals from the body.  The half-life of coriander is not known, and many consider its use in chelation to be a great danger as it may distribute mercury elsewhere in the body, potentially exacerbating sickness.

True health-shaman

Just because something is ‘natural’ does not automatically qualify it as safe. We will do our best to monitor content like this since often we don’t know better until we do!

In the same way, we make an important distinction between ancient, traditional and safe energetic health practices, rooted in time-tested shamanic traditions, and ungrounded ‘new age’ practices which mimic the traditional but only offer a spiritual bypass at best; rather than honour the depth of the the ancient wisdom our ancestors used for healing long before allopathic medicine became our go-to for health answers.

Health Information on OCP

Our commitment is to carefully monitor the health information shared within OCP to ensure there is nothing we know to be misleading in both our community and soon-to-be-created resources library.  We also believe that the true spirit of science is to continually question and explore, and to be prepared to evolve our perspectives when presented with good new evidence and information.

We may find that what we consider to be ‘true’ today changes tomorrow.  This is as it should be. We are all ever-growing in our levels of conscious awareness and need to keep an open mind, along with a willingness to be challenged wherever appropriate.

We actively encourage our community to share personal health stories and any methods or tools that have supported their healing, so we can all learn and heal together.  We ask that members remain respectful of any differences of approach or opinion, in acknowledgment that there is no ‘one size fits all’ solution to health challenges.

It is our wish that members feel safe to respectfully challenge any information they see which feels dangerous.  We ask that when sharing any personal experiences our community make every effort to speak from their own perspectives, rather than in dogmatic terms that imply their way is the only way for all.

Above all, it is our heartfelt intent that as a community we continue to evolve together, supporting each other to learn, grow and heal by sharing our knowledge and experiences, in a spirit of discovery and with respect and compassion always.  We realise that you may not align with our ethos and ask that if you strongly disagree with the sentiments shared in this article, you do not join us.  If our ethos does resonate, however, we welcome you into our community with open arms and look forward to learning from and with you.