We often use the term “balance” as an ideal in regard to health and lifestyle, but I suggest that balance is not attainable or even desirable. We need a new way of thinking about our health.
Health is not a static state. One of my favourite herbalists, Susun Weed, says balance is what occurs just before death :)
Life is constant movement, constant change. Even a mountain is hurtling through space and disintegrating quietly. Any state of health is similarly bound to change.
Instead of ‘balance’, I find the term ‘dynamic equilibrium’ more appropriate.
Health does not occur in isolation from the people and environment around us.
‘Dynamic’ means movement, the opposite of static. What is right for you may not be right for me, and what you need in the morning may be different from the evening. It changes.
‘Equilibrium’ is the balancing act of countering the forces that tend to head us toward disease. It is a constant process, not a state. Like riding a bike.
Dynamic equilibrium in this context is the endless process of remaining flexible with life - bending like a bamboo without breaking- adapting to the ever changing flow.
Sometimes we feel vibrantly healthy, and sometimes we do not.
When we get fixated on external health ideals or programs, we can lose touch with that flexibility, and intuition inherent within us which can guide us and keep us fluidly adapting to life rather than stagnating.
For example, health movements such as the Raw or Paleo movements, can bring great benefits. Raw foods can be very cleansing. The Paleo movement can be very nourishing, and both movements eliminate processed foods, grains, dairy and sugar, and rely on real fruits and vegetables as staples. This is a huge step forward for many people. The movements have expanded our thinking, introduced us to new ways to looking at food, new recipes, new ways of eating.
If we have gone ‘Paleo’, and enjoy eating more meat protein, and ‘healthy fats’ such as coconut oil and butter, we can feel nourished from relaxing previous dietary restrictions that may have left us feeling depleted ....but our liver may eventually complain at the extra work it is being given, and give us the message to lighten up, to eat more salad and fruit, with cravings. Are we listening, or stuck in ‘Paleology’?
Once we fixate, we can lose touch with our own inner knowing. Just because we feel amazing on raw food for a while, doesn’t mean we will feel good on it forever. Same with Paleo, Macrobiotics, Vegan, Nourishing Traditions, Low-carb, etc Although with any of these, it may work for some people for much longer or even their whole life. I know lifelong vegetarians who thrive, and others who had to change because it didn’t work for them.
What about our own temperament? If we are a hot temperament, with a strong fiery digestion, we may be well sustained on a cooling raw diet right through the year. If we are a cooler, milder temperament with a suboptimal digestive power we may find we crave warming, cooked foods as the weather gets cooler. If we are fixed, we listen to the ideology, instead of our own body.
And there is nothing wrong with ideals, either- many people shun meat eating in respect for animals.
There are no inherent rules. People have been eating in different ways for thousands of years. There is no one right way to eat, or to live, although modern processed and GMO foods are not exactly life-giving.
I think ‘dynamic equilibrium’ is a useful term that implies an alive state of bringing our full intelligence, heart and awareness to the question of how we live, how we eat, and how we interact, every day, staying open to the winds of change if they are knocking on our door.