《自律養生實踐家之旅385》 醫療的不能,身體知道

我承認,我認為醫療是一門失敗的科學。這樣的陳述並非指控任何人,畢竟醫療構成了我成長的背景,也塑造了我今日的視角。
我對它沒有仇恨,只是從「人體的立場」看清了醫療的無能。
無論你是否擁護醫藥,或你本身正是醫療體系的一員,這種言論之所以容易被誤解為「對立」,並非我刻意製造,而是因為醫藥的初衷早已偏離自然的軌道。
每個人都應該相信自己的身體,這是最基本、最單純的真理。
然而,從我們開始接受教育的那一刻起,所學的一切「常識」幾乎都建立在忽略身體的價值上。
至少我是如此長大的,我的父親是醫生,他會開處方,卻不了解身體的自癒潛能。我在醫學教育中遇到的每一位教授,也從未提及「身體可以自癒」這件事。
在那個體系裡,療癒等於介入,健康等於控制。
但事實上,身體代表著大自然,它擁有令人難以置信的療癒潛能,這些能力在我們出生的那一刻就已內建其中。
當我們理解並信任身體的力量,它會以最溫柔的方式守護我們。
身體的療癒章節裡,不需要處方藥,也不需要疫苗,因為身體正是自然的縮影。
它所需要的,不是外力,而是時間;它最渴望的,不是干預,而是耐心。
讓它有機會,自然恢復平衡。
若醫療方能保持客觀,若願意敬畏大自然的法則,那麼他們面對我所述的一切,也就不會產生對立。
只要暫時放下職業的角色與立場,我們都能明白:無論你是誰,終究都要回到自己的身體。
我所謂「與身體站在一起」,不是只為自己說話,而是為所有人的身體,包括我的,也包括每一位醫療人員的身體。
現實與事實的矛盾不在於真相,而在人心的立場。
自然法則從未改變:人體早已進化到幾乎無所不能;身體有能力修復、調整、再生,這是事實;而醫藥的介入邏輯,卻逆向於這些法則,這也是事實。
所以,對立並非源自真相的衝突,而是人為的角力。當我們換個角度、放下立場,眼前的世界會完全不同。
我說的不是理論,而是多年輔導中真實發生的改變,那些願意與身體對話的人,最終都選擇相信它。
我記錄這些「視窗翻轉」的故事,並不陌生,因為我也走過同樣的路。當真相顯現時,每個人都會驚訝,最終也都會在心裡—即使嘴上不說—對身體這座大自然的奇蹟,低頭臣服。
「副作用」與「併發症」這兩個名詞,我們都耳熟能詳。它們的存在,正說明了一個事實:沒有人能保證安全。我們不知道何時身體會反撲,也不知道會發生在誰身上。
若所有家長都清楚疫苗潛藏的未知風險,若所有父母都明白抗生素可能影響孩子的發育,你認為,他們會怎麼選擇?
當真相、利益、立場、家庭安全擺在天秤上,哪一邊更重要?
我曾經也接受吃藥副作用的必然,直到我真正理解身體的需求與能耐,我才驚覺「吃藥是吃毒」這句話一點也不誇張。
透過斷食,我理解了身體「囤積食物」的機制,進而明白「囤積藥物」的後遺症。身體並非刻意留住這些廢物,而是無力排除。
原本具備恢復力的身體,為何變得如此無能?這究竟是誰造成的?答案在於商法和利益,也在人性的貪婪。
在與學生的對話中,我經常聽見可怕的現實:擁有自癒力的人,卻仍深信藥物的力量;擁有最精密的人體,卻看不見自身的寶藏。
馬克‧吐溫說過:「問題不在無知,而在認知。」我們的堅持與固執,往往源於不願承認自己錯了。
沒有人真有錯,是環境阻礙了我們的覺醒,是自私的人性奪走了我們的自由,是從眾的文化擴大了集體的迷宮。
我揭露身體的真相,並非要挑起對立。事實上,對立早在我們學會模仿世界的第一天就已開始。
我們餵身體三餐、餵身體藥物、熬夜、追劇、透支體能,這一切,都是我們對身體發動的戰爭。
化解對立的第一步,是學會站在對方的立場。我選擇守住「身體」這一方,那個不容侵犯的自然立場。
身體理解醫療的不能,也始終包容醫療的無能。它從不抗議,只是默默配合,默默善後。
斷食的一小步,是愛身體的一大步。讓身體休息一天、不再處理食物的那一小步,
是邁向全然領悟健康之道的一大步。
我曾經錯得離譜,如今卻如此貼近「身體之道」。
我願意守著大自然的真相,那個醫療永遠學不會,卻始終存在於每個人體內的真相。
(唯上知與下愚不移)
What Medicine Cannot, the Body Knows
I admit it—I believe medicine is a failed science.
This statement accuses no one; after all, medicine shaped the background of my upbringing and the way I see the world today.
I hold no hatred toward it. I simply see, from the body’s standpoint, the incapacity of medicine.
Whether you are a supporter of medical science or part of the system itself, my words may sound confrontational.
But that opposition does not come from me—it arises because medicine’s original intention has long drifted away from the path of nature.
Every human being should trust their own body.
That is the most basic and simple truth.
Yet from the moment we enter the world of education, almost everything we learn as “common sense” is built upon ignoring the body’s value.
At least, that is how I grew up.
My father was a doctor—he could write prescriptions, yet he did not understand the body’s innate capacity to heal itself.
None of my medical professors ever mentioned that the body can heal.
Within that system, healing means intervention, and health means control.
But in truth, the body is nature.
It possesses astonishing powers of restoration, all built within us from birth.
When we begin to understand and trust that strength, the body protects us in the gentlest way.
In the chapter of the body’s healing, there is no need for prescriptions, no need for vaccines—because the body itself is a reflection of nature.
What it needs is not external force, but time.
What it longs for is not interference, but patience.
It only asks for a chance to regain balance on its own.
If medicine could remain objective—if it could revere the laws of nature—then there would be no conflict with what I say.
The moment we put down the title and the role, we all see the same truth:
whoever we are, we must eventually return to our own body.
When I say “stand with the body,” I am not speaking only for myself, but for every body—including yours, and every medical practitioner’s as well.
The contradiction between reality and truth does not lie in facts, but in human position.
The laws of nature have never changed.
The human body has evolved to be nearly limitless in its abilities—to repair, adjust, and regenerate. That is fact.
And medicine’s logic of intervention runs against those laws. That, too, is fact.
So opposition does not arise from truth, but from human conflict.
Change the angle, release the stance, and the world before you transforms completely.
I am not speaking theory—I speak from years of guiding and witnessing real transformations.
Those who learn to converse with their bodies eventually choose to believe in them.
I’ve recorded many such moments of “window reversal.” They are not foreign to me, because I have walked the same road.
When the truth reveals itself, every person is first astonished—and finally, even if silently, bows in humble reverence before the miracle that is the body, this living form of nature.
We all know the words “side effect” and “complication.”
Their existence reveals one simple truth: no one can guarantee safety.
We never know when the body will revolt, nor upon whom it will act.
If every parent understood the unknown risks hidden in vaccines,
if every mother and father realized how antibiotics might disrupt their child’s development—
what choices would they make?
When truth, profit, position, and family safety sit upon the same scale, which weighs more?
I once accepted side effects as inevitable—until I came to understand what the body truly needs and can do.
Then I realized: “Taking medicine is taking poison” is not an exaggeration at all.
Through fasting, I learned how the body stores food—and thus understood the aftereffects of storing medicine.
The body does not cling to waste on purpose; it simply lacks the power to eliminate it.
How did a once self-restoring body become so helpless?
Who caused this?
The answer lies in commerce and profit—and in human greed.
In my conversations with students, I often hear a terrifying truth:
people possess self-healing power, yet still worship medicine;
they carry the most sophisticated organism ever made, yet fail to see its treasure.
Mark Twain once said, “The problem is not ignorance—it’s the illusion of knowledge.”
Our stubbornness often comes from our unwillingness to admit we were wrong.
No one is truly at fault.
It is the environment that blocks awakening,
selfishness that steals our freedom,
and conformity that deepens the collective maze.
I reveal the truth of the body not to provoke conflict—
for conflict began long before us, the day we learned to imitate the world.
We feed our body meals, feed it medicine, stay up late, binge-watch shows, and drain our vitality.
All of this is a war we wage against ourselves.
The first step to dissolving opposition is to stand in the other’s place.
I choose to stand by the body—the inviolable ground of nature.
The body understands medicine’s limits, and it forgives them.
It never protests; it simply cooperates quietly and cleans up afterward.
A small step in fasting is a great step toward loving the body.
Letting the body rest for a single day—not processing food—is one small step toward fully realizing the path to true health.
I was once deeply mistaken.
Now, I am closer than ever to the Way of the Body.
And I choose to keep guarding this truth of nature—
a truth medicine will never master,
yet one that has always lived within every human being.
