The Wise Woman
Tradition
By Susun
Weed, the
Wise Woman Way.
The Wise
Woman Tradition is the oldest known healing
tradition on our planet. It offers a unique view of
health that is woman-centered and deeply empowering to
women. This is in stark contrast to orthodox - and most
alternative - healing traditions, which are based on male
viewpoints which disempower women.
The medicine I learned in
school was based on a linear, scientific, male worldview whose
truth I did not question. When this medicine failed me, as a
woman and a mother, I sought alternatives. Herbs helped me take
care of myself and my family, simply and safely, but I
questioned the assumptions behind what I was taught. It was
clear to me that alternative health care disempowers women as
much, or more than, orthodox medicine does. They both actively
assume that the norm on which assessment of health is to be
based is masculine in gender.
Assuming that a healthy male
is the definition of health may not seem like much of a
problem, unless you are a woman. This core assumption has hurt,
and continues to hurt, women in a multitude of direct and
indirect ways, from the deeply personal to the widely
political. This assumption leads to attempts to "correct" -
with drugs and surgery - physical and emotional states that are
normal (and healthy) for women, but not for men.
Consider: Healthy women were
given DES (a hormone) simply because they were pregnant - their
offspring are cancer-prone.
Millions of menopausal women
have been (and are still) treated with hormones in an effort to
replace what is "lost." Does this improve their health? No. Use
of hormone replacement increases the risk of stroke, heart
disease, and breast cancer.
Menstruating women need some
quiet time alone. Instead they are offered pink Prozac to help
them overcome their "depression."
Women are advised to have
their uterus (and increasingly their ovaries, too) removed
since they are "not needed after menopause ... just places that
can harbor cancer." It is well known that a woman's sexual
response is unlikely to be as strong, and may even be lost,
when she loses these vital organs. A century ago, a woman who
challenged male authority could be diagnosed as "hysterical"
and her uterus ("hyster") removed (often without anesthesia or
disinfectants).
There is more to medicine than
the male perspective. I speak for the woman-centered tradition.
It offers men and women a new way to think about and create
health in all stages of their lives. It empowers women to take
charge of their health and their lives, to honor and respect
themselves, and the earth. I call it the Wise Woman
Tradition.
The Wise Woman
Tradition empowers women by:
* Focusing
on simple remedies that are easily accessible
* Sharing
information freely
* Offering
compassionate listening
* Renaming her
weaknesses as strengths
* Reminding
her that her body is the body of the earth, is the body of the
goddess, is the sacred ground of being.
The Wise Woman
Tradition empowers women to:
* View
themselves as healthy, even when they have problems
* Create their
own healthy norms
* Honor their
natural cycles and changes (puberty, menses, pregnancy,
menopause)
* Define
themselves from a woman-centered viewpoint
* Connect with
other women for personal and planetary healing
Much of modern medicine seems
complicated and difficult to understand. Many alternative
remedies are also complicated, some are unduly expensive,
others require special training and initiations. This
disempowers women. The Wise Woman Tradition, by focusing on
simple remedies that are easily accessible, and by sharing
information freely, allows women to feel competent and powerful
in taking care of their own health.
The Wise Woman Tradition heals
by nourishing the wholeness of each unique individual.
Nourishing has three primary aspects: simple ceremony,
nourishing foods, and compassionate listening. When women are
heard, when we listen to each other, then we feel validated and
empowered. Harking back to the consciousness-raising sessions
of the 1970's, and informed by Native American teachings of the
talking stick, compassionate listening reshapes women's stories
so they can reshape their lives.
One of the great gifts
of the Wise Woman Tradition is the renaming of our weaknesses
as strengths. When we allow ourselves to be
depressed, outraged, yearning, grief-stricken, confused,
fearful, bitchy, and more; when we allow all that we are to be
part of us, then we can finally find and celebrate our
wholeness/health/holiness.
The Wise Woman Tradition
empowers women by reminding us that we are sacred, that our
bodies are sacred. As women, we are the earth. Each one of us
lives in the body of the earth. Each one of us comes from this
sacred ground of being. And not only are we empowered to honor
ourselves, we are empowered to demand that respect from all
others.
When women accept orthodoxy's
image of them as constantly in need of help, they accept a
powerless position. When women accept the Wise Woman
Tradition's assertion that they are already perfect, already
vibrantly healthy, even when they have problems, they assume a
position of power. When women create their own healthy norms,
they create a place of power in which they can stand, no matter
how fast and furious the changes.
When women believe that their
natural cycles and changes (puberty, menses, pregnancy,
menopause) are somehow sick or wrong, they open themselves to
medical experiments. When women learn that the Wise Woman
Tradition honors these states above all others, they find a
source of deep wisdom and great power flowing into their
lives.
When women define themselves
from a male-centered viewpoint, they always lose. When they
define themselves from a woman-centered viewpoint, they always
win. The Wise Woman Tradition offers this power to women, from
the Ancient Grandmother's heart to yours.
Susun Weed
PO Box 64
Woodstock, NY 12498
Fax: 1-845-246-8081
Visit Susun Weed at The Wise
Woman Center: and Ash Tree Publishing
For permission to reprint this
article, contact us at: susunweed@herbshealing.com
Vibrant, passionate, and
involved, Susun Weed has garnered an international reputation
for her groundbreaking lectures, teachings, and writings on
health and nutrition. She challenges conventional medical
approaches with humor, insight, and her vast encyclopedic
knowledge of herbal medicine. Unabashedly pro-woman, her
animated and enthusiastic lectures are engaging and often
profoundly provocative.
Susun is one of America's
best-known authorities on herbal medicine and natural
approaches to women's health. Her four best-selling books are
recommended by expert herbalists and well-known physicians and
are used and cherished by millions of women around the world.
Learn more at http://www.susunweed.com
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