IN
CELEBRATION OF WATER
Waterfalls,
lakes, rivers, streams, oceans, rain, waves, snow, ice,
wells, hot springs, mist, dew, sweat, tears, perspiration,
steam, fog, oasis's, icicles. Water has so many forms and
as many qualities. It can be bubbling, calm, hot, cold,
stagnant, stormy, deep, powerful and gentle, hard and soft.
It nurtures and sustains life, and can as easily destroy
it. In excess water floods and drowns, erodes and corrodes.
Without water the earth is arid, the crops wither and die
and man falters and returns to the soil.
Since the beginnings of Ayervedic Medicine, over 4000 years
ago, to the present day, water has been associated with the
emotional nature. The qualities of water have symbolized
emotional expression, in medicine, psychology and in the
vocabulary of different cultures around the world. Cold as
ice, bubbling with laughter and enthusiasm, dry humor,
steaming with anger. Water can be playful and light, calm,
serene and peaceful or violent and dangerous.
Positive water energy manifests in natural grace and
flexibility and the ability to nurture others with touch,
warmth, understanding and love. Negative water energy is
born of strong emotions, which sweep aside the needs of
others and ignore social boundaries, or the frozen lack of
emotion caused by deep wounding, repression, suppression
and denial.
Water healing is received from the therapeutic use of
baths, steams, sea water, teas, sprays, body wraps,
douches, enemas, showers, waterfalls - using the cleansing,
dissolving qualities of water to liquefy and release. The
challenge of the water element is to go deeper into
instinctual knowing and delicate feeling that respects all
life, and to practice stillness together with graceful
movement in service and duty.
The main Water element emotion is attachment created by
desire and lust. It is the home of feeling and instincts,
but most people experience only the more superficial
emotions and changeable moods of water affected by desire
for what pleases or satisfies, and resistance to what does
not please and satisfy. Attachment is formed from our
projections, desires, human personal need for giving and
receiving love and the social structures, which protect
relationships by family and community bonds. When positive
there is deep feeling and instinctual knowing of the truth.
Too much of the water element causes water retention,
excess fluid, perspiration and urine malfunctions, and the
need for constant drinking. To little of the water element
causes dryness, thinness, lack of perspiration, scanty
urine and lack of thirst along with resistance to bathing
and drinking.
So how can we use the qualities of water in our lives for
health and self-nurturing? Here is something to try. Take
an evening off of television, socializing, and
responsibilities. Put some water on to boil for chamomile
or peppermint tea. Lay out your favorite pajamas or
nightgown, slippers and robe. Take candles and place them
at strategic locations around your bathroom, close the door
and pour hot water into the bathtub. By pouring hot water
in first you will steam up and warm the entire room. Add
half a cup of Lobelia , a soothing herbal relaxant (it will
drain from the tub with the bath water if you powder it in
the coffee grinder before putting it in the bath), a few
drops of essential oils like Geranium (for water
retention), Chamomile (for deep relaxation), or Jasmine (an
anti-depressant and aphrodisiac). If you like music while
you bathe opt for something soothing and uplifting. Miles
Davis 'In a Silent Way' and tapes of monsoon time in the
jungles of South America are my personal favorites. Silence
has its own reward.
Add enough cold water to make the bath easy and comfortable
to enter. Ease your way in gently, and once in the bath add
hot water until it feels therapeutically hot, like a sauna.
Bringing the water temperature up once you are already in
the bath stimulates healthy perspiration. A bath pillow for
your neck is nice. Now relax. Consciously relax from the
tips of your toes, up your legs and, bit by bit, your
entire body. Let your arms float, loosen your shoulders and
BREATHE.
Take your time. Sipping your tea will help to promote
perspiration, thus cooling you down (it's true). As you
soak all of your pores will open and cleanse. Soak for at
least twenty minutes or longer. It is good to give your
skin a scrub with a brush or loofa to remove old skin. You
can add hot water to the bath as it cools down.
When you are ready pull the plug and take a cool shower.
Colder is better as it closes the pores again and
stimulates circulation. I find it easier to start my shower
a little cold and gradually make it fully cold. It's a
little less scary that way. But the cold water is so
refreshing at this point and doesn't make you feel cold on
the inside.
Rather
than toweling yourself dry, wrap up in towels and allow
yourself to dry naturally. This is the perfect time to
moisturize your skin. Sweet Almond Oil with a few drops of
Jasmine Oil is lovely. Massaging the oil into your skin
stimulates the flow of lymph and helps with water retention
and cellulite. Now you should be feeling soft, glowing, a
little, or a lot, sleepy. Curl up in your coziest pajamas,
find a spot where you are comfortable and less likely to be
disturbed.
Here is your opportunity to read a book, write in your
journal, sketch or paint, float in gentle thoughts or
meditate. You will feel the nurturing and therapeutic
benefits of water tingling through every part of you. It's
a wonderful way to recuperate from your day and promote
health and vitality at the same time.