Only in the late 1960’s did people begin to take a
finely-tuned look at the body instead of ignoring it. In my case, as for
others, in The Golden Notebook, Doris Lessing’s feminine honesty broke
new ground. If she could discuss menstruation, the clitoris, writing the words
down in a novel everyone was reading, perhaps we could discuss them with each
other. Not that I did. The prohibitions for me were much too strong. But I
began to think about myself physically in a different way.
I never owned a copy of Our Bodies, Ourselves, first
published in 1970 by the Boston Women’s Health Book Collective to give accurate
health and medical information to a broad audience of women, but I think all my
friends did. Wilhelm Reich’s phrase “the body is the unconscious” also
contributed greatly to this new way of looking at oneself. For if this were
true, people were whole, all of one piece. There was no separation between body
and soul. The one reflected the other completely.
What followed was a wealth of new ways of thinking, spawning
interest in many new and old fields. All of the hippie traveling we did helped,
leading people to understand that what we were doing in the West was not the
only way. The mind/body connection was explored in physical practices such as
yoga, hard and soft martial arts, massage, quigong and meditation. Alternative
healing, birthing and dying were all opened to examination and experiment. Food
and diet were finally admitted into the health picture.
We had new attitudes about what was attractive, such as
natural looking bodies, and people began to understand that emotional weather
was part of one’s personal picture as well. People began to sort out what could
be cured and what you must live with. Chemical imbalances could now be treated.
Handicapped people were helped to achieve their goals. Sexual orientations of all kinds were tested. Everything could be talked about, and generally
was!
Line, Marty and Paul live through this change. Each of them
is reticent about their own physicality, but they begin to see its importance.
Line becomes a nurse, working first in gynecological wards and then in
oncology. She studies herbal remedies and practices such as Reiki, and is fully
awake to the extraordinary journey people take from birth to death. She becomes
a midwife in later years, sharing all that she has learned.
Marty, who has always thought of herself as unattractive,
moves into a stronger relationship to her body as she studies tai chi and
disciplines her voracious, intellectual mind. She takes photographs which show
that consciousness is fully present in the body. Paul, who spends the 1970’s in
Alaska, contributes as an educator with an open heart. He marries a
French-Canadian woman who insists on treating her early cancer in her own way.
Paul also has to deal with his own post-polio syndrome as he gets older.
All of this change was welcome. It complicates things to have so many choices, but also enhances one's ability to give of one's particular gifts. By this time we have come full circle and focus too much on surfaces. We need to get back to an understanding of how much inner values affect our external selves. But time and our ever-renewing culture will probably take care of that.
All of this change was welcome. It complicates things to have so many choices, but also enhances one's ability to give of one's particular gifts. By this time we have come full circle and focus too much on surfaces. We need to get back to an understanding of how much inner values affect our external selves. But time and our ever-renewing culture will probably take care of that.
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