Disease is often caused by lack of rhythm, be it in thought or feeling, in the breath, in action, or in one’s everyday life. For instance, to stay up in the night when one is accustomed to sleep, to change the dinner-hour, to take a nap when one is not accustomed to, to do anything that one is not accustomed to do, puts one out of rhythm. People who are accustomed to be angry or to quarrel would become ill if they were not allowed to do that. There is a story told in India that a person who could not keep any secret was compelled to keep quiet; in the end, he became ill, and the doctor had to cure him by permitting him to tell the secret. All this signifies rhythm; every habit forms a rhythm.
The fear of catching a disease is also a cause of illness. There are people who wonder if they are ill, and try to find out if there is something wrong with them. Some enjoy self-pity or the sympathy of others. These invite disease. Some entertain disease when they are to a certain extent unwell. They wish to be treated like a patient, or try to take to a lazy life. By so doing, the mind naturally holds the disease longer, since it is allowed to do so.
There are many other causes of illness. Among them, the most unfortunate is the impression: "I have got an illness that can never be cured," for this impression is worse than a disease. In reality, the soul of every individual, whether healthy or ill, is pure from any pain or disease. The soul constantly heals mind and body; if it were not for the mind and body creating its own illness, a person would always be well. It is natural to be healthy. All illness, pain, and discomfort are unnatural.
(Hazrat Inayat Khan)
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