Brendan Kelly uses his expertise in Chinese medicine to draw a connection between the environmental excesses that have led us to the age of climate change and the individual excesses that lead to depletion, imbalance, and disease. His fascinating book offers fresh, clear insight into the root causes of both, as well as a map toward greater personal and environmental health and balance.
Kristin Kimball, author of The Dirty Life; farmer and co-founder of Essex Farm
The human body is a mirror of our home planet. The Yin and Yang of Climate Crisis not only teaches that the body and earth are connected, it explains the need for healing both.
Scott Frazier, member of the Crow/Santee tribe; founder and director of Project Indigenous
Brendan Kelly invites us to set aside our typical ways of thinkingreductionistic, fragmented, and dualisticand to embrace a more holistic and systemic mode of thought. Using the conceptual framework of Chinese medicine, Kelly incisively diagnoses the source of what most ails us, both personally and collectively, and offers guidelines for meaningful change. What could be more important?
John Christopher, PhD, Fellow of the American Psychological Association and the Mind & Life Institutes
With a radically expansive understanding of holistic principles, Brendan Kelly shows us that the remedy for our individual bodies and our planet-body is the same. He invites us to look at the deeper causes of our situation and, in so doing, to experience deeper purpose and connection with life. This book is a must-read for anyone who cares about the earth.
Sarah Von Hoy, PhD, LAc, professor at Goddard College
The Yin and Yang of Climate Crisis is a brilliantly written, far-sighted exploration of climate change using Chinese medicine as an ancient way to see personal mind-body inflammation as deeply interrelated with the earths rising heat. This book empowers people to embrace cooler lifestyles and less inflammatory diets to help rebalance their own lives and in a small, yet organically powerful, way.
Susan Green, PhD, department chair of Behavioral Sciences and director of Wellness & Alternative Medicine, Johnson State College
The Yin and Yang of Climate Crisis
Healing Personal, Cultural, and Ecological Imbalance with Chinese Medicine
BRENDAN KELLY, LA C
North Atlantic Books
Berkeley, California
Copyright 2015 by Brendan Kelly. All rights reserved. No portion of this book, except for brief review, may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any meanselectronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwisewithout the written permission of the publisher. For information contact North Atlantic Books.
Published by
North Atlantic Books
Berkeley, California
Cover image shutterstock.com/Alexandr79
Cover design by Mary Ann Casler
The Yin and Yang of Climate Crisis: Healing Personal, Cultural, and Ecological Imbalance with Chinese Medicine is sponsored and published by the Society for the Study of Native Arts and Sciences (dba North Atlantic Books), an educational nonprofit based in Berkeley, California, that collaborates with partners to develop cross-cultural perspectives, nurture holistic views of art, science, the humanities, and healing, and seed personal and global transformation by publishing work on the relationship of body, spirit, and nature.
North Atlantic Books publications are available through most bookstores. For further information, visit our website at www.northatlanticbooks.com or call 800-733-3000.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Kelly, Brendan (Brendan D.), author.
The yin and yang of climate crisis : healing personal, cultural, and ecological imbalance with Chinese medicine / Brendan Kelly.
pages cm
Summary: Examines the current climate crisis through the lens of Chinese medicine.Provided by publisher.
ISBN 978-1-58394-951-1 (paperback) ISBN 978-1-58394-952-8 (e-book)
1. Climatic changesHealth aspects. 2. Medical climatology. 3. Human beingsEffect of climate on. 4. Medicine, Chinese. I. Title.
RA793.K45 2015
616.9'88dc23 2015001171
Dedicated to my beautiful wife, Liz, who helped make this book happen in innumerable ways, both large and small
Also dedicated to my parents, Joan and Richard, for a lifetime of love, support, and encouragement
To my wife, Lizthank you for several years of keeping me fed, which provided me days at a time to write and research. And thank you for a decade of listening to me talk about the ideas that would become this book.
To the patients at our clinicthank you for the opportunity to see the depth of healing possible with Chinese medicine.
To my current teachers of Chinese medicine, especially Wolfe Lowenthal and Jeffrey Yuenthank you for all that youve given me and all of your students.
To the teachers of my teachers of Chinese medicine, including Huang Di, Sun Si Miao, Zhang Zhong-jing, and Cheng Man-chingthank you for the wisdom youve imparted to generations of students and practitioners.
And to Tim McKee, Richard Grossinger, and everyone at North Atlantic Booksthank you for seeing the potential in a Chinese medicine understanding of climate change.
Contents
Often were like fish in water. Because its continuously all around them, there are stories about how fish arent able to recognize the environment in which they live. For us, rather than not seeing the water all around us, were often unable to see the assumptions that shape our lives.
How we see the world affects everything. It influences what we do, what we value, and how we define a good life. It is also the basis of our cultural institutions, including our economy, our medical system, and modern sciences like biology. Like fish in water, were swimming in a sea of assumptions that are everywhere and affect all parts of our lives. Because they are all around us and permeate throughout our culture, we often accept without question our shared beliefs.
As youll read throughout The Yin and Yang of Climate Crisis, it is these assumptions and our views of the world that are the deeper causes of our rapidly warming planet. Virtually everything we hear about climate change is from our usual, Western perspective. Most of the discussion about the crisis of global warming focuses on external issues: calls to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, increase carbon sequestration, buy and eat locally, and challenge continuous economic growth. These remedies are undoubtedly important, but if we were to look at climate change from a different vantage point, we can see how what is happening in the environment around us is also happening within us. In particular, we can understand that the severity of climate change speaks to deeper and more wide-reaching philosophical and spiritual issues.
The essential importance of stepping outside our usual view of the world to look at the climate crisis is that the transformation we now need requires us to see clearly the consequences of our personal and cultural beliefs. Maintaining the usual perspectives about what signifies a life worth living, how we view nature, and how we treat sickness will continue to lead us down the same path were on. As well discuss with the chapters to follow, this path has not only led us to a place of dramatic climate destabilization, it has also had similar, deep-reaching effects on all aspects of our lives.
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