Becoming a Healer Years ago, I worked at a small health clinic in a remote country. I had gone there to treat an
obscure syndrome. It attacked people’s lungs, causing them to need a respirator to breathe.
I was trying out a new medication to treat these people instead of using a respirator. If I was
successful, I would become famous.
Everything was going fine until war broke out in a nearby country. Many people from that
country fled the hostile invading army. The army wanted to dominate the people, but the
people didn’t want to be oppressed. So they walked hundreds of miles across barren land
to get away.
Some of these people came to our clinic for treatment. I talked with them and learned of
their difficulties. They did not beg or complain. I was impressed by their dignity. There was one woman I will never forget. Her son suffered from malnutrition and stomach
pain, and she didn’t know what to do. Neither did 1.1 was not adept at treating malnutrition.
Nonetheless, when I saw her sadness, I knew I had to help her son.
The woman had been feeding her son bread and water. She had a misconception that it
would be enough for him. However, I knew that he needed to eat vegetables, too. So I took
her outside and showed her a dense patch of edible plants. I taught her howto dig up the
roots, peel them, and cook them for her son. I explained that she should increase her son’s
intake of these vegetables. Likewise, she should strive to get him some meat once a week
to help him regain his strength.
I sent her off with a prescription for some pain medicine, but she also left my office with
some new culinary skills. A few weeks later, she returned to tell me her son was healthy
again. As thanks, she gave me a beautiful ceramic bowl.