sufitariqahs Forum Index sufitariqahs
For All interested in Sufism mainly in UK- and the rest of the world Welcome!
 
 FAQFAQ   SearchSearch   MemberlistMemberlist   UsergroupsUsergroups   RegisterRegister 
 ProfileProfile   Log in to check your private messagesLog in to check your private messages   Log inLog in 

Master Hakim Archuletta of U.S.A

 
Post new topic   Reply to topic    sufitariqahs Forum Index -> Islamic Food - Healing and Health- Spiritual Well being
View previous topic :: View next topic  
Author Message
islam2jannat



Joined: 16 Jan 2006
Posts: 741

PostPosted: Fri May 18, 2007 5:06 pm    Post subject: Master Hakim Archuletta of U.S.A Reply with quote

Master Hakim Archuletta of U.S.A




Only registered users can see links on this forum!
Register or Login on forum!



Contact Hakim Archuletta on
Email:
Only registered users can see links on this forum!
Register or Login on forum!


Phone: 505-216-0667


Last edited by islam2jannat on Thu May 15, 2008 11:25 am; edited 3 times in total
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail
islam2jannat



Joined: 16 Jan 2006
Posts: 741

PostPosted: Fri May 18, 2007 5:07 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hakim Archuletta has worked within the healing arts profession for over 30 years. His interest in medicine and natural health and the study of God's Creation began as a child. His first formal studies were in the Fine Arts which he studied in the 60's in Berkeley where his expertise ranged from graphic arts to theater, cinema and ethnomusicology. He studied homeopathy and apprenticed with Dr. John Damonte in London in the early 70's. He continued these studies in Berkeley apprenticing with homeopathic doctors and working with the first Homeopathic Study group there. He continued his studies in the Middle East, England and North Africa in the mid 70's. In 1978, Hakim went to Pakistan at the invitation of Hakim Mohammad Said of the Hamdard Foundation and studied there with various Hakims (traditional Islamic doctors) supported by grants from the Bawani Trust. His main teacher was Hakim Taqiuddin Ahmad at the Nizami Dawakhana, where he also learned Pharmacy in the Unani tradition. There he earned the title of "Hakim". Returning to the Americas in 1980, he began teaching students privately and established a Family practice clinic in Santa Barbara California. He has conducted and taught study groups for homeopathy in Santa Barbara, California, Taos, Abiquiu, and Los Alamos, New Mexico for professional and lay persons. He began extensive work as counselor, consultant and Hakim/Homeopath in Abiquiu, New Mexico and by traveling nationally for over ten years. This also included workshops on communication and community consensus building including special focus on youth. He has worked with young people for many years and taught science on a high school level for six years in a very "hands on" method and worked on curriculum that is age appropriate and spiritually based in science for young people. More recently he began to focus on trauma and was trained in the methods of Dr. Peter Levine and others. Today he lectures and teaches classes and workshops nationally. He has conducted workshops and lectured at University of California Berkeley, Harvard, Wellesley, Stanford, UCLA, University of Houston and many others. He addressed and led the New Mexico State Congress in opening prayers after 9/11, writes, reads and organizes poetry readings. He has students and patients across the world.
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail
islam2jannat



Joined: 16 Jan 2006
Posts: 741

PostPosted: Fri May 18, 2007 5:08 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Wink


Hakim Archuletta DVDs

Only registered users can see links on this forum!
Register or Login on forum!



sample talks from youTube

Muslim Men: Listen to Your Wives

Only registered users can see links on this forum!
Register or Login on forum!



Health Food Conspiracy

Only registered users can see links on this forum!
Register or Login on forum!



Stop, Listen and Feel What's Being Said

Only registered users can see links on this forum!
Register or Login on forum!



Is Pleasure Compatible With Spirituality?

Only registered users can see links on this forum!
Register or Login on forum!



How Do You "Think" You Should Feel?

Only registered users can see links on this forum!
Register or Login on forum!



We Don't Realize the Degree to Which We've Lost Feeling

Only registered users can see links on this forum!
Register or Login on forum!



this is my favourite and was enough to make me buy the DvD set
Allah's Mercy: Horses Can Heal

The Watermelon: A Great Natural Remedy!

Only registered users can see links on this forum!
Register or Login on forum!



this True of our time ...!
The Lost Tradition of Eating Together

Only registered users can see links on this forum!
Register or Login on forum!



Earth-Connected People

Only registered users can see links on this forum!
Register or Login on forum!



Tomatoes Sidi Hakim Archuletta PDF lesson

Only registered users can see links on this forum!
Register or Login on forum!




Living Healthy in the Modern World (MP3 Audio) - Part 1
ADAMS Center, Sterling, VA-March 2005
Sidi Hakim Archuletta

Only registered users can see links on this forum!
Register or Login on forum!



Living Healthy in the Modern World (MP3 Audio) - Part 2
ADAMS Center, Sterling, VA—March 2005
Sidi Hakim Archuletta

Only registered users can see links on this forum!
Register or Login on forum!




Allah's Pattern In Creation and Environmental Protection: An Islamic Perspective (Hakim Archuletta and Mohamed El-Gassier) (video)

Only registered users can see links on this forum!
Register or Login on forum!







The following was written, primarily for those who attended the workshop at George Washington University (Purchase this workshop). This introduction only points to ideas and principles I consider very valuable.

SOME EXERCISES

The following exercises make use of the Felt Sense to awaken, or recover, the natural ability to be "present in the body." Recovery of sensation enhances our experience of being present in the world and our ability to regulate and maintain balance.

While these few exercises may be simple, they can help our nervous system in restoring that which was more natural to us as children or disabled by difficult experiences.

They are cumulative and daily practice can open a world of discovery and repair. Your body is a complex whole system that has memory on many levels. By reprogramming your system towards its natural state, your nervous system will gradually begin to remember and the experience of feeling grounded in your sensations will naturally increase. God Willing

There's a lot more here than it may seem, take your time with each one, one at a time. If at any time you feel uncomfortable or that itís too much take a break or stop and relax.

There are additional notes on some principals underlying the exercises following the description of them.

Recovering sensation

1. Recall the last time you felt a strong emotion. Was it anger, joy, sorrow? How did you know you were angry or sad? We don't think sadness or anger, we feel sad or angry. We feel with our body, a simple truth often overlooked. Recall the experience of that strong emotion and pay attention to your felt sense, to what you feel in your body now. Can you recall where in your body you felt angry or sad? What was the sensation that you interpreted as sad or angry? What do you feel now in your body?

2. Using both hands, begin patting your skin, start with your hands , each hand patting the other, front and back, move to a different parts and continue patting the parts of your body, each time paying attention to both the part it is, shoulder, arm leg etc. the sensations you experience. Do this long enough to each part to awaken a stronger sense of the presence of the part.

After doing this for several sessions, of you feel OK and that you can manage more you might begin slapping, a little harder, until you feel some warmth and even some tingling without it being painful. Do this as long as you feel comfortable doing it. Cover as much of the surface of your body as you can. Stop patting or slapping and pay attention to the overall sensations and what you experience in terms of bodily sensations. Take some time in simply observing. See what you can discover. This can bring about surprising results if done daily.

3. When in the shower, pay attention to the sensation of the water as it strikes your body. Using a pulsing showerhead is best. Focus on the physical sensations you experience on different parts of your body. Examine them closely. Notice the part and the sensations, arms, shoulders, back neck etc. Just observe and make note of it all. Do the same in the wind, or even rain, notice the experience on the face, arms, and different parts. Eventually you might notice carefully the feeling of different cloth materials on your body as you move. Try walking barefoot and observing what your feet are experiencing on different surfaces.

4. Observe your sensations in different settings. When you enter a room or step into the outdoors, when you are in traffic, in a crowd or alone, or in the forest, overlooking a vast landscape or any other environment, closely observe differences in the sensations of your body. Compare the differences in relation to the different settings. Notice where the sensations are mostly taking place: chest, arms, head, neck, etc. Observe and explore the quality of your sensations. If the sensations are pleasant, see if you can identify specifically what it is you are physically feeling that enables you to consider it "pleasant." If unpleasant, do the same. Make note of the two kinds of sensations if you can. Then, compare them and simply recognize that these different sensations all occur in YOUR BODY with specific physical qualities. Recognize that these sensations occur as physical experiences with specific qualities, even though they may also be associated with a judgment, memory, analysis or thought. Simply doing this is a big step toward grounding your experiences in bodily sensation.

5. Look at some old photos, one at a time. Spend some time to see if your body experiences differing sensations from different photos from different times and of different people. Observe closely and carefully if the sensations are subtle or more marked. Notice what the sensations are, where they occur and what the qualities of the sensations are.

6. When you are passing time such as waiting, observe what sensations are present in your body. Experiment with shifting attention to various parts of your body and observe the differences in sensations and how the part you are attending to may come into and out of focus. Note the strength of the sensory experience.

7. After some practice with the above, try observing your sensations in various circumstances, meeting an old friend, dealing with a difficult person or an old problem, when some good news comes to you. Notice if paying attention to the physical experience makes it any easier to manage a difficult experience or makes a pleasant experience more so. With some practice you will find that chronically difficult exchanges or experiences are almost always made easier by being "grounded in your body." by awareness of the physical sensations present. This grounding will make it easier to have a choice in how you react in different circumstances.

Standing

The first step in grounding is to remember the natural way to stand, with the knees slightly bent, unlocked.

1. When standing at any time, in line at the market, whenever, observe your knees and legs, how you are standing.

Are your knees locked? If so, recognize that this is NOT a natural way to stand as the entire lower half of the body becomes immobilized. Unlock your knees and observe what this feels like. If it feels unnatural, simply recognize this as your habit and that to stand in a natural way seems strange and unfamiliar to you.

2. Stand with your knees unlocked, slightly bent and feet about six inches apart, almost parallel.

Balance between the balls and heels of your feet and let your upper body relax but remain upright.

Bend more at the knees, lowering yourself until you feel the weight of your body on your legs, keeping your upper body upright and relaxed and your weight balanced between heels and toes.

Keep this position for two to three minutes.

Observe any shakiness, trembling, pain or burning of any kind. If you feel unsteadiness, or trembling, recognize this as not as weakness, but as the strength of the vital force returning to your legs.* If it feels OK to do so let any shaking or trembling just happen, donít try to control it recognizing this fact.

Now slowly straighten up, taking care to not lock your knees but so you are fully upright.

Observe now how you feel the weight of your body on your legs and feet.

Observe how your legs feel.

Is there more of a sense of weight, fullness, solidity?

Do you feel more connected to the ground?

Try shifting your weight slightly from foot to foot and see if you can better sense the full weight of your body on the pad of each foot.

Pay some attention to how your entire body feels, how you feel on the whole. Spend some time and notice what sensations are present.

Consider how you might remember these sensations at another time without the exercise and how to become more familiar with them in your body.

Try raising yourself on the toes of one foot. Notice how easy it is to perform such a complex and delicately balanced task. Realize that this is only possibly by the awesome interaction of sensation, involuntary and voluntary aspects of the nervous system and the muscles and mechanisms of the body. This interaction, input and output is with us every moment in our lives.

Breathing

1. At any time or place stop and pay attention to your breathing.

How full is it? How shallow?

What parts, how much of your body moves in response to the movement of your breath? Can you sense it in your belly, chest, arms, neck, and head?

What do you notice that may limit the breath, tightness or tension? How about your posture? Does it disable your ability to breathe deeply and fully? Just observe this.

Do you recognize any impulses for movement as you recognize any tension? If so, simply recognize them first.

See if you can identify any movements of your back shoulders, spine or any stretches of arms shoulders, neck that might fulfill the impulses. Take some time with this to consider how closely any movements might match the impulses.

Take some time to just observe and reflect before making any movement.

Let your body guide you and begin to make the movements but very very slowly, as if in slow motion. Let your body move however it wants.

See if you can let your body guide itself, not with your mind. Observe very closely your felt sensations as you do this and keep it very slow to enable you to fully experience all sensations that accompany the movements.

Know that your body can guide you; it knows how to do this, let it.

If you have found movements that your body wants to make, explore, let it continue as long as it wants, let it move however it likes. Notice the sensations that may be somewhat painful or pleasurable as you do so, explore this.

Continue moving and stretching for as long as you like until you feel you want to come to a state of repose.

Take some time and pay close attention to all sensations you are experiencing in this state.

Notice your breathing again.

Observe how your body feels with each breath in and out. Notice the quality of the sensations. What is the breath affecting in this in and out process, how is your body and its parts responding?

Consider how you might, in the future, remember this experience, the physical sensations of it. At any time simply stop and carefully pay attention to the breath and notice how it moves the belly, chest, shoulders or even the neck. Realize that it's actually all of the muscles of the upper body actually breathe air into the more passive lungs. We breathe with these muscles and body parts we could say, not with our lungs. This close and careful observation can be a rich experience of awareness, a constructive and meditative but relaxing, healing, and integrating process that should not be underestimated.

2. See if, by repeating this, your breathing becomes deeper or larger and if more of your body takes part in response to the breathing.

Notice how your whole body feels if you're breathing is deeper and more of your body takes part.

Notice how your arms and hands feel with more breathing.

Notice if any emotions arise as you do this.

If so, does any sound seem appropriate to make with feelings that arise; this can be an "ahh" or "uhhh..."

Make the sounds with the breathing and see if you can do so with the emotion that has come up so the sound resonates in your chest.

Notice how your body feels and what sensations come as you continue this.

3. Using an exercise ball or a short padded stool, lie back with the ball just under your shoulder blades. Relax and stretch back opening your chest and expanding your ribcage, arching your back. Relax into this position and let your chest expand. If you are able, raise your arms above your head and let them fall back making the arch even greater and lifting and expanding the chest even more. Be gentle and carefully observe the felt sensations and the stretching of the chest that occurs. If there is pain try breathing and relaxing with each exhalation. See if this gradually releases the tension causing the pain to go. If this is difficult, try doing it little by little and day by day, start with a pillow or two, if necessary, increasing the stretch. Doing this easily and gently daily can bring surprising results.

4. Observe at various times in the day, your breathing. Remember the exercises and respond accordingly allowing your sensations to guide you. Your body knows what to do, give it its due with appreciation of its wisdom. Sitting in your car, on a sofa, a chair, notice if the position you are in facilitates or obstructs your breathing, adjust your position and observe with your felt sense your overall experience. Make this practice a habit and it will become automatic. Stretching and adjusting slowly with awareness will teach your nervous system to remember what it once knew so well.

Breathing and feeling go together. You will not find a depressed person fully breathing. We shut down our feelings by limiting our breathing in order to manage overwhelming experiences. To regain our full experience of life we must breathe. It is said in a tradition that Moses, peace be upon him, asked God what His greatest hidden secret was and God replied: "Breath" Remember also that we have to some degree shut down this part of ourselves for survival and adaptation to the experience of trauma or particular social setting and to awaken it we may face some sense of fear or danger. Awakening feeling means to experience both joy and pain. If any of these exercises seem too much or overwhelming, relax and leave them off or return to the standing exercise. If the experience seems too much you may want to find a practitioner of somatic therapy to assist you with more work.

Hakim Archuletta April 2005

Notes on RECOVERING SENSATION

Our nervous systems are vast and complex. The ability to experience sensations of all kinds is natural and important for its function.

Reflection, awareness and attention to what we are experiencing in our bodies with all its qualities while moving through the world is like being aware of the smells, colors and beauty of a forest as we travel through it. This can awaken or bring to life our actual feelings of "hamd" (praise) and "shukr" (thankfulness), to experience life less in a realm of abstract thought or ideas and more as an experiential reality.

Grounding our experiences and ourselves in the world by sensation enables us to automatically carry an awareness of how and where we actually are at all times in relation to all things around us. We then unconsciously carry with us a sense of the actual boundary of our place in the world. This observation can also enable more natural regulation of our nervous system and increases its capacity and resilience to various situations. To carry this awareness can bring more to our lives than we may realize.

Being present in our bodies was more natural when we were children, and for most of us this "being present" was gradually programmed out of our consciousness or shut down by trauma, feelings that were overwhelming, or by a lifestyle in which we learned to live outside of ourselves altogether. Placing a three year old in front of a TV, finding something that will "occupy" her so that mom can get on with her work is one example of the kind of foundational training that teaches us to live outside ourselves.

Success with occupying a child in this way is a prime way to teach her to avoid personal, live contact or action in the world in favor of abstract and seemingly "real" distraction. Most children will feel some sense of loss or separation in this redirected focus, but they will eventually learn to "live" in this artificial world rather than the actual one. At the same time, many children object strongly to this and begin to act out their displeasure at being left alone. Abandonment to television becomes one of the most compelling foundations for behavior in our world today, the hypnotic trance-like state, the pain and false pleasure embedded in it helps account for much of the energy that drives the industry itself.

From these kinds of foundations, we begin to learn and develop more elaborate systems of distraction derived from feelings of separation, and become addicted to their use when faced with overwhelming events, or even the stress of everyday life.

In the case of most men, as a result of their particular training and upbringing, distraction is used as a strategy for avoidance and survival in the face of any feeling at all. Our addiction to distraction and avoidance takes us from the act of fully experiencing pleasure or pain and eventually from the real experience of life itself. We become lost in superficial experience and lost in superficial remedies as well.

Western culture is rife with many more such examples. Our modern age from the turn of the 20th century onward is marked by an enormous proliferation of images and the development of a plethora of abstract experiences outside ourselves. Photo albums have replaced the extended family, movies and TVs have replaced adventure and friendship. The internet has become a virtual world that we look upon as part of life and yet remains cold and two dimensional, without smell, taste or tactile sensation even with promises of îinteractionî or ìrealityî. This is a collective strategy developed as a means of coping with continued and historical trauma.

All this has created a narcissistic culture in which we live in the space of an image of how we are supposed to live and not how we actually feel. This entails being divorced from sensation and feeling. Eventually whole parts and layers of our being become senseless and abstracted until we are unable to genuinely care about things as we should. We continue to go through the motions and postures of "caring," since we think and believe this is our responsibility, yet somewhere inside us we know how things really are, even if we are no longer able to embody this in our lives. This creates a terrible disconnect and feeds the sense of hopelessness. All this in turn impacts our physical, emotional and spiritual well being.

There are countless ways to explore and awaken the felt sense, and there are many that we can discover for ourselves. Remember, these are exercises to recover that which is innate within us by Gods design and something that was at one time more easily and naturally available to us

The ability to shut down feelings when things are too much for us to handle emotionally is also a Mercy from God, enabling us to continue functioning even if it may be on a less conscious level. Nevertheless, our ability to gently wake up and go beyond this shutting down is intimately connected with genuine growth and knowledge.

On Standing, Breathing

Grounding means connecting to the earth. The nervous system naturally activates, charges up, and discharges. This is a constant rising and falling of activation, ongoing, with the taking in of information and charge and expressing of it accordingly, it is in the breath, in the heartbeat in all processes of life in the body. There is rise and fall, waves. This is an ongoing principle found in all of creation, "In the creation of the heavens and the earth and in the alternation of night and day... there are signs for those who reflect" Qur'an. This is a great verse for understanding both the Hikmah (wisdom) of the body and movement in the entire creation. Our body charges and discharges, activates and deactivates in various ways. When discharge is disabled, charge remains, seeking an outlet, or if the discharge continues to be disabled, the system begins to shut down to manage what would be a destructive, overcharged system. Grounding happens to an "earth" of any kind. For the nervous system, the earth itself it an excellent ground and nature, an extended earth, serves this purpose well. We all know how a walk in the forest can be so calming and healing. Connection is necessary for "earthing" and connecting to something solid and supportive is the other requirement for the grounding experience.

The natural swing from activation to relaxation, from contraction to expansion, and the regulation of that is essential for balance. The loss of this and the swing to extremes represents much familiar pathology.

The Muslim practices his basic prayer by connecting to God through the actions of washing with water first, standing, bowing and then prostration on the ground, the earth itself if possible. It is said in the Qurían that for those who practice this regularly, that: ìÖupon them there shall be no fear nor anxietyî This brings for the Muslim a grounding by feeling connected to God five times a day or more and incidentally to the earth. For them this can serve as a strong grounding.

We often express this grounding as ìsupportî and the earth serves this function consistently and loyally through its gravity for our entire lives, eventually embracing our physical body itself in death.

Mother is for us, another excellent ground and we seek what we experienced from her in many things for release, support and the ability to regulate the charge and discharge and resulting sense of wholeness or completion. Unresolved discharge is not experienced as wholeness as there is still unfinished expression. With the mother and child there is constant charge and discharge, connection and disconnection. There is a natural rhythm to this in all healthy relationships. If the natural flow of this rhythm is disrupted and connection and disconnection is not made harmoniously, there can be felt either a need from the disconnection, seeking "her" even to obsession, or an aversion, even hatred, from too much connection and over activation not successfully released. Many of our physical and emotional pathologies and machinations of our culture rest on this need to identify with, to connect, and the harmonious regulation of it all.

After mother there is father and siblings, friends and neighbors, neighborhoods, house and home, even the house of cardboard and mud, family and familiar, all can serve to identify with and ground: clubs, gangs, place, country, affiliations, cults, race and ethnicity, foods, clothing and cultural artifacts, from anywhere and anything to which one feels connected, works. When a person feels this connection, with his senses, the grounding takes place. The feeling itself, not the idea or thought alone, is necessary for the nervous system to take part, whether it is conscious or unconscious. When feeling connected is diminished, grounding is diminished. We seek, we need, family, community, affiliation.

This need for connection, so essential and primal can help us to understand an expression by some of loyalty (attachment) beyond reason to something. If they identify themselves with a group and find grounding in it, the issue of loss from this can be then, as one of survival on, usually, an unconscious level. In the cult or the nation the leader may push the envelope beyond not only all reason and common sense but past limits of well being. The need for connection to both the leader and the group is so great that the person may accept a situation of great hardship or more perversely, even destroy themselves in order to sustain this elemental root need. Our history is filled with examples of this need and consequences of its loss not only in the political and social but in countless stories of love and romance.

Feeling genuinely connected to God serves for the healthy worshipper as strong connection while connection to ideologies alone can often be desperate and insufficient for genuine grounding. Ideologies will usually be supported by the group whose constituency gives them solidity. The rituals and accoutrements of a religion may also serve to support the grounding through the physical of objects and rituals. The Muslim, in his connecting to God has not only in his five daily prayers, but in much of his worship, his body, water and earth to serve and embody this.

In our present times, the traditional means of connection, to family, friends, neighbors, land, animals, culture, simply in conversation and all else that would connect us has been so disturbed that its lack becomes an issue not only in our social and spiritual health but immediately in the physiological functions and health of our bodies. Our present condition and lifestyle seriously disables healing from the stress and traumas naturally. This inability to heal from trauma, and the resultant violence, disassociation and ìloss of our sensesî will only increase as time goes on if we continue the life style we have developed. One Shaykh (teacher) said that the flood in the time of Nuh (Noah) was one of water and in this age it is one of disconnection.

The exercises represent simple methods for reconnecting on our individual experiential level, for reconnecting on a very primitive level in our own bodies to our selves and a means for gaining integrity and sense that can, God willing, become a starting place that can extend from there outward into our lives and actions.

Click here to purchase the workshop at George Washington University.


Last edited by islam2jannat on Fri May 18, 2007 5:30 pm; edited 5 times in total
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail
islam2jannat



Joined: 16 Jan 2006
Posts: 741

PostPosted: Fri May 18, 2007 5:08 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Some recommended reading for more on topics from the Washington D.C. workshop. Click here to purchase the workshop.

Traditional Islamic Medicine:

Tibb-ul Nabbi or Medicine of the Prophet
A translation of two works of the same name
1. Al-Suyyuti
2. Mahmud bin Mohamed al-Chaghhayni
Current publisher unknown.
Good for basic principles and foundational concepts.

Medicine of the Prophet
Ibn Qayyim Al Jawziyya
Translated by Penelope Johnstone, Islamic Texts Society
Beautifully produced but difficult for application. Needs a teacher to glean that which is practical from some archaic material and some misleading prescriptions.

Nutrition:

Nourishing Traditions
Sally Fallon, New Trends publishing

Nutrition and Physical Degeneration
Weston A. Price

Homeopathy, Medicine:

The Science of Homeopathy
George Vithoulkas

Principals and Art of Cure by Homeopathy
H.A. Roberts

Lecture on Homeopathic Philosophy
James Tyler Kent

Boerickes Repertory
William Boericke

Desktop Guide
Roger Morrisson

Vaccination
Randall Neustadter

Who Is Your Doctor and Why
Alonzo Shadman

Trauma, Relations, Bioenergetics:

Waking the Tiger
Peter A. Levine

I Don't Want to Talk About It
Terrance Real, Scribner

How Do I Get Through to You
Terrance Real, Simon and Schuster

Depression and the Body
Alexander Lowen

Spirituality and the Body
Alexander Lowen

The Conscious Ear
Alfred A. Tomatis

What is an emotion, Essay
William James

Nature, First Nature:

So many books now on the imbalance of our lifestyle, even Freud's discussion of our separation from nature speaks clearly of the immensity of the implications.

The Technological Society
Jaques Ellul

Mary Oliver
Collected Poems
Almost all of Mary Oliver's poems are reflections on nature.

Ivan Illich
Medical Nemesis, Deschooling Society, etc.

Frankenstien
Mary Shelly

Time Wars
Jeremy Rifkin

Technopoly
Neil Postman

The Paradigm Conspiracy
Denise Breton and Christopher Largent

Websites:

Foundation for Human Enrichment:
Only registered users can see links on this forum!
Register or Login on forum!


Relational Recovery Institute:

Only registered users can see links on this forum!
Register or Login on forum!


Weston Price Foundation:

Only registered users can see links on this forum!
Register or Login on forum!

Back to top
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail
islam2jannat



Joined: 16 Jan 2006
Posts: 741

PostPosted: Fri May 18, 2007 5:20 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

A Weekend with Hakim Archuletta...

Assalamu'alaykum wa Rahmatullah,

I promised some people I'd post a few points from a recent weekend with Sidi Hakim Archuletta, on my blog...so here it is, insha'Allah...they're not a linear set of points (as he says his lectures aren't either)...just things that stuck out for me...

I should start by saying that meeting him was itself a healing for me -- his presence really warmed my heart and I found myself missing him before he even left, subhan'Allah. I pray Allah bring us together again soon.

The Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him and give him peace) said,
"There is a part of the body that, if sound, the entire body is sound"
and that part is the heart.
(Hadith #6 reported by Bukhari and Muslim)

Sidi Hakim started by telling us that the world 'health' comes from the Old English word 'wholth', so to be healthy means to be whole. Hikmah means "wisdom" and Allah is al-Hakim (the Wise) -- the principle in the hikmah tradition is that each thing has its place in the universe -- when this is proper, we have wholeness. So we have to find our place by finding our true nature. Why are we here? What are we? That is what Islam is here to tell us: we are here to worship Allah Ta'Ala...with our entire being!

Much of his message this weekend was about coming together as a people and a community. He mentioned that one Shaykh said that the flood in the time of the Prophet Nuh (peace be upon him) was one of water, and that the flood of our times is one of separation. In light of this he advised us to never eat alone and added there is a hadith in which we were told that the one who eats alone eats with Shaytan. We as Muslims believe we are what we eat (so eat whole, halal, organic foods made at home!), and we are also who we eat with, and how we eat (eat with people, with your hands, on the ground!).

He touched on the long-term problems we are creating by being distant from family and friends -- situations where mothers are raising children in isolation, having to put them in front of TV sets so they can get their work done, and the adverse effects of such parenting on both mother and child.

At the heart of his message was this advice of coming together, knowing our neighbours, visiting one another, eating together, praying together, and being together.

The Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him and give him peace) said,
"the one who knows himself knows his Lord."

We need each other to get a sense of who we are.

The Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him and give him peace) said,
"the believer is a mirror to his fellow believer"

So why do we avoid that company? Because we are afraid to face where we are at -- it's sad/sorrowful to realize the time we've wasted, the state we're in...but we need to remember that the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) changed the face of the planet in his lifetime -- we're not him, but we should aspire to be like him! The largest growth industry in the world is that of illicit drugs...why? Because people can't face their own lives -- they need to get "high". We don't have time for our own friends so we watch the 'friends' on TV because they can't disappoint or hurt us. We can't live life so we watch "reality television" and let other people 'live' for us...

Sidi Hakim also spoke quite a bit on the differences between genders. One Moroccon Shaykh said the wisdom behind men being obligated to pray in congregation while women may pray alone -- that it is partially because men need to be made to come together whereas women naturally incline towards doing so.

He brought to light the fact that it was not by any accident that the Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him and give him peace) when he received the revelation, ran to his wife Khadija for comfort and consultation. So, he said, from this men should realize the need to consult their wives, to listen to them -- he told us that Shaykh Darqawi said the beginning of the path is to hear/to listen...this means men should not always feel the need to fix things or feel their wives are just complaining, but that they just need to listen!

Sidi Hakim also spent a lot of time on some basic elements of life: breathing and standing. He made us realize that most of us don't breathe. Breath is life. The more you breathe, the more you live. Real breathing means you feel the breath in every part of your body -- right to your finger tips. He showed us how our standing is not in line with our natural way of doing so -- we lock our knees, we walk rigidly, our bodies are clamped together (especially those who pump weights!), our sitting ruins our posture...things to keep in mind in our daily lives...

So...
BREATHE!
and remember,

The Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him and give him peace) said,
"the root of all ailments is cold" ... so stay warm!

May Allah preserve Sidi Hakim, bless him abundantly, continue to make him a means of healing for people, and give him a long, healthy, happy life of 'ibaadah. Ameen.

Only registered users can see links on this forum!
Register or Login on forum!



Smile
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   Reply to topic    sufitariqahs Forum Index -> Islamic Food - Healing and Health- Spiritual Well being All times are GMT
Page 1 of 1

 
Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum




Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group

Abuse - Report Abuse
Powered by forumup.co.uk free forum, create your free forum!
Created by Raulken of Hyarbor S.r.l.
TOS & Privacy.

Page generation time: 0.378