Monday, March 30, 2015

Traditional Faith healers Philippines - Various Methods, Medicine and Faith

Philippines has today a vast various methods of faith healers, some stemming from ancient traditional methods via herbs, spiritual, masseuses, natural vegetation ( such as banana leaves ) and a great variety of mixed methods of modern medicine mixed with traditional ones. Some are pretty much whatever to find cures and you got to also be aware of the scammers out there..

Real authentic practitioners do provide results via psychological and physical. There are great reasons who when you get a messauge, your body feels refreshed and lifted. It's helps clearing blood streams from congestions and overall revive the body, and this is backed by studies on matter. It's important to point out. Medicine and doctors can cost money and the traditional method is simply much more cost efficient when a majority of the people cannot afford the modern prices, then it makes more sense to revert to methods that helped people before modern medicine.

This was a good find that I want to share with you that discusses "how does faith healing work"


In Asia there are few health services of the Western variety available for the majority of the people, but the services of a "doctor" versed in native medical lore and trained in the traditional Asian manner can be obtained without too much trouble. The average Asian doesn't visit a doctor's office. He must be very sick before he goes to the expense of calling a doctor - either Western or Asian. Doctors and medicine cost money and the ordinary Asian doesn't have money on hand for such an expense. Medical treatment may mean that someone goes hungry and that a whole family may have to eat less for a year for the sake of one ailing person. A doctor is often considered as a last resort. The tolerance level for pain is very high. I recall an elderly Filipina who came to our home seeking medical care. She was very ill, yet she didn't complain. She appeared stoic. We brought her to the hospital, where she died only a few days after admittance. We have seen many people with ugly sores walking down the street. The deformed, maimed and blind people are seen wherever one travels. Large cities in the Philippines like Manila and Cebu have up-to-date medical services, but the vast rural areas in the provinces suffer from an acute lack of modern medical services. Because the medical needs are so enormous and treatment so expensive, the ancient medical practices, whether in the Philippines or elsewhere, are still popular.

In Sri Lanka, for example, magical medical men are doing brisk business. These people call themselves "occult practitioners". The ministry of Cultural Affairs gives financial assistance to the legitimate practitioners of the magical arts. "Any such person," explains ministry secretary Nalin Ratnayake, "must have his application authenticated by the MP for his area." This is all it takes to be in business. These occult practitioners use a wide variety of methods. The most spectacular is the Yak Netum, or devil dancing, to appease the evil spirits, believed to bring various forms of illness. The proponents of the magical method maintain that their art is an arm of Ayurveda, the ancient South Asia medical discipline related to yoga and which relies heavily on herbal cures. D. G. Gabo Singho, president of the Sri Lanka Occult Practitioners Association, takes his work seriously. He comments: "Of course there are the charlatans who practice it for money. But any true Kattadiya (occult practitioner) is generally carrying, on an important family tradition. Money is not important. Many have gained a wealth of knowledge from ola (palm leaf) books preserved through the generations."
In the Philippines, there are basically three types of traditional healers: the Albularyo (herb doctors), the Baylan (mediums) and the Espiritista (spiritualists).

Albularyo

A herb doctor lives in a village and has an occupation. He may be a farmer, a plow maker or a carpenter. He is well sought after. He will not perform surgery, He will accompany his patient all the way to the hospital. But even there his task is not always finished. When the relatives of the patient feel that the hospital treatment is not adequate, they may still resort to the herb doctor. One such "doctor" said: "At times the parents or relatives still call me in. I remember several instances where I would be smuggled into the hospital posing as a visitor. When the doctors and nurses are out of the room I treat the patient, using herbs and oraciones (prayers)." The matter of treatment seems strange to the Westerner. If the herb doctor attributes a relatively mild case of fever in a child to the spirits, he may try to drive them away through the offering of prayers and food. Dr. Juan M. Flavier, president of the International Institute of Rural Reconstruction in the Philippines, interviewed some herb doctors. He asked one, "What types of illness do you feel doctors don’t know about?” The herb doctor replied, "Those of the spirit and those that are unseen, as for example, the sickness of the soil." The "sickness of the soil" refers to being struck down with illness brought on by spirits living in the ground. The disease may take various forms. The herb doctor commented to Dr. Flavier, "No one can deny the existence of such spirits but doctors continue to deny them as causes of some diseases.

The Baylan

So called mediumistic healing, in one form or another, is found in many countries. In the Philippines, mediums are believed to possess extraordinary powers to cure sickness, to exorcise evil spirits from the rice fields, or out of the human body, and to intercede with good spirits for the petitions of the people. The mediums claim to have special knowledge of the environmental spirits. They perform all important rituals, chant prayers for the community when the barrio faces a crisis. How do mediums function? F. Landa Jocano, a Filipino scholar, witnessed numerous mediumistic experiences in a small, rural community in central Panay.

Espiritists

Plane loads of ailing Western tourists have made their way to Baguio City to seek healing from a "faith healer". Baguio City, a beautiful resort center, north of Manila, is frequented by rich Filipinos and Westerners during the hot dry season. It is well-known for its faith-healers. At least four faith-healers practice there. Some ten others operate in nearby Pangasinan province. These healers are called spiritualist, psychic or astral surgeons who claim to cut incisions with their fingers and perform other miracles of para-science.

Read The Full Post http://www.reformedreflections.ca/studies/faith-h-in-philippines.html



The power within us is something astounishing and just amazing. More people should connect spiritually rather the materialistically. Love and emotions can only be felt and not bought. Do you agree ??  Comment below

Hope your gotten value out of this post.

Have a great day

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Saturday, March 28, 2015

The Healing Arts of the Philippines - Must Read


The author uses Ablon to waken sleeping nerves
How many know about awakening sleeping nerves ? This is something that many people are not aware of.

The lessons of this are truly something worth looking into and even analysing and expanding. Science says we have enough nerves that can extend half way to the moon... hmmmm thus maybe we do indeed have sleeping nerves don't you think ???

Here check this out please.
The Healing Arts of the Philippines ByVirgil J. Mayor Apostol

  ByVirgil J. Mayor Apostol
Therapeutic massage in the Philippines is a tradition as old as the island's first inhabitants. Most widely known as Hilot or Hilut, the massage tradition is known by a variety of other names.
Some names for massage therapy in different dialects of the Philippines
  • Aplos (Bontoc)
  • Aptus (Ivatan)
  • Unar (Kalinga)
  • Kemkem (Pangasinan)
  • Ilot or Ilut (Ilocano, Itawis, Zambal, Pampango)
  • Ilu (Ibanag)
  • Ilat (Isneg)
  • Elot (Ilongot)
  • Agod or Agud (Maguindanaon, Maranao)
  • Hagud (Bukidnon)
  • Ablon (Northern Ilocano)
  • All are part of the traditional folk medicine that has survived the ages despite the coming of modern technology. There are various categories of folk doctor (arbolario) including the practitioner of Ablon or Ilut (mangablon or mangngilut), the herbalist (mangngagas), the bonesetter (mammullo), the obstetrician (partera), and other specialists such as snake- or animal-bite curers (mannuma) and shamans or spiritual healers (mangallag). All of these practices have common roots with other healing modalities in Southeast Asian countries including those of Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Burma, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, and other outlying islands. Lying just above the equator, the Philippines is situated in the Pacific Ocean, north of Indonesia, east of Vietnam, and south of Taiwan. A tropical climate is endured with a cooler dry season from March through June, and a wet season the rest of the year. Filipinos belong to the Austric stock of peoples that inhabit an area extending from Madagascar off the coast of East Africa, to Easter Island in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.There are even those who believe that the Philippines was once part of the ancient continent of Lemuria that was swallowed up by the Pacific Ocean long before Atlantis was in the Atlantic Ocean.

    As the natives migrated into the three major islands - Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao, with them came their animistic beliefs and customs. Assimilated through migration and trade was the influence of Hindu-Malayan and Islamic-Malayan cultures via the islands to the south, as well as the European influence of Spanish conquest, a domain that lasted over 300 years since the 16th century. Thus, practices from a conglomeration of sciences, religions, arts, and medical practices, are still evident throughout the islands to this present day. Most prevalent, though, is a spiritualism overseeing the etymology or diagnosis of an illness to the actual healing.  Read Full Post Here - http://asiapacificuniverse.com/asia_pacific_features32.htm
    The people in Philippines have been healers since they set foot on those islands which dates back to thousands of years and it's important that this knowledge gets passed to others to know about it.

    When I came across this, I knew it was a unique find because I had never heared about this before yet it does make a lot of sense to me.

    What do you think about it ? Comment below

    Philippino Traditional Therapy - Manghihilot For Better Health and healing

    Alternative medicine has been practiced in the Philippines and is still is today in many parts. With various methods not all came in form of herbs and medicine..

    There is a common traditional therapy. Manghihilot comes as a massage therapist/chiropractor which promotes healing and good health. A treatment of very affordable and with little to no resources. This simple, yet effective method relies on mainly the hands of a healer who touches and checks for stress, tensions, body issues like bone fractures, stretching muscles as well.Very important to point out how this ancient indigenous practice recognizes the natural benefits of touch therapy.

    The principal of this therapy is that being ill is an imbalance of energies and spiritual strength.

    Not just anyone can be a healer. The healer is to be one connected with the elements of earth, water, air and fire. Some one who is balanced and understands balance.. A healer can by touch feel the patient palm, back and checks temperature, lumps, tensions and muscle stresses.
    What medical sciences call today as the Diagnose stage. Once the healer has his diagnoses, they begin the treatment or session.

    A session can take a few minutes depending on the person and follow up are needed as well. Most healers will incorporate special oils, herbs and even banana leaves. Remember the point of this is to bring the balance back to the person either from mental issues like stress, ect or physical issues like internal issues and or being sick. The massaging of muscles and tissues, improves the blood flow through the body and applying pressure on certain locations.

    This simple, yet effective method relies on mainly person to person interaction and a healer is someone who can help people live better. If it worked for thousands of years. I'm certain it will work today as well.

    Do you need a health insurance plan to afford a Manghihilot ? No. That's one of the best parts about this therapy is it's very cost effective for everyone and with very little if any prescribed medicine. It's not pro big profits that's for sure. It's pro sound body and sound mind.

    Offcourse though Manghihilot are not miracle workers, they do what they can and science has proven it effective to extents. It's more important the individual live a balanced life and thus maybe they won't need a Manghihilot, but seeing one is never a bad thing cause the body takes much abuse daily from ourselves and it deserves to be healed in what we eat and how we take care of it.

    #Manhihilot #ancienttherapy

    Best regards
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