Introudction | Selections | The
Integral Map | The
Center for Human Flourishing

Chapter 1
Unlike all other living beings we are born with a unique
consciousness that brings with it the capacity for language, creative
imagination, self-reflection, and a universal loving-kindness and compassion.
These capacities are reserved for humankind alone. If we choose to fully
develop them, they enable us to realize in our lifetime an expansive and
sustained health, happiness, and wholeness, a human flourishing of body,
mind, and spirit. No other living being is endowed with these precious
possibilities. We are destined for more than ordinary health or an ordinary
life.
Once we hold the preciousness of life and the possibility
of human flourishing near and dear, its remembrance no longer fades
with the busyness of daily life. Then all thoughts, speech, and action
begin to be measured by a different standard. Rather than patching together
an ordinary life and ordinary health from the partial opportunities
laid out by our current culture, we begin to demand more from ourselves.
We are willing to set out on this new adventure in search of life’s
greatest treasure, a human flourishing of health, happiness, and wholeness.
Chapter 4
Integral healing is the proper approach for our time.
It provides an important leap in vision that is equal to our current
understanding and capacity, allows for an open ended future, and assures
a more encompassing health and life that go far beyond what is possible
with conventional approaches. The integral approach is like a compass
that orients and guides us toward an innovative and expansive healing
process. It is distinguished by five guiding principles: holistic, evolutionary,
intentional, person-centered, and dynamic. The first two are the core
principles that define and distinguish the integral process. The final
three are the application principles that guide us in applying the integral
model to our life. The final goal of integral healing is human flourishing—a
profound, hardy, and sustained health, happiness, and wholeness. Let’s
now examine the five principles that together provide a map to an integral
approach.
Chapter 5
A seed requires the proper soil for its germination.
If we plant it in clay or sand, it will not grow, but if we plant it
in rich earth that is continuously cultivated, a beautiful garden will
naturally arise. To gain full access to the possibilities of integral
health, we similarly need to prepare a proper set of conditions. At
birth, we can only reach out to meet our need for survival. With conventional
education, we learn about conventional health care, treatment, prevention,
and health-promotion strategies. But as we become sophisticated adults,
we develop the capacity to consider, choose, and realize a more expansive
integral health. For this possibility, we need to shift our priorities,
cultivate the ground of our life, focus inward, and expand our consciousness.
With these efforts, the seed of integral health can fully bloom.
Chapter 12
Without integral practice, we experience only a portion
of the health that is available to us. It is the portion that is in accord
with the beliefs, values, and practices of our culture. However ,if we
gather together the wisdom and methods developed throughout time and across
diverse cultures, we will gain an understanding of the human possibility
that far exceeds the vision, knowledge, and approaches of any one culture.
In this way, we will uncover a vision of health,
happiness, and wholeness that is comprehensive in that it covers all
aspects of human experience, sustained in that it is immune to outer
adversities, and expansive in its reach for extended capacities and
human flourishing. Never before have humans been able to access, catalogue,
and utilize the scope of knowledge that is now available to assist us
in attaining a far-reaching health. Our access to the accomplishments
of diverse cultures; new and advanced research into somatic, sensory,
cognitive, and contemplative capacities; and an interest in integral
theory enable us to envision health that reflects the full flourishing
of the human possibility.
Chapter 13
Ordinary, or relative, health is based upon our biology. It is our conventional
understanding of health. We are healthy when our body is free of the
signs and symptoms of disease or disability, and unhealthy when they
are present. This is what is meant by relative health—it is relative
to our biological functioning. Health based on the condition of the
body is always in flux, uncertain, temporary, and invariably deteriorates
with aging and imminent death. In fact, ordinary health changes moment
to moment as our body subtly undergoes the less apparent and subtler
aspects of aging.The second aspect of health is integral, or ultimate,
health. It is based on our level of consciousness. We are healthy when
our mind is both free of mental afflictions and suffering and when we
experience an enduring well-being, happiness, and wholeness that is
independent of our biology and outer circumstances. Integral, or ultimate,
health is sustained regardless of the adversities of life, aging, and
death. It is intentional, self-cultivated, and flourishes over time.
This aspect of health is the unique and precious possibility of human
life.
Chapter 14
Butter is the hidden sweet essence of milk. But for
butter to emerge from milk, the milk must be churned. Health, happiness,
and wholeness are similarly the unseen sweet essence of human life.
To reveal this essence, we must develop ourselves and our life. As we
have learned in this book, we can accomplish this by aspiring to a higher
vision of health and engaging in integral practices that extend and
expand our capacity and ability .In this way, we can evolve a new level
of health that then gives rise to the unique treasures of human existence.
There are those, including the doubting voices within
each of us, who will see this expansive vision as a fanciful and unrealizable
utopian ideal. The habituated mind prefers to cling to familiar and
limited ways of thinking about health and healing. But that is not what
our times are about. In our deepest, most silent places, we each know
that far more is possible than we have ever dreamt of. At this time
in human development, we are called to live a life of the highest meaning
and purpose.
Chapter 16
The fruits will begin to emerge early in your work.
We know from personal accounts and modern research that each step—our
initial turn inward, our preparations, and our early efforts at practice—will
lead to a noticeable, progressive enhancement of health, happiness,
and wholeness. With time, your faith will be transformed into confidence,
and with each passing day thereafter, your confidence will be further
transformed until it becomes an unshakable certainty. Like a ripening
fruit, you will not be able to reverse course. You will harvest the
fruits of a well-lived life.
Integral development is the way we uncover the genius
of the human possibility for a precious and profound health, happiness,
and wholeness.. It is the only antidote for a troubled life and a troubled
world. When we engage an integral process the work we do inside is the
work that the world so urgently needs. Where there is inner peace, there
is outer peace. Where there is inner harmony, there is outer harmony.
Where there is inner health there is outer health. Healing ourselves
is healing others. An integral life begets an integral world. In this
way we become the doctor, the nurse, and the medicine to our self and
to the larger community of humankind.
© Elliott Dacher, M.D. (From Integral
Health: The Path to Human Flourishing,
Basic Health, October 2006)
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