Ryan Crossfield

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121. expectations of health

For two million years man was a success. His journey through time efficiently living as a hunter-gatherer might have seen him through another million-year anniversary. Yet, for us, the chances of our way of life seeing us through another passing century is diminished with each day’s activities.

During our transition to modernity from the hunter-gatherer life, those few thousand years have revealed to us that we can master our environment, but not without consequence. Our efforts to create a world based on desire has wreaked havoc upon the natural order of the world and managed to bring into disrepute the highly evolved good sense that guided our behavior throughout the entirety of our coevolution with this planet. Led by the subjective and uncomprehending gaze of scientific thought, our instinctual competence has seen an increasingly diminutive role over time. Our innate sense of what is best for us has been superseded by the scientific theory, letting intellect serve as the foundation to decipher what should be done — surgery, medication, suppression of symptoms — without taking our real needs into consideration — proper nutrition, lifestyle, aligning ourselves with nature.

We were not formed by the intellectual thought processes theorized and borne out of a lab setting, that sought to guide us toward a better tomorrow. Our successful march forward was only achievable through the adaptation of our environment, led by the expectations of the past. In a sense, we came out of the world, thus are adapted to thrive within it if given the permission to listen to our instinctual needs, instead of the loudest opinions on what should be done to capture health. Therefore, aligning ourselves in accordance to what the body expects by looking to the past to design programs and initiatives, versus the tragic narrative composed by the popular opinion of the day, will best serve us in our efforts to recapture our health. 

In the Continuum Concept, author Jean Liedloff speaks to this very fact, in that “Expectation… is founded as deeply in man as his very design. His lungs not only have, but can be said to be, an expectation of air; his eyes are an expectation of light rays of the specific range of wavelengths sent out by what is useful for him to see at the hours appropriate for his species to see them; his ears are an expectation of vibrations caused by the events most likely to concern him, including the voices of other people; and his own voice is an expectation of ears functioning similarly in them.” She goes on to say that his list can be indefinitely extended; “waterproof skin and hair — expectation of rain; pigmentation in skin — expectation of sun; perspiratory mechanism — expectation of heat; coagulator mechanism — expectation of accidents to body surfaces; reflex mechanism — expectation of the need for speed of reaction in emergencies.” 

It is this sense of expectation that led our body to its robustness and resiliency over millennia. The slow transition granted us the time to easily adapt to the environment we found ourselves within, living in good health and harmony with the natural environment. The sudden shift over the past few thousand years created significant changes to our environment as we pushed toward modernity. With it, we saw lifespan’s expand and at the same time healthspan’s reduce. Instead of understanding the reason behind our declines in health were due to a mismatch in our environment — one divorced from nature and all its wisdom — we used our intellect, guided by scientific thought to suppress our instinctual urges, further separating us from the health that was so easily found by those of past generations who’s success was afforded by succumbing to the natural way of doing things. 

How is it that we got things so wrong? How is it that the forces of nature that put us together in good health to begin with knew what we would need? As with mastery of anything it comes down to experience. The lineage of experiences encountered from the first single-cell eukaryote to the multi-trillion cellular structure we recognize as human is vast enough to defy comprehension, and at the same time obvious in the sense that the only way to become proficient at anything is through repetition. In the millions of years preceding this pivotal point in our history, what you and I have become is the culmination of experiences ranging from environmental changes resulting in everything from temperature fluctuations to the availability of nourishment. All of which gave our body the data to inherently know what it needs to thrive, transmitted by means still unknown to science. 

The intellect of scientific thought has largely suppressed the instinctual urges of what we inherently know is right. The epidemic rates of poor health, disease, and obesity have been brought upon us by differing consistently to the idea that what we read is better than what our body is telling us. Our continued reliance on a system that has constantly failed us is nothing less than insanity.