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Cross Match: The Intersection of
Medicine and Iyengar Yoga

Arjun von Caemmerer

BKS Iyengar Yoga Association of Australia

Published with the permission of Yoga Vaani, the Newsletter of the BKS Iyengar Yoga Association of Australia Ltd.

Introduction
This article explores the overlapping territories of Iyengar Yoga and Medicine. It has been written from my perspective as both a teacher of Iyengar Yoga and general medical practitioner. Although I try to practise Medicine as a doctor, and to teach yoga as an Iyengar Yoga teacher, I find it is neither possible nor desirable to completely separate these: as a yoga teacher I cannot shut out, or turn off, my medical background, and some yoga students also have, on occasion, recourse to consult me as a medical practitioner. This article looks at some of the instances of these intersections, and I hope it will provide some useful stimulus for reflection and constructive thought, not just on the interrelations between Iyengar Yoga teachers and health professionals, but also for Iyengar Yoga teachers in their interactions with their students.


I graduated with a basic medical degree from Sydney University in 1987 (MBBS Hons1) and, after completing 4 years of postgraduate training, became a Fellow of the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners in 1996. I was awarded an Introductory Iyengar Yoga teaching certificate in 1992 and a Junior Intermediate (Level 3) teaching certificate in 2000.

Being awarded a degree or certificate does not necessarily mean that anything more than a certain minimum standard has been reached, and detailing my formal qualifications is certainly not meant to imply that I consider myself as anything of an "expert" in either Medicine or Iyengar Yoga. Rather, I see myself as having a relationship - more accurately an apprenticeship - to each of these disciplines, and possibly, therefore, an unusual vantage point from where observations regarding the intersection of these fields can be made.

At the time of writing this I have been working in General Practice for around 10 years. The Clinic is sited in a dual industrial and residential area and so the field of medicine practised covers both the traditional "Family Medicine" of general practice, as well as Occupational Health. I am thus consulted by a wide spectrum of patients in which all age ranges are represented. The Clinic also includes opportunities to teach medical students and has a complement of General Practice Registrars in training.

Charged Encounters
There are many issues that can arise when the worlds of Medicine and Yoga meet. Their complexities, subtleties and potential complications are perhaps best illustrated through the use of short examples and case histories. These are incorporated into the discussion which follows. Some of these examples might also serve as "cautionary tales", and it may be fruitful for other Iyengar Yoga teachers to extrapolate from these into parallel situations which might arise in the course of their own teaching. To preserve the anonymity of individual patients and students, identifying details have been omitted.

1.Yoga, Medicine and Language
It is crucially important to realise that although there exist areas of overlap between Yoga and Medicine - and these will be elaborated on later - there are also fundamental differences between these systems rooted at the level of language.

Each patient, whether yoga student or not, arrives at the medical consultation within their own conceptual world. Into this fits their ideas of normal function, health and disease. These formulations may not necessarily be either coherent or consciously articulated. It may be assumed - by either patient or doctor - that the language used in their mutual interaction carries the same meaning for both parties, and this assumption increases the potential for skewed communication and misunderstandings. An example is the use of the term "chronic". In medical parlance this refers to the duration of a complaint, though many patients use this term as an index of severity.

Different paradigms underlie the various ways of viewing the human individual and health. Each health modality has a language and vocabulary unique to itself. The way in which a traditional practitioner of Chinese medicine, or teacher of Iyengar Yoga, formulates an understanding of a complaint may make little sense to an orthodox allopathic doctor, unless that doctor shares not just a common vocabulary, but also a common meaning which might be attributed to that vocabulary. The word "spleen", for example, conveys quite different meanings in traditional Chinese medicine compared with allopathic medicine. It is thus possible for a diagnostic formulation to be dismissed as nonsensical (e.g. "deficient spleen") if the words which are common to each system are endowed with radically different meanings for each practitioner.

Each conceptual framework can thus be seen as having a unique language within which its meaning is articulated. This means that as a medical practitioner and an Iyengar Yoga teacher, I have two languages operating in parallel - that of Iyengar Yoga, and that of Medicine. It is not always possible to translate easily or fully from one to the other, and learning the vocabulary of Iyengar Yoga means not just expanding one's word count, but acquiring a different understanding. In Light on Yoga, where Yogacharya Sri BKS Iyengar explicates the meaning behind the name "Paschimottonasana", he uses a conceptual understanding which has no correspondence in orthodox medical anatomy:

Paschima literally means the west. It implies the back of the whole body from the head to the heels. The anterior or eastern aspect is the front of the body from the face down to the toes. The crown of the head is the upper or northern aspect while the soles and heels of the feet form the lower or southern aspect of the body. In this asana the back of the whole body is intensely stretched, hence the name (p.130).1

He then goes on to explain the derivation of an alternate name for this asana "Brahmacharyasana":

Due to the extra stretch given to the pelvic region more oxygenated blood is brought there and the gonad glands absorb the required nutrition from the blood. This increases vitality, helps to cure impotency and leads to sex control. Hence, this asana was called Brahmacharyasana. Brahmacharya means celibacy and a Brahmachari is one who has controlled the sex appetite (p.134).1

These understandings are therefore based not just on the asana's anatomical shape, but also upon its subjectively experienced physiologic and mental effects.

The definition of anatomical function, as attributed to single muscles (as is seen in standard anatomy textbooks) reflects a vocabulary which is simultaneously too simplistic and too compartmentalised to adequately reflect the experience of asana. Individual muscles do not work in isolation, and the complexity of their functions in asana means that the language of standard anatomy is intrinsically inadequate to express the functional relationships which occur within asana. The teacher of Iyengar Yoga not only has to subjectively understand this, but has to expand the understanding and vocabulary of their yoga students so that the terms used in their interaction then share a common meaning.

It is, in fact, where there might be a superficially shared vocabulary, but not shared meaning, where the potential confusions increase most. For example, in physiotherapeutic terms the phrase "extend the spine" would refer to a back bending movement, whereas to an Iyengar Yoga practitioner this conveys the meaning of lengthening the spine. The level of confusion can multiply if several practitioners operating within very different conceptual frameworks are being accessed by the one person at the same time.

As an example of this, a young man, A., enquired about using Iyengar Yoga to help his back problems. It transpired that not only was he intending to investigate Iyengar Yoga, but was concurrently seeing his general medical practitioner, a specialist surgeon, a physiotherapist, a chiropractor and an osteopath for this same problem! He had thus been presented with a variety of diagnostic labels and therapeutic avenues, and was (understandably) becoming quite confused by the differences in approach each of these practitioners had to his problem. His solution was to consider adding Iyengar Yoga into this equation. He was not willing to investigate Iyengar Yoga by itself, being convinced - despite the evidence to the contrary - that more was better. Rather than increase his confusion - and risk presenting Iyengar Yoga in a situation where the benefits might be undone by another modality - it was agreed that he defer his exploration of Iyengar Yoga until he was satisfied that these other approaches had been exhausted.

The understanding that yoga has its own unique language, based within the experiential and conceptual framework of yoga, is traditional. In his commentary on Yoga Sutra 3:6, Sri BKS Iyengar quotes Vyasa:

Yoga is to be known by yoga.
Yoga is the teacher of yoga.
The power of yoga manifests through yoga alone
(173).2

2. The doctor-patient and teacher-student relationships
There are similarities between the teacher-student and doctor-patient relationships. Both relationships should be free from exploitation and, ideally, both are informed by the attitudes espoused in Yoga Sutra 1:33: friendliness, compassion, gladness, and, where warranted, indifference. Nonetheless, when attending a doctor, the scope of the doctor-patient relationship differs from that between yoga teacher and student. The boundaries change, sometimes dramatically, and unless the patient (and doctor) are emotionally prepared for this, difficulties are magnified from the start. Though both relationships are necessarily intimate, the type and degree of intimacy differs severally. As a medical practitioner being consulted by a yoga student it is often relevant to be aware of personal details which the student might not wish me as their teacher to know. It may be necessary to ask for details of past medical health, family history, psychosocial history, habits (dietary, drug etc), sexual history, financial situation and so on. Whilst clearly not all of this information is required all of the time, it is occasionally relevant. I also need to feel unconstrained to conduct whatever physical examination is warranted - this may involve intimate examinations.

In contrast, Yoga teachers do not usually need to know this degree of personal detail concerning their students. In fact, such knowledge can sometimes prove prejudicial - for example, a teacher may incorrectly assume that a student with a detailed objective knowledge of anatomy (such as a physiotherapist) would have a corresponding subjective understanding of their own anatomy. If I am appraised of a yoga student's intention to consult me in my capacity as a medical practitioner, I try to go over these differences with them beforehand so that they are clear as to what might be involved.

The necessity for trust is as paramount in the doctor-patient relationship as it is in the student-teacher one. However, a proportion of yoga students hold attitudes which I might loosely term "anti-doctor". Sometimes these are based on actual experience. Sometimes, however, these reflect an unexamined polarisation between yoga (& other natural healing methods) and whatever is conceptualised as allopathic or "western medicine". If such an attitude is held, consciously or not, it definitely complicates the subsequent interaction. It may mean that on the one hand I'm considered acceptable (because I'm a yoga teacher), but might also mean I'm simultaneously regarded with a degree of reluctance or suspicion (because I'm a doctor). The resulting ambivalence has the potential to undermine any therapeutic benefit. This can be illustrated by the following case history.

B.'s enthusiasm for Iyengar Yoga was highly infectious: she had encouraged several others into classes. She was a positive, vibrant and humorous, though slightly scatty presence who could always be relied upon to be a spruiker for yoga. Not that this was just hot air - she had found that Iyengar Yoga classes eliminated the need for her to visit her osteopath and the need for anti-arthritis medication. She had always demonstrated a somewhat cavalier attitude to her body, and often required a modicum of restraint in classes.

Arriving one afternoon in class she airily mentioned that she had some days previously "sprained" her wrist, but quickly added that it had been Xrayed and was OK, and that she would take care of it. Knowing her somewhat dismissive attitude, and the doctor in me flashing his little red light on & off, I grilled B. for more details. She illustrated how, while cavorting around a swimming pool, she had slipped on the pool cover and landed heavily on her outstretched hand. Despite her stated aversion to doctors, a friend had persuaded her to see one, and she was sent for an Xray immediately after the injury. This had apparently disclosed no fracture. She was advised that she just had a sprain. The treatment provided was a bandage. No follow up was suggested.

Recognising that there was a definite possibility that B. had sustained a scaphoid bone fracture (one of those wrist bone fractures notorious at declaring themselves on Xray only some 10 days after the initial event), I asked her if I could examine her wrist. She was extremely tender at the base of the thumb in her "anatomical snuff box", a site often tender in scaphoid fractures. Indeed, so suggestive is the presence of pain here that orthodox medical opinion mandates treating this with plaster immobilisation on the assumption that a fracture is present until the opportunity of reXray can occur 10-14 days after the initial trauma. As J.C.Adams writes in Outline of Fractures:

Fractures of the scaphoid are often overlooked ... In many cases the pain from the initial injury is slight and the patient can continue to use the hand. Thus he may regard the injury as a sprain and may not even consult his doctor ... When the clinical features suggest fracture of the scaphoid but the initial radiographs give no confirmation of it the radiographic examination should be repeated after an interval of two weeks....Fractures of the scaphoid are potentially troublesome and the incidence of complications is high - the most important complications are: 1) delayed union; 2) non-union; 3) avascular necrosis; and 4) osteoarthritis. 3

I advised B. - not as her yoga teacher, but as a doctor - to at least get her hand reXrayed, knowing there was a distinct possibility of a hitherto undisclosed fracture. I was summarily dismissed: "I don't like doctors, and I don't like Xrays" she said.

After missing a few classes, she turned up several weeks later still nursing a sore wrist. She had got a second opinion - this time from her osteopath. He had, apparently, pummelled her lightly with a rubber mallet and reassured her that her bones were fine. Again, she had (doctors' fingers easily find painful spots) an exquisitely tender scaphoid region. I advised her, in much more directive terms, that again I would recommend reXray. She was silent.

She reappeared 2 weeks later sporting a fibreglass cast on her forearm. It transpired she had seen a friend - a radiographer - who not only provided the Xray that confirmed her ununited scaphoid fracture, but also persuaded her to urgently see an orthopaedic surgeon. The surgeon informed her that she now had a 40% chance of this fracture remaining persistently ununited, in which case, surgery would have to be seriously considered.

Thankfully, she was by now rattled and so complied with her surgeon's advice and also with my advice regarding yoga. She regained her previous strength and mobility in her wrist, and is now back to her usual effervescent enthusiasm. Incidentally, she told her surgeon that she was finding Iyengar Yoga useful for her arthritis, and despite the fact that she had an impressive and pain free range of movement in her joints, he was dismissive. She continues to spruik for yoga.

As already mentioned, B.'s case is cited here because it illustrates the potential hazard of holding an unexamined polarisation between "western medicine" and other health modalities. Her mistrust of doctors contributed to a delay in correct diagnosis and appropriate treatment. Interestingly, a similarly unexamined polarisation between "western medicine" and other health modalities is also demonstrated by the orthopaedic surgeon whom B. consulted: he dismissed an entire field of knowledge (Iyengar Yoga) out of hand.

This case is also a good example of where my dual training as both a doctor and an Iyengar Yoga teacher proved useful. Had I not also been a doctor, it is unlikely that I would have known about the peculiarity of scaphoid fractures, and thus been able to question the advice given - incorrectly, as it turns out - by both the initial doctor and osteopath.

3. Referrals
As a doctor one of my medical responsibilities is to refer patients appropriately. Referral is warranted when I feel the patient's management would be optimised by the input of another health professional. This does not imply that I think Iyengar Yoga might not be able to help with a particular complaint, but that the person concerned may not be ready to take on active management of their problem. For example, simple muscle-tension headaches almost invariably respond favourably to Iyengar Yoga, but many of those afflicted also have an intercurrent depression which saps their motivation to start anything new, and a more useful and realistic therapeutic approach for them at this time might be massage. I may mention Iyengar Yoga in passing, but won't push it.

It can sometimes be problematic when I'm faced with a patient who requests referral to another health professional, or who self-refers to another practitioner during the course of their treatment. Firstly, there may be the assumption on their part that as an Iyengar Yoga teacher I will unquestioningly endorse all "natural" health practitioners and "alternative" practices. This is not always the case. Secondly, some health practitioners - and medical practitioners are not excepted - cross the boundaries of their own expertise, and begin to advise in areas in which they are not appropriately trained. As a result, these practitioners will sometimes impose their own inadequate understanding of, or ideas about yoga onto patients. It is extremely common, for example, to hear of yoga being circumscribed by the simplistic notions of "stretching" or "exercises" or "relaxation", and not uncommon for fears (for example regarding inverted postures) to be transmitted to patients. I have therefore now learned to be explicit when referring patients: if I think there is any likelihood of them receiving gratuitous and ignorant advice regarding yoga, I'll warn them of this beforehand and ask them to filter it out.

Then there are the ethical issues surrounding the practice of referral. I am aware, for example, that the perception might arise that by my recommending Iyengar Yoga I am inappropriately self-referring, possibly for financial gain. But how, when I know personally the efficacy of Iyengar Yoga in managing many problems (and have seen many students reconfirm this), can I not recommend it? Ethically, should I keep silent about a modality which I know to be extremely effective?

4. Diagnosis: What's in a Label?
Students frequently arrive at classes with what are essentially muskuloskeletal complaints. These usually improve over time through the use of appropriate yoga. However, on occasion, a student will present with what appears at first to be a muskuloskeletal problem but which has, in fact, a more serious and sinister aetiology, and which may require a different therapeutic intervention (e.g. surgery). On such occasions, yoga teachers should be prepared to refer students to someone with different expertise (e.g. a medical practitioner) for investigation.

For example, C., a beginner yoga student, complained that her arms "felt weak" and that she had difficulty maintaining them at or above chest height. She told me she was seeing her doctor about this and I gave my usual response: let me know if there is a diagnosis. A diagnosis might mean that what was taught to her would require further modification. But in the absence of a specific diagnosis I was happy to work from how the asanas influenced her symptoms, an empirical adjustment based on her subjective response. Thus, when doing the standing postures, she was asked to use the support of the trestle, or work with her hands on her hips.

The classes did not irritate or worsen her condition. She seemed strong and capable in class, though sometimes could not hold the postures for as long as the other students. However, she informed me that outside the classes she had begun to experience sudden and unpredictable collapses - her legs would just seem to give way. Her doctor referred her to a rheumatologist (joint specialist) who checked her knees and arms and found nothing structurally wrong. She also had Xrays and other tests to exclude cervical ribs (a congenital condition where extra ribs can compress the nerves and blood vessels to the arms when the arms are raised) and these too had come back negative.

I was concerned that I might be seeing the start of a scenario familiar to many doctors, where a patient with an ill-defined complaint embarks on a round of medical consultation. In the subsequent diagnostic process, they are sometimes subjected to multiple and increasingly invasive tests, potentially toxic pharmacological remedies of dubious benefit, and occasionally even surgery in a bid to reach a diagnosis.

C. returned to the classes after a short absence. A neurologist had diagnosed her with myasthenia gravis. In this condition the immune system generates an antibody to the nerve-muscle junction. The result is an abnormal fatigable weakness of muscles. It is certainly not common, though definitely not rare (1/10,000). The condition is much more common in women than in men, and is classified as an auto immune process. What triggers the immune system to generate the auto antibodies is unknown. As in C.'s case, many of those affected have abnormalities of the thymus gland - either tumours or overgrowth. In this condition, voluntary muscular movements may start strongly but cannot be sustained. Though any muscle group can be affected, those most commonly involved are above the shoulder girdle. Importantly, if the respiratory muscles become involved, myasthenia gravis can be fatal.

C.'s complaints were classical. Indeed, hers was a "textbook case" of myasthenia gravis. Nevertheless I and two other doctors - one a specialist - had missed it completely. In my own case, I believe that had she presented as a patient at the Clinic, I would almost certainly have considered it as a possibility which needed active exclusion. However, because I was being consulted - not as a doctor - but as her yoga teacher, I was not in the position to take a full medical history, conduct the requisite physical examination, or order the appropriate diagnostic tests.

In this instance, identifying the disease process (i.e. making the correct diagnosis) had important therapeutic implications. Having an abnormality of the thymus gland, C. belonged to that group of patients most likely to benefit from surgery. In such individuals, removal of the thymus gland (located within the chest cavity) is generally followed by long lasting remission.

5. Remedial Yoga
Yoga students sometimes attend the Clinic because they hope that I'll be able to dispense "yoga advice" to them there. This is nearly always inappropriate: the Clinic is an unsuitable environment in which to teach Iyengar Yoga as I do not have the time, space or facilities there. I also believe it is unethical to expect Medicare to subsidise a non-medical consultation. I have thus learned that it is important to define what the issue is with the student/patient early on and to clarify whether it is as a doctor or as a yoga teacher I am being consulted. If the issues clearly fall into the domain of yoga, I advise them to make a time to see me in the yoga school. If the problem is clearly a medical one (e.g. pre-travel immunisation advice) then I deal with this at the Clinic. Many times, however, it is not clear-cut. For example, the student may have back pain and be anxious to rule out a serious medical problem (such as cancer), but willing to use yoga for their management of this once serious disorders have been excluded. Most of the time, it is easiest and best to ignore the fact of their being a student of yoga until the issue of the management of their problem arises, as it is only at the time of management of the particular problem that the question arises as to whether as a yoga student they have the commitment as well as the desire to use Iyengar Yoga therapeutically.

Even when a patient has an established yoga practice, it does not automatically follow that remedial yoga will be used optimally. Patient D., for example, attended the Clinic with a complaint which was indicative of a serious underlying disorder. Although D. had a commitment to an asana practice, it was my opinion that the type of practice he was doing (both in the actual asanas practised and their sequencing) was not optimal, and quite possibly even aggravating his condition. However, as I was being consulted specifically as a doctor - and not as his yoga teacher - my advice in this area was not solicited, and when proffered, unheeded. The potential therapeutic use of Iyengar Yoga in this situation remained, therefore, unexplored. Ironically, I believe the reason he chose to consult me as a doctor was because he knew I was also a yoga teacher. Unfortunately, in this instance, I could do no more than voice my opinion as to the possibility of more helpful yoga, and then provide what support I could through the course of his illness in my allotted role as general practitioner.

Many patients would like their doctor to simply "fix" their problem, often with a prescription. In this exchange not only might the patient's subjective understanding of their problem be non-existent, but their own responsibility for managing their problem is minimised. Although yoga cannot prevent the arising of all future difficulties, an experienced Iyengar Yoga practitioner has a potentially vast repertoire of tools in the practices of asana and pranayama, not only to help understand and manage their difficulties, but where possible to prevent these from returning (Yoga Sutra 2:16). To use yoga therapeutically, however, requires the student ultimately to take on the responsibility for managing their own problem. Yoga practice requires, and develops, the cycle of trust, fortitude, accurate memory, absorption and insight (Yoga Sutra 1:20). Therefore, if a student proclaims a keenness to use Iyengar Yoga therapeutically, but has little actual commitment to it, it is predictable that its use in this context can only be suboptimal. This means that before committing to use Iyengar Yoga therapeutically for a yoga student, I have to be sure they're not after a "quick fix", and preferably not simultaneously consulting a multiplicity of health practitioners.

In practice, each individual's suitability needs to be assessed. If they seem genuinely interested in obtaining relief from their problem, and other modalities do not interest them (or have already been exhausted), I'll mention Iyengar Yoga earlier and with more vigour. If, however, they seem to have an investment in maintaining their problem - and this is commoner than might be thought - I won't. For example, E.'s initial reason for attending a remedial yoga class was to address the problem of pain in her forearms and lower back. This had developed at work and been resistant to many interventions (medication, physiotherapy, modification of work duties). Over several months these symptoms were addressed successfully in the class, only to be supplanted by a complaint of shoulder blade area pain. This too was brought under control through the use of yoga, but was then replaced quickly by kneecap pains. The development of these complaints was puzzling, especially as she had mobility disproportionate to her level of complaint and also a level of function outside the classes which did not equate with her stated level of incapacity (she was a keen and able gardener, for example). In order to clarify the situation I asked E. if she found the classes at all helpful. When she answered with an emphatic no, I decided to discontinue her classes since there seemed to be no valid reason for her continued attendance. E. was not entirely happy with this decision and even volunteered belatedly that the classes had in fact been of some benefit.

In retrospect, I believe she had an investment (emotional and financial) in maintaining her complaints which sabotaged their resolution in this context. She was, after all, receiving financial compensation for her inability to maintain her usual work hours and had, on more than one occasion, expressed dissatisfaction with her job. It is interesting to note that she intended to use the money obtained by way of settlement to start a business in which the expected physical demands would be considerable.

Yoga may be more a field for understanding a problem than necessarily eliminating it. As Sri Prashant Iyengar has stated: "Yoga cures what cannot be endured, and endures what cannot be cured".4 In Yoga Sutra 2:4 afflictions are seen as potentially existing in 4 states: active, interrupted, mild and dormant. Like a dormant volcano, the potential for re-emergence of a problem always exists if circumstances are adverse. Thus, I do not think it is wise to promise "cures" through yoga even though many students have experienced long-lasting relief.

The greater the commitment of the student to yoga, the greater the likelihood of a good outcome. This may at best be the acceptance of a problem that is chronic. Patient F., for example, has been subjected to three progressively more disabling spinal operations for low back pain. He unfortunately now has a spinal nerve root so entrapped by dense surgical scarring that even slight over-stretching confines him to bed for several days with extremely severe back pain, and an inability to use his left leg. F. is dependent on a high daily dose of narcotic to help manage his pain. Nonetheless, he credits his Iyengar Yoga practice (which is currently confined mainly to forms of supported lying, sitting and standing) to staving off suicide, exerting significant antidepressant and analgesic effects, and helping with insomnia. Although I could wish - and have wished - for more in terms of his mobility, both he and I have had to accept the limitations he currently has, especially in relation to his repertoire of asana.

As a doctor and Iyengar Yoga teacher I have to resist the temptation to step outside my own sphere of knowledge. This might mean refusing to take someone for remedial yoga- not out of meanness - but rather from an acknowledgement that in this field I definitely have my limitations. As an example of this, I was asked by a yoga student, G., if I could devise a yoga programme for his wife who was 20 weeks pregnant. His enthusiasm was understandable (Iyengar Yoga had helped him with his back pain), but dangerously flattering. His wife had an "incompetent cervix" which threatened miscarriage. Her cervix had therefore been recently stitched, and she had then been advised complete rest by her obstetrician. Not only was I not confident or competent in this area, who was I to countermand the instructions of her specialist? What would have happened had she miscarried? I therefore declined, with relief I suspect not only on my part, but also on hers. I had, however, been tempted.

In this context, when yoga teachers encounter something entirely outside the range of their understanding and experience, it is apt to recall what Sri BKS Iyengar has written in The Tree of Yoga:

You can only give what you yourself have experienced. If you wish to help others through the healing power of yoga, you have to put yourself at the service of the art and through experience gain understanding. Do not imagine that you already understand and impose your imperfect understanding on those who come to you for help.

Remember that the experience and knowledge born of subjective experience are a million times superior to accumulated and acquired knowledge. Experienced knowledge is subjective, and it is factual, whereas acquired knowledge, being objective, may leave the stain of doubts. So learn, do, relearn, experience, and you will be able to teach with confidence, courage and clarity
(p.111-112).5

6. Common Ground
Yoga and Medicine share the
dual intentions of alleviating suffering and promoting optimal health. As Sri BKS Iyengar comments on Yoga Sutra 2:16:

yoga is a preventive healing art, science and philosophy by which we build up robust health in mind and body and construct a defensive strength with which to deflect or counteract afflictions that are as yet unperceived afflictions (p.117).2

Although medicine is often used when prevention has failed and disease is well-established, contemporary medicine does recognise and practise three levels of prevention: primary prevention which reduces the likelihood of diseases occurring (e.g. immunisation); secondary prevention which is aimed at the early detection of disease before it becomes symptomatic (e.g. Pap smears and checking blood pressure); and tertiary prevention which is the attempt to prevent the complications or disability associated with already established disease.

Another area of commonality is that both medical practitioners and Iyengar Yoga teachers might be seen as Apprentices in their chosen fields - that is, accepting that their understanding is never definitive, and that, over time, application to their subject will yield a deeper and more comprehensive knowledge. Yoga, however, stresses the importance of subjective understanding wrested through personal practice. This means assuming self-responsibility if one is to rely on yoga for a therapeutic effect, whereas in many medical interventions the patient's self-responsibility is minimised.

It is important to recognise that the medical profession have a tendency to colonise "alternative" health fields, often with scanty training: for example, any general practitioner in Australia could, until 2003, with no or minimal training, practise acupuncture (and receive a government rebate for doing so!). But more importantly, the medical profession sometimes set themselves up as the arbiters of how such therapies should be used. While it is true that doctors study for long periods in order to practise medicine, this is certainly inadequate in developing expertise in Iyengar Yoga, and does not render them sensibly capable of either prescribing or proscribing it.

Finally, whilst it is indisputably true that the student who is impelled to start Iyengar Yoga for a reason (e.g. back pain) - and who finds relief through its practice - often becomes a committed and long term practitioner, it is important not to restrict the purpose of yoga only to a therapy. The Sanskrit term samadhi bhavanarthah (Yoga Sutra 2:2) implies a state beyond the absence of afflictions. It is thus reminiscent of the WHO definition of health formulated in 1947: "a state of complete physical, mental and social well being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity".6 Even though a yoga student may see me as a patient in the Clinic, if they are to fully engage with Iyengar Yoga, it is my responsibility as their teacher, where possible, to expand their view of yoga beyond the elimination of disease. As Yogacharya Sri BKS Iyengar points out in The Tree of Yoga:

In the first instance, yoga is not a therapeutic science at all. Yoga is a science for liberating the soul by bringing the consciousness, the mind and body to a state of integration. But when a factory is constructed to produce a certain product for marketing, fortunately or unfortunately many other products may incidentally be produced, and may also have market value. So it is possible to forget the original purpose for which the factory was built, and produce only the by-products to sell on the market. Similarly, yoga has several facets, and though the aim and culmination of yoga is the sight of the soul, it has lots of beneficial side-effects, among which are health, happiness, peace and poise. As every industrial process has certain by-products, so health, happiness and healing are all by-products of yoga, and yoga can be seen to some extent as a medical science (p.86).5

Note
The accompanying illustration juxtaposes the images of Patanjali and a modern version of the traditional Caduceus, the latter reprinted (with permission) from:
Talley N. and O'Connor S. Clinical Examination: A guide to Physical Diagnosis. MacLennan and Petty, 1989; Front cover illustration

Acknowledgements
Special thanks to Naomi Cameron for her assistance in writing this article.

References
1. Iyengar B K S. Light on Yoga. Thorsons, 2001
2. Iyengar B K S. Light on the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali. The Aquarian Press, 1993
3. Adams J C. Outline of Fractures. 8th ed. Churchill Livingstone, 1983; 175-177
4. Motiwala S, Mehta R H. Treating Chronic Ailments with Yoga: Lower Back Pain. Yoga Vaani. 1997; Vol XIII, No. 3: 46
5. Iyengar B K S. The Tree of Yoga. Shambhala Publications, 1988
6. Hetzel B S. Health and Australian Society. 3rd ed. Penguin, 1980; 16

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