From
Tapestry of Healing
Where Reiki and Medicine Intertwine
by
Jeri Mills M.D.
Copyright
© Jeri Mills 2001
Prologue
It was just past 1 A.M. when I
rolled out of bed in the doctors’ on-call room and headed towards labor wing. As
I walked through the door to the labor and delivery triage room, the familiar
smell of alcohol and iodine filled my nostrils. The room vibrated with the low
drumming of half a dozen fetal cardiac monitors, a soothing melody for those of
us who worked on labor and delivery. The slightest alteration of any of those
rhythms would alert us and send everyone running to handle the emergency.
I went to the desk where the nurse on duty
handed me a chart and gave me a brief history of the patient who had just
arrived.
As I walked down the narrow aisle
separating the two rows of gurneys that lined the walls of the room, I heard an
occasional voice coming from behind the curtains that shielded occupied beds.
Most patients were there to determine if they were in labor. Others were
pregnant, ill, and waiting for lab tests to come back. Some anxious women came
to check on the well-being of a fetus who had been less active than usual that
evening.
I opened the
curtain to the dimly lit six-by-nine foot cubicle where my patient rested on a
gurney. Long, narrow feet moved restlessly. Slender fingers convulsively gripped
the edge of the blanket that covered an enormous belly. Two gray plastic cords
snaked out from under the blanket connecting the sensors that were belted over
my patient’s abdomen to the fetal monitor in the back corner of the cubicle near
her right shoulder.
Enormous brown eyes stared at me from a
pale face. A tentative smile crossed her lips only to be replaced by a grimace
as the next contraction began. The woman’s back arched and she reached
frantically for the arm of the small, round, gray-haired woman who stood at her
left side. The older woman gently rubbed the pregnant woman’s shoulder as she
murmured soft, reassuring sounds. When the
contraction subsided, I introduced myself. The pregnant woman’s hand trembled
slightly when she reached out to shake mine.
“This is my mother,” she told me in an
unsteady voice. “She had to come with me tonight because my husband is out of
town.” Her voice broke and a small sob escaped her lips. She took a deep breath
and continue “This is my fourth baby. I should be used to it by now, but this
labor is much worse than all the other ones. He seems to be in such a hurry,
this little one.”
She stopped speaking and reached out for
her mother’s hand as the next contraction began. As soon as it was over, I
examined my patient. Though her labor had started less than two hours earlier,
she was already eight centimeters dilated. Two more centimeters and her baby
would be ready to enter this world.
I alerted the nursing staff and we quickly
rolled her down the hall to a nearby birthing room. We had just gotten her
settled in the room when she began writhing in the bed. I said, “There’s no time
for an epidural, your baby is coming too fast, but I can give you an injection
of pain medicine.”
“No,” she gasped. “I had all my other
babies naturally. I won’t take drugs for this Aieeeee...”
Unable to use any of the tools Western
medicine had to offer to relieve my patient’s discomfort, there was still one
thing I could do to help her. After obtaining her permission, I laid my hands
lightly on her swollen abdomen. The healing energy immediately began to flow
through my palms. My patient gave a long sigh and her shoulders seemed to melt
into the pillows. Her fingers slowly released the balled-up edge of the blanket.
Looking at me through heavy lidded eyes, she mumbled, “Oh, I’m so relaxed...”
After a few minutes, her eyes closed. The
energy continued to flow from my hands, and she appeared to sleep through the
next several contraction. Reassured that my patient was comfortable, I left her
side and walked across the room to her mother. As we chatted softly about the
various applications of the ancient hands-on healing art, I asked the woman if
she would like to see how it felt. At her nod, I placed my hands at her temples
and relieved the headache she had developed over the last hours.
Awakened by an intense pain, my patient
looked at me and demanded, “I want you back here with me right now!”
I returned to her bedside and placed one
hand near the top of her uterus and the other above her pelvis. There I
remained, a living epidural, until she delivered her son a half hour later.
How did this American-trained obstetrician
gynecologist come to combine Western medicine with ancient Buddhist
healing techniques while practicing in a hospital in Tucson, Arizona?
Looking back, it amazes even me to recall the subtle twists of fate that
shaped the healer I was to become.
Tapestry of Healing: where reiki and medicine intertwine
Tapestry of Healing: where reiki and medicine intertwine