A Doctor’s Whisper
The earliest
appointment today is 8am, but I arrive at the clinic two hours early. Closing
the door soundlessly behind me, as if I am unwilling to disturb the flowers laden
with dew, I tiptoe to the terrace adjacent to the clinic bathed in the morning
glow.
For a while
I meditate, and then I stroll back and forth on the rustic wooden floor. I am standing
not far from a cluster of high-rise buildings, just a bit further away from a verdant
forest and a mountain range.
In addition
to flowers and shrubs, our dear friend Dr. Ali planted many fruit trees on the
terrace: plum, pear, apple, fig... in front of which are several angels and
Buddhas each in their own reverie, clothed in stone. When the leaves quiver for
no apparent reason, I know a bird is peeping at me from under the branches.
All that
inhabits the space in front of my eyes seem so dear. Though in a boisterous city,
I feel more like the Japanese hermit in Hojoki, far away from earthly hustle
and bustle. Aware of myself and the world, having no desires or wishes, in my
heart arises not a single thought but gratitude.
Some patients
will be waiting to see us today, including two eye patients. The herbs that
will be given to them are all ready made in advance, some for internal use,
some external. Each formula must be prepared meticulously, but I do not mind at
all. Cooking is not my cup of tea, but making an herbal formula is such a joy!
During the
last few years of the pandemic, we were glad we had opportunities to help
people reduce their symptoms. Our achievement is gratifying, and at the same
time, our patients helped us grow and mature, both medically and spiritually.
We are like those green fruit on our terrace, hanging on the shaky branches and
due to the care of both the rain or shine, becoming a little bigger day by day.
A few days ago, a patient asked me: Dr. Zhao, how has your
business been?
I smiled and asked: business? what business?
Seriously, we
never see our clinic as a business. It is a place for healing, both for others
and for ourselves. As for making money, that is never our priority. Sure
enough, a clinic cannot survive in the long-term without making money, but if
making money is our sole goal, it is only unsatisfactory.
Here is a scene I often imagine in my mind:
Knock, knock, knock…
Who is there?
We are lost, please let me in, help is needed!
Ah, lost travellers in darkness!
Wide the
door opens; in they are let. If hungry, they are fed; if thirsty, they are provided
with water; if cold, they warm their feet by our campfire until their boots are
warm and ready to hit the road. Then we show them the direction they ought to
head in, and watch them vanish at the end of the road. To their destination
they have to walk, we don’t walk for them.
A young girl, suffering from long term depression, asked: Dr.
Anna, why am I so sensitive?
I smiled, “One’s sensitivity is one’s gift. You just need to use
this gift in the most appropriate manner you can think of.”
A four-year-old girl told me that she often accidentally fell
and hurt her knee.
I asked her: What do you do when your knee hurts?
She tilted
her little head thoughtfully and said, "In our home we have a rose garden.
When I have a booboo, I hop to a rose bush and sing songs to it. Once I sing,
the owie goes away."
This reminds me what Hugo wrote: ' Be as a bird perched on a frail branch that
she feels bending beneath her, still she sings away all the same, knowing she
has wings…’
Isn't this little girl like a singing bird with wings?
Yes, little
children often have greater wisdom.
The running
water does not turn around, nor the departing bird return. It seems that on the
wall of life, helplessness and imperfection creep. There's only one way to perfect
it: discover the wings you accidentally lost, and then learn to sing like a
bird, just like that four-year-old child who forgets her knee pain by singing
to the roses.
210 - 2885 Barnet Hwy,
Coquitlam, BC V3B 1C1, Canada
Mon.&Fri.: 8:00am-12:00pm
Wed,Sat.&Sun.: 8:00am - 8:00pm
Tue. & Thurs.: Closed