
Tom Monte offers a unique form of counseling that begins
with a clear assessment of a person's physical, emotional,
and energetic imbalances. He then offers a variety of
healing tools, including diet, daily behaviors, and
body-mind-and-spiritual practices for restoring harmony and
balance to the person's physical and emotional life. Tom is
a highly experienced teacher and counselor. He has written
more than 30 books on health and healing, and has been a
student of macrobiotics, Chinese medicine, and many other
forms of natural healing for more than 25 years. He has
counseled thousands of people to better health.
In addition, Tom has worked with many medical doctors, both
as a writer and health practitioner. For people who are
under medical care, Tom attempts to combine his
understanding of the traditional healing arts to support a
person's work with his or her medical doctor to produce a
truly holistic approach to healing.
(Note: Please see the accompanying article for a better
understanding of the meaning of healing versus curing.)
HEALING VERSUS CURING
There is a fundamental difference between curing, which is
the work done by medical doctors, and healing, done
primarily by practitioners of complementary medicine.
Medical doctors discover the presence of disease by
detecting the presence of certain signs and symptoms. Once
an illness is found, doctors attempt to cure it by
eliminating those signs and symptoms, usually through the
use of pharmaceutical drugs, surgery, or radiation
treatments. Drugs are used, for example, to relieve
arthritis pain, or lower high blood pressure, or treat
chronic stomach distress.
Though the symptoms and signs of an illness may be
eliminated, the underlying cause of the disorder -- as well
as the behaviors that contribute to the disease -- are
largely unchanged. The person may be said to be cured of
headache, or high blood pressure, but the causes of both
disorders remain unchanged.
Curing requires very little behavioral change from the
person being treated. He or she merely submits to the
doctor's treatment and is said to be cured.
To heal means to change the underlying condition that either
created the illness in the first place, or support its
continued presence. The vast majority of the illnesses that
afflict and kill people today take a long time to create and
finally present symptoms and signs. Heart disease, the
common cancers, adult-onset diabetes (type 2), high blood
pressure, digestive disorders, and forms of arthritis are
usually the consequence of long-standing behaviors, such as
dietary practices, cigarette smoking, lack of exercise,
stress, and other behaviors that destroy health. These
behaviors create the conditions for illness and support its
life.
To heal means to reduce or eliminate the conditions that
support disease and replace those conditions with those that
create and support health.
When a doctor tells a patient that there is no cure, it
means that there is no treatment that the doctor can
administer to eliminate the illness. It does not mean that
the person cannot be healed. There is no cure for heart
disease, for example, but we all know that a person with
heart disease can be fully healed and the illness eliminated
from the body. To be healed, the patient himself must change
his behavior.
Healing is more often the domain of competent complementary
healers, while curing is the domain of medical doctors.
Depending on the situation, both approaches may be
necessary. In many instances, each approach is enhanced by
embracing the other.