NON CREDO OR NON BELIEF
George Ohsawa the founder of
modern macrobiotics during the first half of
the twentieth century embedded the idea of non-credo
or non-belief in his macrobiotic philosophy.
You might recognise this from Zen Buddhist and
Taoist thinking.
This has provided an interesting
paradox within macrobiotic principles as although for
many westerners in the 1960s and 70s non-credo
summed up the whole Zen macrobiotic movement,
through the 80s and 90s non-credo was replaced
by a plethora of macrobiotic concepts and beliefs.
George Ohsawa talked about non-credo
in terms of developing an endless curiosity.
Practically this could be interpreted as asking
more questions and not looking for answers but
enjoying the process of discovery and exploration.
It is, I think worth revisiting
this founding principle and see how it can influence
our current practice of macrobiotics. Let's
look at the basic ideas behind non-credo.
For me the idea of non-credo
applies to man made ideas, concepts, dogma,
principles, theories, doctrines rather than
self belief, feelings, intuition or any kind
of spiritual connection.
DOES ONE BELIEF EXCLUDE OTHER
THINKING?
Once we take on a belief is there
a risk that we will find it harder accept a
contrary belief at the same time? We could argue
that the more beliefs we have the smaller our
world becomes making it micro rather than macrobiotic.
DO BELIEFS GET IN THE WAY OF
INTUITION?
If we take on too many beliefs
do we overule our intuitive feelings if they
do not match our treasured beliefs? If we have
an internal data base of all the foods we have
ever eaten and a deep biological knowledge of
how these foods effect us, what happens when
our body cries out for a certain food to address
a nutritional deficiency and it is not on our
version of the macrobiotic diet? Rather than
develop our intuition and creativity in general
do beliefs stunt this powerful side of our beings?
CAN BELIEFS MAKE ARE MINDS SMALLER?
Should we be walking along a
busy shopping street and a pink elephant flew
across we would see it but most of us would
not register it in our minds as a flying pink
elephant is not within our belief system. If
we had a young child with us he or she would
jump around looking at it as for a young mind
pink elephants are possible. This begs the question
that as we take on more beliefs are we imprisoning
our minds into narrow channels of thinking?
Do we lose out on all the amazing, wonderful,
beautiful, mind blowing things that are going
on outside our beliefs?
IS IT POSSIBLE THAT BELIEFS STUNT
OUR DEVELOPMENT?
When we take on a belief do we
then stop the inquiry, the search, the discovery
and halt our own development? If for example
I believed that eating macrobiotic foods would
solve all my problems and I just ate macrobiotic
food would I still make the effort to work at
forming better relationships? When we take on
a belief we tend to close that subject and just
start using it rather continue the process of
evolution.
DO WE NEED TO BELIEVE IN SOMETHING
TO DO IT?
Will someone take on the effort
to eat macrobiotically if he or she does not
believe in it? To me that depends on what we
want macrobiotics to be. If macrobiotics is
a creative, artistic, intuitive way of exploring
the relationship between food, emotions, spirit
and health then beliefs might just get in the
way of that journey. If macrobiotics is a science
with the aim of developing the ultimate healthy
diet then a degree of belief may be required
if the promise is a long life and freedom from
illness. For me the greatest pleasures in life
come from music, art, film, fiction, food, friendships,
sex, love.....and yet none of these require
any conceptual beliefs.
ARE BELIEFS DELUSIONAL?
As man made concepts do not accurately
reflect reality beliefs often are to a certain
extent delusional and if those beliefs are deep
rooted we may even ignore reality and favour
our pet theories.
WHY HAVE BELIEFS?
There must be a reason we like
to find things to believe in otherwise I could
argue that we would not have that propensity
in our characters. The most common and researched
advantage of a belief is the placebo effect.
If we believe miso soup will help us recover
from an illness about a third of the people
in sample typically will show signs of improvement
from that belief alone. That belief might be
strengthened by some kind of theory whether
yin and yang or something more scientific. It
then becomes a point of discussion as to whether
we need to believe in something else or can
we simply believe in ourselves to get that placebo?
Do we need the concepts?
I think we all might have experienced
difficult times and here beliefs help get get
us through but do problems build up if we then
cling on to those same beliefs later?
HOW DOES THIS EFFECT MACROBIOTICS?
Where does non-credo leave us
with macrobiotics? I think non-credo is the
essential counter balance that can reduce the
risk of becoming dogmatic, conceptual and even
fanatical with our practice of macrobiotics.
Non-credo can help us be imaginative, creative
and intuitive with our cooking. Perhaps most
importantly non-credo encourages us to practice
macrobiotics from our own heart and experience
and not someone else's belief system and for
me this is the golden nugget in George Ohsawa's
philosophy.
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