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In ancient Greece, over 2,600 years ago, medical
centers dedicated to Asclepius, the god of healing,
blended the best aspects of physical, intellectual, emotional, and
spiritual healing arts. At these sanctuaries, healers offered their
compassion and skills to all who came for help. Now, in another
day and time, the Asclepeion Center for Body Mind Therapy shares
this mission, intense desire, and journey.
In Greek mythology, Asclepius was the originator of medicine and
healing. Ancient depictions of Asclepius show a moving visage of
infinite compassion, combined with a vigorous, athletic body. His
staff, the caduceus, a rod entwined with two serpents,
remains the symbol of medicine today.
According to legend, Asclepius was the son of Apollo, the Greek
sun god, and a beautiful mortal woman, Coronis. While pregnant,
however, Coronis fell in love and took a mortal lover, paying for
her infidelity with her life. Yet, when it came to the unborn child,
Apollo relented. He beseeched his brother Hermes, the guide of dead
souls to the underworld, to pluck the still-living child from his
mother’s womb.
Apollo named his son Asclepius and carried him to a remote cave
in Crete, where he entrusted him to the care of the centaur Chiron—half
horse, half man. Chiron was a wise, gentle, compassionate immortal—who
also was thought to have taught Achilles, Jason, and other ancient
Greek heroes.
Chiron acted as a mentor to Asclepius, instructing him in the boy’s
own passion: the healing arts. Asclepius became skilled in surgery
and in the use of drugs. As a young man, he left the cave of Chiron
to serve humanity.
Temples dedicated to Asclepius by grateful patients became the first
hospitals. Such a shrine was called an Asclepeion. The main center
dedicated to Asclepius was the great theater and sanctuary at Epidaurus,
located at a sacred spring that bubbled out of a hillside near the
thriving city of Corinth.
Epidaurus became a celebrated place of retreat and renewal—a
great cultural and healing center that used spiritual, psychological,
and physical approaches to healing. Treatments included diet, exercise,
rest, medicine, hands-on healing sessions, healing herbs, prayer,
assigned study, drama, chanting, dream analysis, clearing the soul
of painful memories, and sometimes visitation from the gods during
sleep. Asclepius was believed to appear in dreams in various forms,
including that of a snake, to give healing guidance to those who
sought it.
Legend further tells us that Asclepius had seven children, who all
became physicians and nurses. His son Machaon was a skilled surgeon,
while Poaleirios was an expert on internal diseases. One of his
daughters was Hygieia, goddess of health and cleanliness; another
was Panaceia, or “all-healing.” Machaon and Poaleirios
appear as characters in Homer’s Iliad, the ancient
Greek saga of the Trojan War, as commanders and military physicians
of the Thessalian army.
Athena, goddess of wisdom, gave Asclepius a powerful gift: the blood
of the snake-headed Medusa, which contained the power to kill or
to heal, even from death itself. But when, as legend tells us, Asclepius
began to use it to revive mortals from the dead, Zeus, the king
of the gods, was affronted by the prospect of humans sharing immortality
with the gods. Hurling one of his thunderbolts, he killed Asclepius.
But the great healer became a constellation among the stars, and
the healing arts that he had brought to humanity continued on.
The Ancient Greeks revered Asclepius, rather than the historical
figure of Hippocrates, as the founder of medicine. Many see the
Hippocratic tradition—with its emphasis on documenting and
defining specific diseases—as directly opposed to spirituality
and healing rituals such as those used in the Asclepeion temples.
Yet, the famous Hippocratic oath, to which medical physicians still
swear today, begins with an invocation “To Apollo, the
physician, Asclepius, Hygieia, and Panaceia… “
As an integrative practice, we strive to dwell ever more deeply
in the tradition of honoring both Asclepius, the Greek god of healing,
and that of Hippocrates, the Greek physician, father of medicine.
Our aim is to wisely blend all potential aids to bring people ailing
in body, mind, and spirit back to optimum health.
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