Happy Genetics: From Epigenetics to Happiness
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Happy Genetics - Richard Romagnoli
GIBRAN
1
BE ALWAYS HAPPY
RICHARD ROMAGNOLI
Dad clasped my hands tightly and looking into my eyes told me: Be always happy.
My heart started beating wildly, and I managed to respond with a whisper: I promise you, Dad.
That evening, in the hospital room where he had been lying for some time, I fell asleep thinking about his words, the last ones he told me before leaving his body. For many months he had struggled with a terrible disease, which had struck him when I was still a boy. I can proudly say I loved Dad so much. I admired him for his ability to be loved by many people beyond his friends and family. I admired his ability to inspire colleagues with his dedication to his work, and I was in awe of his great generosity and the joy of life that was an innate gift that enabled him to draw smiles from even the grumpiest people.
Dad had the ability to transform the grayest days, making them suddenly beautiful, like those rainbows that suddenly appear after a storm and hover lightly towards infinity.
In the last period of his illness I promised myself to find a way to alleviate the suffering of those in pain. I could not understand how medical science, despite the many wonderful breakthroughs, could still be so inadequate and unable to effectively find the right treatments for cancer patients like him. For a long time Father had subjected himself with great confidence to all the therapies recommended by the doctors. I remember the continuous operations he underwent due to the seriousness of the illness and the endless days spent with him in the hospital trying to distract him and comfort him during the suffocating sessions of radiotherapy and chemotherapy. During this experience, I was able to observe that it is precisely in moments of discouragement that those who suffer find in the smiles and words of encouragement of doctors and paramedics the strength they needed, which relieved them from at least some of their suffering.
I have a sense of enormous respect and profound gratitude to all those who practice the medical art, who recognize the importance of the necessary therapeutic alliance established between doctors and the patients under their care that has been so wisely declared by two luminaries, Edmund D. Pellegrino and David C. Thomasma.
At such a gloomy time, in which I went through long weeks full of anguish, I tried in every way to soothe my inner suffering. I felt powerless in the face of Dad’s suffering, and the only thing that remained for me to do was to turn to God to ask him the reason for all that experience. I wanted to know, from his point of view, what was the use of all that pain, demanding a full answer from the Creator himself.
It is in moments of difficulty that our faith strengthens or weakens. Even those who do not place faith in any creed, and who experience moments of intense pain, feel the need to re-establish intimate contact with their inner serenity so that the mind can quiet itself down. During that difficult time I suffered more because of the lack of mental serenity. It was as if my peace of mind had been completely engulfed by the anger and profound disappointment I felt. I only began to emerge from that deep darkness when I resumed my studies on Eastern spirituality. After Dad left the body, I began to think seriously about dedicating myself to the study of medicine. I felt the need to deepen my knowledge of all the scientific topics concerning the body-mind bond. I hoped to find the answers to the many existential questions that had remained buried and unresolved in me. In my heart I longed to become the doctor that Dad should have met, and that could explain the reason for his illness, helping him to heal deep inside.
I was certain that in order to understand human nature and to alleviate our suffering, I would have to study human beings in their entirety. Like a loner who embarks on an unknown journey, I began to venture out, exploring knowledge and the subtle links that connect body-mind-emotions-soul as one.
Traveling to discover unknown destinations is fascinating, as is the very mystery of the unknown. To proceed towards knowledge it is necessary not to be influenced by the limits of what is already known, it is necessary to be willing to have that open mind, which allows us to be surprised by new knowledge, which can emerge only beyond preconceptions and mental limits.
Today, unlike the past centuries and thanks to modern scientific experiments, we recognize that the human being can no longer be considered as a simple compound of chemistry and molecules or as a set of organs and apparatuses that Interact with each other mechanically. We are aware of the fact that our real identity cannot be illusory and confused with our gross body, which is nothing more than an essential tool that allows us to live the experiences of life, to experience and discover our true and real Divine Nature.
One day I made a choice, and it was that instead of dedicating myself to the study of medicine, I would dedicate myself to exploring another knowledge, the most intangible—and perhaps for this reason—the most fascinating: the science of the Soul.
I began to deepen the studies I had already undertaken at sixteen on various topics concerning spirituality, this time round with more commitment. Re-reading the Vedas I began to reflect on the various teachings of my beloved Master Sri Sathya Sai Baba with a different perspective. I felt the need and a sense of urgency to reach conclusions that would help me make Peace with God. Rather than needlessly wasting time following sterile philosophical dissertations, I began the most adventurous of journeys, the introspective one.
It so happened that in search for the lost meaning of what had happened to me, in an unconventional and somewhat bizarre way I began to practice well-being, with the Soul as the starting point.
THE MAGIC OF LIFE
My passion for the art of prestidigitation gave me the opportunity to embark on a wonderful adventure, without which I could never have lived through all the experiences that over the years have allowed me to meet thousands and thousands of people around the world, and even in large audiences to make them experience the therapeutic power of unconditional laughter.
By dedicating myself to voluntary service in hospitals, I began to recover from the trauma and the pain of losing my father. It all happened when I accepted the invitation to perform in a small provincial hospital.
My experience in hospital wards led me to the understanding of how a positive attitude is important and necessary, both for hospitalized patients and for the relationship between operators and doctors in healthcare facilities.
When I was eight, Dad managed to get special permission from the board of the psychiatric hospital where he worked for me to perform before their in-patients. After my magic show an old lady came up to me and hugged me.
Her tender gesture dissolved all my fears, and that day, in that psychiatric hospital, I decided that one day I would dedicate myself to doing something that would bring relief to the lives of the most marginalized people. I was only eight years old, and that very day I unknowingly sowed a powerful seed in my destiny, which today I cultivate with joy.
In everything we do, what really makes a difference, and sets us apart, is the intensity and the love with which we do it. This applies to our family and professional lives, as well as to the rapport between those who experience the disease and those who must take care of them. We often focus more on operational routines or on what needs to be done, rather than on the person receiving care. Simple gestures like a smile, a hug, a caress, as well as words of comfort, have the great power of bringing about positive change to people’s lives.
We must begin to understand that every gesture of love remains indelibly impressed in those to whom we give it.
IT WILL BE ALL RIGHT
When Sara and I decided to move to southern India for a long stay, it was to carry on with the volunteer service in hospitals and orphanages in the Indian subcontinent, which I had already started a few years earlier. With our girls Matilde and Sofia we moved to Puttaparthi, one of the poorest states of India, but really rich in spirituality.
Our Master had proved to be benevolent toward us regarding that drastic decision to leave Italy forever and to change our Western habits and adapt ourselves to learning local customs.
I have always believed that when choices are made with love and awareness, the subsequent consequences always bring the best in one’s life. A few years after our move to India, our beloved Master left the physical body, and after a few months of loss due to that experience, my mission continued with more fervor than before pursuing a single goal, that of contributing to well-being of the greatest number of people in the world or, more simply, of being at the service of humanity.
With more diligence than before, I continued to attend Sri Sathya Sai Super Specialty Hospital in Puttaparthi, doing my volunteer service and receiving endless gifts, thanks to the unexpected learning opportunities that enriched my life with new teachings.
I found myself attending the best doctors in India. I was following a select group of professors and luminaries of various medical specializations with whom I volunteered thanks to the Sathya Sai Mobile Hospital project.
Every month, for twelve consecutive days, the Mobile Hospital carries out an incredible humanitarian service for which it has been honored with world-wide praise, bringing to different Indian villages every kind of care necessary for the thousands of unprivileged people who otherwise would not be able to afford all the treatments necessary for their cure because of their poverty.
The Mobile Hospital is equipped with the most sophisticated medical equipment and allows thousands of children, women, and the elderly to be visited by the best professors and doctors who spend their holidays devoting their time to this voluntary service with a spirit of devotion.
In those months I learned the importance of heart-to-heart communication that allowed me to interact with the children and the elderly of the villages even though I did not know their local languages. To bring them some relief my contribution was to entertain them by trying in every way to encourage smiles and unleash their laughter. Being with those doctors allowed me to learn more than what is taught in many university programs. Observing their attitudes and studying their ability to empathize with older people, women, and children has revealed to me everything that can never be learned by studying from textbooks. Knowing how to listen is ninety-nine percent the secret of effective communication because it allows us to establish, with greater success, the real needs of those who are in front of us. From those doctors I learned how fundamental it is never to forget that every cure, every drug, and every relationship that is established with those who are