Dr. Jason Liu, who is a medical doctor, professor, and founder of the Mind-Body Institute in California, understands why people have again become afraid to venture out to large gatherings as news about COVID-19 seems to be around every corner. But while we so closely try to safeguard our physical health in fear, we end up forgetting about our mental and spiritual health, he says.
As a doctor of holistic medicine, Liu looks at the whole person when it comes to health. Right now, people’s immune systems are being attacked by the virus on three fronts.
“Right now, people have fear: That’s the key,” he said.
This fear is an assault on our psychological state, our spirits, and our physical bodies.
At the most basic level, fear triggers our fight-or-flight response and the cascade of hormones and physiological changes that come with it. While this state is good for reacting to an immediate threat, it takes a significant toll on our well-being.
“Meaningful spiritual entertainment is able to empower your mind, body, spirit—your whole being—to be able to protect yourself,” Liu said. “Through the arts, through performance, we help people overcome fear and depression and anxiety.”
When an experience changes our mental state, especially if it does so in a profound and significant way, the results are physiological. This is held as truth in medical science, in positive psychology, and in the wisdom of the ancients. It’s a principle humans have understood since before the Greeks built the Epidaurus Theatre in 400 B.C. as a place to honor Asclepius, the god of medicine—and as a place for the weary to cleanse their souls with therapeutic waters and theater.
“They’re bringing hope to the world, to the people, to every individual,” Liu said.
Music That Moves the Soul
Beyond the healing power of the arts in general, Liu pointed out that Shen Yun’s music blends ancient Chinese musical principles with the sound of the full classical orchestra that audiences are most familiar with.Liu’s explanation matches that of Shen Yun’s closely, as this was common knowledge in traditional Chinese culture before communism destroyed traditional culture in China.
However, Shen Yun celebrates the beauty and wisdom of traditional Chinese culture. Liu said that gives it a unique energy.
“This energy really activates your whole mind, body, spirit,” he said. “Our body needs energy. When you don’t have good energy, you don’t sleep well, you worry, and then you make mistakes, because your mind is not clear. This is very common. People lose their spiritual strength, their mental clarity, and then they make mistakes. And they then so easily get sick, because they become weak.
“Body, mind, and spirit—don’t forget this. This is how our whole being came from the universe, from God.”
Have Faith
Of the three, our busy modern mankind most easily forgets the importance of the spirit, and Liu expressed his wish to administer a reminder.“No matter what kind of religion you have, Christian or Buddhist, or qigong meditator, or yoga practitioners, there’s a lot of spiritual practices still; those people understand it.”
Faith is every individual’s own choice, Liu said. He noted that he wouldn’t recommend someone who’s still holding on to fear to go out and watch a show with their minds clouded with negativity. The three aspects of the body, the mind, and the spirit all need to be in balance.
“These are the three points that I want to make, these three aspects of the physical, the mind, and the spirit,” he said.
And a testament to their motivation is the fact that they’re sharing their source of health—their fearless passion for art and faith—with the world, according to Liu.
Liu still remembers the feeling he had when he first saw a performance many years ago.
“Gosh, this show, I feel so connected, I really feel connected. This whole show, two hours, I’m in heaven. I feel all of life surrounding me, I feel that my whole body is so warm, great energy circulating inside my body, a hundred meridians are open,” he said. “When I came out of the theater, you know, my face, I feel changed. I feel young, like I’ve gone back to my 20s! You have to experience that.”