πŸ”Ž Introduction

✨ In this profound teaching, Master Woo Myung explores the relationship between the brain, the human mind, and the body. Is the brain responsible for healing illness? If the brain is the human mind, then what is the true body of a person?

This writing reveals a deeper spiritual framework rooted in yin and yang, the microcosm and macrocosm, and the origin of human existence. 🌌 According to this perspective, the human form is not separate from the Universe, but an expression of it. Understanding this truth transforms how we see life, death, illness, and healing.


ORIGINAL WRITING BY MASTER WOO MYUNG

Is the brain responsible for treating illnesses as well as for the body? If the brain is the human mind, what is the whole body of the person?

People originally came from the place of absolute nothingness which exists prior to the existence of people. Of yin and yang in the Universe, man’s form exists as yang. But actually yin itself is the original body of the Universe so when people die, they return to yin. Yang simply put into form that which has always originally been in the scope or sphere of yin – all things are simply as they are. This means that something in existence has not pushed out yin when it came into form; even when it is in existence, it is also still yin. Therefore, the human body is a little Universe that resembles the Earth. The existence of human form is an expression of yang that came from one’s original self which is the Universe. Therefore when it disappears, only the Universe remains just as it is.

The problem is that when man has his own individual mind, he does not disappear completely after death. This human mind resides in the middle brain. In the microcosm of the body, the brain has the role of God and governs over the whole person. It is the mind or the brain that cures illnesses, both curable and incurable. A person’s whole body is the mind of the Universe, but the human mind is the brain.

– Woo Myung


🌿 Reflect at Santa Clara Meditation

At Santa Clara Meditation, practitioners contemplate the relationship between the individual mind and the mind of the Universe. 🌠 Through meditation, one seeks to go beyond the limited human mind and awaken to the greater reality in which the body itself is a reflection of the Universe.

True healing, from this perspective, is not merely physical β€” it begins with understanding the origin of the mind and returning to one’s original nature.