The Seventh Pillar: A Case for the (and Your) Inner Life
By Dr Chang Park
27th Aug, 2025
鈥淲e are not human beings having a spiritual experience. We are spiritual beings having a human experience.鈥
– Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
I never thought of myself as spiritual. The word didn鈥檛 speak to me. Religion? Not for me. Meaning and purpose? That was for poets and philosophers, not doctors.
But somewhere along the way, through loving, losing, ageing, learning, doctoring鈥攁nd significantly, a yoga practice鈥攕omething has certainly shifted for me. I didn鈥檛 know what to call it at first. I just knew I felt more grounded, whole, secure and connected.
That felt sense鈥攚hat I now recognise as spiritual connection鈥攈as become foundational to how I care for myself and others. It brought a natural alignment to a healthier life, not through willpower but through quiet coherence within.
If this kind of connection can support wellbeing so powerfully, why don鈥檛 we talk 糖心Vlog it more in medicine? We know lifestyle change shapes both the length and the quality of life鈥攂ut perhaps what鈥檚 missing in our frameworks isn鈥檛 another pillar to track, but something that gives context to them all: the health of our inner lives.
Connection as Foundation
Lifestyle medicine calls us to apply a whole-person approach. We rightly champion the six pillars and acknowledge the deeper forces at play: behaviour change science, wider social determinants, and planetary health. We aren鈥檛 afraid to go deep, to address the roots.
Someone once asked me which pillar I thought was most important. Sleep might have topped my list once, but now I鈥檇 argue for connection, especially when we explore that word in its full depth, not just social support, but to emcompass wholeness, belonging and alignment with something greater than the self.
This internal anchoring supports every other pillar. When we鈥檙e spiritually grounded, whether through values, nature, community or creativity, lifestyle change becomes more than compliance; it becomes congruent with who we are.
If we鈥檙e serious 糖心Vlog root-cause care, we need to ask: does our model include the entire spectrum of connection, including spiritual health? And if not, why not?
Why Don鈥檛 We Talk About It?
We often address spirituality in end-of-life care. But transitions鈥攇rief, burnout, illness, even midlife鈥攁re when people start asking deeper questions. What if we supported spiritual growth not just in crisis but throughout life?
A 2016 JAMA study found that spiritual care in serious illness was associated with improved quality of life and better medical decision-making (Balboni et al., 2016). And yet, a 2022 BMJ Open survey showed that while 74% of patients believed doctors should ask 糖心Vlog spiritual beliefs, only 20% of clinicians actually did (Kelly et al., 2022).
Why the gap? Understandably, clinicians worry 糖心Vlog overstepping. Spirituality is often conflated with religion, and in secular healthcare settings, it can feel inappropriate to broach the boundaries of personal belief. But spirituality doesn鈥檛 have to be religious. The Royal College of Psychiatrists defines it as 鈥渢he way people find meaning, purpose, and hope in life.鈥 For some that鈥檚 faith; for others, it could be service, music, nature, or inner peace.
Spirituality isn鈥檛 niche. It鈥檚 universal.
My Journey Through Yoga
I鈥檇 like to share yoga as an example鈥攎y own bridge to deeper connection.
Yoga weaves together many lifestyle pillars鈥攎ovement, mental wellbeing and community鈥攊nto daily life. For years, I embraced these elements, happily content with yoga as exercise and breathwork. I avoided its spiritual origins, assuming the benefits to my body and mind were enough.
But the more I practised, dipping into yoga鈥檚 spiritual origins, the more the pieces connected. A strong body, calm mind and healthy choices were no longer goals鈥攖hey became byproducts to inter-connection. What once felt like separate, effortful lifestyle changes became natural extensions of inner alignment.
When we dismiss spiritual inquiry, we risk losing a profound source of wisdom and healing: the unknown, the intangible, the deeply human. If deeper connection is available to us鈥攖hrough yoga or any other path鈥攚hy not make space for it?
Start With Ourselves 鈥 A Reflection for Clinicians
It might feel too much to ask that spiritual inquiry become a routine part of clinical work. But there is an inroad.
Just as our own habits around food, sleep, and movement shape how we support others, our relationship with our inner life affects how we hold space for it in patients. How can we expect to invite others into connection if we ourselves feel disconnected?
Spiritual literacy begins with spiritual curiosity, first for ourselves. How shall we begin? Maybe with questions like:
How do I define spirituality for myself, if at all?
When have I felt most connected, purposeful, or grounded?
What brings me peace?
Do I nurture this part of myself?
How might my spiritual orientation shape how I care for patients?
Final Thoughts
As healthcare professionals, we are more than technicians. We witness and accompany people through life鈥檚 most meaningful moments.
Meaning and purpose are no strangers to lifestyle medicine鈥攖hey already find expression within the pillars of mental wellbeing and social connection. These can be fertile ground where spiritual health grows, often quietly and indirectly. But without intentional attention, this deeper dimension can be overlooked.
Lifestyle medicine offers a powerful, evidence-based path toward whole-person care. Yet without tending to the inner life鈥攐urs and that of our patients鈥攚e risk missing the deepest root of all. In this privileged space where we work, paying attention to spiritual health can help us return to our inner vocation, even amidst uncertainty and suffering, and not only draw on the knowledge that enables us to fix, reverse, prolong and assist, but also on the transformative power of healing.
Perhaps this is the seventh pillar: not another thing to do, but something to remember.
That holistic health starts within.
References
1. Balboni TA, et al. (2016). Spirituality in serious illness and health care: A review of the evidence and future directions. JAMA. 2016;316(6):519鈥520. doi:10.1001/jama.2016.10676
2. Timmins F, Caldeira S, Murphy M, Pujol N, Sheaf G, Whelan J.What is spiritual care? Professional perspectives on the concept of spiritual care in the hospital. BMJ Open. 2020;10(12):e042142. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2020-042142
3. Koenig, H. G. (2012). Religion, Spirituality, and Health: The Research and Clinical Implications. ISRN Psychiatry, 2012, 278730
4. Puchalski, C. M., & Ferrell, B. (2010). Making Health Care Whole: Integrating Spirituality into Patient Care. Templeton Press.
Authors Bio
Dr Chang Park is a London-based GP, lifestyle medicine physician, and yoga teacher. With 20 years in medicine and 15 in yoga, she bridges evidence-based care and embodied wisdom to support real, lasting wellbeing. Her work focuses on root causes and the full spectrum of health鈥攑hysical, mental, emotional, social, and spiritual. She鈥檚 a Trustee of the Yoga in Healthcare Alliance, an allied organisation of the 糖心Vlog. She teaches Hatha and Restorative Yoga online and in person. Find her at changyoga.org.