Guest guest Posted July 10, 2000 Report Share Posted July 10, 2000 One of the mainstays of TCM diagnosis is pulse diagnosis. A " floating pulse " is one that that can be felt the easiest with very slight pressure. Increase the pressure of your finger on a floating pulse, and it disappears. Decrease the pressure on the wrist, and you start to be able to feel the pulse again. In contrast, a " sinking " pulse is one that is felt most strongly with the most pressure on the wrist. Ease up on the pressure on the pulse and it's harder to feel. A floating pulse usually points to attack by an External Pernicious Evil like Wind Chill, Wind Heat, etc. The body is being attacked at the most superficial levels. In contrast, a sinking pulse means that there is an Interior imbalance. An External Evil has moved deep into the body, or an Internal imbalance has arisen from other factors. I don't want to go into the full TCM pulse diagnosis in this pulse. TCM healers don't check 1 pulse position like in the West. TCM healers check a minimum of 12 different pulses, three on each arm at two different levels. For now, a good exercise for people interested in learning pulse diagnosis is to check one position like is done in the West and see if the pulse feels stronger with slight pressure or heavy pressure on the wrist. This will start to get you familiar with pulse diagnosis. Victoria ______________________ Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 12, 2000 Report Share Posted July 12, 2000 I'm reposting this since it hasn't yet come through via my email, and it forms the base of some posts done tonight on pulse diagnosis. This was the first post I did this morning as way of introduction to the pulse diagnosis posts I did tonight. My apologies if it already has come through on your email and this is a duplicate message. Chinese Traditional Medicine , " Judy Fitzgerald " <victoria_dragon@h...> wrote: > One of the mainstays of TCM diagnosis is pulse diagnosis. > > A " floating pulse " is one that that can be felt the easiest with very slight > pressure. Increase the pressure of your finger on a floating pulse, and it > disappears. Decrease the pressure on the wrist, and you start to be able to > feel the pulse again. > > In contrast, a " sinking " pulse is one that is felt most strongly with the > most pressure on the wrist. Ease up on the pressure on the pulse and it's > harder to feel. > > A floating pulse usually points to attack by an External Pernicious Evil > like Wind Chill, Wind Heat, etc. The body is being attacked at the most > superficial levels. In contrast, a sinking pulse means that there is an > Interior imbalance. An External Evil has moved deep into the body, or an > Internal imbalance has arisen from other factors. > > I don't want to go into the full TCM pulse diagnosis in this pulse. TCM > healers don't check 1 pulse position like in the West. TCM healers check a > minimum of 12 different pulses, three on each arm at two different levels. > > For now, a good exercise for people interested in learning pulse diagnosis > is to check one position like is done in the West and see if the pulse feels > stronger with slight pressure or heavy pressure on the wrist. This will > start to get you familiar with pulse diagnosis. > > Victoria > > ____________________ __ > Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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