Guest guest Posted November 8, 2000 Report Share Posted November 8, 2000 Welcome to the new people who have joined the list. I encourage others to post about their areas of interest as well as to ask questions. The people on this list have a hunger for learning TCM. Ads are not allowed on the list. Links to articles on commercial sites are allowed. Members come from various backgrounds and are at various levels of learning about TCM. Some are brand new to TCM, others are students, and some are professtionals. I encourage all to ask questions as this gets discussions and sharing of more information going. I encourage students and professionals to post information about their special areas of interest. Like one room school houses in years past, beginning and intermediate students often pick up information more quickly than they would if they were not exposed to more experienced students. We're all students here - even the professionals who wouldn't be on a TCM list if they didn't want to learn more. Some of the members on here are new to TCM. TCM can be overwhelming to newbies. The longer you stick with it, the more you understand it. But it can be very overwhleming in the beginning because the concepts underlying TCM and the terminology of TCM are so different from Western medicine. In order to help those new to TCM, from time to time I give some of the basics in these welcoming posts. Common English words with special meaning in TCM are captialized - Cold, Heat, Wind, Deficiency, Excess, Liver, Spleen, Phlegm, Blood, etc. When an organ is referred to in the Western anatomical sense, it is spelled with a lower case letter - liver, spleen, kidneys, lungs, etc. When the TCM meridian or Organ system is referred to, it is spelled with a capital letter - Liver, Spleen, Kidneys, Lungs, etc. Meridians are pathways of Qi or energy throughout the body. Actually, " meridian " is a very poor translation of the Chinese term for these pathways of energy. " Channels " is the preferred term, but I still use meridians as this translation is so well-known to the general public and the term " channels " can refer to other things besides the energy pathways. " Energy " is an incomplete translation of " Qi " , but it's good enough for general use and for use on here. TCM is more concerned with function and groups of functions than with anatomy. The kidneys are two bean-shaped organs, but the Kidneys also include many of the functions of the adrenal glands, the bones, the teeth, and the ears. People with ear or hearing problems frequently will be found to have Kidney imbalance (though Kidney imbalance is not the only possible Root of ear and hearing problems). The eyes are considered part of the Liver, and people with Liver imbalance frequently will have problems with the eyes and vision (though Liver imbalance is not the only possible Root of eye and vision problems). TCM is far more concerned with identifying and treating Roots than Western medicine is. Western medicine primarily treats symptoms in all too many cases. TCM recognizes that if just symptoms are treated, the Root can manifest in other ways. In order to arrive at the correct diagnosis so the correct treatment can be determined, TCM examinations can be very lengthy, especially if the person's problems are particularly " knotty " (complex). From the time a person walks in the door, the TCM healer is starting to observe and analyze. Does the person walk slowly or rapidly? Is the voice loud or soft? Are there any unusual color tones in the complex? Does the person make eye contact? Etc. Each of these things and others is giving the TCM healer information s/he needs to arrive at a correct analysis. The TCM healer also will look at your tongue. What color and shape is the tongue? What color is the tongue coating and how thick is it? Is the tongue swollen or writhered in appearance? Etc. A pulse diagnosis also is a part of the diagnosis, but unlike Western doctors, the TCM healer is taking a minimun of 12 different pulses. Three positions on both wrists ( 3 X 2 =6) at both a superfial and a deep level (6 X 2 = 12) are noted. Is the pulse rapid or slow, strong or weak? Can the pulse be felt most easily with little pressure on the wrist or most easily with a lot of pressure on the wrist? Etc. The TCM healer may also ask a lot of questions. Some of these may seem strange at first. Like what time of the year is your favorite season, and if there is a season of the year when you tend to have more problems than others? Do you have trouble warming up in cold weather or cooling down during the summer? Do you sweat a lot and if so, is it worse at night or during the day, or, do you not sweat when you should? Etc. TCM syndromes very rarely correspond to Western medical disorders. Two of the few which do are the common cold (Wind Chill) and most cases of arthritis and rheumatism (Painful Obstruction Syndrome). Most Western medical disorders do not correspond to a specific TCM syndrome. For example, asthma may have a Root in the Lungs (such as Cold Phlegm or Hot Phlegm Blocking Lungs, Lung Qi Deficiency), or the Root may be in the Kidneys (Kidneys Refusing to Receive Qi), or the Root may be in the Liver (Liver Fire Insulting Lungs), or somewhere else. What is analyzed and treated in TCM are TCM syndromes, NOT Western medical conditions. Sometimes TCM is best, sometimes Western medicine is best, and sometimes a combination is best. There are some things which TCM simply cannot do. For example, no herbs and no amount of acupuncture will cure chronic headaches which are being caused by one leg being shorter than the other and this throwing the posture off to the point that it causes headaches. For this one sees a DO. One of the easiest concepts for those new to TCM to start with is the concept of Cold and Heat. Some problems are due to a person (or a part of the person) being too Cold, and some to a person being too Hot. The general guidelines are to heat the Cold up to normal and cool the Heat down to the normal. Herbs and foods have thermal energy. When you check the Materia Medica (a listing of herbs and their properties), each herb or other healing substance will have its thermal energy listed - cold, cool, neutral, warm, or hot. There are posts in the archives on Hot and Cold. Also check the posts on the 8 Principal Patterns. The 8 PP is the most basic anaylysis approach of TCM. You start by analyzing if the problem is too Hot or too Cold, if it's due to a Deficiency (a problem caused by there not being enough of something) or due to an Excess (a problem caused by there being too much of something), if the problem is due to something in the Exterior of the body (skin, muscles, meridians, head, arms, and legs) or the Interior (the trunk of the body, the organs), and if there is a Yang or Yin imbalance. Two of the functions of Yang are to warm the body and activate things. Two of the functions of Yin are to cool and calm the body. People who lack enough Yang are people who have trouble warming up, hate cold weather, don't feel thirsty and prefer hot soups when they do take liquids, suffer from loose bowels and even diarrhea, have pale complexions, talk and walk slowly, have a lot of very severe fatigue, and may have to urinate a lot and the urine is clear. These people may be suffering from hypo- (underactive) glandular problems. Another term for Yang Deficiency is Deficiency Cold. The Cold is being cause by there not being enough of something. People who are Yin Deficient (Deficiency Heat) tend to feel too hot a lot of the time, have trouble cooling down, hate summer, are thirsty a lot and want cold drinks, tend to suffer from constipation characterized by dry and hard stools, have reddish cheeks, produce conentrated urine, move and speak rapidly, have night sweats, and feel agitated (nervous energy). An example of Excess Cold is frostbite; an example of Excess Heat is heat exhaustion. Victoria _______________________ Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com. Share information about yourself, create your own public profile at http://profiles.msn.com. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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