Guest guest Posted October 24, 2002 Report Share Posted October 24, 2002 I keep running into him as a source while I try to track down the source of the " avoid nightshades " dietary rule that macrobiotics and some TCM practitioners have latched onto, which appears to be an invention of the 1970s. From what I have been able to cobble together, Daniel P. Reid was supposedly born in San Fransisco, holds a Master's degree in Chinese Language and Civilization, and has lived in East Asia for over 30 years, over 20 of which were spent learning various aspects of Traditional . He was also apparently a restauranteur based in Taiwan at one time, but currently lives in Byron Bay, Australia. He seems to have a reputation as being a respectable source of knowlege, and he does publish under Shambhala, which generally puts out reasonable stuff, but what I've read of his doesn't seem to live up to his reputation. He seems to mix and match his own ideas, Indian and other Eastern miscellanea, 19th century European quackery with actual useful Chinese information, calling it all Traditional . Has anyone else read any of his works? Am I jumping to conclusions? I've only read a couple of his books, and they do seem to have a reasonable amount of good information in them, it's just the bizzare excesses that makes me suspicious. Mbanu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 25, 2002 Report Share Posted October 25, 2002 Daniel Reid's books seem to be pretty close to the " money " to me. I haven't found anything factually wrong in his books. He does seem to want to communicate to his western audience using western ideas. > He seems to mix and match his own ideas, Indian and > other Eastern > miscellanea, 19th century European quackery Which quackery is this? > just the bizzare > excesses that makes me suspicious. Which bizarre excesses? I really am curious! Bye! Hugo Everything you'll ever need on one web page from News and Sport to Email and Music Charts http://uk.my. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 26, 2002 Report Share Posted October 26, 2002 > > He seems to mix and match his own ideas, Indian and > > other Eastern > > miscellanea, 19th century European quackery > > Which quackery is this? > > > just the bizzare > > excesses that makes me suspicious. > > Which bizarre excesses? > > I really am curious! A couple examples: This is taken from the Shambhala Guide to Traditional Chinese Medicine, by Daniel Reid: " The most basic principle of proper food combining is to avoid conflicts of yin and yang in the stomach. In Western terms, this is known as alkaline and acid, or pH balance. When foods that require an acid medium of digestive enzymes in the stomach- such as meath, eggs, and other concentrated proteins- are eaten together with foods that require an alkaline medium, such as bread, rice, noodles, and other carbohydrates, the two types of digestive enzymes conflict and neutralize each other, forming a neutral medium that digests neither type of food. Instead, the carbohydrates ferment and the proteins putrefy... " (pg. 88) He will often explain Chinese advice while giving his own unrelated reason, as opposed to a explaination from a TCM viewpoint. He also doesn't seem to distinguish his own personal commentary from established theories and facts. Food combining does play a role in TCM dietetics, but the correlation of it to his personal ideas about pH balance, and alkaline digestion occuring in the stomach seem unfounded, even from a purely Western viewpoint. In the translation of the Yinshan Zhengyao at least, most food combining rules seem to center around avoiding eating different sorts of meat together, or certain meat vegetable combinations, such as pork with beef, or beef with chestnuts. However, even these are a bit shaky, as modern research into combining many of hese " forbidden foods " has show them to be no more accurate than the admonishment not to fall asleep on millet stalks while drunk, lest one contract leprosy. A bit later on, he uses the section on Chinese nutrition to push his own ideas about " enzyme energy " , using verification from a Taoist in Taiwan (as opposed to say, a Chinese Medical Doctor?) as justification for including it: " ...regarding enzymes and energy, Master Luo Teh-hsiou, a Taoist practitioner in Taiwan, remarked: This energy contained in enzymes is chee at work in the human body, and it is contained only in fresh unprocessed foods. Whenever you eat inert foods devoid of the chee-power of enzymes, your body is robbed of vital energy in order to digest and metabolize the stagnant food in your system, and this causes a constant drain of energy from the body. " (pg. 93) Reid is also particularly big on pushing fasting and enemas as part of Traditional . In _A_Handbook_of_Chinese_Healing_Herbs_ for instance, he states: " Purifying the bloodstream, detoxifying the tissues and cleansing the internal organs of metabolic wastes and digestive debris accumulated from decades of wrong food, medicine, and habits is by far the most important first step on the path to renewed health and rejuvenation. Toxic tissues, impure blood, clogged colons, and swollen livers release a constant stream of poisons that pollutes the entire system... The only way to eliminate these toxins is by fasting at least once or twice a year for 3-7 days each time. During the fast, you can use either pure water or freshly extracted fruit juice diluted by half with pure water. It is most important to use a high-grade psyllium-husk preparation four or five times daily throughout the duration of the fast in order to sweep the bowels clean of all toxic debris. If you also do daily colonic irrigations... you will at least triple the quantity of toxic waste eliminated from your system during any fast. " (pg 39-40) From what I have learned, I was under the impression that 'fasting' was treated much like starving in TCM, being a source of Qi Deficiency and not usually a good idea. Most fasts that were practiced in China as far as I am aware of were for specific medical conditions, or more commonly for religious observances, not for general bodily maintainance. Although I am familiar with the use of enemas in TCM, I was under the impression that they too were used for specific cases only, not as a general health tonic, and in some cases (such as in problems with obesity) were even recommended against. In this particular book, he doesn't go into any detail as to the sources behind his ideas, although going back to _Shambbhala_Guide_to_Chinese Medicine_ he uses a quote from a Chinese physician named Chai Yu-hua (I am unfamiliar with this name. Has anyone else ever heard of this person?) to justify his ideas about fasting and enemas. Chai Yu-hua stated " Purging the bowels eliminates the source of poisons, thereby permitting blood and energy to regenerate naturally. By cleaning the bowels we repair the body. " He also goes on to talk about Chang Tsung-cheng (another unfamiliar name... can anyone help me identify it?) who " used fasting and colonic cleansing therapy to cure his patients of dozens of seemingly unrelated symptoms, including respiratory ailments, chronic constipation and indigestion, headaches and fevers, arthritis and rheumatism, as well as mental and emotional disturbances " (p. 96) which to me personally, sounds somewhat as though he was curing people by pattern, and not implying that fasting and colonic cleansing are reasonable for all cases, as Reid seems to imply. This is not to say that his books are useless, they are often filled with accurate and valuable information, it's simply that oftentimes he seems to slip in his own extra information without differentiating from the established Chinese theory. On the third hand, he does have a respected reputation, and I haven't read all of his books, nor have I been studying TCM for nearly as long as he supposedly has, maybe ideas such as alkaline digestion, enzyme power, fasting and colonics really are part of TCM... it just seemed kind of odd to me. Mbanu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 2002 Report Share Posted October 28, 2002 Hi Mbanu...your point is very clear now, thanks for the time spent writing. > This is not to say that his books are useless, they > are often filled > with accurate and valuable information, it's simply > that oftentimes > he seems to slip in his own extra information > without > differentiating from the established Chinese theory. Well, that's what I have found to some degree as well. There is a shade of something in his books which is not quite TCM, and certainly not exactly western medicine either. I've always taken it to be an example of the difficulties in trying to bridge the two, rather than as out and out errors. I admit that one thing I do _not_ like about his books is the depth - the ones I've read are full of info, but one can only get to a certain depth of understanding because of the way the information is presented...almost a pop-science sort of way. > On the third hand, he does have a respected > reputation, and I > haven't read all of his books, nor have I been > studying TCM for > nearly as long as he supposedly has, maybe ideas > such as alkaline > digestion, enzyme power, fasting and colonics really What do you think, if anything, about the yin and yang aspects of digestion? What is an acid? What is a base? See you later, Hugo Everything you'll ever need on one web page from News and Sport to Email and Music Charts http://uk.my. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 2002 Report Share Posted October 28, 2002 > What do you think, if anything, about the yin and > yang aspects of digestion? What is an acid? What is a > base? I don't think that I have the thourough grounding in both Western and Eastern ideas of nutrition that I would need to bridge the gap sucessfully between different ideas regarding digestion and pH levels, so I haven't really spent that much time trying to. My understanding of the TCM process of digestion leads me to believe that it is Yang in nature; It relies on quite a bit of transformation and separation in transmuting food into the various forms of qi. Transformation, especially of a denser form of energy (food) into a lighter form (qi) seems Yang to me. The Yin aspects of digestion seem to be most strongly linked with elimination. However, my understanding of this process is still somewhat shaky. It mostly seeems to involve filtering the denser " turbid " energy from the lighter, and eventually expelling the " turbid of the turbid " energies the form of urine and feces. This process of downward filtering and condensing makes me consider this portion of digestion Yin. I haven't really thought about acids and bases to any great degree, although I have been looking into the macrobiotic explaination for this. Macrobiotics also makes a correlation between yin/yang and acid/alkaline. Although this seems like an odd idea to me, I thought I would give it a deeper look. Compared to Reid's theories of alkaline digestion, the macrobiotic theories that yin or yang foods can raise the pH level of a persons blood seem a bit more reasonable. I am currently awaiting a book on the macrobiotic acid/alkaline viewpoint called _Acid_and_Alkaline_ by Herman Aihara that will hopefully shed some more light on the subject. Mbanu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2002 Report Share Posted October 29, 2002 > I haven't really thought about acids and bases to > any great degree, > although I have been looking into the macrobiotic > explaination for > this. Macrobiotics also makes a correlation between > yin/yang and > acid/alkaline. If I may make a suggestion; try to not look too much into macrobiotics since it uses a backwards interpretation of yin/yang theory from the TCM point of view. It may just make your life that much more confusing for a while. I have also found that it is much more rigid in its interpretation. I think that one of the clearest correspondences between yin and yang function lies with alkaline and acid balances, probably because it's such a basic (haha ... get it? yin, basic, foundation? sheesh) level of functioning. Ok, bye, Hugo Everything you'll ever need on one web page from News and Sport to Email and Music Charts http://uk.my. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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