Guest guest Posted October 25, 2002 Report Share Posted October 25, 2002 In a message dated 10/25/2002 6:47:59 AM Pacific Daylight Time, victoria_dragon writes: I wrote: < Too much Yin will make one aggressive. One gets greedy and possessive. I have a Water element predominant dog that I see this happen to all the time. I forgot to mention that there are different types of aggression. It seems like the first thing we think of with aggression is an excess Yang situation .... a Hot Liver situation. Anger is associated with the Liver. Aggression can be due to anger ... but it isn't always due to anger. My dogs aggression was not related to anger. There is aggression based on greed ... aggression based on fear ... as well as aggression based on anger. My dogs aggression was based on greed. By continuing to study the 5 Element theory I was able to help my dog. Utilizing cooling foods and attempting to subdue the Liver, only made the problem worse. It took me a very long time to see and understand this ... I found it so perplexing. It wasn't until I looked past the aggression and looked towards what was motivating him ...along with viewing it in relation to his constitutional predominance ... that I was able to begin to resolve the issue. I also believe that my solution for him ... would have been the same ... had he been a person. Kit wrote: << it's too bad food studies are done on animals, since they have differently designed digestive systems. I.E. Dogs and cats can become anemic on onions and garlic....believed to be health foods for us. I find working with animals very helpful. Yes ... they are put together differently ... yet they are also made up of the same " 5 elements " that we are. My dog responds to food .... in accordance with the principles. The only difference that I have found thus far is that his diet needs to contain a higher amount of protein ... and a lesser amount of vegetable. IE his diet needs to be more acidic than mine. Dogs are not the same as cats .... cats need even more protein. I suspect rats and mice and pigs and horses ... all have their unique differences ... but .... We all share the same common bond of the elements. Lynn Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 25, 2002 Report Share Posted October 25, 2002 > Too much Yin will make one aggressive. One gets greedy and possessive. I > have a Water element predominant dog that I see this happen to all the time. > If I feed him too many Yin foods ... he gets aggressive ... greedy ... > possessive .... full of himself ... etc For those new to TCM, in the message base are some posts from Dagmar titled Letter from China. In some of these, Dagmar goes into the different types of energy and people (5 Element theory). Sometimes there will be an imbalance with one Element (Wood, Fire, Earth, Metal, or Water) predominating. This sounds very esoteric, but there are some practical applications. TCM recognizes many different approaches to analysis. For example 8 Principle Patterns (Exterior/ Interior, Excess/ Deficiency, Hot/ Cold, and Yang/ Yin), analysis according to Fundamental Processes (Qi, Blood, Shen, Jing), analysis according to Pernicious Evils (Heat, Cold, Wind, Dryness, Dampness, Fire). Analysis according to Organ (i.e., Kidney Yin Deficiency, Lung Qi Deficiencym Damp Heat in the Gall Bladder, etc.). Sometimes one approach will be enough to analyze and treat correctly; sometimes various approaches are combined. 5 Element Theory is another approach that looks at relationships between Organs. Actually between Elements. For example, if one's Kidneys are not up to par, one's Liver eventually will not be either. This is because Water (Kidneys, Bladder) is the " mother " of Wood (Liver, Gall Bladder). Tonifying the " mother " (in this case Water) automatically tonifies the " son " (Wood in this cases). Put in Organ analysis terms, the person has joint Kidney and Liver Yin Deficiency. It's not going to be enough just to tonify the Liver Yin because in time the Liver will become Yin Deficient again because the Kidneys simply do not have the Yin to supply the Liver. All these different approaches are going to seem very confusing to a person who is just learning about TCM. But as you gain familiarity with the strange-sounding terms and concepts, everything will start to fall into place. The different approaches to analysis are different perspectives. They enable the healer to come up with the best possible understanding and most effective treatment for what ails the person. Not all TCM schools teach 5 Elements, but I recommend learning it. A 5 Elements approach can be invaluable when trying to work with " knotty " (complex) cases. These are cases where there are so many imbalances that when the healer starts to treat one, it can worsen another. Pull on one strand of the " knot " and it causes another strand to " knot " up worse. In these cases 5 Element Theory sometimes can guide the healer to an approach that would not have been considered otherwise. Also, it is theoretically possible to do effective acupuncture and acupressure using only the Transport (Element) acupoints. I'll be posting more on these special points in a future post. I believe there already is some info about them in the message base. Victoria Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 25, 2002 Report Share Posted October 25, 2002 yet they are also made up of the same " 5 elements " that we are. My dog responds to food .... in accordance with the principles. The only difference that I have found thus far is that his diet needs to contain a higher amount of protein ... and a lesser amount of vegetable. IE his diet Hi Lynn, Actually I was thinking more in terms of research studies. Interesting about the five elements. More applicable to dogs than cats, I would guess, because you can include more vegetables. I have taken the tack of feeding mine, as closely as possible and still watching nutrients, as they would eat in nature. That is raw meat with the bones. The cats are getting almost 100% meat, mostly whole quail...with sweet meats added & offerings of grasses. The dogs are getting mostly 50/50 (mea tw/bones to veggies)right now with heated broth....since they are on diets. I'll alter the percentage when they are at a healthy weight. About to add green tripe (dogs)...ugh, not looking to forward to that...but dogs will love, it I'm sure. These are the types of foods that their digestive systems have evolved to handle and what it's proven they thrive on. BTW: Emotions have improved, too. I would be dead in a month ;-), I think......if ony for the ugh-factor.....;-( Kit Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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