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I am in search of references about music and the five elements.

Apparently there are different indications that some music are more in

tune with some deficiencies.

The only thing I found out is that Wood would be related to the tone of

the bamboo flute.

If we can determine what kind of music fits what kind of elements, then

we can enhance treatments by playing the right music (and using the

right color of light) while doing the treatment.

 

If you have any sources, thank you to let me know.

Frederic

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The six healing sounds of taoist medicince (eg Chi Nei Tsang) may give you

insight about relation to the elements.

 

Each internal organ is associated with an element, and each element has a

sound.

here is a useful link

http://users.erols.com/dantao/sixsound.html

 

and another

http://www.shouyuliang.com/newsletter/v2n3/v2n3a2.shtml

which contains

Sound Xu Ke Hu Si Chui Xi

Organs Liver Heart Spleen Lungs Kidneys Triple Burner

Seasons Spring Summer Late Summer Fall Winter --

Elements Wood Fire Earth Metal Water --

Specific Openings Eyes Tongue Mouth Nose Ears --

 

Now the fun part is finding an instrument that would make the appropriate

sound..

 

 

christine

Sun, 10 Nov 2002 20:04:58 -0600

frederic <>

Music

 

I am in search of references about music and the five elements.

Apparently there are different indications that some music are more in

tune with some deficiencies.

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Chinese Traditional Medicine, frederic <fredlecut@e...> wrote:

> I am in search of references about music and the five elements.

> Apparently there are different indications that some music are more

in

> tune with some deficiencies.

 

Well, Shen Wu at http://www.musicqigong.com was developing a

professional course for CEUs. He also outlines some basic theory at

his site. I can't say much on his legitamacy, I've never heard of him

before. Apparently he lives in Florida in the US. There are also some

music qigong teachers in China listed on the web:

 

http://www.chinaqigong.net/english/qgsk/kt.htm and a couple others at

http://www.chinaqigong.net/english/qgsk/

 

Mbanu

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frederic wrote:

>

> I am in search of references about music and the five elements.

> Apparently there are different indications that some music are more in

> tune with some deficiencies.

> The only thing I found out is that Wood would be related to the tone of

> the bamboo flute.

> If we can determine what kind of music fits what kind of elements, then

> we can enhance treatments by playing the right music (and using the

> right color of light) while doing the treatment.

 

The five elements are associated with five particular notes as well.

They are the black keys on a piano, I just can't remember which is which.

 

I have for a long time thought about getting those tibettan white

crystal bowls and taping them a bit to create the tone that is

consistant with the element I'm focusing on in the treatment. Just

haven't found them cheap enough for all five yet...

 

I like the idea of hitting it and then leaving the room as the sound

decays and takes the patient on a little journey.

 

-al.

 

 

--

Al Stone L.Ac.

<AlStone

http://www.BeyondWellBeing.com

 

Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional.

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  • 9 months later...

Hey, no worries. I practice martial arts and constantly practicing on sand

bags, focus mitts, and people. With stronger fingers, you do better

bodywork. :)

 

 

 

Robert Chu, L.Ac., QME

chusauli

 

See my webpages at: http://www.chusaulei.com

 

 

 

 

 

> " Marco " <bergh

>

>

> music

>Mon, 25 Aug 2003 07:08:02 -0500

>

>I not sure if I remember correctly or made the following up.

>

>I am learning the flute to incorporate in relaxing and meditation. What I

>really want to learn is the guitar but will this be counterproductive for

>the fingers and hands with regard to massage and moxa and qi gong and so

>forth?

>

>Marco

>

>

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We were told that playing guitar would build calluses that would make feeling

the pulses harder.

 

~Jody

-

Robert Chu

Monday, August 25, 2003 7:54 AM

Re: music

 

 

Hey, no worries. I practice martial arts and constantly practicing on sand

bags, focus mitts, and people. With stronger fingers, you do better

bodywork. :)

 

 

 

Robert Chu, L.Ac., QME

chusauli

 

See my webpages at: http://www.chusaulei.com

 

 

 

 

 

> " Marco " <bergh

>

>

> music

>Mon, 25 Aug 2003 07:08:02 -0500

>

>I not sure if I remember correctly or made the following up.

>

>I am learning the flute to incorporate in relaxing and meditation. What I

>really want to learn is the guitar but will this be counterproductive for

>the fingers and hands with regard to massage and moxa and qi gong and so

>forth?

>

>Marco

>

>

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, " Jody Herriott "

<jherriot@m...> wrote:

 

 

> We were told that playing guitar would build calluses that would

make feeling the pulses harder.

 

 

>

 

 

> ~Jody

 

 

 

 

I don't think this is so... atleast for me... In most pulse styles

(i've been exposed to) you use the pads of the fingers vs the tips for

guitar. I think instruments build sensitivity, through more use with

the fingers as well as different brain use.

 

 

 

 

-

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, " " wrote:

> > Jody: We were told that playing guitar would build calluses that

would make feeling the pulses harder. >>>

 

> : I don't think this is so... at least for me... In most

pulse styles (i've been exposed to) you use the pads of the fingers

vs the tips for guitar. I think instruments build sensitivity,

through more use with the fingers as well as different brain use.

 

 

 

Jason:

 

While calluses can dull the pulse sensation, it shouldn't be a

problem when doing TCM pulse diagnosis which looks at only gross

features of the pulse. You're right about instruments building

sensitivity through more use and activating more parts of the brain.

 

That's why we read pulses with only the left hand---it doubles the

training, sensitivity, and nerve connections in the left hand;

rather than dividing attention and time between hands which already

have different levels of sensitivity.

 

 

Jim Ramholz

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