Guest guest Posted March 7, 2004 Report Share Posted March 7, 2004 Hi group, Perhaps someone else can corroborate these phenomena---I have had four patients who had cotton pulses and were also hypothyroid. Leon Hammer (via Dr. shen I presume) describes the cotton pulse as representative of sadness, an inability to express anger, or blaming others for their plight. Any thoughts about the connection? Joe Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 7, 2004 Report Share Posted March 7, 2004 Chinese Medicine , " Joe " <qimoves> wrote: > > Hi group, > Perhaps someone else can corroborate these phenomena---I have had > four patients who had cotton pulses and were also hypothyroid. Leon > Hammer (via Dr. shen I presume) describes the cotton pulse as > representative of sadness, an inability to express anger, or blaming > others for their plight. Any thoughts about the connection? Dr. Hammer elaborates cotton also as sad in the sense of resignation, powerlessness, which could correspond to lack of the fire/Yang, which would make sense as Yang vacuity associates with hypothyroid. He also describes it as trapped Qi at the surface, which implies stagnation of WeiQi. Adding Jeffery Yuen's depiction of WeiQi as a form of Yang Qi, the cotton would be affecting the sinew channels, the level of Wei Qi. This associates with both the senses (awareness of the outside) and reflexive, instinctual movement. So also Yang vacuity (hypothyroid) failing to support Wei Qi, which then stagnates, renders one with a sense of powerlessness, lack of defensive as well as aggressive strength to respond adequately to external challenges. With Jeffery Yuen's schema of energetic levels, the Wei Qi level manifests psychologically as mood, as untargeted reactive feeling such as sadness not relating to specific causes. If the stagnation reaches deeper to the Ying Qi level (aka Qi & Blood in the Luo and primary channels), here emotion would come into play, as targeted and socially informed feelings, carried in the Blood, e.g. ones relationship to anger or blame. If the stagnation and exhaustion goes even deeper, overcoming Ying Qi and then challenging the Yuan Qi / Jing Qi level (Divergent and 8 Extraordinary channels), then the psychological issues at the level of temperament / constitutional disposition would come into play. Dr. Hammer finds the superficial stagnation (cotton quality), over time, can exhaust or otherwise affect deeper levels. In this context I can envision the emotional issues he describes – inability to express anger, blame, etc. , L.Ac. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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