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Basics for Beginners Books?

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Don't give up I felt the same way at first intrigued ,but very confused. So I

left it alone and thought about it for awhile. Actually it took quite awhile

before I was convinced that I could get this,Not that I have it now, but this

grouip is fantastic and you will get lots of good advice and encouragment

which is what this is meant to be,but you already knew that didn't you.

Rabiah

 

 

 

 

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Hi

 

I've gone back to the beginning and started reading messages. I'm

not sure if it's Fibro Fog or my brain has shut down. I am having

trouble understanding most of the responses.

 

Can anyone recommend a book or resource that would be helpful for

someone completely new to TCM? I checked the files and links and

must concede defeat. I need this in remedial form at this point.

 

TIA,

mjd

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Ask questions on anything you don't understand.

 

TCM can be very overwhelming at first because it is so different from

Western medicine.

 

If you're interested in herbs, Henry C. Lu's Chinese Herbal Cures is

a good beginning book. He doesn't go into TCM in detail, but he

gives a few of the underlying concepts. Each herb he lists in the

book has a folk tale associated with it. I found this useful for

remembering many of the herbs. For example, the folk tale associated

with Radix (root of) Dioscoreae, aka Shan Yao, aka Mountain Medicine,

aka Chinese yam is that a weakened, almost defeated, and trapped army

took refuge on a mountaim surrounded by much stronger enemy forces

who decided to starve them out. The trapped army lived on dioscorea

which grew abundantly on the mountain. After several months, they

came roaring down off that mountain to defeat the encircling enemy

army. Shan Yao is a Qi tonic herb. Tonic herbs supplement Qi,

Blood, Yin, or Yang in the body. (Qi is pronounced " chee " and roughly

though inadequately translated as energy.)

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Chinese Traditional Medicine , " victoria_dragon "

<victoria_dragon> wrote: Ask questions on anything you don't

understand. TCM can be very overwhelming at first because it is so

different from Western medicine. If you're interested in herbs,

Henry C. Lu's Chinese Herbal Cures is a good beginning book.

 

 

Hi Victoria,

 

If I asked questions on things I don't understand, we'd be in

trouble. lol I seriously don't understand any of what I've read so

far. I don't know why because I am not stuck on Western Medicine.

 

I ordered the book you listed and I loved the story you shared from

it. That is very powerful and I can't wait until it gets here.

 

Thanks and I will try to come up with some half-way intelligent

questions once I've formulated my thoughts on all this. Add a chalk

line to the " overwhelmed " side. :-)

 

Thanks again,

mjd

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Chinese Traditional Medicine , Remediesbyrabiah@a... wrote:

> Don't give up I felt the same way at first intrigued ,but very

confused...this grouip is fantastic and you will get lots of good

advice and encouragment which is what this is meant to be,but you

already knew that didn't you. Rabiah

 

 

Hi Rabiah,

 

I am not planning on giving up. Thanks for letting me know you

experienced this too. Whew!

 

Yes, I agree this is a fantastic group.

 

Thanks again,

mjd

 

P.S. You have a very pretty name, btw.

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