Guest guest Posted July 5, 2006 Report Share Posted July 5, 2006 I would like to ask the board about some good TCM books to read. The books I have read that I can remember off the top of my head are Chinese Herbal Medicine by Daniel Reid, The Web That Has No Weaver by Ted Kaptchuk, and another on by Henry C Lu, all of which have been fantastic reads and taught me a lot about Chinese medicine. I think it would help me to read a book that had some more practical or clinical information, because it would help me learn the material instead of trying to memorize theories that seem to tend to the arbitrary side. Like for example when they say that wood (or the liver) is mother to fire because it generates it. That makes complete sense, but to me it would be more useful if I understood how or why that was the case in a specific person or type of people, or something like that. Like something for an example of this is someone with a liver problem (usually heat I think) usually has some sort of temper or short fuse. I understand that is not in all cases, but it's a general idea that helps put the pieces together to figure out how things really do interact with each other. A good example of this for me is in math. I hardly ever memorized a formula in math because I always learned how to derive them myself so I wouldn't have to remember it, but I would always be able to get it whenever I wanted. I focused on the process of how things were done, and looked at the several ways I could get there. The other side of this to me was physics. My teacher never showed me how formulas were derived or why they were true, so it was just memorizing formulas, and then plugging the appropriate variable in each place. I never really had an understanding of how it worked or why, but I passed the class fine because on every test he let us write down the formula's on an index card. This really wouldn't work as well in TCM because, not having an understanding of how things really work (what I call learning) when you get to a trouble that is not a " memorized formula " then I'd be lost and have no clue what to do. So I guess what would be good are some simple fairly straightforward examples that are explained in detail according to TCM. A good example of this I read somewhere is it was talking about yin and yang. Overall water is yin and mountain is yang, generally speaking. If a person's overall being was personified in a portrait, and say the picture was a mountain-scape with a river running in the background. Overall this would follow the pattern. On the other hand if the portrait was a seascape with a mountain in the distance, the water would be mostly yang in the picture compared to the yin mountain in the background. A book that had many examples like this in it would be very helpful for me. Has anyone read or know of a book like this? Thanks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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