Guest guest Posted May 11, 2004 Report Share Posted May 11, 2004 Hi everyone, Okay, since I get this in digest form twice a day, there is often so much I'd like to respond to but it's hard to keep organized. So here goes: #1: Re: The conversation on eczema and the theory of toxins " pushing out. " This idea falls under Hering's Law of Cure.. which I know was mentioned a few days back. Asthma is looked at as eczema of the lungs, in this theory, and thus healing from lung conditions often involve some kind of skin disorder. I know in TCM, eczema can have many etiologies as well. I know this is an issue of much disagreement in the field. I have my own experience with Hering's Law of Cure that I thought I'd share... I began experiencing migraines at 12. I was given Vicodin. I developed an ulcer at 16. Tagamet. Vertigo spells, disorientation at 17. No doctor. Finally escalated to a full-blown grand-mal seizure. Many doctors, hospital, MRI, EKG, EEG, neurologists. I rejected drug-therapy and just gritted my teeth and bore it through my early college years. That stopped and I developed chronic lower right abdominal pain and depression through the latter half of college. After many trips to the OB-GYN, and finally a psychologist (recommended to me by the Ob-GYN after being diagnosed with " polycystic ovarian syndrome " which i was told didn't actually explain my pain..).. the pain got worse and worse. At the time, I'd like to add, I was pre-med, hell bent on going to med school. I went to an urgent care clinic at UCLA that turned me away saying... " your pain is " chronic " make an appointment, we can't see chronic cases at urgent care. " i was devastated. I wouldn't have gone to urgent care had the pain not been URGENT! so that was the final straw that encouraged me to pick up the phone and try an acupuncturist. I went down a list I'd found on the internet and called the first one that struck me. She saw me that same day. She listened to what i had to say very carefully. Then told me I was very sick. and that i would get sicker before i'd get better. She predicted a bad cold or flu of some kind (it happened within two weeks.. 104 fever) started me on herbs and acupuncture and a very strict diet cutting out all sugar including fruit and making sure to eat chicken and fish every day. I followed this diet completely for at least a year. She asked me to come in two to three times a week for the first couple of weeks and then tapered me off to once a week. She encouraged me to take warm baths, walks and take it easy.. NO STRESS. Here's the bizarre thing. My pain didn't really go away. It got worse. AND I started experiencing vertigo again. but it was different this time.. and muscle twitches began. all over my body. my hands began *buzzing*. They felt hot, electric and tremored. It was so bad i couldn't sleep at night, I tried to sleep *on* my hands so that they would become numb. I couldn't think, my brain was fuzzy. I could not put a thought together or hold my short-term memory.. I would just completely blank. And this was terrible for my work where I had to teach logical reasoning to law school bound students. I remember laying awake one night and sobbing and sobbing. Hot flashes were starting at the bottom of my feet and running up my body to my head and then back down again. I was sure I was dying. I became hysterical... then remembered this book i kept in my nightstand. Someone had given it to me and I hadn't picked it up yet.. it was called Radical Healing by Rudolph Ballentine, M.D. So I frantically flip through the index looking for " tremors " or " seizures " or " muscle spasms " .. couldn't find it but my eyes rested on one word.. detox. So i open the book to the page, and find an entire chapter. The first question addressed, to my great relief was, how do i know i'm getting better and not worse? EXACTLY i thought! And this was my first encounter with Hering's Law of Cure. Illness begins from the bottom of the body and moves to the top.. from outside, in. And thus healing must move its way outward. And that while healing, you must go through every stage of your illness backwards. All i can say is that this struck a cord, and explained my vertigo and inability to think. Maybe it is true that my acupuncturist's healing plan could have included ways to minimize these side effects, but I do not blame her in the least. It took me 20 years of tension, stress, and abysmal eating to get to the point I was at, how could I expect to be well in two, three, or even 20 treatments? How could I expect a smooth, " trouble " free healing process? My opinion and experience is that healing is hard work.. both emotionally and physically. You must let go of patterns that are deeply ingrained. Your body must release all the memories, and possibly toxins it is holding. Pain from injury is another story, but chronic illness brought on by a combination of physical, emotional and spiritual neglect/abuse is deep seated. And it requires not just acupuncture or herbs, but a total commitment on the part of the patient to change the behaviors that led to the illness. And that is what i did. This is the field I'm most fascinated by in TCM. Perhaps too, responding to the comment on LI, SI and Liver needing to be able to handle the detox.. is it not possible that the body, once prodded, will want to release everything as quickly as possible? There are many ways for the body to release toxins.. urination, defecation, but also menstration and through the skin.. sweating (sweating- even according to TCM!). So where am I now? four years after my first acupuncture treatment and two years into my own study of TCM? After breaking off a relationship that was not working, monitoring my nutrition and mental state and beginning martial arts, and thanks in enormous part to the help of my acupuncturist.. not just for the acupuncture and herbs she prescribed but the rock of calm and confidence she became and the new path she introduced to me, the pain disappeared completely. But it took three and a half years of dilligence. I did in fact experience stomach pain for a brief while and the headaches appeared as recently as three or four months ago. I will say I am in relapse at the moment.. the side pain is haunting me a little- a direct result of falling off the nutrition and emotional balance band wagon. I have been overly stressed and controlling in my life, with a new relationship that is throwing me into tailspins.. something I am working on as we speak. I look now at the pain as my body's way of reminding me of the lessons I've learned. We talk about depth of illness in TCM.. Wei, Qi, Ying, Blood.. And we include release the exterior herbs in some Ying-heat and Blood-heat formulas, under the assumption, as I understand it, that the heat clearing herbs will push the heat outward and downward so that the release the exterior herbs (as well as the downward draining herbs) might vent it (or drain it) out. Is it not possible that various illnesses find their way to certain depths in our body and that by releasing the inner most we will can begin to clear the more superficial layers? I don't think it is so very different from TCM. Take or leave my experience. I think it may only be really relevant for, as I said, chronic illness with a strong emotional component. I also wanted to address the idea of WM's approach to illness. I am in complete agreement that the biological sciences have only hit the tip of the iceberg when it comes to their chosen methodology.. classifying the primary, secondary, tertiary, quaternary structure of every single biological molecule. What fascinates me is that it seems the deeper and deeper the sciences go, the more questions are raised and the more the theories become reminiscent of mysticism. Take the much cited Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle or Quantum Mechanics in general. Advanced physics as well. This is fascinating trend, as I see it, but ultimately devoid of even the attempt at a clear and reasoned understanding of the utter complexities in the interactions of every factor in the system (in medicine's case, the human body), I doubt, for this reason, that WM will find the answers that are so desperately needed for chronic illness. Becoming ill takes time and destructive patterns. How can we expect that a pill or surgery will remedy this? That is why I respectfully declined a life in western medicine. For these reasons I am totally opposed to the idea of using a term like Unified medicine. I do not want to unify with western medicine.. Because of the dogma now prevalent there, I agree with, was it Z'ev? who remarked on Assimilative medicine. We can Compliment WM, and we are an Alternative to WM. I am proud to be. Please forgive any ignorance I may have shown. I am young and still have much to learn and welcome any insight or response. Respectfully, Nadia _______________ Is your PC infected? Get a FREE online computer virus scan from McAfee® Security. http://clinic.mcafee.com/clinic/ibuy/campaign.asp?cid=3963 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 12, 2004 Report Share Posted May 12, 2004 Hi Nadia! Have you considered that you may have endometriosis? Just reading this, makes me wonder . . . " the pain disappeared completely. But it took three and a half years of diligence. I did in fact experience stomach pain for a brief while and the headaches appeared as recently as three or four months ago. I will say I am in relapse at the moment.. the side pain is haunting me a little- a direct result of falling off the nutrition and emotional balance band wagon " . Of course, I am *not* a gynecologist . . . At 03:56 PM 5/11/2004, you wrote:<snip> thanks in >enormous part to the help of my acupuncturist.. not just for the acupuncture >and herbs she prescribed but the rock of calm and confidence she became and >the new path she introduced to me, the pain disappeared completely. But it >took three and a half years of dilligence. I did in fact experience stomach >pain for a brief while and the headaches appeared as recently as three or >four months ago. I will say I am in relapse at the moment.. the side pain is >haunting me a little- a direct result of falling off the nutrition and >emotional balance band wagon. I have been overly stressed and controlling in >my life, with a new relationship that is throwing me into tailspins.. >something I am working on as we speak. I look now at the pain as my body's >way of reminding me of the lessons I've learned. Regards, Pete Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 12, 2004 Report Share Posted May 12, 2004 OB/GYN? Work the Liver meridian, in general. Of course, you must still examine the patient, but LR3, 4,8,and 14 always work wonders in my practice. JG --- Pete Theisen <petet wrote: > Hi Nadia! > > Have you considered that you may have endometriosis? > Just reading this, > makes me wonder . . . " the pain disappeared > completely. But it took three > and a half years of diligence. I did in fact > experience stomach pain for a > brief while and the headaches appeared as recently > as three or four months > ago. I will say I am in relapse at the moment.. the > side pain is haunting > me a little- a direct result of falling off the > nutrition and emotional > balance band wagon " . Of course, I am *not* a > gynecologist . . . > > At 03:56 PM 5/11/2004, you wrote:<snip> > thanks in > >enormous part to the help of my acupuncturist.. not > just for the acupuncture > >and herbs she prescribed but the rock of calm and > confidence she became and > >the new path she introduced to me, the pain > disappeared completely. But it > >took three and a half years of dilligence. I did in > fact experience stomach > >pain for a brief while and the headaches appeared > as recently as three or > >four months ago. I will say I am in relapse at the > moment.. the side pain is > >haunting me a little- a direct result of falling > off the nutrition and > >emotional balance band wagon. I have been overly > stressed and controlling in > >my life, with a new relationship that is throwing > me into tailspins.. > >something I am working on as we speak. I look now > at the pain as my body's > >way of reminding me of the lessons I've learned. > > Regards, > > Pete > > Movies - Buy advance tickets for 'Shrek 2' http://movies./showtimes/movie?mid=1808405861 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 12, 2004 Report Share Posted May 12, 2004 Hi Pete! Yes I have considered that. Ultimately, I guess I don't know how useful that particular WM diagnosis is. To diagnose it would require a laproscopy and even then they may not find anything.. And there's no real solution, WM-wise for endometriosis. I've always thought the most major component CM-wise was the Liver channel.. the pain is right along that meridian and radiates down my leg on occasion and up around my liver. Last time I was into the clinic however I had one of my supervisors trying to convince me that it was Spleen Qi deficiency at which point I inquired how the Spleen Qi deficiency was causing the pain. I don't doubt that there may be Spleen Qi deficiency as a result of Liver overacting on the Spleen but focusing on the Spleen seemed to defy CM philosophy of treating the root.. especially given my history and since I am keenly aware of my emotional state's relevance in the condition. He was adamant that Gui Pi Tang would be a better formula for me than Xiao Yao San and went into a long diagrmatic explanation that left me unconvinced but pondering it. I just feel, given my history... Migraines (Liver Yang rising quite possibly), Ulcer (liver overacting on Stomach), Seizures (Overall deficiency causing Liver wind) and finally lower right abdominal pain (Liver Qi stagnation) that the underlying cause was Liver. Thanks for the thoughts... :> Respectfully, Nadia Chinese Medicine , Pete Theisen <petet@a...> wrote: > Hi Nadia! > > Have you considered that you may have endometriosis? Just reading this, > makes me wonder . . . " the pain disappeared completely. But it took three > and a half years of diligence. I did in fact experience stomach pain for a > brief while and the headaches appeared as recently as three or four months > ago. I will say I am in relapse at the moment.. the side pain is haunting > me a little- a direct result of falling off the nutrition and emotional > balance band wagon " . Of course, I am *not* a gynecologist . . . > > At 03:56 PM 5/11/2004, you wrote:<snip> > thanks in > >enormous part to the help of my acupuncturist.. not just for the acupuncture > >and herbs she prescribed but the rock of calm and confidence she became and > >the new path she introduced to me, the pain disappeared completely. But it > >took three and a half years of dilligence. I did in fact experience stomach > >pain for a brief while and the headaches appeared as recently as three or > >four months ago. I will say I am in relapse at the moment.. the side pain is > >haunting me a little- a direct result of falling off the nutrition and > >emotional balance band wagon. I have been overly stressed and controlling in > >my life, with a new relationship that is throwing me into tailspins.. > >something I am working on as we speak. I look now at the pain as my body's > >way of reminding me of the lessons I've learned. > > Regards, > > Pete Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 13, 2004 Report Share Posted May 13, 2004 Hi John! The examination requirement is a limitation of email discussion with list members. I get the impression that she is associated with a medical school and will know enough to see someone for an examination. At 11:43 AM 5/12/2004, you wrote: >OB/GYN? Work the Liver meridian, in general. Of >course, you must still examine the patient, but LR3, >4,8,and 14 always work wonders in my practice. JG >--- Pete Theisen <petet wrote: > > Hi Nadia! > > > > Have you considered that you may have endometriosis? > > Just reading this, > > makes me wonder . . . " the pain disappeared > > completely. But it took three > > and a half years of diligence. I did in fact > > experience stomach pain for a > > brief while and the headaches appeared as recently > > as three or four months > > ago. I will say I am in relapse at the moment.. the > > side pain is haunting > > me a little- a direct result of falling off the > > nutrition and emotional > > balance band wagon " . Of course, I am *not* a > > gynecologist . . . > > > > At 03:56 PM 5/11/2004, you wrote:<snip> > > thanks in > > >enormous part to the help of my acupuncturist.. not > > just for the acupuncture > > >and herbs she prescribed but the rock of calm and > > confidence she became and > > >the new path she introduced to me, the pain > > disappeared completely. But it > > >took three and a half years of dilligence. I did in > > fact experience stomach > > >pain for a brief while and the headaches appeared > > as recently as three or > > >four months ago. I will say I am in relapse at the > > moment.. the side pain is > > >haunting me a little- a direct result of falling > > off the nutrition and > > >emotional balance band wagon. I have been overly > > stressed and controlling in > > >my life, with a new relationship that is throwing > > me into tailspins.. > > >something I am working on as we speak. I look now > > at the pain as my body's > > >way of reminding me of the lessons I've learned. > > > > Regards, > > > > Pete > > > > > Movies - Buy advance tickets for 'Shrek 2' >http://movies./showtimes/movie?mid=1808405861 > > > >Membership requires that you do not post any commerical, swear, religious, >spam messages,flame another member or swear. > >To translate this message, copy and paste it into this web link >page, http://babel.altavista.com/ > > > and adjust >accordingly. > >If you , it takes a few days for the messages to stop being >delivered. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 13, 2004 Report Share Posted May 13, 2004 Hi Nadia! Sometimes a patient with endometriosis is made better by pregnancy. You *might* get some clues about it by using contraceptive pills for a few months, some of these work by creating the same hormonal levels as a pregnant woman would experience, you'd have to investigate the various types with that in mind. Of course, the result might be inconclusive, too. I heard of one lady who just about stayed pregnant. She wound up with seven kids. Her husband was OK with that. Impressive family pictures! At 12:40 PM 5/12/2004, you wrote: >Hi Pete! > >Yes I have considered that. Ultimately, I guess I don't know how >useful that particular WM diagnosis is. To diagnose it would require >a laproscopy and even then they may not find anything.. And there's >no real solution, WM-wise for endometriosis. Regards, Pete Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 13, 2004 Report Share Posted May 13, 2004 Hi Pete! Forgive me my passion, but you've hit upon a nerve :> No way jose. Yes I have tried birth control pills back when I was seeing my OB/GYN many years ago. In fact, that is the most common suggestion made to women who have any type of problem at all that defies a clear diagnosis. And it did nothing more for me than regulate my periods... (They also suggested anti-depressants.. the cure all for women! BC Pills and anti-depressants! Let's put all women on them and their hysterical unfounded medical complaints will end!) I was suffering from Amenorhea at the time I was diagnosed with a last ditch Polycystic ovarian syndrome based on nothing but an abnormal LH, FSH blood test level - no ultrasound could confirm it, and the solution? BC Pills! Yay! My message was not intended as a call for help, as I mentioned I am managing the situation with exercise, nutrition, occasional acupuncture and herbs when called for and first and foremost emotional and psychological patterning readjustment. Actually, the point I was trying to make, albeit it seems unsucessfully, was that healing is hard work! And doesn't always happen in the few acupuncture treatments we've been told it should.. and also, as far as chronic, psychologically triggered issues, often requires a comprehensive treatment plan involving not just the acupuncture and herbs, but nutrition, physical activity and sometimes psychological counseling (whether by " professional " , solo " soul " searching, etc.) of some type. As always, I appreciate the thoughts, but having a strong background in the biological sciences (my bachelors degree is in biology: neuroscience and behavior), and being an avid student of all alternative medicine, not the least of which is TCM for which I will soon be licensed, I shudder at the thought that we would overlook the actual *causes* of medical complaints despite the fact that they may defy a clear WM diagnosis. Frankly, WM diagnosis strike me as, by and large, useless pieces of renaming that do more to engender fear and helplessness than shed light on the path to wellness. Kind Regards, Nadia Chinese Medicine , Pete Theisen <petet@a...> wrote: > Hi Nadia! > > Sometimes a patient with endometriosis is made better by pregnancy. You > *might* get some clues about it by using contraceptive pills for a few > months, some of these work by creating the same hormonal levels as a > pregnant woman would experience, you'd have to investigate the various > types with that in mind. Of course, the result might be inconclusive, too. > > I heard of one lady who just about stayed pregnant. She wound up with seven > kids. Her husband was OK with that. Impressive family pictures! > > At 12:40 PM 5/12/2004, you wrote: > >Hi Pete! > > > >Yes I have considered that. Ultimately, I guess I don't know how > >useful that particular WM diagnosis is. To diagnose it would require > >a laproscopy and even then they may not find anything.. And there's > >no real solution, WM-wise for endometriosis. > > Regards, > > Pete Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 14, 2004 Report Share Posted May 14, 2004 Hi Nadia! Well, you didn't present the full case then, did you? Without the full history, you are asking a lot to call for suggestions. What else haven't you told us? At 03:55 PM 5/13/2004, you wrote: >Hi Pete! > >Forgive me my passion, but you've hit upon a nerve :> > >No way jose. Yes I have tried birth control pills back when I was >seeing my OB/GYN many years ago. Regards, Pete Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 14, 2004 Report Share Posted May 14, 2004 Hi Pete! I feel like I'm in bizzaro world! I never asked for suggestions! :> I was sharing my experience (The " case " as you call it) that led to a realization I had about healing! When I asked for " comments " I was speaking on that realization and the opinions I had expressed on alternative versus integrative medicine, not comments on how to heal myself, as I mentioned in both emails on the subject, I am managing just fine with the treatment plan I have engineered. I'm sorry if the " case " distracted from my thoughts, as the latter was the point, and the former the premise on which I had based my thoughts. Thank you, though.. Regards, Nadia Chinese Medicine , Pete Theisen <petet@a...> wrote: > Hi Nadia! > > Well, you didn't present the full case then, did you? Without the full > history, you are asking a lot to call for suggestions. What else haven't > you told us? > > At 03:55 PM 5/13/2004, you wrote: > >Hi Pete! > > > >Forgive me my passion, but you've hit upon a nerve :> > > > >No way jose. Yes I have tried birth control pills back when I was > >seeing my OB/GYN many years ago. > > Regards, > > Pete Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 15, 2004 Report Share Posted May 15, 2004 Hi Nadia! I guess we got caught in the semantic trap - comments, suggestions . . . At 03:31 PM 5/14/2004, you wrote: >Hi Pete! > >I feel like I'm in bizzaro world! I never asked for suggestions! :> >I was sharing my experience (The " case " as you call it) that led to >a realization I had about healing! When I asked for " comments " Regards, Pete Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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