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Hearsay?/ Dragons Treatment

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Hi All,

I agree that we have to be careful about people describing certain OM

techniques or theories as being " classical " , when they could be the

product of a fertile imagination.

 

That said, it is ridiculous to demand a classical literary source for

everything that is practices in traditional medicine. A great deal of

traditional oriental medicine has existed as closely-guarded covert

oral knowledge passed down from father to son. There is nothing

written down, but it is no less traditional for that. The classical

texts that do survive are probably only a fragment of the first 2000

years of disparate views and concepts that we strangely try to

homogenise into one school called " TCM " .

 

As for the Seven Dragons possession treatment, there are many

practitioners who can attest to both the diagnosis and effectiveness

of the treatment, as Stephen McCallan testifies. The sources for

Worsley's protocols are explored by Eckman in " In the Footsteps of the

Yellow Emperor " which identifies Worsley's source for this as " Master

Hsiu " , a classical Chinese practitioner who taught Worsley in the 1960s.

 

Best wishes,

 

Godfrey Bartlett

 

> >

> > Jody H and I had the same instructor. My notes show the treatment

> came from George Soulie De Morant;

>

> Can't find it, could you point out where?

>

> .

> >

> > Kind of like waking the dragon to attack the negative

> energy/spirits/disharmony. I look at it as more healing or nurturing.

> >

>

> This is the concept that I question... I would like to see a chinese

> source on this...

>

> Thanx in advance,

>

> -

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I am not concerned here about the clinical efficacy of the Seven

Dragons treatment, but how medical information is communicated in our

profession. At times, our profession seems like a free for all, where

anything goes, and everything is accepted. Clearly, issues of spirit

or demon possession are in the history of Chinese medicine, and

treatments for these are in, for example, Sun Simiao's Qian Jin Yao

Fang.

 

I am more concerned about accurate translation and depiction of

concepts in Chinese medicine, If we don't know what 'aggressive

energy' means, or what the original Chinese characters or concepts are,

or where the " Seven Dragons " comes from, we have only the modern

teacher to trust. We have to 'believe', rather than understand. This,

my friends, is very poor scholarship. Poor scholarship leads to poor

transmission of medicine to future generations of practitioners.

 

Would you study any modern subject, from physics to metaphysics,

without clear definitions of terminology? Without sources? How would

you then understand the subject matter? Why obscure the core concepts

of a system of medicine without explaining them? If you cannot say

clearly what seven dragons are, aggressive energy, or possession are in

the context of Chinese medicine or the Chinese language, what on earth

are you talking about?

 

 

 

On Jul 2, 2004, at 5:02 AM, acu_qichina wrote:

 

> As for the Seven Dragons possession treatment, there are many

> practitioners who can attest to both the diagnosis and effectiveness

> of the treatment, as Stephen McCallan testifies. The sources for

> Worsley's protocols are explored by Eckman in " In the Footsteps of the

> Yellow Emperor " which identifies Worsley's source for this as " Master

> Hsiu " , a classical Chinese practitioner who taught Worsley in the

> 1960s.

>

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Chinese Medicine , " acu_qichina "

<acu@q...> wrote:

> Hi All,

> I agree that we have to be careful about people describing certain OM

> techniques or theories as being " classical " , when they could be the

> product of a fertile imagination.

>

> That said, it is ridiculous to demand a classical literary source for

> everything that is practices in traditional medicine.

 

Just for the record I agree and have never said otherwise...

 

 

>

> As for the Seven Dragons possession treatment, there are many

> practitioners who can attest to both the diagnosis and effectiveness

> of the treatment, as Stephen McCallan testifies.

 

From my perspective that is completely moot, I could care less if you

and others think it works... But on a side note What people think

works is always amazing to me...

 

The sources for

> Worsley's protocols are explored by Eckman in " In the Footsteps of the

> Yellow Emperor " which identifies Worsley's source for this as " Master

> Hsiu " , a classical Chinese practitioner who taught Worsley in the 1960s.

 

So I assume you are saying that there is no written record for the

dragons treatment in Chinese? And for that matter, no mention of any

idea of summoning dragons to disperse the evil written previous to

worsley? Are you saying that it completely comes from an oral

tradition? Finally for the record, I could care either way, I am just

trying to gather information on it's past and history, please no need

for people to get defensive. :)

 

Respectively,

 

-Jason

 

>

> Best wishes,

>

> Godfrey Bartlett

>

> > >

> > > Jody H and I had the same instructor. My notes show the treatment

> > came from George Soulie De Morant;

> >

> > Can't find it, could you point out where?

> >

> > .

> > >

> > > Kind of like waking the dragon to attack the negative

> > energy/spirits/disharmony. I look at it as more healing or nurturing.

> > >

> >

> > This is the concept that I question... I would like to see a chinese

> > source on this...

> >

> > Thanx in advance,

> >

> > -

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Chinese Medicine , " "

wrote:

>> The sources for

> > Worsley's protocols are explored by Eckman in " In the Footsteps of the

> > Yellow Emperor " which identifies Worsley's source for this as " Master

> > Hsiu " , a classical Chinese practitioner who taught Worsley in the 1960s.

>

> So I assume you are saying that there is no written record for the

> dragons treatment in Chinese? And for that matter, no mention of any

> idea of summoning dragons to disperse the evil written previous to

> worsley? Are you saying that it completely comes from an oral

> tradition? Finally for the record, I could care either way, I am just

> trying to gather information on it's past and history, please no need

> for people to get defensive. :)

>

>

 

in the Peter Mole article there is an endnote which mentions a journal article

written

by Bob Flaws in 1989 in which he writes about the 4 blocks within the larger

body of

CM. Anybody perchance have the article and can summarize? Or can ask Flaws?

Might shed some light on the question.

 

rh

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