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Hi Stephan,

 

Interesting that you talk about the Liver. I've always believed that the

Liver is the gate way for the earthly spirit. A classic example of that is

Xiao Yao Wan - Free the Wanderer patent pills. A happy person will always

have a calm Liver, free from stagnation. The Liver, I believe, balances the

ties of the body to the spirit. Of cause the Liver's emotion is anger, which

blocks the Liver's Qi and ability to regulate the body's movement of Qi.

This is linked to the fact that acceptance of the world around you will not

cause anger and will lead to a happier life.

 

I believe that drug abuse, is caused by people wishing to find a short cut

route to the ideal person we believe ourselves to be. Most drugs will

highlight certain qualities, relaxed, energetic, perception, etc. I've

noticed that drug abuse, especially cannabis greatly affects the Liver's

ability to move Qi freely. The 'stoned' feeling felt by users during

cannabis consumption, is an exaggerated form of Liver Qi movement, making

the body feel light and disorientated, as the lighter forces of spirit Liver

Wind rise to the head. After use, the next day, the Liver has a come

accustomed to external influences controlling its movement and literally

backs off from regulating Qi movement as it expects a third party to do so,

in this case the cannabis. No cannabis use, thereafter, leads to Liver Qi

stagnation. Once cannabis is introduced again, the Liver Qi stagnation

subsides until the next time. The episodes of none cannabis intervention,

cause stagnation, leading to Heat and over a long period of time, a pattern

of empty Heat in the Liver.

 

What have other members noticed about drug abuse, especially cannabis, and

its affects on the body?

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio

 

www.chinesedoctor.co.uk <http://www.chinesedoctor.co.uk/>

 

 

stephen macallan [stephenmacallan]

01 January 1601 00:00

Chinese Medicine

Re: Re: the dragons treatment

 

 

hello phil and ann,

If there is no polluted ch'i,

then the protocol merely sedates, slightly, the relevant officials,

,including liver - hence, perhaps, the calmer, nicer patient.

 

regardez

 

stephen

 

 

 

 

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> Attilio:

> Interesting that you talk about the Liver. I've always believed that the

> Liver is the gate way for the earthly spirit. A classic example of that is

> Xiao Yao Wan - Free the Wanderer patent pills. A happy person will always

> have a calm Liver, free from stagnation. The Liver, I believe, balances

the

> ties of the body to the spirit.

>

>

 

Which discussion leads, indirectly and perhaps out of line with the current

thought,

to the intruguiging 41st Difficult issue in Nan Ching:

 

[i am currently crafting an article on the enigma and much of the thinking

below

comes from it]

 

'Only the Liver has two lobes. What does that correspond to?'

 

> The Liver, I believe, balances the

> ties of the body to the spirit. Of cause the Liver's emotion is anger,

which

> blocks the Liver's Qi and ability to regulate the body's movement of Qi.

>

>

 

Which lobe holds anger? Which depression, or anxiety? Which one finally,

stagnated to stasis, leads to the unwelcome Corridors of Rage?

 

The R is the larger lobe and occupies the R upper abdominal quadrant. It

adjoins the GB channel at the part that it regulates the Dai [GB 26, 27,

28].

 

It sits athwart the Liver mu, and the SP mu to boot.

 

Importantly it juxtaposes to the K mu, the only one at the ide of the body,

in which case, part of the SJ - GB - Dai - Yang Wei ensemble.

 

The L lobe is minuscule, almost an afterthought, a small player in the Wood

drama. Or is it? For small is yin, the basis of all yang big.

 

The Sage explains that the early part of Spring has not yet forgotten

Winter,

and is as yet in it's womb; and the latter part has not yet greeted fully

the

summer, and is not yet apposed to it. Hence the two lobes.

 

One season is 90 days, all 4 making the 360.

 

Early part would therefore be 45 days, from last day of winter to 45th

day of spring, to be termed the " winter-spring " span of Wood Spring;

 

Later part would therefore be 45 days, from 45th day of spring, to

the first day of summer, to be termed the " spring - summer " span of

Wood Spring.

 

Which part would hold anger?

 

Instantly the thought arises that impressed anger will live in the left, and

the expressed, in the right.

 

Extending this perilously fascinating thought, RAGE would arrive when the

inherent yin-hold of the smaller L lobe would give way to the mad

expressions of

the R, large, overwhelming, and entirely oblivious of the harm it causes.

 

[more later]

 

Dr. Holmes Keikobad

MB BS DPH Ret. DIP AC NCCAOM LIC AC CO & AZ

www.acu-free.com - 15 CEUS by video.

NCCAOM reviewed. Approved in CA & most states.

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Hi Attilio,

 

Strange this subject should come up as the acupuncture group

has just concluded a thread in which I was a principle participant.

I'll summarize my thoughts and information on the matter here but if

you want to read the whole thread go to the acupuncture group

and look for the subjects in the last couple of weeks

titled " marijuana a great blood/yin tonic " and " ma fen... " It is a

spirited discussion between myself and a student of TCM who

was " treating " himself with pot and claiming wonderful results with

certain " side effects " .

 

According to one of my teachers Dr. Jamie Wu Qian-Zhi, all addictive

substances, as you said, move qi to give a temporary feeling of

wellbeing. The problem is that they do this at the expense of vital

substances--qi, jing and shen--in the long run. Think the coke

binger who feels emotionally wonderful and quite energetic during

use and then " like being run over by truck " the next days. Marijuana

in particular according to Wu, releases and makes available essence

(hence the high energy, motivation, wisdom and creativity which seem

to available to the user during the high) which is then dissipated

as it powerfully moves the qi in the short run. Then the person

experiences the textbook aftereffects of dull, spacey mind,lack of

motivation, weakness, irritability until they use again. Long term

use even contributes to gynecomastia, low sperm count/motility,

lowered libido in men (though libido is increased during the high).

I had a patient with acute Lin Syndrome once who was a regular pot

smoker and reported extreme exacerbation of symptoms of weakness and

urinary disturbance with only one puff of the smoke. He was

absolutely unable to use while ill in the Kidney.

 

I really have no problem with otherwise healthy people using pot on

occassion recreationally as we do many things which effect our

essence and health as a matter of " Joi de vive " . People who are

sick, however, and fooling themselves into thinking that pot helps

them would do much better to get on a good formula or receive an

well crafted acupuncture treatment. Think chemo and glaucoma users--

aren't Chinese Herbs safer and more effective, truly restoring ones

health at the root? The effects may be slower to realize but true

supplementation is never quick. The key is adherence to the middle

path so to speak. To become too obsessed with perfect eating/living

can also be detrimental to quality of life and creates judgemental

attitudes, self-agrandizing behavior, mental rigidity and qi

stagnation. However choose wisely and only use very occassionally

should be the rule for anything " bad " for us including alcohol,

cigarrettes, chocolate, refined white flour...the list goes on and

feels and tastes soooooooooo good!!!

 

Thanks for stimulating a most interesting and important thread.

 

Regards, Shanna

 

Chinese Medicine , " Attilio

D'Alberto " <attiliodalberto> wrote:

> Hi Stephan,

>

> Interesting that you talk about the Liver. I've always believed

that the

> Liver is the gate way for the earthly spirit. A classic example of

that is

> Xiao Yao Wan - Free the Wanderer patent pills. A happy person will

always

> have a calm Liver, free from stagnation. The Liver, I believe,

balances the

> ties of the body to the spirit. Of cause the Liver's emotion is

anger, which

> blocks the Liver's Qi and ability to regulate the body's movement

of Qi.

> This is linked to the fact that acceptance of the world around you

will not

> cause anger and will lead to a happier life.

>

> I believe that drug abuse, is caused by people wishing to find a

short cut

> route to the ideal person we believe ourselves to be. Most drugs

will

> highlight certain qualities, relaxed, energetic, perception, etc.

I've

> noticed that drug abuse, especially cannabis greatly affects the

Liver's

> ability to move Qi freely. The 'stoned' feeling felt by users

during

> cannabis consumption, is an exaggerated form of Liver Qi movement,

making

> the body feel light and disorientated, as the lighter forces of

spirit Liver

> Wind rise to the head. After use, the next day, the Liver has a

come

> accustomed to external influences controlling its movement and

literally

> backs off from regulating Qi movement as it expects a third party

to do so,

> in this case the cannabis. No cannabis use, thereafter, leads to

Liver Qi

> stagnation. Once cannabis is introduced again, the Liver Qi

stagnation

> subsides until the next time. The episodes of none cannabis

intervention,

> cause stagnation, leading to Heat and over a long period of time,

a pattern

> of empty Heat in the Liver.

>

> What have other members noticed about drug abuse, especially

cannabis, and

> its affects on the body?

>

> Kind regards

>

> Attilio

>

> www.chinesedoctor.co.uk <http://www.chinesedoctor.co.uk/>

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Shanna - you seem to be saying that cannabis is detrimental

to people who are really ill. Does that mean you think it

has no medicinal properties? Is it more a case of over use

that leads to the problems of qi flow? I think there's a lot

more to this plant than most of us look to - and like

anything, too much is detrimental.

Karen

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Hi Karen

 

That depends on how you define " medicinal properties " . Yes, it has

effects with respect to chemo-induced nausea, morning sickness and

glaucoma but at what cost? I'm saying that a well crafted Chinese

herbal formula is much superior with no side effects and does not

endanger one's jing. It's like asking about using high blood

pressure pharmaceuticals. Yes they work but at what cost to well

being and future health? TCM works just as good if not better in

many cases and the gains in health are real and longer lasting. Pot

use is only for the moment--it does not cure glaucoma. One has a

better chance of permanantly improving their problem with TCM. It's

more of a hassle to go find a qualified practitioner, work at

getting the formula right and drinking the stinky herbs but your

long term results are far superior. I'm more like to vote for a law

legalizing recreational use of pot than one which encourages people

to use it medicinally. These people obviously have not found a

qualified TCM practitioner to help them with their problems. I know

of no disease which pot can help that TCM cannot do better. Please,

correct me if I'm wrong.

 

Shanna

 

 

 

Chinese Medicine , <tryfan@o...>

wrote:

> Shanna - you seem to be saying that cannabis is detrimental

> to people who are really ill. Does that mean you think it

> has no medicinal properties? Is it more a case of over use

> that leads to the problems of qi flow? I think there's a lot

> more to this plant than most of us look to - and like

> anything, too much is detrimental.

> Karen

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Hi Shanna,

 

I wasn't, in my last post, referring to the medicinal use of Cannabis. Huo

Ma Ren is already used to tonify Yin, especially in patients with

constipation. However, now that the subject has been brought up by many

members, why wasn't the leaves of the Cannabis plant ever used in TCM? THC

is a bronchi-dilator amongst other things. I also believe that short doses

of Cannabis can have beneficial emotional and spiritual effects, although

extended use will be very much the opposite. I wrote a short paper on

Cannabis some years ago, see the files section.

 

As to the side effects of drug use, there a little more complicated than you

state. A wonderful paper that delves deeper into the adverse effects of all

drugs can be found in the JCM archives. Details below:

 

 

Given, S. (1997). 'Understanding Addiction According to Traditional Chinese

Medicine', Journal of , 54, 12, p1-6.

 

 

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio

 

www.chinesedoctor.co.uk <http://www.chinesedoctor.co.uk/>

 

 

shannahickle [shannahickle]

03 July 2004 18:02

Chinese Medicine

Re: Liver - Cannabis

 

 

Hi Attilio,

 

Strange this subject should come up as the acupuncture group

has just concluded a thread in which I was a principle participant.

I'll summarize my thoughts and information on the matter here but if

you want to read the whole thread go to the acupuncture group

and look for the subjects in the last couple of weeks

titled " marijuana a great blood/yin tonic " and " ma fen... " It is a

spirited discussion between myself and a student of TCM who

was " treating " himself with pot and claiming wonderful results with

certain " side effects " .

 

According to one of my teachers Dr. Jamie Wu Qian-Zhi, all addictive

substances, as you said, move qi to give a temporary feeling of

wellbeing. The problem is that they do this at the expense of vital

substances--qi, jing and shen--in the long run. Think the coke

binger who feels emotionally wonderful and quite energetic during

use and then " like being run over by truck " the next days. Marijuana

in particular according to Wu, releases and makes available essence

(hence the high energy, motivation, wisdom and creativity which seem

to available to the user during the high) which is then dissipated

as it powerfully moves the qi in the short run. Then the person

experiences the textbook aftereffects of dull, spacey mind,lack of

motivation, weakness, irritability until they use again. Long term

use even contributes to gynecomastia, low sperm count/motility,

lowered libido in men (though libido is increased during the high).

I had a patient with acute Lin Syndrome once who was a regular pot

smoker and reported extreme exacerbation of symptoms of weakness and

urinary disturbance with only one puff of the smoke. He was

absolutely unable to use while ill in the Kidney.

 

I really have no problem with otherwise healthy people using pot on

occassion recreationally as we do many things which effect our

essence and health as a matter of " Joi de vive " . People who are

sick, however, and fooling themselves into thinking that pot helps

them would do much better to get on a good formula or receive an

well crafted acupuncture treatment. Think chemo and glaucoma users--

aren't Chinese Herbs safer and more effective, truly restoring ones

health at the root? The effects may be slower to realize but true

supplementation is never quick. The key is adherence to the middle

path so to speak. To become too obsessed with perfect eating/living

can also be detrimental to quality of life and creates judgemental

attitudes, self-agrandizing behavior, mental rigidity and qi

stagnation. However choose wisely and only use very occassionally

should be the rule for anything " bad " for us including alcohol,

cigarrettes, chocolate, refined white flour...the list goes on and

feels and tastes soooooooooo good!!!

 

Thanks for stimulating a most interesting and important thread.

 

Regards, Shanna

 

Chinese Medicine , " Attilio

D'Alberto " <attiliodalberto> wrote:

> Hi Stephan,

>

> Interesting that you talk about the Liver. I've always believed

that the

> Liver is the gate way for the earthly spirit. A classic example of

that is

> Xiao Yao Wan - Free the Wanderer patent pills. A happy person will

always

> have a calm Liver, free from stagnation. The Liver, I believe,

balances the

> ties of the body to the spirit. Of cause the Liver's emotion is

anger, which

> blocks the Liver's Qi and ability to regulate the body's movement

of Qi.

> This is linked to the fact that acceptance of the world around you

will not

> cause anger and will lead to a happier life.

>

> I believe that drug abuse, is caused by people wishing to find a

short cut

> route to the ideal person we believe ourselves to be. Most drugs

will

> highlight certain qualities, relaxed, energetic, perception, etc.

I've

> noticed that drug abuse, especially cannabis greatly affects the

Liver's

> ability to move Qi freely. The 'stoned' feeling felt by users

during

> cannabis consumption, is an exaggerated form of Liver Qi movement,

making

> the body feel light and disorientated, as the lighter forces of

spirit Liver

> Wind rise to the head. After use, the next day, the Liver has a

come

> accustomed to external influences controlling its movement and

literally

> backs off from regulating Qi movement as it expects a third party

to do so,

> in this case the cannabis. No cannabis use, thereafter, leads to

Liver Qi

> stagnation. Once cannabis is introduced again, the Liver Qi

stagnation

> subsides until the next time. The episodes of none cannabis

intervention,

> cause stagnation, leading to Heat and over a long period of time,

a pattern

> of empty Heat in the Liver.

>

> What have other members noticed about drug abuse, especially

cannabis, and

> its affects on the body?

>

> Kind regards

>

> Attilio

 

 

 

 

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Hi Attilio (and Shanna),

 

I was impressed with Shanna's commentary below here and in her other post

regarding cannibis. Attilio, you make a good point about Huo Ma Ren' usage in

herbal formulas. It seems to me that herbal formulas are intended to balance,

regulate and harmonize homeostasis (qi or programming). This would lead to

clarity of consciousness ... rather than altered states. It seems that when you

bring up cannibis leaf, you are referring to the pharmacological effects of THC

.... which has loads of mind altering capabilities in addition to other

pharmacological actions. While I've seen where herbal formulas can mitigate

the side effects of Western pharmaceuticals, the best herbalists that I know

tend not to use herbal formulas to bring about Western pharmacological effects

.... that is to directly (or exogenously) force a tissue action. Bringing about

tissue actions through endogenous programming is the beauty of CM, no? I've

posted about this before regarding the subtleties of physiological effects

versus pharmacological effects. This dynamic or paradigm led to some lively

debates that I'd prefer to let rest. But things are cyclical and perhaps they

must be revisited from time to time. We almost slipped into this debate with

the statins and Hong Qu versus using clinically effective herbal formulas.

 

I think I'll take my answer off the air and simply enjoy whatever lively debate

derives. So many excellent minds are joining this list. I'm really enjoying

the exchanges.

 

Respectfully,

Emmanuel Segmen

 

 

Hi Shanna,

 

I wasn't, in my last post, referring to the medicinal use of Cannabis. Huo

Ma Ren is already used to tonify Yin, especially in patients with

constipation. However, now that the subject has been brought up by many

members, why wasn't the leaves of the Cannabis plant ever used in TCM? THC

is a bronchi-dilator amongst other things. I also believe that short doses

of Cannabis can have beneficial emotional and spiritual effects, although

extended use will be very much the opposite. I wrote a short paper on

Cannabis some years ago, see the files section.

 

As to the side effects of drug use, there a little more complicated than you

state. A wonderful paper that delves deeper into the adverse effects of all

drugs can be found in the JCM archives. Details below:

 

 

Given, S. (1997). 'Understanding Addiction According to Traditional Chinese

Medicine', Journal of , 54, 12, p1-6.

 

 

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio

 

www.chinesedoctor.co.uk <http://www.chinesedoctor.co.uk/>

 

shannahickle [shannahickle]

03 July 2004 18:02

Chinese Medicine

Re: Liver - Cannabis

 

 

Hi Attilio,

 

Strange this subject should come up as the acupuncture group

has just concluded a thread in which I was a principle participant.

I'll summarize my thoughts and information on the matter here but if

you want to read the whole thread go to the acupuncture group

and look for the subjects in the last couple of weeks

titled " marijuana a great blood/yin tonic " and " ma fen... " It is a

spirited discussion between myself and a student of TCM who

was " treating " himself with pot and claiming wonderful results with

certain " side effects " .

 

According to one of my teachers Dr. Jamie Wu Qian-Zhi, all addictive

substances, as you said, move qi to give a temporary feeling of

wellbeing. The problem is that they do this at the expense of vital

substances--qi, jing and shen--in the long run. Think the coke

binger who feels emotionally wonderful and quite energetic during

use and then " like being run over by truck " the next days. Marijuana

in particular according to Wu, releases and makes available essence

(hence the high energy, motivation, wisdom and creativity which seem

to available to the user during the high) which is then dissipated

as it powerfully moves the qi in the short run. Then the person

experiences the textbook aftereffects of dull, spacey mind,lack of

motivation, weakness, irritability until they use again. Long term

use even contributes to gynecomastia, low sperm count/motility,

lowered libido in men (though libido is increased during the high).

I had a patient with acute Lin Syndrome once who was a regular pot

smoker and reported extreme exacerbation of symptoms of weakness and

urinary disturbance with only one puff of the smoke. He was

absolutely unable to use while ill in the Kidney.

 

I really have no problem with otherwise healthy people using pot on

occassion recreationally as we do many things which effect our

essence and health as a matter of " Joi de vive " . People who are

sick, however, and fooling themselves into thinking that pot helps

them would do much better to get on a good formula or receive an

well crafted acupuncture treatment. Think chemo and glaucoma users--

aren't Chinese Herbs safer and more effective, truly restoring ones

health at the root? The effects may be slower to realize but true

supplementation is never quick. The key is adherence to the middle

path so to speak. To become too obsessed with perfect eating/living

can also be detrimental to quality of life and creates judgemental

attitudes, self-agrandizing behavior, mental rigidity and qi

stagnation. However choose wisely and only use very occassionally

should be the rule for anything " bad " for us including alcohol,

cigarrettes, chocolate, refined white flour...the list goes on and

feels and tastes soooooooooo good!!!

 

Thanks for stimulating a most interesting and important thread.

 

Regards, Shanna

 

 

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Hi Dr Keikobad,

 

I'm very much interested in your article. Hopefully you wouldn't mind

emailing it to me off-list. It seems that we share a very similar path.

 

I'm fascinated with the Liver, more so than any other organ. I can't see why

the Heart is the monarch of the Zangfu, when the Liver plays such a

important and often superior role to the other organs.

 

It's interesting that you talk of the Liver and seasons. In the past few

years I've noticed that my feelings for the various seasons has been growing

stronger and stronger. The feeling rises from the pit of my stomach and is a

kind of wounded love. Partly because the seasons change, and its lost yet

re-found again, like our incarnations.

 

Perhaps this is because I'm getting older, or perhaps the seasons are

changing and will be no more, with global climatic change and I

subconsciously feel a lost for them. What I can say is that the moment I'm

actively looking forward to Autumn and also Winter (but less so), whilst

Spring is a million miles away.

 

I'm contemplate your other thoughts and suggestions regarding the Liver's

lobes and get back to you.

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio

 

www.chinesedoctor.co.uk <http://www.chinesedoctor.co.uk/>

 

 

Dr. Holmes Keikobad [acuheal]

03 July 2004 16:55

Chinese Medicine

Re: Liver - Cannabis

 

 

> Attilio:

> Interesting that you talk about the Liver. I've always believed that the

> Liver is the gate way for the earthly spirit. A classic example of that is

> Xiao Yao Wan - Free the Wanderer patent pills. A happy person will always

> have a calm Liver, free from stagnation. The Liver, I believe, balances

the

> ties of the body to the spirit.

>

>

 

Which discussion leads, indirectly and perhaps out of line with the current

thought,

to the intruguiging 41st Difficult issue in Nan Ching:

 

[i am currently crafting an article on the enigma and much of the thinking

below

comes from it]

 

'Only the Liver has two lobes. What does that correspond to?'

 

> The Liver, I believe, balances the

> ties of the body to the spirit. Of cause the Liver's emotion is anger,

which

> blocks the Liver's Qi and ability to regulate the body's movement of Qi.

>

>

 

Which lobe holds anger? Which depression, or anxiety? Which one finally,

stagnated to stasis, leads to the unwelcome Corridors of Rage?

 

The R is the larger lobe and occupies the R upper abdominal quadrant. It

adjoins the GB channel at the part that it regulates the Dai [GB 26, 27,

28].

 

It sits athwart the Liver mu, and the SP mu to boot.

 

Importantly it juxtaposes to the K mu, the only one at the ide of the body,

in which case, part of the SJ - GB - Dai - Yang Wei ensemble.

 

The L lobe is minuscule, almost an afterthought, a small player in the Wood

drama. Or is it? For small is yin, the basis of all yang big.

 

The Sage explains that the early part of Spring has not yet forgotten

Winter,

and is as yet in it's womb; and the latter part has not yet greeted fully

the

summer, and is not yet apposed to it. Hence the two lobes.

 

One season is 90 days, all 4 making the 360.

 

Early part would therefore be 45 days, from last day of winter to 45th

day of spring, to be termed the " winter-spring " span of Wood Spring;

 

Later part would therefore be 45 days, from 45th day of spring, to

the first day of summer, to be termed the " spring - summer " span of

Wood Spring.

 

Which part would hold anger?

 

Instantly the thought arises that impressed anger will live in the left, and

the expressed, in the right.

 

Extending this perilously fascinating thought, RAGE would arrive when the

inherent yin-hold of the smaller L lobe would give way to the mad

expressions of

the R, large, overwhelming, and entirely oblivious of the harm it causes.

 

[more later]

 

Dr. Holmes Keikobad

MB BS DPH Ret. DIP AC NCCAOM LIC AC CO & AZ

www.acu-free.com - 15 CEUS by video.

NCCAOM reviewed. Approved in CA & most states.

 

 

 

 

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Hi Attilio - how about this: the Liver does, is the General

in Charge of Strategic Planning, very active and important.

The Heart, the Emperor, is supposed to be. The character for

Heart represents the void. If the Heart is empty, the

spirits have a place to live. the most admirable emperors in

ancient China (as I understand it) were those who did nothing

and the people prospered. Proper ritual (the virtue of the

Heart) meant facing the Dao with an empty, still Heart, ready

to receive.

 

The spirit of the Liver, the Hun, always follows the Shen,

the spirit of the Heart which communicates with/listens to

Heaven. The Hun therefore actively brings us information

from the Shen - which has/holds the connection to the Dao.

 

Karen

 

ps - if you're starting to fall in love with the seasons, you

may be on your way to becoming a Five Element practitioner ;-

)!

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[ad continuum, from my manuscript under construction]

 

Of the zang, all are twain except SP, which is of Earth and cannot be

particulate.

 

LV is bilobulate, HT is right and left, LU are twain, and so K even when

one on the right is no more than the 3 Cavities structured in to an organic

shape.

 

As each zang is two, one must be yin in nature and one yang.

 

Of the zang, only two of four carry the awareness of being conscious,

in life, love and living; which are LU, and LV.

 

K sleeps and does not wake, and misses out on living life, just as HT wakes,

and

does not sleep, and foregoes the world of slumber.

 

LU encompasses an awareness of whatever happened at the first breath, and

lasts, nominally, till the last.

 

LV on the other hand holds the memory of all lives ever lived, here on

Earth, or

whatever planet one woke up in, by default.

 

Now the concept of 'past' is as much a creative myth as that of 'future',

and if one

were to have the luxury of being reckless, or artistic, both being very

nearly

the same thing, than the LV would be the container of all lives we ever

lived, or,

remarkably, will ever live in the future, the LU being the station in which

we can

contemplate what the two states mean..

 

If I were to run everything together, in a mad attempt at linear thinking,

the undoing

of better writers than I, and have LU come together with LV in a love-hate

relationship, where the former restrains while pretending to train, and ends

up the

marauder, than all consciousness is bounden by the LU-LV consortium.

 

Thus the yin of LU resides in the left lobe, and the yang in the right.

And the yin of LV resides in the left lobe, and the yang in the right.

 

If all consciousness, of the 'now' and the 'then' resides in these orbs, the

one must propose some kind of a sequence to how one lives and

sleeps in Tennessee, to wake up in Timbuktu.

 

As yin sleeps and yang wakes, the left LU beckoned, and the breath came into

the right LU, after which inflation it pervaded to the left LU.

 

In terms of consciousness this would mean:

 

< A non-breathing left LU [sleep segments of this life] > gave way to -

< a breathing right lung [waking segments of this life] > - to -

< sleeping left lobe of LV [memory of lives lived] > - to -

< wakeful right lobe of LV [awareness of lives to be lived in future] >.

 

In terms of somatic landmarking, politely termed surface anatomy, the

left lobe of LU would be found to surface, as a qi-line, much as a ley-line,

at the hollow of the left shoulder with the deltoid.

 

If some disharmony involves sleep particles of this life, LU 1 and LU 2

on the left will be palpably out of sorts.

 

If some disharmony involves waking particles of this life, LU 1 and LU 2

on the right will be palpably out of sorts.

 

By the same token:

 

If some disharmony involves particles of past lives lived, LV 14 on the

left

would be palpably out of sorts.

 

If some disharmony involves particles of future lives to come, LV 14 on the

right

would be palpably out of sorts.

 

Now if this were not mad enough, all this bilateralism leads us to a fatally

predictable inference:

 

The left rib cage at the apex, to it's termination in the left 12th half

rib, represents

the somatic structure to sleep of this life and sleeping past of past lives.

 

Just as the right rib cage at the apex, to it's termination in the right

12th half rib, represents

the somatic structure to wakeful days of this life and sleeping part of the

lives which

are to happen in the future.

 

[in next whatever, we get to have acupuncture points with which we can

fiddle with all

kinds of lives, this one, a past one which dos not want to go away, or a

futuristic in the wings,

in short, if you are so inclined, to play God]

 

Dr. Holmes Keikobad

MB BS DPH Ret. DIP AC NCCAOM LIC AC CO & AZ

www.acu-free.com - 15 CEUS by video.

NCCAOM reviewed. Approved in CA & most states.

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Hi Karen,

 

Thanks for this, very interesting.

 

Yes, if the Heart is empty, which it should be, then it can hold everything.

It is our connection to our higher self. When we follow our Heart we are

following our truer selves and our rightful destiny. The Liver is the spirit

that governs and drives the actions of the Heart. It's like the organiser or

executive whilst the Heart is the chairman. The Kidney is Will or the power

house, the workers, the Spleen is the engineering side, busy thinking and

working problems out, given to it by the Liver who got it from the Heart.

The Lung is like the law, governing all and making sure its in line. It also

protects the exterior aspects of the company, the company being us.

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio

 

www.chinesedoctor.co.uk <http://www.chinesedoctor.co.uk/>

 

 

tryfan [tryfan]

04 July 2004 12:46

Chinese Medicine

RE: Liver - Cannabis

 

 

Hi Attilio - how about this: the Liver does, is the General

in Charge of Strategic Planning, very active and important.

The Heart, the Emperor, is supposed to be. The character for

Heart represents the void. If the Heart is empty, the

spirits have a place to live. the most admirable emperors in

ancient China (as I understand it) were those who did nothing

and the people prospered. Proper ritual (the virtue of the

Heart) meant facing the Dao with an empty, still Heart, ready

to receive.

 

The spirit of the Liver, the Hun, always follows the Shen,

the spirit of the Heart which communicates with/listens to

Heaven. The Hun therefore actively brings us information

from the Shen - which has/holds the connection to the Dao.

 

Karen

 

ps - if you're starting to fall in love with the seasons, you

may be on your way to becoming a Five Element practitioner ;-

)!

 

 

 

 

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Hi Attilio - I agree with everything you said about the

spirits of the Officials/systems except I don't believe the

Liver governs the Heart. I see the Heart as Emperor doing

nothing but being available for communications from Heaven.

The Emperor needs, therefore, a 'staff' to run the

country/body. That's where the rest of what you said falls

in. But I don't think anything should govern/lead the Heart -

that's when we get into trouble, when the Heart is led by

something instead of just being.

 

Karen

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[continuing from previous post]

 

No organ has more lobes that the LV, and by that virtue none has generated

never ending controversies over centuries than Orbus Hepaticus.

 

Case in point. At last count circa 1510 it seemed to have 7 lobes, whereas

contemporary reportage says it has in fact 8.

 

Did we grow an extra one along the way over last 500 years?

 

Chang shih-hsien, comenting on the 41st Difficult Issue Nan Ching:

" The LV has a total of seven lobes. Here the text speaks of two lobes. That

is

because the three lobes on the left contitute one lobe, and the four lobes

on thr

right constitute one lobe " . [1]

 

Campus Program.com - a reference library hosting an encyclopedia:

" Functional lobes are divided along the line of the inferior vena cava. Each

half is

supplied by a different division of an artery. These functional lobes are

further

divided into segments, four on each, giving a total of eight numbered

segments

of the liver " . [2]

 

In terms of the Art of Numbers, 7 denotes Neptune, a somewhat forgetful

older

man with a picturesque beard who stands in th middle of the Atlantic

catching

a cold.

 

By an older interpretation 7 also denotes the Seven Seas, and here the

icon is a fierce woman sitting stalwart on a wind strewn rock mid-ocean,

and you don't want to tangle with her.

 

By yet another interpretation, 7 also is the number for wizards of the

seconday

sort hwo mess about with the occult, which sooner or late tends to past

lives.

 

The number 8 is something one hsould give wide berth to, if one is

Occidental.

It is the last of all known numbers, and signifies, transitions in life, and

most

decidely tend to lives other than this.

 

7 and 8. The Occult and the Unseen.

 

Coming to the ethereal soul. The ethereal soul? What in the world can that

mean, considering one has never seen a sol of any sort, and would not

recognize one if one ran into one on Wilshire and 57 th in downtown LA.

 

Something has to be done about Occidentals coming up with Oriental

tranlations. Ethereal? As in surreal? Constituted of ether, as in chloroform

and nitrous oxide, they gas you to extintion in case you decide to stay

after your your 100 th birthday?

 

What can past lives mean to someone who has no concept of what the

present life is made of?

 

Liver hold the memory of past lives. Really! And who is going to confirm

this?

What if there were no past lives? One can't be in a past life and say clever

things

in the present.

 

In which case what is said is said on the wings of the Winds, and could be

so

much blarney with a large potion of presumption.

 

LV needs to flow smoothly, and it does this on blooded feet. LV qi is for

the

alerge part LV Blood, and LV Blood is largely what K makes for it in the

marrow

factory.

 

And if 7 to 8 lobes were not bad enough, LV comes up with two clear systems

of blood supply, the hepatic artery, and the portal vein.

 

[continued, unless every one falls aspleep]

 

http://www.campusprogram.com/reference/en/wikipedia/l/li/liver.html

Dr. Holmes Keikobad

MB BS DPH Ret. DIP AC NCCAOM LIC AC CO & AZ

www.acu-free.com - 15 CEUS by video.

NCCAOM reviewed. Approved in CA & most states.

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