Guest guest Posted July 12, 2004 Report Share Posted July 12, 2004 Chinese Medicine , mystir <ykcul_ritsym> wrote: > > > wrote: > -Mystir_lucky wrote-- questions for Z'ev about the yin huo and heart and emotions and the Treatise on Stomach and Spleen and the Nourish the middle school, > which I've gotten re-energized about from his post. > > > - Chinesemedicinedoc.com... wrote.. > If it helps, I wrote a paper on yinfire that can be accessed at my website: > http://Chinese Medicine/Articles_Pract/Yinfire%20Essay.pdf > - > Chinesemedicinedoc.com > > Ykcul_ritsym responds....When this yin fire is accumulating, does it show in the emotions, and/or body, and what are the signs? What a subtle level of mind/body relation this shows. The actual creating or destroying because of mind, of the bodily resevoir and substance formation, because of emotional energy. The flow or continuity of poor or less than optimal regulation`. I am unsure exactly what you are asking, maybe we could parse through it together. But fundamentally in CM, there are 2 observations I have come to realize. 1) there is no difference between the mind-body (emotions and physical) and more importantly 2) that from a Chinese cultural perspective they tend to somaticize there complaints meaning they do not talk about there emotions like westerners do. So the MAP for Chinese dx does not have much detail on the emotional realm except for basic stuff like irritability etc. This is important for various reasons; one is that you don't have to become overly obsessed with the emotional / spiritual injury because it will show up in the pulse, body complaints, tongue etc. This is the meaning that the emotional and physical body are one. SO does yinfire show in the emotions, yes and maybe. Anything that is effecting the heart (heat), which yinfire can, will possibly lead to emotions that we know from our zang-fu training. Albiet these are basic, they are IMO all that is necessary to dx at this level. Can yinfire present with more complicated western emotional problems, of course. Anytime there is pathology one can have emotional problems. But the roadmap for this is not layed out as clearly. Bob Flaws has a whole book based on western psych diseases and one would see yinfire patterns in there. Does that answer the question? > > Where is San Jiao when all this is going on? The whole body reflects the activity of its 'parts'. The Fire Element seems to be a busy place in the scheme of the 5 elements, with the Small Intestine yang to the Heart's yin position. And the Petricardium paired to the San Jiao. The lung is moving as is the spleen and the rest. Cycling the Ko and shen patterns, it would be good to differentiate which fire channel was most influential, there may be good therapuetic use down the road for this kind of thought. Could you reword this, I am unsure what you are saying. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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