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Dear Group,

 

I am treating a patient who had cancer of the nasal sinus. He had a 6-week

course of radiation, f/b probably about 5 months of weekly chemo. He just

finished chemo mid-September. My question is -- now he has bleeding from both

ears. Treating Sp1 to stop bleeding and the spleen to control blood has not

helped. Are there any herbal supplements or topicals that could help? Would

Yunan Bai yao (sorry, don't know how to spell it) help him?

 

On the note of qi gong and Rich's credentials - there was a fellow in my TCM

school who mainly apprenticed all his knowledge. While he was in school for

the " book learning " education to get his license, his main body of knowledge

came from learning from another master. I think we need to be careful in

dismissing others just because they don't have " school " knowledge..

 

If this was addressed in later notes, please forgive me. I am several

digests behind in my reading.

Diane Bryson

 

 

 

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Hi Dianne,

 

Yannan pai yao is the single most remarkable herb I have ever come across. I

have used it successfully in several cases of bleeding problems involving a wide

spectrum of different disorders. By all means, have your patient try it. 2-3

capsules, three times a day. If it is going to work, it will work in the first

two or three days. - Matt

-

thechidoctor

Chinese Medicine

Tuesday, September 21, 2004 7:40 PM

Bleeding from Ears; Qi Gong

 

 

Dear Group,

 

I am treating a patient who had cancer of the nasal sinus. He had a 6-week

course of radiation, f/b probably about 5 months of weekly chemo. He just

finished chemo mid-September. My question is -- now he has bleeding from both

ears. Treating Sp1 to stop bleeding and the spleen to control blood has not

helped. Are there any herbal supplements or topicals that could help? Would

Yunan Bai yao (sorry, don't know how to spell it) help him?

 

On the note of qi gong and Rich's credentials - there was a fellow in my TCM

school who mainly apprenticed all his knowledge. While he was in school for

the " book learning " education to get his license, his main body of knowledge

came from learning from another master. I think we need to be careful in

dismissing others just because they don't have " school " knowledge..

 

If this was addressed in later notes, please forgive me. I am several

digests behind in my reading.

Diane Bryson

 

 

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Hi Diane,

 

Thank you for your very kind and gracious comment.

 

For me it has been a continuum of learning over the last 25 years.

Taiji, qigong, and yoga practice provides me with a certain amount of

awareness (internal and external) which I am able to incorporate in my

health practices. Being able to sense and manipulate qi makes Chinese

medicine very real to me. Because of this, the Classics carry lots of

meaning for me. I am able to experience in a very direct manner, what

the ancient writers were writing about and do not need to depend upon

accurate translations - assuming that " qi " has not changed over the

last 5000 years. :-). I believe that qigong is a very nice practice

that can enhance anyone's understanding of Chinese medicine and I

highly recommend it to all students of Chinese medicine - whether or

not they are attending a school - which as you indicated is only one

way to learn about Chinese medicine.

 

This knowledge also provides me with a sense of " freedom " in that I

feel that nowadays, I can pass the " desert island test " . That is, if

my family and I were washed ashore on a desert island - no

pharmaceuticals, no herbs, no needles, no doctor - I would still be

able to care for everyone. As long as I have my breath and hands. Or

at least one limb. :-) Everything my family and I need is already in

our bodies - it is matter of " knowing " that it is there and learning

how to use it. I am quite certain you understand what I mean.

 

Hope you are having a very fine day!

 

Regards,

Rich

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I am sorry Rich,

You invite criticism with outrageous statements like these. This

claim is totally false to anyone with common sense. If you are reading

an inaccurate translation of a classical text, how could you experience

what the ancient writers were saying? If you can't check the original

Chinese against the translation with glossaries and/or dictionaries,

how do you know if the translation is accurate or not? Are you

implying that you 'feel the qi' of the text? Mind you, there is great

inspiration in classics such as the Nan Jing, Nei Jing, Shang Han Lun

and others. But it is no more possible to 'experience the qi' of a

text than it is to absorb knowledge by putting one's hand on a book

without opening it.

 

 

On Sep 21, 2004, at 8:40 PM, Rich wrote:

 

> I am able to experience in a very direct manner, what

> the ancient writers were writing about and do not need to depend upon

> accurate translations - assuming that " qi " has not changed over the

> last 5000 years. :-).

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Hi,

You have had the experiences of " Nothingness is the Best Prescription or Dr.! "

it is great.

 

Guigen Qigong

http://www.g321g.org guigen_qigong

Qigong Department, Xiyuan Hospital, Beijing.

 

 

-

Rich

Chinese Medicine

Wednesday, September 22, 2004 11:40 AM

Re: Bleeding from Ears; Qi Gong

 

 

Hi Diane,

 

Thank you for your very kind and gracious comment.

 

For me it has been a continuum of learning over the last 25 years.

Taiji, qigong, and yoga practice provides me with a certain amount of

awareness (internal and external) which I am able to incorporate in my

health practices. Being able to sense and manipulate qi makes Chinese

medicine very real to me. Because of this, the Classics carry lots of

meaning for me. I am able to experience in a very direct manner, what

the ancient writers were writing about and do not need to depend upon

accurate translations - assuming that " qi " has not changed over the

last 5000 years. :-). I believe that qigong is a very nice practice

that can enhance anyone's understanding of Chinese medicine and I

highly recommend it to all students of Chinese medicine - whether or

not they are attending a school - which as you indicated is only one

way to learn about Chinese medicine.

 

This knowledge also provides me with a sense of " freedom " in that I

feel that nowadays, I can pass the " desert island test " . That is, if

my family and I were washed ashore on a desert island - no

pharmaceuticals, no herbs, no needles, no doctor - I would still be

able to care for everyone. As long as I have my breath and hands. Or

at least one limb. :-) Everything my family and I need is already in

our bodies - it is matter of " knowing " that it is there and learning

how to use it. I am quite certain you understand what I mean.

 

Hope you are having a very fine day!

 

Regards,

Rich

 

 

 

 

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Dear Z'ev,

 

> I am sorry Rich,

> You invite criticism with outrageous statements like these.

 

Outrageous? Millions upon millions of people study - in various

practices - and experience qi every day in their lives.

 

 

 

>This claim is totally false to anyone with common sense.

 

Hmmm .. you may be insulting many people other than myself.

 

>If you are reading an inaccurate translation of a classical text,

>how could you experience what the ancient writers were saying?

 

I merely said that I experience the flow of qi that is probably the

same experience that the ancient writers experience. When I experience

the flow of qi through the channels, it is probably the same what the

ancient writers experienced - unless the nature of " qi " and the human

channel system itself has changed since ancient times. If this is

true, then all of the classics are irrelevant.

 

When I experience the qi arising from the Po, Hun, Shen, it is

probably the same qi that the ancient writers experienced. It should

be all the same because we are all experiencing exactly the same

thing, the same qi that existed 500 years ago exists today. It is all

qi - though most probably Consciousness itself has evolved. Qi, in my

view, being a manifestation of Consciousness. But I do not claim this

to be a strict TCM perspective. However, the Classics certainly talk

about the body arising from the Shen.

 

I believe the first step toward understanding qi, so that it can be

" treated " , is studying it - i.e. the qigong.

 

Regards,

Rich

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Hi & Rich,

 

In my opinion, you two are discusion on TCM, but you are stand on different

dimensions.

 

TCM can be divide into to dimension, herb and Qi or functional and energy.

 

Both of your opinion are right.

 

Guigen Qigong

http://www.g321g.org guigen_qigong

Qigong Department, Xiyuan Hospital, Beijing.

 

 

 

 

-

Chinese Medicine

Wednesday, September 22, 2004 10:28 PM

Re: Re: Bleeding from Ears; Qi Gong

 

 

I am sorry Rich,

You invite criticism with outrageous statements like these. This

claim is totally false to anyone with common sense. If you are reading

an inaccurate translation of a classical text, how could you experience

what the ancient writers were saying? If you can't check the original

Chinese against the translation with glossaries and/or dictionaries,

how do you know if the translation is accurate or not? Are you

implying that you 'feel the qi' of the text? Mind you, there is great

inspiration in classics such as the Nan Jing, Nei Jing, Shang Han Lun

and others. But it is no more possible to 'experience the qi' of a

text than it is to absorb knowledge by putting one's hand on a book

without opening it.

 

On Sep 21, 2004, at 8:40 PM, Rich wrote:

 

> I am able to experience in a very direct manner, what

> the ancient writers were writing about and do not need to depend upon

> accurate translations - assuming that " qi " has not changed over the

> last 5000 years. :-).

 

 

 

http://babel.altavista.com/

 

and adjust

accordingly.

 

If you , it takes a few days for the messages to stop being

delivered.

 

 

 

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On Sep 22, 2004, at 7:52 AM, Rich wrote:

 

> Dear Z'ev,

>

>> I am sorry Rich,

>> You invite criticism with outrageous statements like these.

>

> Outrageous? Millions upon millions of people study - in various

> practices - and experience qi every day in their lives.

 

Don't be patronizing. This is not what you claimed in your post. You

claimed to understand what the ancient writers were talking about

without an accurate translation of a text.

>

>

>

>> This claim is totally false to anyone with common sense.

>

> Hmmm .. you may be insulting many people other than myself.

 

I see it more as you insulting this list with your grandiose claims.

 

OK, then, let's here from other people. Can you experience what the

ancient authors of classical texts were without accurate translations

of those texts, without access to the Chinese language, or without even

reading the text? And how would you know? I certainly wouldn't. By

'feeling their qi'?

>

>> If you are reading an inaccurate translation of a classical text,

>> how could you experience what the ancient writers were saying?

>

> I merely said that I experience the flow of qi that is probably the

> same experience that the ancient writers experience. When I experience

> the flow of qi through the channels, it is probably the same what the

> ancient writers experienced - unless the nature of " qi " and the human

> channel system itself has changed since ancient times. If this is

> true, then all of the classics are irrelevant.

 

You are making a claim that you cannot defend in any manner other than

your experience. Why should I buy it? Just because you say so?

>

> When I experience the qi arising from the Po, Hun, Shen, it is

> probably the same qi that the ancient writers experienced. It should

> be all the same because we are all experiencing exactly the same

> thing, the same qi that existed 500 years ago exists today. It is all

> qi - though most probably Consciousness itself has evolved. Qi, in my

> view, being a manifestation of Consciousness. But I do not claim this

> to be a strict TCM perspective. However, the Classics certainly talk

> about the body arising from the Shen.

 

Again, you are making statements and claims that you cannot backup in

any fashion, except your own personal experience. As you say, 'in your

view' qi is a manifestation of consciousness. So, now we need to know

what you mean by consciousness. Also, what you mean about 'the body

arising from the shen'. What are your sources? What do you mean?

Stop making grand, generalized statements about things without source

materials or quotations.

>

>

 

 

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Hi again Guigen,

 

 

> In my opinion, you two are discusion on TCM, but you are stand on

different dimensions.

>

> TCM can be divide into to dimension, herb and Qi or functional and

energy.

>

> Both of your opinion are right.

>

> Guigen Qigong

 

Yes, I agree. The paradoxes (or duality) of Life. I've learned to live

with them and still remain satisfied. They sure are not going away. :-)

 

Regards,

Rich

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What has poor Rich done to deserve this outpouring of vitriol?

 

I read his comments and didn't see them as outrageous or grandiose. It

seems perfectly reasonable to suggest that the experience of qi, like

breathing, is the same for people 2000 years ago as it now. He said it

in a general conversational style and I read it that way.

 

What I find particularly absurd is the suggestion that no-one can say

anything on this list without having a PH.D in ancient Mandarin, and

without citing some ancient text which " proves " what they are saying,

and without also " proving " that this is an accurate translation.

 

You don't need to know the recipe of a cake to know that it is

delicious!

 

Rich's comments reminded me of an article on the Mawangdui manuscripts

by Vivienne Lo (JCM55 Sept97) where she notes that descriptions of

qicong exercises (which pre-date acupuncture) are rooted in direct

experience of qi in the body:

" A further group of texts found in the tomb consists of

nurturing life texts (yangsheng). This is a broad term which

includes gymnastics (qigong), dietary regulation, and sex

and breath cultivation. My particular interest and the hypothesis

in my thesis is that it is in the context of nurturing

life culture - all these kinds of practices and the literature

that they generate - that concepts of yin and yang and the

circulation of qi are brought to the internal aspect of the body...

 

Zhongji, later used as the name of REN-3, appears in a sex cultivation

text in relation to orgasm. It's really an anatomical location

that's

given this fancy name, and the texts also similarly mention Quepen,

later to be ST-12, which is the supraclavicular fossa. I began

to wonder how such a construction of the body came about,

with all its lyrical language, and it seems to me to make

more sense that it developed from the immediate experiences

of sex and breath cultivation, where subjective experience

is likely to be more lyrical about the body, for

example talking about `spurting seas' or `rushing this and

that' reflects an experience of the body in health and pleasure.

I do think the discovery of the points came about

primarily as a result of such an inner vision or experience... "

 

The point is that, two millenia ago, Chinese people evolved an

experiential knowledge of qi and its cultivation which lie at the

roots of their medicine. Are we to put them on a pedestal and say that

humans these days can never gain a similar understanding through

direct experience?

 

What I find particularly worrying about Z'ev's outbursts is that the

approach is very much like the aggressive line taken by the WM

quackbuster sceptic's. For them,the practice of any non-orthodox

medicine has to be justified on the basis of some external Authority

(scientific proof, RCTs etc). Demanding quotations, sources for

anything that's said in a conversation is a similar kind of aggression

in the TCM world. Who controls this Knowledge? - a handful of academic

medical historians? Who controls the dispensation of this Knowledge in

the west? - a handful of TCM Colleges in whose interests it is to

" academicize " any discussions.

This denial of the ordinary individual's ability to obtain knowledge

through experiential means, reminds me of the Pre-Reformation Church.

It was heresy to read the Bible in English - services were in Latin,

the Bible was in Latin - the ordinary folk had no access to their

" Truth " except via the 'experts' - the priests. An individual's

relationship with divinity could only be by means of intermediaries,

controlled by powerful vested interests - never through what they felt

or experienced directly. So I feel this argument is very much about

our's views about what constitutes " Knowledge " or " Truth " , and whether

we are willing to deny personal experience of something, in favour of

an external " authority " .

 

Best wishes,

 

Godfrey Bartlett

 

 

 

 

 

Chinese Medicine , " "

<zrosenbe@s...> wrote:

>

> On Sep 22, 2004, at 7:52 AM, Rich wrote:

>

> > Dear Z'ev,

> >

> >> I am sorry Rich,

> >> You invite criticism with outrageous statements like these.

> >

> > Outrageous? Millions upon millions of people study - in various

> > practices - and experience qi every day in their lives.

>

> Don't be patronizing. This is not what you claimed in your post.

You

> claimed to understand what the ancient writers were talking about

> without an accurate translation of a text.

> >

> >

> >

> >> This claim is totally false to anyone with common sense.

> >

> > Hmmm .. you may be insulting many people other than myself.

>

 

 

 

> I see it more as you insulting this list with your grandiose claims.

>

> OK, then, let's here from other people. Can you experience what

the

> ancient authors of classical texts were without accurate

translations

> of those texts, without access to the Chinese language, or without

even

> reading the text? And how would you know? I certainly wouldn't.

By

> 'feeling their qi'?

> >

> >> If you are reading an inaccurate translation of a classical

text,

> >> how could you experience what the ancient writers were saying?

> >

> > I merely said that I experience the flow of qi that is probably

the

> > same experience that the ancient writers experience. When I

experience

> > the flow of qi through the channels, it is probably the same what

the

> > ancient writers experienced - unless the nature of " qi " and the

human

> > channel system itself has changed since ancient times. If this is

> > true, then all of the classics are irrelevant.

>

> You are making a claim that you cannot defend in any manner other

than

> your experience. Why should I buy it? Just because you say so?

> >

> > When I experience the qi arising from the Po, Hun, Shen, it is

> > probably the same qi that the ancient writers experienced. It

should

> > be all the same because we are all experiencing exactly the same

> > thing, the same qi that existed 500 years ago exists today. It is

all

> > qi - though most probably Consciousness itself has evolved. Qi,

in my

> > view, being a manifestation of Consciousness. But I do not claim

this

> > to be a strict TCM perspective. However, the Classics certainly

talk

> > about the body arising from the Shen.

>

> Again, you are making statements and claims that you cannot backup

in

> any fashion, except your own personal experience. As you say, 'in

your

> view' qi is a manifestation of consciousness. So, now we need to

know

> what you mean by consciousness. Also, what you mean about 'the

body

> arising from the shen'. What are your sources? What do you mean?

> Stop making grand, generalized statements about things without

source

> materials or quotations.

> >

> >

>

>

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HI Godfrey,

 

Lovely!, Many thanks for expressing yourself so clearly, I

Wholeheartedley support your statement and am in agreement with your

observations with regards both to Rich and the value of direct

experience.

 

salvador

 

 

 

Chinese Medicine , " acu_qichina "

<acu@q...> wrote:

> What has poor Rich done to deserve this outpouring of vitriol?

>

> I read his comments and didn't see them as outrageous or grandiose. It

> seems perfectly reasonable to suggest that the experience of qi, like

> breathing, is the same for people 2000 years ago as it now. He said it

> in a general conversational style and I read it that way.

>

> What I find particularly absurd is the suggestion that no-one can say

> anything on this list without having a PH.D in ancient Mandarin, and

> without citing some ancient text which " proves " what they are saying,

> and without also " proving " that this is an accurate translation.

>

> You don't need to know the recipe of a cake to know that it is

> delicious!

>

> Rich's comments reminded me of an article on the Mawangdui manuscripts

> by Vivienne Lo (JCM55 Sept97) where she notes that descriptions of

> qicong exercises (which pre-date acupuncture) are rooted in direct

> experience of qi in the body:

> " A further group of texts found in the tomb consists of

> nurturing life texts (yangsheng). This is a broad term which

> includes gymnastics (qigong), dietary regulation, and sex

> and breath cultivation. My particular interest and the hypothesis

> in my thesis is that it is in the context of nurturing

> life culture - all these kinds of practices and the literature

> that they generate - that concepts of yin and yang and the

> circulation of qi are brought to the internal aspect of the body...

>

> Zhongji, later used as the name of REN-3, appears in a sex cultivation

> text in relation to orgasm. It's really an anatomical location

> that's

> given this fancy name, and the texts also similarly mention Quepen,

> later to be ST-12, which is the supraclavicular fossa. I began

> to wonder how such a construction of the body came about,

> with all its lyrical language, and it seems to me to make

> more sense that it developed from the immediate experiences

> of sex and breath cultivation, where subjective experience

> is likely to be more lyrical about the body, for

> example talking about `spurting seas' or `rushing this and

> that' reflects an experience of the body in health and pleasure.

> I do think the discovery of the points came about

> primarily as a result of such an inner vision or experience... "

>

> The point is that, two millenia ago, Chinese people evolved an

> experiential knowledge of qi and its cultivation which lie at the

> roots of their medicine. Are we to put them on a pedestal and say that

> humans these days can never gain a similar understanding through

> direct experience?

>

> What I find particularly worrying about Z'ev's outbursts is that the

> approach is very much like the aggressive line taken by the WM

> quackbuster sceptic's. For them,the practice of any non-orthodox

> medicine has to be justified on the basis of some external Authority

> (scientific proof, RCTs etc). Demanding quotations, sources for

> anything that's said in a conversation is a similar kind of aggression

> in the TCM world. Who controls this Knowledge? - a handful of academic

> medical historians? Who controls the dispensation of this Knowledge in

> the west? - a handful of TCM Colleges in whose interests it is to

> " academicize " any discussions.

> This denial of the ordinary individual's ability to obtain knowledge

> through experiential means, reminds me of the Pre-Reformation Church.

> It was heresy to read the Bible in English - services were in Latin,

> the Bible was in Latin - the ordinary folk had no access to their

> " Truth " except via the 'experts' - the priests. An individual's

> relationship with divinity could only be by means of intermediaries,

> controlled by powerful vested interests - never through what they felt

> or experienced directly. So I feel this argument is very much about

> our's views about what constitutes " Knowledge " or " Truth " , and whether

> we are willing to deny personal experience of something, in favour of

> an external " authority " .

>

> Best wishes,

>

> Godfrey Bartlett

>

>

>

>

>

> Chinese Medicine , " "

> <zrosenbe@s...> wrote:

> >

> > On Sep 22, 2004, at 7:52 AM, Rich wrote:

> >

> > > Dear Z'ev,

> > >

> > >> I am sorry Rich,

> > >> You invite criticism with outrageous statements like these.

> > >

> > > Outrageous? Millions upon millions of people study - in various

> > > practices - and experience qi every day in their lives.

> >

> > Don't be patronizing. This is not what you claimed in your post.

> You

> > claimed to understand what the ancient writers were talking about

> > without an accurate translation of a text.

> > >

> > >

> > >

> > >> This claim is totally false to anyone with common sense.

> > >

> > > Hmmm .. you may be insulting many people other than myself.

> >

>

>

>

> > I see it more as you insulting this list with your grandiose claims.

> >

> > OK, then, let's here from other people. Can you experience what

> the

> > ancient authors of classical texts were without accurate

> translations

> > of those texts, without access to the Chinese language, or without

> even

> > reading the text? And how would you know? I certainly wouldn't.

> By

> > 'feeling their qi'?

> > >

> > >> If you are reading an inaccurate translation of a classical

> text,

> > >> how could you experience what the ancient writers were saying?

> > >

> > > I merely said that I experience the flow of qi that is probably

> the

> > > same experience that the ancient writers experience. When I

> experience

> > > the flow of qi through the channels, it is probably the same what

> the

> > > ancient writers experienced - unless the nature of " qi " and the

> human

> > > channel system itself has changed since ancient times. If this is

> > > true, then all of the classics are irrelevant.

> >

> > You are making a claim that you cannot defend in any manner other

> than

> > your experience. Why should I buy it? Just because you say so?

> > >

> > > When I experience the qi arising from the Po, Hun, Shen, it is

> > > probably the same qi that the ancient writers experienced. It

> should

> > > be all the same because we are all experiencing exactly the same

> > > thing, the same qi that existed 500 years ago exists today. It is

> all

> > > qi - though most probably Consciousness itself has evolved. Qi,

> in my

> > > view, being a manifestation of Consciousness. But I do not claim

> this

> > > to be a strict TCM perspective. However, the Classics certainly

> talk

> > > about the body arising from the Shen.

> >

> > Again, you are making statements and claims that you cannot backup

> in

> > any fashion, except your own personal experience. As you say, 'in

> your

> > view' qi is a manifestation of consciousness. So, now we need to

> know

> > what you mean by consciousness. Also, what you mean about 'the

> body

> > arising from the shen'. What are your sources? What do you mean?

> > Stop making grand, generalized statements about things without

> source

> > materials or quotations.

> > >

> > >

> >

> >

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