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Hi all,

 

I thought I would mention my friend's progress. She has been using

inhalers for her asthma for about 17 years. She says on average she

had been purchasing one inhaler, which delivered 60 doses, per month.

About 3 weeks ago she decided she would wean herself off inhalers.

This is after having tuina/qigong treatments (once a week) for about

three months.

 

Her desire to use an inhaler has been on and off, but she has not used

one in about four weeks. Last week, I did some deeper abdominal

treatment on her, to sliminate qi and blood stagnation, which she

said helped immensely. Since then she told me that she has been doing

it regularly on herself with excellent results. She is also a Shiatsu

practitioner. Now she feels she has a technique that empowers her to

treat her own problems whenever the need arises.

 

Regards,

Rich

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Excellent news Rich.

 

What acupoints and meridians did you stimulate on the abdomen?

 

Also, has she had any acupuncture or herbs or is she planning to?

 

Regards

 

Attilio

 

 

 

Rich [rfinkelstein]

02 November 2004 14:56

Chinese Medicine

Tuina and Asthma

 

 

Hi all,

 

I thought I would mention my friend's progress. She has been using

inhalers for her asthma for about 17 years. She says on average she

had been purchasing one inhaler, which delivered 60 doses, per month.

About 3 weeks ago she decided she would wean herself off inhalers.

This is after having tuina/qigong treatments (once a week) for about

three months.

 

Her desire to use an inhaler has been on and off, but she has not used

one in about four weeks. Last week, I did some deeper abdominal

treatment on her, to sliminate qi and blood stagnation, which she

said helped immensely. Since then she told me that she has been doing

it regularly on herself with excellent results. She is also a Shiatsu

practitioner. Now she feels she has a technique that empowers her to

treat her own problems whenever the need arises.

 

Regards,

Rich

 

 

 

 

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My friend's primary care over the last three months has been with the

tuina/qigong practitioner who we are both learning from. My friend is

very typical in that here body is tight and rigid - particularly her

upper and lower spine. For this reason, she receives a typical session

which includes bodywork on her whole body - this includes all muscles,

joints, bones etc. There is particular emphasis on releasing the

rigidity in the upper spine. This makes an enormous difference in here

ability to " feel and breathe " in the upper part of her body. I can

only describe it as a feeling that blockages (stagnating) in that are

being released.

 

After the first several sessions, there were heavy guasha treatments

throughout her back. This revealed lots of stagnation throughout her

body - purplish color running down her back especially along her

vertebrae. More recently she has lots of cupping (sliding) along her

back and on the upper part of her chest. The cupping on the upper part

of her chest was painful for her. Maybe it could have been gentler.

However, there was a substantial release of stagnation when the

cupping was applied and the area turned a purplish/black. It lasted

for about 2 weeks particularly in the area right below her neck.

 

The abdominal work was based upon searching for areas that felt " hard

and stagnated " . Small circular movements are used with increasing

pressure as the area softens up. I am thinking that by releasing the

blockages in the lower abdomen, the " downward qi " is able to flow

again and connect up more easily and efficiently. The whole system is

now functioning in a more natural manner. With the blockages, the qi

was struggling to circulate and had numerous obstructions throughout

the whole bodily system.

 

It appears that the localized blockages that may have occurred when

she was younger (she has a very typical " fear of parents " ) gradually

grew over time, blocking more and more areas of the body. The

breathing heaves were a " desperate " measure by the body to try to get

the qi circulating through all of these blockages. Tuina and qigong

(qigong working on the energetic layers) has helped getting the qi

circulating.

 

So no particular meridians or points were " pre-determined " . It is what

ever feels hard and stagnated in the body - wherever it may be.

Meridians are primary channels, but any part of the body can become

blocked so it is merely a matter of finding these areas and releasing

them.

 

Hope this explains the process she went through. I would be glad to

elaborate if you have any further questions.

 

Regards,

Rich

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Thank you for your reply Rich, but this really doesn't answer my question.

 

The Tuina practitioners that I've met in China, all have a detailed

understanding of acupoints and meridians. Also, in the majority of

instances, blockages are located within acupoints. I'm sure your teacher

understands what points he's manipulating and along which meridians.

Therefore, the notion that Tuina is simply finding blockages on the body and

is not related to acupoints or meridians is incorrect.

 

Please ask your teacher and see what he's says.

 

Kind regards,

 

Attilio

 

 

Rich [rfinkelstein]

02 November 2004 18:24

Chinese Medicine

Re: Tuina and Asthma

 

My friend's primary care over the last three months has been with the

tuina/qigong practitioner who we are both learning from. My friend is

very typical in that here body is tight and rigid - particularly her

upper and lower spine. For this reason, she receives a typical session

which includes bodywork on her whole body - this includes all muscles,

joints, bones etc. There is particular emphasis on releasing the

rigidity in the upper spine. This makes an enormous difference in here

ability to " feel and breathe " in the upper part of her body. I can

only describe it as a feeling that blockages (stagnating) in that are

being released.

 

After the first several sessions, there were heavy guasha treatments

throughout her back. This revealed lots of stagnation throughout her

body - purplish color running down her back especially along her

vertebrae. More recently she has lots of cupping (sliding) along her

back and on the upper part of her chest. The cupping on the upper part

of her chest was painful for her. Maybe it could have been gentler.

However, there was a substantial release of stagnation when the

cupping was applied and the area turned a purplish/black. It lasted

for about 2 weeks particularly in the area right below her neck.

 

The abdominal work was based upon searching for areas that felt " hard

and stagnated " . Small circular movements are used with increasing

pressure as the area softens up. I am thinking that by releasing the

blockages in the lower abdomen, the " downward qi " is able to flow

again and connect up more easily and efficiently. The whole system is

now functioning in a more natural manner. With the blockages, the qi

was struggling to circulate and had numerous obstructions throughout

the whole bodily system.

 

It appears that the localized blockages that may have occurred when

she was younger (she has a very typical " fear of parents " ) gradually

grew over time, blocking more and more areas of the body. The

breathing heaves were a " desperate " measure by the body to try to get

the qi circulating through all of these blockages. Tuina and qigong

(qigong working on the energetic layers) has helped getting the qi

circulating.

 

So no particular meridians or points were " pre-determined " . It is what

ever feels hard and stagnated in the body - wherever it may be.

Meridians are primary channels, but any part of the body can become

blocked so it is merely a matter of finding these areas and releasing

them.

 

Hope this explains the process she went through. I would be glad to

elaborate if you have any further questions.

 

Regards,

Rich

 

 

 

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Hi Attilio,

 

Actually I have quite often discussed this with my teacher and the

other tuina/acupuncture/qigong practitioner that I went to. It is as I

described. It is very basic and commonsense. I have also gone to tuina

practitioners who stick to what they learned in school in China. It is

definitely a different approach and I feel much different after the

session. I prefer the practitioners that do not adhere to the

" textbook " approach. It is true that they will use acupoints during

the process - but only when they " feel it is necessary " - e.g.

hardness, stagnation, pain to the touch, lack of qi flow, etc, etc,

etc. Not in any predetermined, cookbook type of fashion. Everyone is

totally different.

 

But this approach is merely my own preference and that of other people

who I hang around with. It appears that meridians and acupuncture

points are a very small subset of what needs to be addressed. Maybe

this is all that they can teach in a four year curriculum. Maybe it is

all that someone can learn who had not learned appropriate

" sensitivity " . Something that comes with age. I have no idea why the

schools in China limit their practice to " meridians " .

 

It is as if I looked at a piping system and decided I would limit

myself to the main pipes, when it is obvious that the primary blockage

was in one of the small pipes. Sure I can try to treat the problem

" remotely " by pushing a large amount of water through the main pipes

hoping it would be sufficient to open up the small pipes (without

breaking the system of course), but it is far easier to just go to the

small pipe and clean it out. That is what I do in my home. :-) Tom Tam

says the same thing in his books. Is it wrong? Well, I guess it is for

each patient to decide. It is certainly right for me.

 

Regards,

Rich

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Hi Rich,

 

I believe that all Tuina practitioners start with the points and Jinglou.

Whether they move on from that is a different matter as you suggest.

However, to move on comes from a deep understanding of the classics and are

therefore based upon the classics, meridians and acupoints.

 

I've noticed that many 'masters' of TCM have unique understandings in their

fields and yet its all based upon a excellent understanding of the classics.

I've asked these people what is their theories and they don't often answer

and make it out to be their own, there not.

 

Attilio

 

 

 

Rich [rfinkelstein]

02 November 2004 19:00

Chinese Medicine

Re: Tuina and Asthma

 

 

Hi Attilio,

 

Actually I have quite often discussed this with my teacher and the

other tuina/acupuncture/qigong practitioner that I went to. It is as I

described. It is very basic and commonsense. I have also gone to tuina

practitioners who stick to what they learned in school in China. It is

definitely a different approach and I feel much different after the

session. I prefer the practitioners that do not adhere to the

" textbook " approach. It is true that they will use acupoints during

the process - but only when they " feel it is necessary " - e.g.

hardness, stagnation, pain to the touch, lack of qi flow, etc, etc,

etc. Not in any predetermined, cookbook type of fashion. Everyone is

totally different.

 

But this approach is merely my own preference and that of other people

who I hang around with. It appears that meridians and acupuncture

points are a very small subset of what needs to be addressed. Maybe

this is all that they can teach in a four year curriculum. Maybe it is

all that someone can learn who had not learned appropriate

" sensitivity " . Something that comes with age. I have no idea why the

schools in China limit their practice to " meridians " .

 

It is as if I looked at a piping system and decided I would limit

myself to the main pipes, when it is obvious that the primary blockage

was in one of the small pipes. Sure I can try to treat the problem

" remotely " by pushing a large amount of water through the main pipes

hoping it would be sufficient to open up the small pipes (without

breaking the system of course), but it is far easier to just go to the

small pipe and clean it out. That is what I do in my home. :-) Tom Tam

says the same thing in his books. Is it wrong? Well, I guess it is for

each patient to decide. It is certainly right for me.

 

Regards,

Rich

 

 

 

 

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I would like to share my two cents worth here. A practitioner of tui na or

of shiatsu

may free up the entire abdomen to better promote movement.

 

While you might think that all blockages are related to channel points they

simply are not.

The stagnation may be related to an internal blockage. This type of work is

very similar

to Kiiko Matsumoto and other Japanese practitioners who work on opening up

the abdomen

for better circulation. In other words, a blockage in the abdomen over time

can lead

to problems of the channels. This work can be amazing.

Later

MB

 

 

On 11/2/04 12:42 PM, " Attilio D'Alberto " <attiliodalberto

wrote:

 

> Thank you for your reply Rich, but this really doesn't answer my question.

>

> The Tuina practitioners that I've met in China, all have a detailed

> understanding of acupoints and meridians. Also, in the majority of

> instances, blockages are located within acupoints. I'm sure your teacher

> understands what points he's manipulating and along which meridians.

> Therefore, the notion that Tuina is simply finding blockages on the body and

> is not related to acupoints or meridians is incorrect.

>

> Please ask your teacher and see what he's says.

>

> Kind regards,

>

> Attilio

>

>

> Rich [rfinkelstein]

> 02 November 2004 18:24

> Chinese Medicine

> Re: Tuina and Asthma

>

> My friend's primary care over the last three months has been with the

> tuina/qigong practitioner who we are both learning from. My friend is

> very typical in that here body is tight and rigid - particularly her

> upper and lower spine. For this reason, she receives a typical session

> which includes bodywork on her whole body - this includes all muscles,

> joints, bones etc. There is particular emphasis on releasing the

> rigidity in the upper spine. This makes an enormous difference in here

> ability to " feel and breathe " in the upper part of her body. I can

> only describe it as a feeling that blockages (stagnating) in that are

> being released.

>

> After the first several sessions, there were heavy guasha treatments

> throughout her back. This revealed lots of stagnation throughout her

> body - purplish color running down her back especially along her

> vertebrae. More recently she has lots of cupping (sliding) along her

> back and on the upper part of her chest. The cupping on the upper part

> of her chest was painful for her. Maybe it could have been gentler.

> However, there was a substantial release of stagnation when the

> cupping was applied and the area turned a purplish/black. It lasted

> for about 2 weeks particularly in the area right below her neck.

>

> The abdominal work was based upon searching for areas that felt " hard

> and stagnated " . Small circular movements are used with increasing

> pressure as the area softens up. I am thinking that by releasing the

> blockages in the lower abdomen, the " downward qi " is able to flow

> again and connect up more easily and efficiently. The whole system is

> now functioning in a more natural manner. With the blockages, the qi

> was struggling to circulate and had numerous obstructions throughout

> the whole bodily system.

>

> It appears that the localized blockages that may have occurred when

> she was younger (she has a very typical " fear of parents " ) gradually

> grew over time, blocking more and more areas of the body. The

> breathing heaves were a " desperate " measure by the body to try to get

> the qi circulating through all of these blockages. Tuina and qigong

> (qigong working on the energetic layers) has helped getting the qi

> circulating.

>

> So no particular meridians or points were " pre-determined " . It is what

> ever feels hard and stagnated in the body - wherever it may be.

> Meridians are primary channels, but any part of the body can become

> blocked so it is merely a matter of finding these areas and releasing

> them.

>

> Hope this explains the process she went through. I would be glad to

> elaborate if you have any further questions.

>

> Regards,

> Rich

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Hi Attilio,

 

One of my favorite passages in the Neijing is this one:

 

" In a word, man will survive when following the law, and dies when

acts against it. If the Yang energy fails to enter into the body and

Yin energy can not come out from the body, the favorable condition of

health will turn to the adversity, the contradictions between exterior

and interior will cause the disease of mutual excluding of Yin and

Yang. " [Yellow Emperor's Canon Internal Medicine, Wu and Wu].

 

So it is taught in the classics that favorable conditions for health

existif energy is flowing through the body without obstruction

(heavenly-to-earth, positive-to-negative, in-to-out) and health were

turn to illness when energy no longer flows. Energy flows everywhere

in the human body and can be also obstructed anywhere - whether it be

in the smallest chamber in the little finger or in the very Heart of

Life. It is the nature of the Life that is manifested by the Shen.

 

Regards,

Rich

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Hi Mike,

 

> In other words, a blockage in the abdomen over time

> can lead to problems of the channels. This work can be amazing.

> MB

 

Thanks for your comments Mike. One can make an excellent case that all

chronic blockages begin in the " abdomen " - the Shen, Po, and Hun. At

least that is what it says in the Classics and that has certainly been

my experience. I also very much enjoy Matsumoto's writings.

 

Regards,

Rich

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Since the Zangfu are located in the trunk of the body with the abdomen

comprising half of the trunk, of course disorders (excess, deficiency,

stasis, etc) will arise from here.

 

Why I wanted to know the exact, mysterious points used on the abdomen is

because I recently learnt various aspects of Fu Zhen. This is a new form of

abdominal acupuncture that is practiced in Beijing. It uses Ba Gua theory

aswell as two other levels (Ba Gua is the deepest level) to achieve effect.

The whole body is treated on the abdomen in relation to a turtle. Therefore,

abdominal points are very interesting to me, hence my questions.

 

Attilio

 

 

Rich [rfinkelstein]

02 November 2004 22:43

Chinese Medicine

Re: Tuina and Asthma

 

 

 

 

Hi Mike,

 

> In other words, a blockage in the abdomen over time

> can lead to problems of the channels. This work can be amazing.

> MB

 

Thanks for your comments Mike. One can make an excellent case that all

chronic blockages begin in the " abdomen " - the Shen, Po, and Hun. At

least that is what it says in the Classics and that has certainly been

my experience. I also very much enjoy Matsumoto's writings.

 

Regards,

Rich

 

 

 

 

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This is a new form of

abdominal acupuncture that is practiced in Beijing. It uses Ba Gua theory

aswell as two other levels (Ba Gua is the deepest level) to achieve effect.

The whole body is treated on the abdomen in relation to a turtle.

 

(Tom): Yes, Attilio. I also learned that method, at the TCM inpatient dept of

the Jiangsu Provincial Hospital, Nanjing. Very interesting. Not that hard to

learn, also.

 

 

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Rich,

 

What does this mean: 'all chronic blockages begin in the " abdomen " -

the Shen, Po, and Hun'. Am a little confused.

 

Angelo

 

Chinese Medicine , " Rich "

<rfinkelstein@a...> wrote:

>

>

> Hi Mike,

>

> > In other words, a blockage in the abdomen over time

> > can lead to problems of the channels. This work can be amazing.

> > MB

>

> Thanks for your comments Mike. One can make an excellent case that

all

> chronic blockages begin in the " abdomen " - the Shen, Po, and Hun.

At

> least that is what it says in the Classics and that has certainly

been

> my experience. I also very much enjoy Matsumoto's writings.

>

> Regards,

> Rich

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Nice quote Rich.

 

What do you make of the rest of the Neijing where it discusses much

of the theories upon which modern TCM is based?

 

Angelo

 

Chinese Medicine , " Rich "

<rfinkelstein@a...> wrote:

>

>

> Hi Attilio,

>

> One of my favorite passages in the Neijing is this one:

>

> " In a word, man will survive when following the law, and dies when

> acts against it. If the Yang energy fails to enter into the body and

> Yin energy can not come out from the body, the favorable condition

of

> health will turn to the adversity, the contradictions between

exterior

> and interior will cause the disease of mutual excluding of Yin and

> Yang. " [Yellow Emperor's Canon Internal Medicine, Wu and Wu].

>

> So it is taught in the classics that favorable conditions for health

> existif energy is flowing through the body without obstruction

> (heavenly-to-earth, positive-to-negative, in-to-out) and health were

> turn to illness when energy no longer flows. Energy flows everywhere

> in the human body and can be also obstructed anywhere - whether it

be

> in the smallest chamber in the little finger or in the very Heart of

> Life. It is the nature of the Life that is manifested by the Shen.

>

> Regards,

> Rich

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Nice quote Rich.

 

What do you make of the rest of the Neijing where it discusses much

of the theories upon which modern TCM is based?

 

Angelo

 

Chinese Medicine , " Rich "

<rfinkelstein@a...> wrote:

>

>

> Hi Attilio,

>

> One of my favorite passages in the Neijing is this one:

>

> " In a word, man will survive when following the law, and dies when

> acts against it. If the Yang energy fails to enter into the body and

> Yin energy can not come out from the body, the favorable condition

of

> health will turn to the adversity, the contradictions between

exterior

> and interior will cause the disease of mutual excluding of Yin and

> Yang. " [Yellow Emperor's Canon Internal Medicine, Wu and Wu].

>

> So it is taught in the classics that favorable conditions for health

> existif energy is flowing through the body without obstruction

> (heavenly-to-earth, positive-to-negative, in-to-out) and health were

> turn to illness when energy no longer flows. Energy flows everywhere

> in the human body and can be also obstructed anywhere - whether it

be

> in the smallest chamber in the little finger or in the very Heart of

> Life. It is the nature of the Life that is manifested by the Shen.

>

> Regards,

> Rich

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Hi Angelo,

 

> What does this mean: 'all chronic blockages begin in the " abdomen " -

> the Shen, Po, and Hun'. Am a little confused.

>

> Angelo

 

In Chpater 8 of the Ling Shu [Wu,Wu translation] it is written:

 

" According to the principle of acupuncture, one must examine the

patient carefully first and then treat according to the conditions of

his spirtuual activities. As the blood, channel, Ying-energy, vital

energy and the essence of life are all stored by the five viscera,

when they become abnormal and be divorced from the storing viscus, the

refined energy of the five viscera will be lost, the soul and the

inferior spirit will be rising in the air, and Will will be vexed and

the patient himself will lose his intelligence and fail to ponder, and

why is it so? Is it due to the natural morbidity or due to the

artificial fault of man? "

 

It goes on to explain the relationship of the Shen, Po, and Hun to

health and how it expresses itself physically through emotions. Mark

Seem, Claude Larre, and Kiiko Matsumoto/Stephen Birch have all written

excellent books on the nature of the Spirit and how it might be

considered the root of disease. It is a subject that I enjoy reading

about.

 

Regards,

Rich

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Hi again Angelo, :-)

>

> Nice quote Rich.

>

> What do you make of the rest of the Neijing where it discusses much

> of the theories upon which modern TCM is based?

>

> Angelo

 

I really like the Neijing. I have the Wu,Wu translation and the Ni

translation. Both have a different flavor. Often I do not understand

the Neijing until I have had my own individual experiences that I can

relate to in the Neijing - e.g. the concept of " natural flow " , which

finally made real sense to me when I started to study tuina and ws

able to relate it all to my taiji practice. For me, the Neijing is

usually the first place I go for " inspiration " or clues about the

nature of life and health.

 

Regards,

Rich

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Rich,

Qi flows through channels and network vessels. The flow of qi is

what the ancient physicians 'mapped' through various techniques. The

channel system is the 'map' we consult when releasing depressed qi, it

allows us to more fully understand what it is we are doing.

Otherwise, when releasing blockages, how do we know where the qi

'goes'? This also applies to abdominal blockages as well, which are

associated with specific channels and mu xue/alarm or mustering points.

If your point is that one doesn't need to understand or utilize

channels and points to treat with tui na, you are not making it very

well.

 

 

On Nov 2, 2004, at 10:23 AM, Rich wrote:

 

> The abdominal work was based upon searching for areas that felt " hard

> and stagnated " . Small circular movements are used with increasing

> pressure as the area softens up. I am thinking that by releasing the

> blockages in the lower abdomen, the " downward qi " is able to flow

> again and connect up more easily and efficiently. The whole system is

> now functioning in a more natural manner. With the blockages, the qi

> was struggling to circulate and had numerous obstructions throughout

> the whole bodily system.

 

So no particular meridians or points were " pre-determined " . It is what

ever feels hard and stagnated in the body - wherever it may be.

Meridians are primary channels, but any part of the body can become

blocked so it is merely a matter of finding these areas and releasing

them.

 

>

 

 

 

 

 

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Hello hello,

 

Rich I agree that your approach is practical and effective, and cuts out a lot

of the intellectualisation

time which many of us love but possibly waste too much time on, so I understand

why you have

chosen to study this method. However, I feel that it is useful to understand the

points and be able to

locate and describe them in order to communicate with other practitioners, just

as it is useful for us as

practitioners of TCM to learn western anatomy and physiology in order to

communicate with doctors,

physios, etc, and our patients!

 

so while for you it may not be necessary to know which points you are working

on, it would be very

useful to ME if you were able to say that when treating someone for a particular

kind of asthma you

found areas of stagnation around such and such a point on such and such a

channel....

 

> It is as if I looked at a piping system and decided I would limit

> myself to the main pipes, when it is obvious that the primary blockage

> was in one of the small pipes....

 

This idea is not at all outside of standard meridian-channel theory, when we

consider the network of

the main channel pathways, the connecting vessels, sinew channels, " network

vessels " or " collaterals " ,

and skin (what are they called again?) channels, capillary vessels, and of

course the eight extraordinary

vessels.

 

I'm not saying you should go off and learn all the points or anything, I'm all

for learning what we need

and not wasting our time learning what we don't want to know (I'm just about to

graduate from my

course at school, where " law and massage " , " massage business practices " and

" microbiology " are all

compulsory subjects!!!) but I think it would definately be useful diagnostic

information for the rest of

us if you could describe (as you have been) the areas of the body where you find

blockages.

 

One day i'll learn to say what I want to say without repeating myself three

times!

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Hi Rich

 

Thanks for your reply. However, the quote does not explain how all

chronic blockages begin in the abdomen (unless I am missing

something?) and how this relates to the Shen, Po, and Hun.

 

On another note - how do you treat disturbances of the Shen, Hun,

and / or Po using Tuina?

 

Regards

 

Angelo

 

Chinese Medicine , " Rich "

<rfinkelstein@a...> wrote:

>

>

> Hi Angelo,

>

> > What does this mean: 'all chronic blockages begin in

the " abdomen " -

> > the Shen, Po, and Hun'. Am a little confused.

> >

> > Angelo

>

> In Chpater 8 of the Ling Shu [Wu,Wu translation] it is written:

>

> " According to the principle of acupuncture, one must examine the

> patient carefully first and then treat according to the conditions

of

> his spirtuual activities. As the blood, channel, Ying-energy, vital

> energy and the essence of life are all stored by the five viscera,

> when they become abnormal and be divorced from the storing viscus,

the

> refined energy of the five viscera will be lost, the soul and the

> inferior spirit will be rising in the air, and Will will be vexed

and

> the patient himself will lose his intelligence and fail to ponder,

and

> why is it so? Is it due to the natural morbidity or due to the

> artificial fault of man? "

>

> It goes on to explain the relationship of the Shen, Po, and Hun to

> health and how it expresses itself physically through emotions. Mark

> Seem, Claude Larre, and Kiiko Matsumoto/Stephen Birch have all

written

> excellent books on the nature of the Spirit and how it might be

> considered the root of disease. It is a subject that I enjoy reading

> about.

>

> Regards,

> Rich

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Hi,

 

> However, I feel that it is useful to understand the points and be >

>able to locate and describe them in order to communicate with other

>practitioners, just as it is useful for us as practitioners of TCM to

>learn western anatomy and physiology in order to communicate with

>doctors, physios, etc, and our patients!

 

Yes, I agree. For this reason, I do study points and physicology. It

is useful for communication

 

>

> so while for you it may not be necessary to know which points you

>are working on, it would be very

> useful to ME if you were able to say that when treating someone for

a particular kind of asthma you

> found areas of stagnation around such and such a point on such and

such a channel....

 

Yes, this is very true. In this particular situation the whole hara

felt very hard to the touch and I gently massaged it to relieve

stagnation.

 

> This idea is not at all outside of standard meridian-channel theory,

>when we consider the network of the main channel pathways, the

>connecting vessels, sinew channels, " network vessels " or

>collaterals " , and skin (what are they called again?) channels,

>capillary vessels, and of course the eight extraordinary vessels.

 

Yes, and probably many, many more that move off of these channels and

vessels. They are all over the place and different modalities work in

different ways. Qigong can work on whole areas at a time or can narrow

its focus if so desired.

>

> I'm not saying you should go off and learn all the points or

>anything, I'm all for learning what we need and not wasting our time

learning what we don't want to know (I'm just about to graduate from

>my course at school, where " law and massage " , " massage business

>practices " and " microbiology " are all

> compulsory subjects!!!) but I think it would definately be useful

>diagnostic information for the rest of

> us if you could describe (as you have been) the areas of the body

>where you find blockages.

 

This is a good point. The Japanese Shiatsu systems use the notion of

the Hara - e.g. to describe general areas of the abdomen. The Hara is

broken down into larger areas which make sense from a bodywork

perspective.

 

But your point is very well taken.

>

> One day i'll learn to say what I want to say without repeating

myself three times!

 

Well I enjoyed reading all three of them. Thanks! :-)

 

Regards,

Rich

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Hi Angelo,

 

>

> Hi Rich

>

> Thanks for your reply. However, the quote does not explain how all

> chronic blockages begin in the abdomen (unless I am missing

> something?) and how this relates to the Shen, Po, and Hun.

 

Claude Larre/Elisabeth Rochat discuss this very question extensively

in their book " Rooted in Spirit " . Their translation of the paragraph

that I quoted is this:

 

" For every needling, the method is above all

Not to miss the rooting in the Spirits

 

Xue and Mai, Ying and Qi, Jing and Shen,

These are stored by the Five Zang.

 

If a situation becomes such that

By succession of overflowings and total invasion

They leave the Zang,

Then the Essences are lost;

And Hun and Po are carried away in an

uncontrollable agitation,

Will and Intent become confused and disordered.

Knowing -how and Reflection abondon us.

 

Where does this state come from?

Should Heaven be blamed? Is it Man's fault?

 

And what we call Virtue, Breaths, Life, Essences, Shen, Hin, Po,

Heart, Intent, Will, Thought, Knowing-How, Reflection? "

 

The authors go on and explain in their view:

 

" Human activityy from beginning to end (the end simply our return to

the origin), is directed by the Spirits. The quality of life and the

fullness of our years are assured only by association with them. We

must remember, therefore, that the root of life is in the Spirits.

Root is ben and the Spirits are shen. ... To be effective, and at the

same time not violate the organism, the acupunturist goes all the way

to the origin of the patient's life, to that place wehre the Spirits

are rooted, to ben shen. "

 

Mark Seems in his book Bodymind Energetics quotes Andrew Weil:

 

" Healing is not just a property of the physical body .. we area all

mind-bodies, so that healling, like health and illness, must also be

psychosomatic. "

>

> On another note - how do you treat disturbances of the Shen, Hun,

> and / or Po using Tuina?

 

Indirectly. It is as Seem's suggests in this same book (P.72):

 

" Acupuncture therapy, while unbocking an energetic zone,

simultaneously frees up the psyche trapped in the zone, and if

attention is not paid to the undrelying psychological issues in the

patient's life experience, a new energetic zone will be soon become

disturbed. "

 

I can hardly do service to this point of view in a short message. The

authors I have referenced do a far better job than I can ever hope to do.

 

Regards,

Rich

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Dear Z'ev,

 

Thank you for helping me clarify my point of view.

 

Regards,

Rich

 

> Rich,

> Qi flows through channels and network vessels. The flow of qi is

> what the ancient physicians 'mapped' through various techniques. The

> channel system is the 'map' we consult when releasing depressed qi, it

> allows us to more fully understand what it is we are doing.

> Otherwise, when releasing blockages, how do we know where the qi

> 'goes'? This also applies to abdominal blockages as well, which are

> associated with specific channels and mu xue/alarm or mustering points.

> If your point is that one doesn't need to understand or utilize

> channels and points to treat with tui na, you are not making it very

> well.

>

>

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Hi,

 

Or it might be seen as an impaired five phase cycle.

 

“The Five Phases dry up when mind and spirit are lost "

-- in “The Journey to the West”, Vol 3, Anthony Yu, Trans 1980

 

Rich wrote:

>>What does this mean: 'all chronic blockages begin in the " abdomen " -

>>the Shen, Po, and Hun'. Am a little confused.

 

> In Chpater 8 of the Ling Shu [Wu,Wu translation] it is written:

>

> " According to the principle of acupuncture, one must examine the

> patient carefully first and then treat according to the conditions of

> his spirtuual activities. As the blood, channel, Ying-energy, vital

> energy and the essence of life are all stored by the five viscera,

> when they become abnormal and be divorced from the storing viscus, the

> refined energy of the five viscera will be lost, the soul and the

> inferior spirit will be rising in the air, and Will will be vexed and

> the patient himself will lose his intelligence and fail to ponder, and

> why is it so? Is it due to the natural morbidity or due to the

> artificial fault of man? "

>

> It goes on to explain the relationship of the Shen, Po, and Hun to

> health and how it expresses itself physically through emotions. Mark

> Seem, Claude Larre, and Kiiko Matsumoto/Stephen Birch have all written

> excellent books on the nature of the Spirit and how it might be

> considered the root of disease. It is a subject that I enjoy reading

> about.

 

If one steps back to the five phases one can look at a life from some

perspectives - feng shui, life stage, diet - and widen awareness.

Many cases of asthma are cured with simple dialogue between people,

generating changed perspective as the phases re-align.

 

Five phase cycles are 60% yang and 40% yin, so they're assumed to

be proactively changing.

 

This drifts into modern Dreambody (www.processwork.org) and ancient taoism.

Processworkers can work with comatose people to wash out blockages, that

then release the people to progress in various ways. (eg " Coma " by amy mindell)

 

bye,

vic

--

Vic Williams (604)433-5189 -- www.strategicprocess.com -- www.spiralwild.com

Empowering personal growth. Developing Personal & Group Ecology.

" Fools ignore complexity. Pragmatists suffer it. Some can avoid it. Geniuses

remove it. "

-- Alan Perlis

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Hi Vic,

>

> Hi,

>

> Or it might be seen as an impaired five phase cycle.

>

> " The Five Phases dry up when mind and spirit are lost "

> -- in " The Journey to the West " , Vol 3, Anthony Yu, Trans 1980

>

 

This is a great quote. I have never seen it before. I think it

illustrates the cohesion of Chinese culture - philosophy, medicine,

literature, life. It also, I believe, illustrates the root source of

Five Phase and Yin/Yang Theory - i.e. the Spirit. Thanks much for

bringing it to my attention.

 

Regards,

Rich

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Hi,

 

I think the book (journey to the west) has scads of such

weavings. It follows a confucian order to a buddhist monk with

taoist protectors, under a dominant buddhist rightness blanket.

It shifts through a whole range of settings showing chinese

culture and life from some points of view.

 

Rich wrote:

>>Or it might be seen as an impaired five phase cycle.

>>

>> " The Five Phases dry up when mind and spirit are lost "

>>-- in " The Journey to the West " , Vol 3, Anthony Yu, Trans 1980

 

> This is a great quote. I have never seen it before. I think it

> illustrates the cohesion of Chinese culture - philosophy, medicine,

> literature, life. It also, I believe, illustrates the root source of

> Five Phase and Yin/Yang Theory - i.e. the Spirit. Thanks much for

> bringing it to my attention.

 

We use the five phase cycle all the time. We link it to the five

senses, and five levels of awareness. And follow the extension to

eight phases with two ears/nostrils/eyes, into the yijing.

 

Just developing buoyancy - optimism in someone, or a group, can

cure many social physical problems. Just finding individual

and group blockages to release the chi/qu allows renewed health

and growth in the life pattern.

 

We teach tracing the five levels of awareness into nature and

city/building/room design, healthy diet, and treatments.

 

 

Let the dragons play their natural magic and the five phases will flow well.

 

 

bye,

vic

--

Vic Williams (604)433-5189 -- www.strategicprocess.com -- www.spiralwild.com

Empowering personal growth. Developing Personal & Group Ecology.

" Fools ignore complexity. Pragmatists suffer it. Some can avoid it. Geniuses

remove it. "

-- Alan Perlis

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