пятница, 21 октября 2011 г.

Comparing Greek and Chinese Philosophy and Science

Comparing Greek and Chinese Philosophy and Science

Most people are aware by now that we can find science, technology, and medicine in every culture, but the outcome of decades of research on non-European traditions has not been, as we might have hoped, a narrative of world science.1 What we find instead is a set of stories that remain largely unrelated until they end, one by one, with bodies of knowledge and practice pulverized by the impact of the West. Some bits survive, more or less, such as traditional Chinese medicine. So far as the rest of the world is concerned, they are exotic curiosities rather than parts of an understanding that hang together.


The history of science ought to be more than a collection of cultural ghettos. That is why people curious about the evolution of science as a general human phenomenon have always invested such high hopes in comparative studies.


For three hundred years historians have been forming judgments about the relations of European and other scientific traditions, and the main similarities and differences between them. But if we ask what we have learned from these three centuries of comparative studies, the answer is embarrassingly little.


Certainly no educated person today would claim that the Chinese or the Japanese had no aptitude for science, or that Islamic science depended entirely on borrowings from Greece. Every undergraduate who has taken an introductory course in the history of science knows that the centers of innovation in late-fourteenth-century mathematical astronomy were not Paris and Oxford but Seoul and Baghdad. That is not the result of comparative study, but of research by specialists on one civilization at a time.


Explicitly comparative study has called attention to a number of parallels between civilizations, and to regular contacts between their technical traditions. But has it uncovered new possibilities of human thought and practice? Has it led to substantial understanding of worldwide science? Has it helped us to a deeper comprehension of Japanese medicine, or Greek epistemology, or Indian mathematics? A certain number of facts and dates has accumulated, but the conclusions drawn in the many published comparisons seldom affect our own understanding.


Disappointment will continue to outbalance hope as long as we insist on comparing things out of context one at a time, whether they are concepts, values, machines, or groups of people. I cannot offer a ready-made formula for a more optimistic approach, but let me describe my current explorations.

They began four years ago when I met G.E.R. Lloyd, a historian of classical philosophy and science who for some time had been as worried as I had been about the need for comparisons that made sense. He had been following recent and innovative scholarship on China, as I had done with respect to Europe. We began a series of exploratory studies that we hoped would point us in revelatory directions. After three years of exchanging what turned out to be a thick stack of drafts, and meeting in the summers to argue about them, we decided that this experiment was worth continuing. It was yielding new questions that suggested new ways to look at the traditions we studied.


We decided to begin a more or less systematic collaborative study of Chinese and Greek natural philosophy and science. At present we are rereading the primary literature, led by new questions to find new things in it. We have begun drafting and rewriting parts of what will take several years to become a finished book. Our preliminary studies, not at all restricted to science, have led us to define what seem to be several useful approaches to comparison:


1. An advantage of cooperation is that it gives us approximately equal depth in the study of the two cultures.2 We do not want to add to the accumulation of comparisons that put together a substantial understanding of one with superficial generalities about the other. Mastery of the languages and the primary sources of both traditions is hardly optional.


2. We do not choose what to compare by the criteria of today’s science, but by what turn out to be important similarities or contrasts in Greece and China. We look for superficial similarities with different significances, or different means that lead to analogous ends. We are trying to learn how different cultural circumstances push ideas and institutions in different directions.


That leads us to draw on aspects of Greek thought that have no counterpart in China, at least in the period that interests us. An obvious example is Greek element theories, which claim that things are made up of minute ultimate parts that usually do not look like the parts that are big enough for us to see. Element theories build on the idea that reality is hidden, and direct experience is in some ultimate sense not real. That fundamental claim, which we usually refer to as appearance vs. reality, has no counterpart in China. Exploring the circumstances in which it developed in Greece has drawn our attention to Chinese circumstances that leave no scope for such an idea.


Equally interesting, of course, are important Chinese ideas that were not found in Europe, for instance cheng ming which used to be translated “the rectification of names.” This is actually quite a diverse group of doctrines about what should be done when names and the things that they designate do not correspond. The variations point to different social interests and political agendas. Greeks entertained vaguely similar ideas, but what we find interesting is how peripheral they were there.


Much effort has been wasted by comparativists straining to find logic in early Chinese philosophy, but no one has yet come to grips with the complementarity of Greek logic and Chinese semantics. Semantics, after all, is what the the people that historians lump together as ming-chia mostly discussed.3


More obvious comparisons are possible when concepts or assumptions turn up in both cultures. Because their settings are different, they are bound to have very different implications. Topics worth exploring range from patronage as a form of livelihood (which had very different implications in the two cultures) to the idea that the state and the human body are both miniature replicas of Nature. I will summarize below our approach to this idea of macrocosm and microcosms, to make it clear that what we are doing is more than a conventional exercise in the history of ideas.


3. There is obviously some risk in picking activities to compare from dissimilar periods, where their settings and their significances may be very different. We have looked for a single period in which both cultures seem to be passing through more or less analogous transitions and in which the literatures are comparable. There is no particular reason that there should be such a period. But we believe that there is one.


It happens that between roughly 300 B.C. and A.D. 200 both China and Greece decisively moved away from a free-for-all in philosophic innovation. By the end of that time both were obsessed instead with preserving what had already been done. This was also the period in which the sciences separated out of natural philosophy and established their own institutions and distinct literatures.


Medicine did so earlier in Greece. In the fifth century B.C., when philosophy was just developing its repertory, medicine was already a flourishing intellectual as well as practical enterprise. Still, in the Hellenistic period, from about 300 B.C.on, in medicine as well as in physics, people focussed more and more attention on the past, on what had been inherited from the ancients.


Those five hundred years give us a large and more or less commensurable literature in which to explore basic scientific issues that had not been pressing earlier. In natural science and mathematics we can confront Eudoxus, Euclid, Hipparchus and Ptolemy with the Mathematical Methods in Nine Chapters (Chiu chang suan shu the Arithmetical Canon of the Chou Gnomon (Chou pi suan ching and the astronomical treatises of the first two Standard Histories. In medicine we can set Galen and his predecessors side by side with Chinese classics from the Mawangdui manuscripts through the Canon of Eighty-one Problems (Huang-ti pa-shih-i nan ching


The period we are studying is especially significant in a sense that we did not realize when we began. It was an era of fundamental political change at both ends of Eurasia. The Hellenistic period marked the end of the independent Greek city state as a significant unit. The social order that had evolved thinkers such as Plato and Aristotle ceased to exist. The larger world that Alexander’s empire created, the world in which Rome rose and fatally overextended itself by the year 200, was bound to redefine the scope of learning and science.


In China too, changes in society and politics paralleled a change in thought and work. The same half-millennium began with rapidly shifting constellations of power as the local potentates of the Chou dynasty wiped each other out. Over those five centuries, the first universal and centrally organized imperial state first stabilized itself, then disintegrated, and finally collapsed.


Before 300, ambitious intellectuals competed in a widespread system of princely patronage. As the Han state succeeded, they became civil servants in a single bureaucracy and eventually adherents of a single state orthodoxy. But that order faded. By A.D. 200 a position in the civil service could be as dangerous as it could be profitable, and the official philosophy was no longer being taken seriously. That leaves us with the stimulating challenge to determine how these political changes are related to the emergence of natural philosophy and science. The period is the same, and to a large extent the actors are the same.


4. My colleague and I are not comparing things or concepts, but processes, evolving activity. Like most historians of science today, we have no use for the idea that science is one thing and its context another. We are looking at ideas, their use, and the social process that created and elaborated them, as a single phenomenon. How physicians or astronomers earned a living, how thinkers grouped themselves, in what ways they publicly disagreed, and what political significance they claimed for cosmology are just as revealing as concepts, forms of proof, and patterns of thought.


From this point of view it does not make sense to ask whether social change was the cause of scientific change, or whether philosophy changed politics. We see these as part of a single manifold of history. Our work is understanding what makes them one process. A prime example is the close linkages from the third century on between natural process, political process, and the vital processes of the human body.


There has been a great deal of writing on the development of cosmology in China, in connection with natural philosophy and the individual sciences. The yin-yang, Five Phases, and ch’i concepts were eventually combined to provide the framework for a new theory of resonance between Heaven and Earth on the one hand and the political realm on the other, with the body a second microcosm. A number of scholars including myself would put the final synthesis in the first century B.C., near the end of the Western Han. The document that consummated the mature synthesis of yin-yang, Five Phases, and ch’i now appears to be the Inner Canon of the Yellow Lord (Huang-ti nei ching from the third century on did not associate concepts of the state with cosmology and science because the empirical data forced them to do so. Rather, as I show in Chap. IV, the yin-yang and Five Phases concepts were moral and political from the start. In the long sweep of Chinese thought they remained at the same time moral, political, and physical.


Ideas of ch’i, yin-yang, and so on permeated all three domains because they were too politically important to pass by. What made them important is that the same people were using them to claim that the operations of the unified and centralized Ch’in-Han state were based on Nature’s processes. They were arguing that resisting a state built on the unity of Nature was bound to fail as surely as resisting the four seasons was bound to fail. They were also trying to persuade an emperor not bound by constitution or law to limit his own freedom. They argued that he and his officials could keep cosmos and state aligned only by modeling government on the regularities and disciplines that governed heaven and earth.


Let us look at the book that first systematically developed such parallels, Lü Pu-wei’s Springs and Autumns (Lü shih ch’un-ch’iu It begins with the idea that interfering with the circulation in the human body leads to illness. It goes on first to draw out parallels in Nature, and then to point out their meaning for the state. This book was written in a chaotic time (ca. 239) when there had been no Chou king for a generation, and when no one could do more than hope that China would soon be unified:


Human beings have 360 joints, nine body openings, and five yin and six yang systems of function. In the flesh tightness is desirable; in the blood vessels (hsueh-mo free flow is desirable; in the sinews and bones solidity is desirable; in the operations of the heart and mind harmony is desirable; in the essential ch’i regular motion is desirable. When [these desiderata] are realized, illness has nowhere to abide, and there is nothing from which pathology can develop. When illness lasts and pathology develops, it is because the essential ch’i has become static.

Analogously, water when stagnant becomes foul; a tree when [the circulation of its ch’i is] stagnant becomes worm-eaten; grasses when [the circulation of their ch’i is] stagnant become withered (?).


States too have their stases. When the ruler’s virtue does not flow freely [i.e., if he does not appoint good officials to keep him and his subjects in touch], and the wishes of his people do not reach him, this is the stasis of a state. When the stasis of a state lasts for a long time, a hundred pathologies arise in concert, and a myriad catastrophes swarm in. The cruelty of those above and those below toward each other arises from this. The reason that the sage kings valued heroic retainers and faithful ministers is that they dared to speak directly, breaking through such stases.


This union of politics, physics, and medicine was not temporary. It made its way into what you might call “the first Neo-Confucianism” (see Chap. IV). This promiscuous doctrine, much of it contrary to the teachings of Confucius, became conventional among the office-holding elite from the late second century on. Here is a sample from Abundant Dew on the Spring and Autumn Annals (Ch’un-ch’iu fan lu 156/130 B.C.), which designed the Han Confucian state orthodoxy:7 “the king models himself on heaven. He models himself on its seasons and consummates them. He models himself on its commands and circulates them among all men. He models himself on its constant categories and uses them when initiating affairs. He models himself on its Way and thereby makes order emerge. He models himself on its will and thus commits [his realm] to benevolence.”


The political focus continued into the literature of the distinct sciences that emerged in the first century B.C. It is common in the ancient books that came to be considered the founding canons of the various sciences. We can see it, for instance, in the dialogues between emperors and ministers in the medical Inner Canon and the cosmological Mathematical Canon. It recurs where we would most expect to find it, namely in technical writings for and by emperors, at least down to the medical Canon of Sagely Benefaction (Sheng chi ching of 1118.)


This passage from the Basic Questions (Su wen a version of the Inner Canon, is not about macrocosm and microcosm, but about the correspondence of the two microcosms, state and body. It begins as the Yellow Lord tells his minister Ch’i-po that he wants to hear “about the relative authority of the twelve systems of functions associated with the internal organs, about which is higher in rank and which lower.” A key to medicine, in other words, is the political hierarchy of the visceral systems, seen as departments in a civil service. Ch’i-po replies:


The cardiac system is the office of the monarch; consciousness issues from it. The pulmonary system is the office of the minister-mentors; oversight and supervision issue from it. The hepatic system is the office of the General; planning issues from it. The gall bladder system is the office of the rectifiers; decisions issue from itÿ20.ÿ20.ÿ20. [and so on for twelve systems of body functions associated with internal organs]. It will not do for these twelve offices to lose their coordination.

If the ruler is enlightened, all below him are secure. If one nourishes one’s vital forces in accordance with this, one will live long and pass through life without peril. If one governs all under Heaven in accordance with this, it will be greatly prosperous.


If the ruler is unenlightened, the twelve offices will be endangered, so that the thoroughfares of circulation will be closed off and movement will not be free. The body (hsing will be seriously injured. If one nourishes one’s vitalities in accordance with this, the result will be calamity. One who governs all under Heaven in accordance with this will imperil his patrimony. Take care! Take care!


There is no need to pause over the choice of civil service posts, which relate each set of functions to the ensemble of vital processes. Ch’i-po’s point is that these systems make up the body’s internal bureaucracy, and that the heart (which thinks, wills, and feels) coordinates their activities in the same way as the emperor keeps his civil service working together. Executive virtue is equally crucial in both spheres. Health is defined in terms of an ultimately political ideal.


These examples show that government depends on patterns that also hold for the cosmos and the body, and that the functional systems of the body make up a bureaucracy. To complete the schema, since the state is a little cosmos, the cosmos must be a civil service writ large. This is clear enough from the first of the astronomical treatises in the Standard Histories, which is in fact entitled The Book of Celestial Offices (“T’ien kuan shu Each of the constellations it enumerates turns out to be a department staffed by stars.


Comparisons


Let me summarize a few of the conclusions we have drawn from comparing the relations of macrocosms and microcosms in China with those we find in Greece:

1. Greek culture in the period that concerns us encouraged disagreement and disputation in natural philosophy and science as in every other field; in China the emphasis remained on consensus.


2. For Greeks, whatever other purposes it served, oral disagreement was a tool of competition. Without sinecures or even secure employment, philosophers were teachers. They depended on skill in debate for livelihood and fame. They tended to argue face to face and to expect the public to decide, just as it decided in the assembly or at trials. Even when Greeks agreed that something was the case, they seldom agreed on why or how.


In China people who lived by their knowledge, with few exceptions, expected rulers to support them–as “guests” (ke in the local courts of the Warring States and as imperial officials in the Han. They presented their ideas much of the time not to colleagues but rather to their patrons, who expected advice but did not have to act on it, or even to reply to it. This relationship hardly made for lively exchanges, and few are recorded. Disagreements with other scholars were, except for a testy few who tended to have unsatisfactory careers, unimportant by comparison. Open attacks were usually written–and one-sided. Patrons faced with political decisions encouraged parleys on concrete questions, but seldom showed patience for anything resembling intellectual debate.


On the whole, the Chinese valued consensus as much as the Greeks valued dispute. In China the relationships of masters and disciples were based on the ritual transmission of written texts. A teacher and his disciples formed an internally cohesive community that avoided attacking other communities. Quarrels were not likely to be productive when teachers aspired above all to official employment for their pupils, and when parents measured success by the same criterion.


3. Like those of China, Greek macrocosms and microcosms reflected political ideals. For the Chinese those ideals remained unifying and centripetal. From the Han on, in a social system that valued civil service above every other career, philosophers who wanted to be politically engaged, or simply respectable, understood the risk of favoring alternatives to the current dispensation of power.


In Greece, with its diverse city-states, constitutions, and political tastes, some people saw the cosmos as a single order, some as an ensemble of quite distinct orders, some as a balance of opposed powers, some as a state of strife. There was no shared ideal to build on.


4. Chinese rulers formed a loyal civil service elite by building on symbols and rituals that literati valued. But this process of alignment bound both. As an element of the new ideology, rulers to varying extents accepted limitations on their power.


The interests of Greek rulers were on the whole irrelevant to the thinkers who developed diverse cosmic metaphors for the state. Philosophers had no voice in the decisions of power-holders. Because intellectuals were not constrained by reasons of state, and because their public roles were played out in disagreement rather than consensus, their stances reflected a great range of contradictory definitions of state as well as of cosmos.


Conclusion


Because of circumstances like the ones I have summed up for this single example, the two cultures differed greatly in what one said and how one said it. The comparison throws into relief the reasons that the discourse of Chinese science was so rarely confrontational. Natural philosophers in the Western Han accepted the state’s view of itself because, unlike their Greek counterparts, they formed and maintained it. The same people shaped a view not merely of the political microcosm, but of the cosmos and the body. We intend to explore further the manifold in which the three were united, particularly to understand why it remained desirable to keep them linked as the separate sciences emerged. This sketch of one of our themes suggests that the pieces of the puzzle are beginning to fall into place.



Original article and pictures take www.corespirit.com site

среда, 19 октября 2011 г.

Cold Laser Light Therapy and the Mind–Body Connection

Cold Laser Light Therapy and the Mind–Body Connection

Most people tend to not let go of unresolved emotions and experiences, many of which are often unconscious; this can be hazardous to your health and to your skin. Your body is full of unresolved emotions and memories that can be triggered by present day situations and stimulus, which can cause a negative reaction in emotions, thoughts, behaviors, physical health, relationships, and to your complexion.


Many illnesses are the end result of emotions that have been repressed and unacknowledged, and often covered up which can lead to physical, mental and emotional health concerns. Unexpressed emotions tend to stay in the body like emotional land mines waiting to be set off.


According to experts in mind/body medicine, our emotions have a profound effect on us because they are physically linked to our bodies by way of our immune, endocrine, and central nervous system. These experts agree that often the seeds for a person’s physical, mental and emotional problems were planted by their earlier emotional traumas.


Research has shown through the Mayo Clinic, that unresolved grief can surface years later as insomnia, memory loss, lack of focus, depression, anxiety, headaches, relationship issues, intestinal problems, mental health difficulties, eating disorders, addictions and other issues.


How Stress Affects your Skin


Healthy looking skin is a reflection of how healthy your organs are. Stress, cortisol (the stress hormone), and accumulated toxins building up in your body can negatively affect our physical, emotional, mental health and our skin. Your face can also shows how resilient you are to stress.


When you notice the signs of uneven skin tone and texture, appearances of pigmentation and dark spots, pimples, acne, rashes, and broken capillaries it is, in part, an indication of the accumulation of toxins that are building up in your body. When the immune system weakens, the effect can be seen on your face as a warning sign. It is your skin’s attempt at expelling the accumulated toxins from your body.


Light Frequencies Help Detoxify & Release Toxins


It is believed by some, that light therapy energetically stimulates unconscious and unresolved issues, and that by putting light and color frequencies into the mind/body system that stagnant areas will begin releasing. This is the detoxification of emotions, echoes physical detoxification, and is possibly the catalyst for physical detoxification. This “Energy Detox” gives the body a boost to return to a balanced body and mind, enabling it to reverse decades of accumulated toxins.


Chinese and Russian scientists have demonstrated that the acupuncture meridians transmit light, which makes it a possibility that these points are pathways where organisms most effectively absorb light. Vibrational imbalances seen as increased light emissions in cells, could be brought into balance by the application of light in complementary or balancing colors along the meridian points.


A German bio-physicist, Dr. Fitz Albert Popp’s work clarified how human cells communicate. He described a constant level of radiating light moving gently around the body, similar to the esoteric descriptions of the auric field. His experiments demonstrated that all cells communicate by light within the spectrum of visible light and microwave energy.


When a cell becomes disturbed in some way, the light vibration around that cell becomes disharmonious, which is then thought to detrimentally influence the vibrational patterns of neighboring cells.


The red Cold Laser Light adds energy and tone and stimulates, while the cool colors like blue and green decrease and sedate the life energy. Each color is associated with a particular wavelength and photon intensity. The shorter wavelengths, such as the light from the red end of the spectrum, have the lowest photon frequency but the highest intensity.


How Cold Laser Light Therapy & Meridian Massage can Affect Wellbeing


It is believed that Cold Laser Light Therapy may enhance emotional and mental wellbeing. It can help to reduce everyday stress, anxiety and depression by targeting meridian points and through the release of serotonin and endorphins.


There is an increasing body of evidence that suggests that Cold Laser Light Therapy treatments on meridian points can stimulate a similar effect as acupressure, traditional acupuncture with needles, and reflexology.


The body has an energy circulation system that is similar to the blood circulation system. The energy flows along 12 main meridians or channels with many points that are like connecting stations through which energy flows into the muscle to allow balanced activity to take place.


If this energy becomes blocked, imbalances can develop causing some connecting station points to become irritated or congested. This can result in pain or weakness in the surrounding muscles as well as causing aches, pains, insomnia, irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), and other physical, mental and emotional concerns. Stimulating these points helps to normalize impaired conditions.


According to Traditional Chinese medicine, the main organs and their meridians are also associated with different emotions. An excessive amount of these emotions can damage the associated organs, while a disease of these organs may, in time, lead to excessive displays of these emotions.


The following are some examples of the meridian points that correlate to a particular emotion and thought process:


  • The Heart meridian is responsible for: excessive laughter and fear.
  • The Lung meridian is responsible for: grief, sorrow and negativity.
  • The Gallbladder meridian is responsible for: judgments, decisions, motivation, governing emotions of anger and irritability.
  • The Liver meridian is responsible for: planning, anger, irritability, excessive excitability, crying moods, and a compulsion to over function or under function at work or other areas of life.
  • The Small Intestines meridian is responsible for: filtering information and sorting out facts to make decisions.
  • The Spleen meridian is responsible for: thought, learning, concentration, worry and emotional tension.
  • The Kidney meridian is responsible for: will, sexual impulse, negativity, unease, fear, timidity, impatience, over functioning or under functioning at work or other areas of life.

Why the Face is the Perfect Area to Release Emotional & Physical Toxins


The face is a micro-map of the body’s 12 meridian energy points, representing areas and systems within the body; while also stimulating circulation in the brain and nervous system. A relaxation response may occur by releasing serotonin and endorphins and reducing some of the stress related symptoms such as: depression, anxiety and other mental and physical symptoms. Overall health and emotional wellbeing can be enhanced in this way.


Many practitioners of Reflexology, acupressure and other types of treatments working with the meridians, are concentrating more on the face, which has a large number of nerves and blood vessels, and is the closest to the brain, which is the control center of the body. So it makes sense to stimulate the meridian/energy points there, which can effect the blood circulation and the nerve supply.


Working on the face is a natural relaxing experience that can reduce stress and tension and helps to create a natural healing element. By massaging and stimulating the meridian points on the face, lymphatic drainage can flow, the glands are stimulated, the facial muscles are revitalized, and the healing process is supported. The benefit is long-term facial rejuvenation with smoother, suppler skin, reduced fine lines, improved skin elasticity, and a more radiant complexion.


Cold Laser Light Therapy, Lymphatic Drainage, and Meridian Massage, each contributes in gently releasing emotional and physical toxins as well as rejuvenating and lifting the skin.


The following conditions should not receive Cold Laser Light Therapy and/or Meridian Massage:


  • Epilepsy
  • Acute infection with a high temperature
  • Stroke – in the first two weeks
  • Allergies to the active ingredients in gels / products
  • Immune deficiency disease
  • Thyroid problems
  • Hepatitis
  • Oral blood thinners / Circulation problems
  • Pregnancy
  • Heart problems
  • Pace Maker
  • Diabetics
  • Cancer
  • Anti-coagulating drugs (i.e., Warfarin and Heparin)
  • People taking a variety or high dosage of drugs
  • Up to six months after heart surgery
  • Hypersensitive people (e.g., chronic fatigue)
  • Contagious conditions
  • Implanted defibrillators or stimulators


Original article and pictures take www.corespirit.com site

понедельник, 3 октября 2011 г.

Chinese Medicine To Improve Female Sex Drive

Chinese Medicine To Improve Female Sex Drive

What Is Menopause?


Menopause is the natural termination of the menstrual cycle and reproductive years, usually occurring between age 48 to 55. At this time the ovaries start making less oestrogen and progesterone, the hormones that regulate menstruation.


Ideally, this process is smooth and easy. However, when the menopausal transformation is not harmonious, a variety of symptoms may present, common among them are: ‘hot flashes’, headaches, irritability, depression, insomnia, nervousness, leg cramps, night sweats, vaginal dryness and lethargy.


During this transition, some women have a noticeable reduction in their desire for sexual activity.


Chinese medicine, which primarily comprises the practice of acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine, can offer an additional or alternative method of facilitating this transition and improving libido.


How Does Acupuncture Help?


In Chinese medicine, the symptoms of menopause are often characterised as an empty heat condition. In relieving the symptoms, acupuncture may be used to:


– Clear heat (primarily characterised by feelings of heat)


– Improve libido


– Nourish the fluids of the body (which are being depleted by excessive sweating and also evidenced by vaginal dryness)


– Calm the spirit


Extremely thin needles are inserted at specific acupuncture points and gently stimulated with minimal or no discomfort. These points are selected from acupuncture points on the body and ear, based on the presenting symptoms.


Chinese Herbal Remedies


Herbal formulas may be given alongside acupuncture or by themselves. These herbs are also used to improve libido, relieve/improve vaginal dryness, clear heat, nourish the fluids of the body and calm the spirit. In creating the ideal herbal formula, a number of herbs are typically combined to address the myriad symptoms.


– To improve libido: Yin Yang Huo (Horny Goat Weed), Tu Si Zi (Dodder Seed) and Hai Ma (Sea Horse) may be combined to increase libido.


– To clear heat, nourish fluids and relieve vaginal dryness: Bai He (Lily Bulb), Sheng Di Huang (Rehmannia) and Mu Li (Oyster Shell) may be combined to address symptoms such as: hot flashes, night sweating and vaginal dryness.


– To calm the spirit/shen: To improve symptoms such as insomnia, irritability and depression, the herbs Ling Zhi (Ganoderma), Xie Cao (Valerian root) and Zhen Zhu (Pearl) may be added.


Whether the treatment given is acupuncture and/or herbal formulas, there is usually an improvement in symptoms almost immediately. Treatment will continue while symptoms are evident. For the many women who have menopausal problems, it is of some consolation to know that most symptoms are temporary and will usually pass.


Diet And Lifestyle Recommendations


As with any health-care programme, diet and lifestyle plays an important role.


Useful foods to include in the diet are:


– Black beans


– Soy products


– Saffron (stir spice into already cooked rice or vegetables)


– Aloe vera


– Wheat germ


-Mung beans


– String beans


– Seaweed


– Tofu


– Kidney beans


– Barley


– Black sesame seeds


Avoid:


– Coffee


– Alcohol


– Cigarettes


– Excess meat consumption


– Excessive amounts of stress


Additionally, useful supplements to include calcium, B complex, vitamin A, C and E.



Original article and pictures take www.corespirit.com site

четверг, 29 сентября 2011 г.

Chinese Medicine for Relieving Allergies

Chinese Medicine for Relieving Allergies
Chinese Medicine for Relieving Allergies


Chinese Medicine for Relieving Allergies


Shoshanna Katzman, MS, L.Ac., Dipl. Ac & CH


The predominant Chinese medicine view of disease is that illness is caused by an imbalance in the flow of qi, also known as vital energy. Allergies stem from the same, yet specifically involving a qi blockage of the nose and sinuses and referred to as bi yuan, which translates as “nose pool.” Allergies are said to occur when wei qi (defensive Qi) is weak and not able to protect the body from invasion of the external pernicious factor of the “evil wind.” Instead, wind enters the upper body bringing dampness in the form of a runny nose and congestion, and heat symptoms in the form of itchy eyes. Chinese Medicine diagnosis for allergies is thus described as a manifestation of “wind invading the body.”


Acupuncture, cupping, Chinese herbal medicine, Chinese dietary recommendations, and Chinese exercises such as qigong and tai chi provide excellent treatment options for alleviation of allergies. Each of these modalities focuses on treatment of the whole person, the building of wei qi for adequate immunity, and dispelling of the wind from the body. Treatment for seasonal allergies should begin approximately 6-8 weeks before one’s allergic season, although treatment can be helpful at the onset as well. Chinese medicine practitioners traditionally recommend treatment for allergies through using all of the disciplines mentioned above for increased strength and power in terms of ability to strengthen qi flow adequately.


According to the Chinese classic the Nei Jing, deficiency of wei qi stems from issues derived from the weakness of the spleen and inability for it to fully govern digestion. In this case, the spleen is not transforming food properly into a clear substance, thus unable to supplement the qi of the lung. This impairs immune function because the lungs serve to control the wei qi. The spleen and the lungs are also involved with the production of phlegm, whereby it is said that “the spleen is the root of phlegm engenderment, the lungs are the place where phlegm is stored.” Therefore, spleen weakness leads to increased production of phlegm dampness because it is not able to perform its function of transforming fluids within the body. Instead, the fluids become stagnant and transform into dampness, which over time becomes excessive phlegm. This, in turn, impairs the function of the lungs. Therefore, it can be seen from these explanations that a deeper underlying root cause of allergies can be said to be the spleen organ system. Thus any treatment plan to strengthen energetic immunity and resolve excessive phlegm must involve balancing of the spleen in combination with the strengthening of the lungs.


Therefore, spleen weakness leads to increased production of phlegm dampness because it is not able to perform its function of transforming fluids within the body. Instead, the fluids become stagnant and transform into dampness, which over time becomes excessive phlegm. This, in turn, impairs the function of the lungs. Therefore, it can be seen from these explanations that a deeper underlying root cause of allergies can be said to be the spleen organ system. Thus any treatment plan to strengthen energetic immunity and resolve excessive phlegm must involve balancing of the spleen in combination with the strengthening of the lungs.


Two Major Types of Allergic Rhinitis


There are two major types of allergic rhinitis, one is wind cold and the other is wind heat. Wind cold is characterized by clear, thin, and copious watery phlegm, whereas wind heat leads to thick, opaque, and yellowish phlegm. Treatment for the wind-cold type is to strengthen overall qi and balance the energetics of the spleen and lungs while releasing the wind from the body. There are acupuncture point combinations and Chinese herbal formulas specifically designed for these purposes. There are particular formulas designated for acute rhinitis, and others for administration after the acute phase is over which target an individual’s underlying energetic constitutional imbalance.


Chinese herbs are introduced as needed and are a great way to further reduce the allergy symptoms without the side effects of over the counter and prescription allergy medications. Chinese formulas are easily obtained as patented formulas, in pill form. For example, bi yan pian is an excellent formula for dispelling the wind and reducing phlegm within the nasal passages. Another patent remedy which is commonly used is called pe min kan wan, and translated as “nose allergy pills.” This formula is good for treatment of wind heat symptoms, helping to clear heat and toxins, reduce phlegm, cool the blood, and clear the nasal passages. There is also a formula called “minor blue dragon” that can be taken as an herbal decoction or also be found in pill form. It is used for the treatment of wind cold symptoms and taken to specifically resolve excessive phlegm production and strengthen the qi of the lungs.


Single Chinese herbs are also recommended for treatment of allergies, each in tea form. These include ginger, chrysanthemum, and green tea. Chrysanthemum tea is infused from dried chrysanthemum flowers, which serve to clear heat, calm the liver, and eliminate redness of the eyes. Ginger tea is made by adding ¼ inch of grated raw ginger, added to a cup of water. It is then brought to a boil and simmered for 20 minutes. Ginger is a natural antihistamine and decongestant and provides relief by releasing constricted bronchial tubes. Green tea also has antihistamine effect due to the catechins that it contains. It can be made from loose green tea leaves, by pouring one cup of boiled water over a teaspoon of leaves and steep for approximately 10 minutes. Strain the liquid for each of these teas and drink it hot, with honey added if desired to promote the healing benefits of the tea. Generally, these teas are best when consumed one time a day for prevention, and two to three times a day during an acute allergic phase.


Acupuncture


Acupuncture is also useful as a preventative treatment for allergies, as well as one that is quite helpful when allergies are acutely active. It is a safe and effective tool for treating allergy symptoms such as itchy red eyes, scratchy throat, sinus congestion, sneezing, cough, and shortness of breath. Acupuncture points are used to strengthen the immune system and normalize the immune response to allergens by balancing the nervous system.


Some of the most effective acupuncture points for treatment of allergies are large intestine 20, large intestine 4, stomach 36, stomach 3, stomach 44, gall bladder 14, and lung 7. Cupping treatment is traditionally applied to the upper back along the urinary bladder meridian on the acupuncture point urinary bladder 13. Qigong exercises which specifically target strengthening of the lung and spleen meridian are the best for the treatment of allergies. However, qigong and tai chi as a whole naturally strengthen the body’s wei chi defensive response, together with boosting qi flow throughout the entire body – both leading to optimal health and wellness. It is essential to check with a Chinese medicine practitioner such as an acupuncturist who is highly trained in Chinese herbal medicine to make sure that these formulas are appropriate for one’s particular constitution. Furthermore, these formulas are contraindicated for particular conditions such as pregnancy or tendency toward bleeding.


Following particular dietary recommendations is another major component of treatment and prevention of allergic reactions. This involves strengthening the energetics of the spleen by eating more warming and drying foods and drastically reducing cold and raw foods such as salads and sushi. It is also helpful to eliminate foods that can cause an allergic reaction, especially during the acute phase of the allergies and then re-introduce them when the body is strong and healthy. In general, reduction of foods responsible for excessive phlegm production is a good idea, not only to ward off the chance of allergies but also for overall continued vibrancy of health. These include foods such as dairy products, sugar in the form of cookies, cakes, and candies, as well as products made with wheat and corn. Elimination of greasy, oily, and fatty foods is also recommended, as well as those adulterated with dyes and coloring agents. Specific foods reputed for their help with allergies include radishes, which transform phlegm, alleviate dry itchy throat, relieve a sore throat, clear the nasal passages, and reduce phlegm. Garlic and onions are also excellent foods due to their anti-inflammatory property.


This information provides practical ways to ward off allergies when approaching, deal with them at their height, and strengthen the body after they are gone with hopes of them not returning. Chinese medicine certainly holds great options for dealing with the onslaught of allergies. Be proactive and work toward strengthening the energetics of your lungs and spleen to keep your immunity strong. Through keeping qi flowing and body balanced through following right living habits and seeking Chinese medicine help when necessary, health and wellness will be naturally and eternally yours.


Enhance your Health with Qigong


Learn a series of gentle movements from the ancient Chinese art of self-healing and fitness, to maintain health and nurture your spirit.


Qigong is a form of energy medicine movement that activates the body both physically and energetically. During Qigong training, you learn to cultivate your Qi (vital energy) and increase energetic awareness. This results in an increased sensitivity to electrical, magnetic and other energies not just emanating from yourself, but from others.


Through the practice of Qigong, one begins to strengthen and train the development of inner awareness. When this occurs, a person can begin to access information within themselves in an enhanced manner increasing inner wisdom.


Shoshanna is the author of Qigong for Staying Young: A Simple 20-Minute Workout to Cultivate Your Vital Energy. Visit Shoshanna’s Qigong Online Store at https://qigongforlonglife.com/


Visit Shoshanna and Red Bank Acupuncture & Wellness Center at https://healing4u.com


Original article and pictures take thecompleteherbalguide.com site

вторник, 20 сентября 2011 г.

Chinese Medicine and Power of a Happy Heart

Chinese Medicine and Power of a Happy Heart
Chinese Medicine and Power of a Happy Heart


By Shoshanna Katzman, MS, L.Ac., Dipl. Ac. & CH


According to Five Element Theory, joy is the positive emotion of the heart, whereas sadness or lack of joy is negative. Experiencing joy in daily life is nourishing to the heart as well as a state of being that is highly desirable on many levels. Such joy is exemplified by a forward-arched chest, spring in one’s step, and ease with laughter combined with kind, loving interaction with self and others. Its attainment is derived through establishing balanced energy within the heart organ system, the cornerstone of Chinese medicine treatments directed toward heart health and emotional balance.


Chinese medicine


Chinese medicine teaches that the heart stores the Shen, also known as spirit. Shen health leads to clear consciousness, intention, volition, thought, and reflection. When heart energy is sufficient and balanced, shen nourishes blood adequately to manifest feelings and expression of joy together with clear insight and awareness. Moreover, a bright and plentiful heart shen leads to harmonious behavior, interacting with self and others in a respectful, thoughtful, and helpful manner in the appropriate time and space. This leads to a joyous feeling of wholesome compassion toward oneself and others, manifesting in a genuine sharing with another in a relationship. It is a form of heart energy.


Heart energy


When heart energy is in a state of disharmony the opposite is true. Oftentimes this manifests as a state of “excess heart fire,” where the body becomes accelerated and expanded. Exhibiting a fast pulse, eating too quickly, or inappropriate joyfulness are each indicative of such imbalance. It is also accompanied by a lack of boundaries with others and unexpressed desires and feelings. The body overcompensates for this excessive heart condition through overwork, which can characteristically lead to burnout, high blood pressure, and unfortunately eventual heart attack or stroke. These negative results can be thwarted through paying special attention to establishing an energetic balance of the heart organ system, for which Chinese medicine offers great support. The heart is traditionally said to be “the house of the mind,” whereby a strong heart leads to an abundance of joy and calm mind and spirit – an exquisite equilibrium between the heart and mind.


Chinese treatments for nourishing the blood and shen of the heart


Chinese medicine treatments have a profound effect on the mind, in part, because an increased flow of qi naturally creates an increase in blood flow to the head, resulting in a calm mind and sharp memory. Research has found that acupuncture treatment influences neurotransmitter production in the brain. A study that compared acupuncture to antidepressants found that the use of acupuncture as a supplement to prescription medication showed significantly better improvement than taking antidepressants alone. The opening flow of energy and blood throughout the du mai or governing vessel is helpful in this regard. As one of the eight extraordinary meridians, du mai runs up the spine to the head and penetrates the brain. It is thus well known for influencing the mind and considered by the later Taoists to be “the seat of the spirit.” Interestingly, the anterior pathway of the governing vessel connects with the heart meridian – creating a twofold opportunity for treatment directed toward the creation of optimum wellness of the mind and spirit.


It is of utmost importance for the heart and mind to work together as one. Chinese medicine is a method of guiding people to find everlasting peace and mental clarity – one well worth the experience.


Treatments


Acupuncture


Acupuncture is highly effective for nourishing the blood and shen of the heart, thereby increasing mental clarity and concentration. It accomplishes this through treatment of many of the 365 main points located along twelve main meridians of the body. It also treats acupuncture points located along the eight extraordinary meridians, such as the du mai just mentioned. Treatment is also often directed to balancing of the energetics of the pericardium, which is the protective casing around the heart. This is said to be a safer approach rather than treating the heart directly when in an imbalanced state. A German research study found that acupuncture has the ability to improve exercise tolerance in patients with chronic heart failure. Ten acupuncture treatments to promote general strength and treat the nervous system and inflammation were found to influence skeletal muscle strength, increase walking endurance, and shorten recovery time post-exercise with less reported general exhaustion.


Cupping therapy


Cupping therapy is another modality that can be provided by an acupuncturist to support the health of the vital organs to support heart health. This technique involves the external application of glass cups creating suction, which leads to opening the free flow of qi and blood. An appropriate cupping treatment to balance the heart would be done bilaterally on either side of the bladder meridian running along the side of the spine on your back. Treatment as such works with the energetics of the body’s vital organs to strengthen their function. In this case, cupping over acupuncture points on the bladder meridian associated with the lungs, heart, liver, spleen and kidneys are the best choice. This releases stagnant or stuck qi and thus opens qi flow to each of these yin organ systems. Establishment of balance and flow between these major organs has an enormous effect on the health of the heart and nourishment of its shen spirit.


Expressing emotions


Expression of one’s feelings on a regular basis is essential for heart health, just as is its steady rhythmic beating. Allow feelings to naturally emerge internally first, take the time to listen and process them, and when appropriate share them in a purposeful caring manner with another. Allowing feelings to flow freely in this manner contributes to the free flow of blood throughout the heart, leading to a balanced and healthy heart.


This is especially true for the emotion of anger, which can have a deleterious effect on the energetics of the liver. Liver health is crucial for optimal heart health according to the five elements because the liver is responsible for the nourishment of the heart. Repressed anger can also be the root cause of depression, which has a negative impact on the ability of the liver organ system to perform its function of creating a free flow of qi and blood throughout the body.


Working toward verbalizing anger as it arises helps reduce the chance of it building up within the system. Engaging in regular exercises such as qigong and tai chi are also excellent ways for an individual to channel their anger while increasing qi and blood flow and calming of heart energy. Acupuncture is also effective in this regard. In fact, a randomized, controlled, double-blind study done at the University of Arizona has confirmed that acupuncture is a promising treatment for major depression in women. Acupuncture was received two times per week for one month and one time per week for another month for a total of twelve sessions. Results showed that 70% of the women treated with acupuncture for their depression experienced at least a 50% reduction of symptoms, results comparable to the success rate of psychotherapy and medication.


The Five Element Theory also teaches that the kidneys are responsible for controlling the energetics of the heart. Deficiency of the kidneys thus impedes its ability to control the heart properly, leading to an energetic imbalance of the heart such as excessive heart fire. This kidney/heart connection is similarly seen in Western medicine when an individual has a heart attack as a result of a kidney problem.


Benefits Chinese herbal medicine


Chinese herbal medicine can be used to strengthen the energetics of the kidneys, thus the heart. A safe and effective herbal formula is known as “wu zi wan,” which serves to nourish the vital essence of the kidney, thereby strengthening the ability of the kidneys to control the heart energy sufficiently. In addition, wu zi wan is a rejuvenating adrenal tonic that supports energy and stamina. It is also traditionally used to improve sexual energy, virility, and fertility. Moreover, it promotes memory, restores luster to skin, reduces weakness or soreness in low back or knees, decreases dizziness and forgetfulness, improves eyesight, promotes hearing, reduces fatigue, and increases mental concentration – thus addressing many symptoms associated with the aging process. Taken as a tea, pill, concentrate, or as a food paste, wu zi wan should not be taken at early stages of acute illness such as cold or flu or during an acute infection. And as with all herbal formulas, it’s best to consult a practitioner licensed in Chinese herbal medicine to make sure of appropriateness for one’s constitution.


This article provides numerous ways to claim one’s power of joy through heart health, duly supported by the energetics of the liver and kidney. There is a much careful consideration and work to be done in this regard to maintain health now and for a lifetime. The path is easy when choices are made with consideration for how one’s lifestyle impacts the overall quality of health and longevity. The heart as the holder of the shen has a great impact on the physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual components of life. It is an energy that works best when honored, cherished, and kept healthy through free-flowing qi and blood. The best outcome is the level of everlasting joy derived from this noble deed of health and wellness – enjoy the process and relish in the “power of joy” attained and sustained throughout a lifetime with the help of Chinese medicine.


Enhance your Health with Qigong


Learn a series of gentle movements from the ancient Chinese art of self-healing and fitness, to maintain health and nurture your spirit.


Qigong is a form of energy medicine movement that activates the body both physically and energetically. During Qigong training, you learn to cultivate your Qi (vital energy) and increase energetic awareness. This results in an increased sensitivity to electrical, magnetic and other energies not just emanating from yourself, but from others.


Through the practice of Qigong, one begins to strengthen and train the development of inner awareness. When this occurs, a person can begin to access information within themselves in an enhanced manner increasing inner wisdom.


Shoshanna is the author of Qigong for Staying Young: A Simple 20-Minute Workout to Cultivate Your Vital Energy. Visit Shoshanna’s Qigong Online Store at https://qigongforlonglife.com/


Visit Shoshanna and Red Bank Acupuncture & Wellness Center at https://healing4u.com


Original article and pictures take thecompleteherbalguide.com site

среда, 7 сентября 2011 г.

Chinese Licorice Root

Chinese Licorice Root
Picture of chinese licorice plant
Chinese Licorice Plant

Chinese Licorice Root Benefits


Licorice root is great for de-toxifing the body. It can remove over twelve hundred toxins.


It is mixed into many Chinese herbal formulas to enhance the effects of the other herbs and reduce any bad side effects they may have. Some believe that it can remove intoxication from alcohol and drugs, though no scientific studies have confirmed this.


In China, licorice is knows as “The great detoxifier”.


Licorice is anti-inflammatory, antibacterial, antiviral, antioxidant and antispasmodic in nature. It is probably best known for it’s expectorant and demulcent activity. Licorice, for many years, has been an important ingredient in cough drops and syrup. It’s also beneficial for treating cold, flu and sore throat and any illness caused by virus or bacteria.


This root has so many healing properties it’s hard to list them all. Some others include the treatment of bronchitis, tooth decay, gingivitis, canker sores, ulcers, muscle cramps, enlarged prostate, dandruff, liver conditions, arthritis and many more.


Chinese Licorice root has been widely used in China for the treatment of ulcers. It possesses the ability to lower acid levels in the stomach, relieve indigestion and heartburn. It is also has mild laxative effects. It is good for relieving inflammation and irritation in the digestive tract. It also helps the liver by increasing the flow of bile.


This Chinese herb can also enhance the immune system by naturally boosting interferon levels. Interferon is a chemical that fights viruses. It’s Glycyrrhizinic acid content also stops the growth of harmful bacteria and viruses.


Chinese Licorice should not be confused with licorice from other locations, such as Europe and America. “Glycyrrhiza Uralensis” is the Chinese licorice. Other types of licorice like “Glycyrrhiza glabra” do NOT have the same healing properties discussed here. They do have their own set of healing properties though that you might want to research further.


If You Are Over 30


If you are over 30, you'll want to take some GF20 with this. Then you'll be able to run circles around people your own age. What is GF20?


Chinese Licorice root Uses


  • Treat coughs, colds and flu
  • Treat depression
  • Weight loss
  • Anti fatigue
  • Treat body odor
  • Assist the pancreas
  • Treat bronchitis, emphysema, tuberculosis and asthma
  • Treat dandruff and baldness
  • Treat gingivitis and tooth decay
  • Treat canker sores
  • Treat viral and bacterial infections
  • Treat skin conditions such as rash, eczema and shingles and psoriasis
  • Treat fungal infections like athlete’s foot
  • Treat heartburn and GERD
  • Treat ulcers
  • Treat liver problems
  • Treat constipation
  • Treat cancer
  • Treat hepatitis
  • Treat yeast infections
  • Reduce PMS, hot flashes and mood swings
  • Treat prostate enlargement
  • Treat arthritis, bursitis, tendinitis and gout

Scientific Name


Glycyrrhiza Uralensis


Common Names


Guo Lao, sweat herb, sweet wood, beauty grass, elf grass, pink grass


Where It Grows


This plant is native to China


Which Part Of The Plant Is Used


The root


Picture of Chinese Licorice Root

How It Works


Chinese Licorice root contains many beneficial substances, like glycyrrhizin, plant sterols, glycosides, flavonoids, vitamins and minerals. It promotes the proper functioning of the adrenal glands.


How It’s Used


Chinese licorice root is available in capsules, tablets, tea, extracts and syrup.


Precautions and Side Effects:


Chinese Licorice root should not be taken by people with high blood pressure or heart disease. Do NOT take if Pregnant or nursing. May cause the retention of water.


Description and History Of Chinese Licorice


Chinese licorice is a perennial plant that grows from three to seven feet tall and grows in grassy plains. It prefers a dry climate and sunshine. The root is brown and wrinkled with it’s inside colored yellow. It has a sweat taste. The plant has on average five pairs of dark green leaves. In Chinese herbalism, licorice is at the top of the list with ginseng in importance for treating disease and insuring good health.


Licorice root is one of the most widely used herbs in Chinese medicine. It is thought to enhance the effects of all other herbs. The Chinese herbalist have been using this potent herb for over 5,000 years. It was mentioned in their oldest medical texts, “Shen Nong’s Herbal Classic”. In Chinese “Guo Lao”, another name for licorice, means “Teacher of the King”. Licorice is about 50 times sweater than sugar.


Editor’s Comments


I have used licorice many times for the treatment of cough and gingivitis and sometimes heartburn. It is most effective.


References



Original article and pictures take www.herbslist.net site

вторник, 30 августа 2011 г.

Chinese Fire Cupping

Chinese Fire Cupping

upping astounds some Western people. When they see the big round red “hickeys” on people or when they see it being done, they wonder what is going on? The interesting technique is akin to the other traditional medical techniques in that the practitioner is attempting to manipulate the various qi, Yin and Yang, or body fluids to influence health.


Does it work? The verdict on this is yet out: Western doctors generally don’t recognize cupping as beneficial compared to Western medicine. Here’s information on cupping’s history, methods, and general acceptance in modern times.


The History of Chinese Cupping


Could It Have Originated in the West?


People practiced fire cupping in Europe, Asia and Africa for thousands of years. It isn’t clearly a Chinese invention. The Ebers Papyrus that is one of the oldest medical textbooks in the world describes that in 1550 B.C. the Egyptians used cupping. In ancient Greece, Hippocrates (~400 BC) prescribed cupping for diseases. This method in multiple forms spread throughout Asian and European societies.


In more recent times, it was even popular in the 1700s in Western Europe, and it is still done following the traditional European style in some Eastern European countries. It was also recommended by Mohamed. In Islamic countries, cupping is often associated with blood-letting to draw blood out. It is a common treatment in the Islamic world.


Western cupping is different than Chinese cupping, and it isn’t clear that it was a method adopted from abroad. Instead of putting fire inside the cup, in the West people may heat the cup with a flame or warm object held outside the cup. However, the effect is the same in that the blood and skin are pulled up. Western cupping doesn’t use the Chinese system of acupuncture points.


When Did It Appear in the East?


Archaeologists have found jars that might have been used for fire cupping about 1000 BC that is the time of the end of the Shang Dynastyera (1600? -1046? BC) and the beginning of the Zhou Dynasty (1046-256 BC) era.


However, the first written text describing cupping as a medical procedure is thought to be a text that was written after the Han Dynastyera (206 BC-220 AD) by Ge Hong called A Handbook of Prescriptions for Emergencies. The book text dates to about 300 AD, and this is much later than the earliest Western texts. Since written treatises about cupping predate Chinese records, maybe people adopted the technique from the West.


The Chinese Cupping Method


In China, cupping is used for high Yang issues such as bronchitis, coughs and colds. The Chinese think that these symptoms mean that there is too much Yang in the body. Through the fire cupping treatment or modern methods of applying suction to the skin such as by using suction pumps, they generally believe that some of the Yang factor can be removed so that the Yin and Yang balance can be restored.


However, there isn’t total agreement as to why the procedure should work. There are differing theories about qi and how it functions. A more modern idea about Chinese cupping is that it removes pathogens or toxins that tend to accumulate just under or on the skin.


Cupping isn’t meant for pregnant women, people with heart disease, and other conditions. In such cases, practitioners might perform moxibustion or acupuncture instead.


To Remove the Yang


Unlike moxibustion that increases the Yang, cupping removes the Yang. Like moxibustion, cupping can be performed along with acupuncture. Both needles and cupping tend to remove the Yang.


First, oil is applied to the skin, usually on the back, to help maintain the suction and to allow the cups to be slid around on the back snugly. The practitioner heats the air inside the cup or uses mechanical suction. He puts the cup on specific acupuncture meridians or at other spots on the body. Sometimes, incisions are made to draw out blood.


If acupuncture needles are used in conjunction with the cups, the needle may be applied at the acupuncture point, and the suction cup may be placed over it to enhance the effect.


Nowadays, modern machine suction pumps are commonly used instead of fire to create the suction effect. Generally, there is no discomfort since the suction isn’t very strong, but it does draw the blood to the surface leaving a mark like a bruise mark or hickey. The mark generally disappears within a few days.


The Acceptance of Cupping Today


Various methods of cupping are still practiced around the world as was described above. Cupping has a several thousand year old history. The Islamic world has a strong tradition of cupping since they think that Mohamed recommended the treatment. They have their own strong tradition and don’t utilize Chinese cupping techniques.


Chinese fire cupping is a traditional technique that is now not commonly used in China. The cupping technique utilizing the traditional acupuncture meridians has been introduced in the West, but Chinese cupping is still a rare procedure.



Original article and pictures take www.corespirit.com site