Tag Archives: Chinese medicine

Don’t be ashamed of our fuzzy grasp of reality, it’s keeping us sane. And effective.

 

A professional.

It’s an idea in the mind.

We all know when something or someone is “professional;” there is a certain quality involved, a trust; a standard of expectation.

As an ideal standard for a Chinese medicine practitioner, however, “a professional standard of practice” should be only the starting point. Our ancient tradition calls for more than this. It calls for self-cultivation, a development of insight and intuition, an empathy with the patient that provides a deep understanding for patterns of imbalance occurring within, and realisation of exactly which interventions can bring that patient back to themselves, as they should be.

To achieve this we cannot limit our study to medicine, but must expand our own richness of experience, in a wide variety of fields. Nothing is irrelevant to this. Everything can teach us something that, if only by analogy, might suddenly trigger that particular clinical insight we may need to break through our current barrier.

But we have to think, to puzzle out for ourselves exactly what the mechanism of pathology is, for each patient. We have an extremely flexible theory of physiology set out for us, in Chinese medicine: just detailed enough to be accurate, yet not so complicated that it cannot be held in the head, all at once. This is important when we want to imagine the consequence of any particular intervention:

“Hmm; this patient has fluid retention, I need to clear the fluids. But they also have a tendency toward loose stool and dizziness, so if I just use downward-draining diuretic herbs, it will probably exacerbate the tendency for Spleen qi to descend instead of ascend, and could make the dizziness and loose stool worse.”

Or:

“Hmm; this patient has fluid retention, I need to clear the fluids. But they also are constipated. I’ll bet what is happening here is that those fluids being retained in the tissues are just exactly the same fluids that should be in there moistening the bowels. So by regulating the fluid metabolism the constipation should resolve by itself. Let’s try it and see.”

Or:

“Hmm; this patient has fluid retention, I need to clear the fluids. Not only that, but her periods have stopped. Blood is mainly fluid, and the disruption to the fluids could be interfering with the normal menstrual blood flow. The crucial question is, which came first, the fluid retention or the amenorrhea? Ah, the fluid retention. So if I regulate the fluid metabolism the periods should return. I’ll try Dao Shui Fu Ling Tang.”

We believe that the advantages of this “fuzzy physiology” have not yet been fully appreciated, even by those of us who employ it everyday. In another piece we examined the consequences of the flip side, the addiction to concrete detail that can paralyse action in the face of uncertainty. But as a profession we have not begun to examine, in any explicit way, how the level of our Chinese medicine approach to clinic can open the door of creativity and insight in the treatment of patients, and free us from the trap of prescription-by-rote that will eventually spell the end of “evidence-based medicine” as an ideal.

We believe that it is this fuzzy physiology, and none other, that constitutes our identity, and our primary contribution to society. Where else can people turn when the biomedical model has seized up for them? A naturopath?

Naturopaths use herbs, but mainly based on a Western bio-medical model, so no hope of a new angle there. Hell, they are using OUR herbs, more and more, perhaps believing they are somehow more powerful than their own. Likewise, all sorts of people are “dry needling”. What they seem not to know is that it is the system, the world-view, the understanding of connectivity that makes Chinese medicine powerful.

As most new graduates of a Chinese medicine school discover, however, the system is anything but a prescription-by-rote. It all seems straightforward enough, in the beginning. We learn typical groups of symptoms that often occur together, and learn what can lead to that condition, the mechanism of pathology, and what to do about it. But in clinic it is not that simple. Not only that, those patterns we learned are only examples. We certainly can check the accumulated experience of our tradition, which is a tremendous resource, but much of the time we have to think the whole thing out for ourselves. An example we are all familiar with: petrol fumes leading to headaches and dizziness. Not going to find the mechanism for that in the classics. But your patient is sitting there in front of you, looking at you with those big trusting eyes: you’d better come up with something. And it has to work. You have two appointments, generally, before they quit in disgust.

Ok, apply the brain. Let’s see, he’s a bit fat with thick fingers, definitely a phlegm body-type. But what’s that got to do with petrol? Hmm, fumes, though; fumes are fragrant, fragrant things are yang and expand outward. What if the yang-natured fumes are breaking up the congealed yin-nature of the phlegm? Yang also rises, perhaps these fumes are carrying up that now-dispersed phlegm into the head. Presto—a theory. Let’s test it: transform phlegm and direct it downward. Oh good, it worked!

There are few things as satisfying as that.

But the next patient has the same primary presenting symptom: headaches and dizziness when exposed to petrol or perfumes. This woman, though, is not fat at all, and moreover has a thin red tongue with little coat, thready left side pulse, and a tic in her left eye. She lights a Fatima in a holder and sits back coolly, suspicious. You wave away the smoke and try to think. What did the classics say about Fatima brand smokers? No, that’s a dead end. Fumes. Yang. Expansion. No phlegm to break up here, obviously. But wait: yang expansion is balanced by yin contraction, it’s everyday experience. She is clearly yin deficient, and her whole manner screams Liver. Could it be Liver yin deficiency with a tendency toward Liver yang rising? Then all it would take is petrol or perfume to trigger the rising of yang, and bang! Headache. Ok, it’s a theory. Test it.

This type of thinking is crucial to continued growth as a Chinese medicine practitioner. The satisfaction provided by each little success as we solve each puzzle along the way supplies much of the motivation for being on the front line with the public, every day. As we gather experience over years of clinic, we become more adept at this kind of thinking, and of course achieve better results. We are therefore more valued as we get older. How many professions can say that?

One thing that will derail this whole process, however, is adopting the Western medicine viewpoint as the final word in diagnosis in clinic. From then on, you are crippled, forever waiting for someone else to “do the research” and tell you what to do. Furthermore, you are stuck with the blindspots of the Western biomedical model, with all of its unexamined assumptions. Sure, it’s the main thoroughfare these days.

Use biomedical findings as reference by all means. But do the thinking yourself. Use our fuzzy physiology and let it lead you off the main thoroughfare, into that side street, down a weeded lane and through a little vine-covered door, into the hidden garden where, right in the centre, there is this tree …

The Twin Palaces of China

Chinese medicine is a treasure house, Mao told us, and so it has proven. For those of us in the profession it provides, at the least, a means of making a reasonable living in a satisfying and ethical way. But the more one engages with it, the more Chinese medicine reveals itself as a truly vast storehouse of treasures, each separate room an inexhaustible cornucopia of ways to improve the quality of living for oneself and others.

A separate room may be a specialty within the formal medical structure, such as paediatrics or ophthalmology, or it may be an area of investigation, such as herb growing and harvesting. Some rooms are larger than others. A small but very popular room is accessed by the billions who utilise some aspect of Chinese food therapy. We in the West have just barely peeked around the edge of the door in some rooms: an example of this is the meteorological–medical theory wuyun liuqi.

Indeed, we may find that exploration of this vast storehouse transforms us as we go, makes demands upon us that alter the way we experience ourselves and the world, challenges and changes our assumptions about how we as humans function, why we are, and even the boundaries of our skin.

One of the major halls in this storehouse is the experiential knowledge of the flow of qi around the body, both within and without the channels. We could almost call it the Hall of Qi, as it is an area that has led to the development of acupuncture, shiatsu, and qi gong, not to mention most of the Chinese martial arts. Involvement with qi gong or the martial arts (especially those known as “internal’” that put a premium on the development of proprioceptive awareness) will after a period of time — generally five years or so — find one developing an awareness of the circulation of qi, one that is not imagined or forced, but rather quite natural.

An older acupuncture teacher in China, who had also practised tai chi for a number of years, was incredulous when her new foreign students kept asking questions like: but how do you know the acupuncture points and channels are here, in this spot, and not somewhere else? She finally said, exasperated: “But can’t you feel it?”

It starts to look as though we, the modern sophisticates, are the ones who lack refinement in this area. Is it possible that there are ways of feeling and sensing that are simply not developed in our culture, while being so commonplace in other cultures that they are taken for granted?

As we get better at this, we may find that Chinese medicine students can learn in the body, instead of just in the head; that qi gong or tai chi or other internal martial arts will be core subjects taught by experts, rather than electives. At the moment, we should certainly be increasing the awareness of the part that yang sheng (life nourishing) exercises can play, not only in keeping practitioners healthy, but in fostering a deeper, more palpably experiential understanding of their art.

It is easy to wander from that Hall of Qi into an adjoining palace called Daoism (which Mao, strangely enough, never mentioned) — the two buildings share a non–existent wall.

While Chinese medicine has informed Daoism from the earliest times, the influence flowed strongly both ways. Many of the best known early authors in our medicine were as well–known for their Daoist works as for their medical texts, and these include such heavyweights as Ge Hong (Zhou Hou Bei Ji Fang), Tao Hongjing (Ming Yi Bie Lu, Ben Cao Jing Ji Zhu), Sun Simiao (Qian Jin Yao Fang), Meng Shen (Shi Liao Ben Cao) and even the famed Tang dynasty commentator on the Huang Di Nei Jing, Wang Bing, whose standard version we still use today.

All of these authors have works discussing the practice of Daoism. This pattern continues throughout the history of TCM: Ma Danyang (to name a single further example) is the compiler of the Ma Danyang’s 12 Heavenly Star Points of Acupuncture song (Ma Danyang Tian Xing Shi Er Xue Ge) but he is even better known as one of the seven illustrious disciples of Wang Chongyang, along with his famous wife Sun Buer — Sun the Inimitable.

The point of this retro romp is to flag this connection between Chinese medicine and Daoism, for the few who may not be aware of it, and to perhaps pique the curiosity — why is the connection so strong? Did the Daoists, those early scientists, discover in their investigations not only better herbal medicines and more effective uses of points, but other things that improved their medicine?
Those interested in delving deeper should read the book review section, where several of Thomas Cleary’s books on Daoism were introduced.

The Tyranny of the Microscope

OR

 

The Allure of Certainty

 

Chinese and Western medicine complement each other so well because of the great difference in mindset, in approach. Chinese medicine is handicapped when there is a change at the cellular level that is not reflected in either bodily sensations or appearance of the patient (including tongue, facial colour, pulse and various bodily discharges). Western medicine can often pick this up early — for example, in a simple pap smear.

Western medicine is handicapped when the patient feels something is wrong but none of the diagnostic tests show any changes. There is a tendency to downplay the patient’s sensations of illness, or suggest that it may be stress, depression or imagination.

This is not a consciously applied technique on the part of Western medicine, it is a natural outgrowth of the technology that focuses on chemicals, cells and molecules. In this world, the world of the microscopic, it is visible physical change at this level that is significant; vague subjective sensations give only a general hint about which tests to run. Once the tests come back, there is concrete evidence of the problem, a certainty to the diagnosis; there is a clear line: complaint—test—results—diagnosis. There is a firm foundation, someplace solid to stand. This concrete certainty is extremely alluring. You have proof for every move you make! You are Right, and you can prove it.

That is, if the tests come back with concrete evidence. Without clear positive results, there is no certainty, and for those reliant on certainty this would feel extremely precarious. Like sailors pre-Columbus: over there, beyond that horizon, is Chaos!

Infinitely variable life has a way of disrupting our certainties.

So what do you do? Improve the tests, by all means. Develop more sensitive scanning devices — perhaps the answer is at an even smaller level. One day surely we can control all the variables. Or …

 … you learn to work with uncertainty. One might have methods of measurement that give you enough to go on, enough to be able to plot a course of action, without the comfort of absolute concrete evidence. One might, as it were, navigate by the stars instead of that solid dependable coastline.

This is the everyday world of Chinese medicine, our proper place, and one of our major contributions to the health care of our society: a different way of navigating. This is clinic, not the lab. We take the evidence of our own senses, together with the “vague subjective sensations” of the patient, and look for recognisable patterns. We have learned, over hundreds of generations of humans, what to look for, the patterns to seek, which could be confused with what, how to differentiate. There is no certainty, but from these pattern constellations we plot our course, the course for doctor and patient, back home to that fluid state called health.

Evidence-based medicine is very attractive if one is uncomfortable dealing with uncertainty. There is the proof: this treatment will work, for sure. Well, at least for a certain percentage of patients; the others are non-responders. Too bad for them.

There is also the understandable tendency to try to fit the patient to the treatment instead of fitting the treatment to the patient: “Well, I know this works, it’s proven, and he is almost right for the category, so …”

This type of approach also seems so undeniably right. Who can dispute that “we should use what works”? “There is proof for this treatment, it works, of course it should be used” (unfortunately this all too easily slips into the false corollary, “There is no proof for this treatment, of course it should not be used.”)

But again: works for whom?

There are those who lament the advent of evidence-based medicine as the demise of the art of the clinic in Western medicine; the movement in this direction has been inexorable ever since Western doctors began looking more at their lab results than they do at their patients. This all may be so; it is really not the business of anyone in Chinese medicine except perhaps to watch and learn. It becomes our business when we are told that Chinese medicine should change its clinical approach to be more like Western medicine, when we are told we should have proof, and more certainty.

When certainty exists, by all means take advantage of it (before it moves!) — but when that coastline has disappeared behind you, and the waterfall at the edge of the world is before you, try Chinese medicine. It’s been there before.

A light intervention can treat a serious illness

It is a standard assumption for us, part of our worldview in Chinese medicine, that the part reflects the whole. Enough reflections from different parts, and we have a pretty good idea of what the whole is doing.

The whole can be an organ in the body, the whole body, or even the body of society.

Increasingly over a number of years, a certain scenario has been recurring. Patients, especially those working for large firms, have been becoming more and more run-down, exhausted, burnt out. Treatment helps, but before long it is obvious that it is all being poured back into the job, and that “treatment” has become “maintenance.” Soon even that is slipping. Things continue to slide downhill until they finally and reluctantly quit the job, and then they gradually recover their health, and are much happier as well.

Now people in modern societies generally work harder than is necessary or good for them, but this has gone far beyond that. There is something different going on. Here is the story we hear, again and again:

Why Work is Killing You
Click for the article in pdf form, (no charge, no sign-up, no nothing: just the article).

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Xiaoyao at his last job.

Only three sources of energy

People often ask why they are no longer as fertile as they were in their twenties. “I mean, I am only 35, its not like I’m old or anything. Why should I be less fertile than when I was 25, or even 20?”

In attempting to answer this question over the years, a diagram emerged (below) that illustrated the situation in financial terms. This seemed to be the most understandable for people. But just by the way it also illustrated the need for yang sheng practices: practices that nourish life, regular practices that reduce the leakage of jing, qi, and shen: vital essence, energy, and spirit.

 

Three Sources of Energy diagram
Air             from           Lungs
Income                                      Food and drink       from         Spleen

Inherited Trust Fund                 Inherited jing/essence         Kidneys

 

We have only three sources of energy: the air that we breath, the food that we eat, and the inherited jing/essence which is stored in the Kidneys. It is this last which supports our growth in our mother’s womb until we are born, and then continues to support the growth of the bones of our frame until we are more or less fully grown. This inherited jing/essence then turns into our own reproductive energy. Like a family trust fund passed down the generations, intended to be preserved and increased, the jing should be employed only for reproductive purposes or for emergencies, while we live day-to-day on our ‘income’: the air and food we take in.

But we don’t.

We, like little rich kids bedazzled with our wealth, spend beyond our income, and simply borrow from our trust fund whenever we need more energy  or simply want a ‘buzz’. This in fact is the tell-tale sign that we are borrowing from the Kidney jing: instead of the normal feeling of quietly sufficient energy, we get the fine tremor, the ‘rush’, and even occasionally palpitations and insomnia when we really overdo it.
Coffee and other stimulants do not give us energy, they simply facilitate a loan from the trust fund.
This trust fund is not bottomless, however, as much as it may seem so in our 20s: we begin to notice that our hair or skin is not so shiny or resilient, we don’t heal as well as before, and in fact, we are aging.

Shock.

It’s an even greater shock when (or more like ‘if’) we ever think through the consequences of the scenario:
a) We have never lived solely on our ‘income’, and b) We have been borrowing steadily from our trust fund, but c) This is now depleted, so d) We are forced to live on our income, but e) We still spend at the same rate.

No wonder things are breaking down! And they can only break down so far, before …

The Daoists, among others, very early on saw the way this scenario played out, and decided to take steps. Over the centuries they researched and developed a variety of methods for turning this process of depletion around, starting with reducing the loss of whatever jing/essence still remains, then starting to replace it.
Kidney jing/essence can be replaced, built up again, but it is a slow process because this energy is a reservoir of concentrated potential, whose main defining characteristic is accumulation in stillness, over a long period.

Unfortunately for us, stillness over any period of time is not a feature of Western society, and lest we be consumed in the fires of our own mad activity we desperately need to learn and practise these life nourishment techniques that the Daoists (and others) have developed and preserved for us, the later generations.

As the Daoists would say, if we can extend our lifespan we might have a chance of learning something worthwhile …