Speaking from a Chinese medicine perspective, intention is crucial towards effective treatment. In one class, Liu Ming described how one doctor at Five Branches School was so effective in treating patients that other teachers and students wanted to learn his “secret.” They came and observed his clinic shift. They saw the patients getting positive results but did not see anything special that he did—he needled the same points as other doctors. In other words, there was nothing special or mysterious that he did. Finally, people asked him what his “secret” was. He said that when treating his patients, he truly and sincerely wanted to help them and his mind was completely focused on treating them. That was it! Intention, positive energy, and concentration allow one to focus on the treatment and make it possible for the maximum conduction of qi from doctor to patient.
Friday, December 03, 2010
Kirlian Photography
Kirlian photography may help us understand that our body is ultimately an energetic entity. And because it’s energetic, it could be healed using energetic therapies such as qigong and acupuncture. Kirlian photography can also be used as a diagnostic tool. It could eventually be tuned to reveal areas of stress and even cancer. Who knows, maybe it could also be a better airport security tool than the body scan machine. It could reveal mental and spiritual state of a person.
Acupuncture as Effective Energy Medicine
It is essential to understand the basic concept of Qi and how practicing building up one’s qi through Qigong could improve one’s health. Acupuncture is basically the art of using qi to heal the body. I would also explain that the body has various meridians by which qi travels. If the doctor practices qigong, his or her treatment is more effective than a doctor who does not. If a doctor is really good, she could use the “one needle” acupuncture technique in which a needle is inserted in one point, usually the crown of the head. Then, the doctor would transfer her own qi to the needle and, using her mind, guide the qi anywhere in the patient’s body. Overtime, qi could heal the myriads ailments.
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Biophysics and Chinese Medicine
Biophysics involves applying physical laws to biological systems. Using the tools of science, it looks at the minute structure of our system to understand the biomechanical activities of our system. Scientists mainly use logical reasoning to understand and develop techniques to further that understanding. Their logic is fostered by imagination, creativity, diligence, and previous and concurrent work by other scientists. They strive on predictability and repeatability. Because biophysics is immensely complex, bio-scientists tend to focus on a tiny segment of the whole system. For example, my friend is a biochemist who has spent over 8 years studying genetic recombination of a yeast protein.
Chinese medicine has its own system, albeit it looks at the holistic aspect of the living system. Compared with modern bioscience, it appears somewhat primeval. Its modus operandi resembles that of an imperial court. There is a king, minister, general, officials, etc. Each major function of the system is ruled by one of these individuals. For example, the emperor is the heart. It infuses its regal fire into blood causing the heart to be red and full energy. The heart is the ruler of the mind and the entire body. The heart knows everything about the body; hence doctors take pulses to tap into this knowledge. Yet, it doesn’t leave the palace because it has a minister (pericardium) who goes out and carries out the heart’s directives. The heart rules the mind; for that reason, when a person cannot sleep, it’s common to look at the heart.
There is some element of faith in the Chinese system; e.g., it doesn’t spend much time in trying to understand why the heart is the king. It accepts this premise and proceeds to use this knowledge to provide treatment. There is a Qi, which is an amorphous force that has the ability to transform, transport, warm, defend, and control. There is blood which acts as a river providing Qi and nutrients to myriad regions of the body.
With a few rules up front and understood, there are biophysical semblances in Chinese medicine. It essentially boils down to balance of qi and blood, of yin and yang, of mind and body, of motion and stillness. If something is weak, augment it; if it’s too strong, sedate it; if it’s stuck, invigorate it; if it’s too wet, dry it; if it’s too dry, nourish it. Doctors who understand these rules will then use creativity and imagination to direct Qi and blood to heal patients, very much similar to scientists who attempt to activate certain chemicals to catalyze a certain process.
I am a living system....
I am a living system because I have the characteristics and attributes of an organic organism: I was born, I breathe the air, I require nourishment, my system has mechanisms to assimilate nutrients and eliminate waste, I can adapt and respond to internal and external conditions, and I can reproduce to perpetuate my species. And yet, to me, this is not enough. I recall a quotation from Jack London, “The proper function of man is to live, not to exist.” Hence, a developed and advanced living system really lives, not merely exist in the world.
I am a living system……this is a very difficult question when we examine the first word: “I.” It presupposes that I know who “I” am. I have often contemplated this question. Many years ago, I spent a week at a Buddhist monastery looking into a koan “Who am I?” We were to watch our mind with razor sharpness and laser-like concentration to identify the origin of a thought and from that place probe deeper into it until we find a guy “who plays a flute with no holes.” To this day, I am none the wiser nor closer to knowing myself. And yet, part of being a living system is that we have the capacity and the curiosity to look into our own existence to gain awareness of how we came to be, what gives us “meaning” in life, and reflect on the inevitability of our mortality.
Perhaps all of this existential cogitation is biology’s stratagem to keep us engaged in our lives and help us evolve into the next phase of “punctuated equilibrium.”
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