helping others

Sincerity

Sincerity

✍️Wendy Brown

When the sage embraces

the divine sovereign heart

her voice can move

and transform the world

One who lacks purity and

sincerity cannot move others

When a person merges

with this truth in essence,

the shen-spirit may move

amongst the external world

with highest degree of sincerity


One who forces himself to

lament, though may sound

sad, will awaken no grief 

One who forces himself to

be angry, though may sound

fierce, will arouse no awe

 

She who forces herself to

be affectionate, though may smile,

will create no air of harmony

True sadness need make

no sound to awaken grief

True anger need not

show itself to arouse awe
 

True affection need not

smile to create harmony

Truth and sincerity are

to be prized as a doctor

of Chinese medicine 

 

People come from far

and wide for help

True healing is derived

from principles of

sincerity, truth, and purity

This intrinsic disposition

is what makes it so that

a patient listens to, and

hears, the practitioner

Humans loathe death

and delight in life.

A doctor of Chinese medicine

informs what in a patient’s

life can destroy them;

Tells them what can

be good for them;

Advises what is convenient

for their condition;

Exposes what brings them suffering


Even if they are the kind

of person who does not

follow The Way (Tao),

being without principles,

or does not follow the

patterns of the natural

order of life, how would

they not listen to the

doctor who is sincere

and pure in this medicine? 

Lingshu Chapter 29

Posted by Wendy in analytical

The 6 Stages of Disease

The Shānghán lùn 傷寒論, known as the treatise on cold injury or cold damage disorders, is a Chinese medical text compiled by Zhang Zhongjing 张仲景 around the end of the Han dynasty period. It is one the oldest completed medical books in the world.  The Shānghán lùn has 398 chapters, 113 herbal prescriptions, and is organized by the six stages of disease.

Tai Yang  太陽, Greater Yang   A milder stage with external symptoms of chills, fever, stiffness, and headache.

Therapeutic Principle:  Promote Sweating.

 

Yang Ming  陽明, Yang Brightness   A more severe internal excess yang condition presenting as fever without chills, distended abdomen, and constipation.

Therapeutic Principle:  Cooling and Eliminating.

 

Shao Yang  少陽, Lesser Yang   A Shao Yang type person are most young adults in their prime, a medium body type that bounces back from extremes. Pathogenic factor is half outside, half inside; Half excess, half deficiency, presenting as chest discomfort, and alternating chills and fever.

Therapeutic Principle:  Harmonizing.

 

Tai Yin  太陰, Greater Yin   A Tai Yin type person lacks tone, has flacid tissues, is pale, puffy, bigger on bottom than top, there is deficiency of Spleen Yang effecting proper digestion leading to overall dampness. Presents with chills, and distended abdomen with occasional pain.

Therapeutic Principle:  Warming and Supplementing.

 

Shao Yin  少陰, Lesser Yin   A Shao Yin type person has not much muscle, flat chest, narrow hips. There is a deficiency of Yin (which controls Yang) resulting in Yin fire effulgence. Presents with weak pulse, anxiety, drowsiness, diarrhea, chills, and cold extremities.

Therapeutic Principle:  Warming and Supplementing.

 

Jue Yin  厥陰, Absolute Yin   Presents with signs of thirst, difficult urination, and physical collapse.

Therapeutic Principle:  Warming and Supplementing.

 

 

Posted by Wendy in analytical