Let’s conclude this series on strategy in Chinese medicine with our final two points.
Treating Erratically
Martin Luther once said that Mankind is like a drunkard who upon falling off his horse on one side overcompensates and promptly falls off the other side. In Chinese medicine, the opposite of sticking with the same protocol no matter the situation is constantly changing what you’re doing. Now, I want to draw an important distinction here. The speed with which you have to make adjustments will depend on many factors, especially the modality being used. The very nature of acupuncture is such that you’re both creating and reacting to changes in the patient’s energy field, which by its nature is subtle. This just naturally leads to treatments in most cases being completely different from week to week in a lot of patients.
In the case of herbs however, what you don’t want to do with a chronic case if you can possibly help it is to leap from formula to formula. If you have legitimately resolved a layer of the condition and are ready to move to the next thing, that’s one thing. What you don’t want to do however is “Ok this week I think I’ll give you You Gui Wan because last week I gave you Si Jun Zi Tang and the week before I gave you Xiao Yao Wan, so I feel like we’re covering all the bases.” As I have heard Heiner Fruehauf eloquently state, you have to have the courage to decide on a base formula that adequately meets the conditions and then stick with it long term by regularly alternating a small amount of the ingredients.
That said, I don’t want to discourage anyone from having the courage to take a well-calculated risk when they aren’t 100% sure of the outcome. Let’s be honest, not many of us are completely sure about exactly what’s going to happen every time they hand their patient a bottle. I certainly am not. In fact, I find myself white-knuckling the patient’s chart, re-re-checking my conclusion long after they’ve gone home more than I care to admit. Its part of the Chinese medicine experience in our age, in my opinion.
In short, treat what you see and not according to pre-conceived notions if you can possibly help it. When in doubt, remember Reynolds’ First Maxim!
Too Many Doctors Spoil the Case
A huge problem in Chinese medicine-and one not easily resolved-that you will run into with many of your patients is the fact that you are only one of a small army of medical practitioners that they are currently seeing, and often the last one to the party, so to speak. You will often find yourself having to cope with not only the patient’s original condition, but also the added side effects and pulse-obscuring properties of drugs given to them by their team of MDs, the pile of supplements procured from their local health food store, their ill-advised Medifast diet/candida cleanse/detox protocol, their equally ill-advised weight room habit, their Reiki practitioner, their support group, and oh yes, their OTHER acupuncturist. Different doctors I’ve talked to have had different things to say on this subject. Dr. Leon Hammer has said that he typically suggests that if the patient would like to try these other methods that perhaps they come back after having first exhausted their possibilities. A famous Taiwanese doctor that a couple of my friends learned under is reputed to have refused treatment to patients who were currently under the care of someone else. How you handle this is your business of course, but suffice it to say that the more factors there are in the treater equation the more difficult it’s going to be to get anywhere with the case.
In America at least, most of the people who seek us out are in a high degree of physical and energetic chaos. The nature of our societal demands such as our crazy “rest is for the weak” work ethic, our fetishization of requiring the absolute best of the best of everything we come into contact with, keeping up with not just the Joneses anymore but the rich, famous, and Hollywood-employed as well, our terrible diets, our masochistic exercise programs, our sense of entitlement and lack of tradition, our rejection of the old and glorification of the young, our out and out INSANITY in every corner of our existence produces a patient who is coming apart at the seams on their best day. The introduction of any more chaos whatsoever into this picture can cause nothing but further catastrophe. It is absolutely not surprising that our most common “big” diseases are cancer and autoimmune conditions. We are chaos personified, the absolute opposite of peaceful growth and progression like the seasons. Nearly every patient that walks through our doors will be in this state and it would be well to keep in mind.
Also worth noting is that the primary problem in the chaotic state is that the very Yin and Yang of our beings is separating and with that separation comes greater and greater vulnerability to more disastrous diseases of every sphere. In my opinion, this separation begins at the level of the Gui Zhi Tang-type Taiyang invasion (note that Gui Zhi Tang’s most famous characteristic is that of “harmonizing Ying and Wei” which is nothing less than putting Yin and Yang back into contact with each other) and ends in death. Everything else along that continuum is some degree of separation of Yin and Yang and needs to be accounted for thusly. I fervently recommend that anyone not intimately familiar with this concept read the following article by Dr. Hammer entitled,” Towards a Unified Theory of Chronic Disease with Regard to the Separation of Yin and Yang and ‘The Qi is Wild.”
How do these two topics relate to timing and momentum? Simple. If you’re trying to walk to Albuquerque you’ll never get there if you walk toward Portland for a day, then San Diego for a day, then Atlanta for two days. You also won’t get there if you ask directions from everyone you meet and they all tell you something different. Timing and momentum is doing the right things at the right time consistently. Cure doesn’t happen without it.
That concludes this series. I hope you’ve gotten something useful out of it. If you’d like to go back and read the previous segments, here they are again:
http://deepesthealth.com/2010/strategy-in-chinese-medicine-timing-and-momentum-pt-1/
http://deepesthealth.com/2010/strategy-in-chinese-medicine-timing-and-momentum-pt-2/
http://deepesthealth.com/2010/strategy-in-chinese-medicine-timing-and-momentum-pt-3/
Strategy in Chinese Medicine, pt 4: Timing and Momentum
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Filed under Alternative Medicine, Holistic Healing, Natural Health Care by on Jul 7th, 2010. Comment.
You will remember not too long ago when Mitesh, a student at NCNM, released some very interesting information about an experiment he was doing concerning the flavors of Chinese herbs, their combinations, and their impact on human physiology. Well, he completed a continuation of the project for this latest term project and has consented to let me share his findings with all of you.
I want to apologize for the formatting – I’m actually on vacation and have limited time to put this together. Sometimes, copying and pasting from other programs (like Microsoft Word) can be pretty tricky. Hopefully, it will still be readable.
I’ll also have another student project to share sometime soon. It’s one student’s multi-disciplinary exploration of the energetics of Chaihu – I think you’ll find it to be very interesting. Enjoy!
—
Purpose of Experiment
This experiment is a continuation of last term’s experiment in which I combined Chinese herb flavors to see if a particular effect arose. For example, did Sweet and Pungent create an inner sensation which I would call Yang Qi? Using the Tang Ye Jing herb flavor assignments, I would combine Ren Shen, the sweet archetypal herb, with Gui Zhi, the pungent archetypal herb, assess the inner experience and see if it converged on something I would consider Yang Qi. This proved to be true.
|
Dominant > |
Sour |
Pungent |
Sweet |
Salty/Heart |
Bitter (Kidneys) |
|
Sour |
Wu Wei Zi |
Xi Xin |
Maidong |
Houpo |
Zhuye |
|
Pungent |
Zhishi |
Gui Zhi |
Gan Cao |
Dahuang |
Huangqin |
|
Sweet |
Shaoyao |
Sheng Jiang |
Ren Shen |
Zexie |
Baizhu |
|
Salty |
Dandouchi |
Chuan Jiao |
Dazao |
Xuanfu Hua |
Huanglian |
|
Bitter |
Shuyu |
Fuzi |
Fuling |
Xiaoshi |
Di Huang |
Table 1: Tang Ye Jing Primary and Secondary Flavors
I continued this Chinese herb paring for Sweet and Sour, whose outcome, according to my teachers, should be the creation of fluids. This too proved true.
I further investigated the other two pairing with Sweet, that being Bitter and Salty. I then attempted to create descriptive markers to note the inner experience after which I then attempted to attribute my best Chinese Medicine term to the experiences.
The flavor combination testing was preceded with a calibration effort in which I poetically described the effect of the archetypal herb flavors. This allowed me to then have an authentic experience of what was meant to be Sour or Pungent.
Furthermore, I then take the a combination of primary and secondary flavors and see if the single herb would also have the same effect as the combined archtypal herbs. Therefore, would the herb with a primary flavor of Sweet and secondary flavor of Pungent, Gan Cao, create Yang Qi? And would the herb with a primary flavor of Pungent and Secondary flavor of Sweet, Sheng Jiang, create Yang Qi as well? This proved not to be true for this case and there was no convergence is experience between any combination o f archetypal herb flavors and single herb with matching primary and secondary flavors. As such, I decided to drop this portion of the experiment and only proceed with testing of archetypal herb flavor combinations.
Background Information
The Tang Ye Jing assigns organs to flavors differently than the NeiJing. The Tang Ye Jing assigns flavors based upon shared gesture. The NeiJing assigns flavors based upon contrary gestures. For example, the Lung has a natural gesture of contraction, that akin to Metal and Fall. Therefore then NeiJing would assign Pungent to the Lung because its gesture is dispersive. Therefore, it would counteract the over-contractive pathology of the Lung. However, the Tang Ye Jing would assign the flavor of Sour to the Lung because they share the same gesture.
Another way of describing this difference is what is referred to as T? Yòng??, translated as body and use. T? shows bones next to a ritual vessel. Yòng shows either a target with an arrow through it or bronze ritual tripod vessel. The Tang Ye Jing assignments focus on T? whereas the NeiJing assignments focus on Yòng.
|
Flavor |
Suwen Chapter 5 Organs |
Tang ye Jing Organ |
Representative TYJ Herb |
|
Sour |
Goes to Liver and Restrains |
Lungs |
Wu Wei Zi |
|
Pungent |
Goes to Lungs and Disperses |
Liver |
Gui Zhi |
|
Sweet |
Goes to Spleen and Tonifies |
Spleen |
Ren Shen |
|
Bitter |
Goes to Heart and Descends |
Kidneys |
Xuanfu Hua |
|
Salty |
Goes to Kidneys |
Heart |
Di Huang |
Table 2: Flavors and Organs according to Tang Ye Jing and NeiJing SuWen
Unknown to me at the time of the conception of the experiment, a line in Chapter Five of the SuWen states:
??????
Su?n k? y?ng xiè wèi y?n
Sour and bitter gush and leak forth yin
Originally I hadn’t tasted this flavor combination, but this time it was on the docket. Knowing that results like this were possible, I proceeded with a little more caution than when all the combinations had Sweet as a flavor.
|
Two Tastes Combinations |
Outcome |
|
Pungent + Sour |
Investigated |
|
Pungent + Sweet |
Investigated – Part 1 |
|
Pungent + Bitter |
Investigated |
|
Pungent + Salty |
Investigated |
|
Sour + Sweet |
Investigated – Part 1 |
|
Sour + Bitter |
Investigated – Gush and Leak Forth Yin |
|
Sour + Salty |
Investigated |
|
Sweet + Bitter |
Investigated – Part 1 |
|
Sweet + Salty |
Investigated – Part 1 |
|
Bitter + Salty |
Investigated |
Table 3: Two Flavor Combinations
In the future I would like to investigate triple, quadruple and all five flavors. A list in the appendix shows the possible combinations.
Methods and Design
The real question is if there was a convergence of experiences amongst herbs on a subjective level. As mentioned previously, a primary baseline of subjective experience harmonized to the Tang Ye Jing flavors was done with the primary flavors from Table 2 above.
There was 6 oz of each herb decocted in 16 oz of water and gently boiled to a 8 oz reduction. They were ingested slowly savoring the experience. Each tasting lasted about 20 to 30 minutes for the full effect and about 10 minutes between tasting to clear the experience…
–
During the next portion of this article – Mitesh will reveal the results of this, his latest experiment. Look for it coming this week!
An Exploration into Chinese herb flavor combinations – continued!
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Filed under Alternative Medicine, Holistic Healing, Natural Health Care by on Jun 28th, 2010. Comment.
The past two weeks we’ve been discussing timing as it pertains to acupuncture and herbology. Let’s now tackle momentum.
As you may recall, the quote we have been referencing from the Art of War is this:
“When a falcon strike breaks the body of its prey, it is because of timing. When torrential water tosses boulders, it is because of momentum.”
What Sun Zi is talking about here is the accomplishing of something difficult, moving mountains as it were. In Chinese medicine this can be compared to dealing with difficult and intractable cases, the likes of which unfortunately are rapidly increasing in number here in the U.S. These cases are often created by incorrect or ineffectual treatment of a condition that is made orders of magnitude more complicated by the failed treatment itself. Here I’m talking about things like disease suppression, medication side effects, and the results of surgery, all things that most of our patients will have experienced in spades before they ever walk through our doors as their “last hope”. Leaving aside for now the problems of what to attack and how (something I’ll cover at a later date), let’s now assume that we have intervened in some way and had some sort of positive effect on the patient. This is where momentum comes in.
Consecutive intervention
The process is almost always going to be the same for deciding on treatment: gather the symptoms, look at the whole picture, make a decision. The next time the patient comes in this decision-making process has to be repeated. Even if the decision is to continue the treatment from the previous session, you’re still having to make the call of “what do they need me to do right now?” The time-honored TCM school clinic technique of “I did these points last week and they feel better so I’m just gonna do them again” is just not going to fly unless a proper examination reveals that yes, that combination of points is appropriate here. This is the primary component of establishing momentum, doing the right thing at the right time, repeated.
Uprooting
Borrowing from the Chinese martial art Taijiquan: in Taijiquan, a primary goal is to “uproot” your opponent (meaning, remove their structural stability) so that you can basically do whatever you want with them. My teacher’s teacher once compared this to a job he used to work at a loading dock in a harbor in Taiwan moving giant barrels from ship to land and vice versa. By themselves, the barrels were absolutely impossible for even 2-3 people to move. Yet, if you uprooted it by tilting it up onto its edge a bit you could now sort of roll it by yourself to wherever you needed it to go.
Treating chronic disease is very much like this. Your first task is to make enough initial headway against the condition that now it starts responding to what you want to do, which I can tell you is not always the easiest thing in the world. However, once you finally achieve that uprooting, now you have to keep it uprooted so that you can keep pushing it where you want it to go, like the aforementioned barrels. Explaining what to do to achieve this would take its own series, and really is the sum of all other treatment knowledge you are able to bring to bear. So instead I will tell you what not to do, otherwise known as a group of pitfalls that will effectively kill whatever momentum you have built. Note that some of these pitfalls will be of your doing and some will be of your patients’ doing. It’s part of your job to make clear to them what needs to happen in order for the desired result to be achieved, meaning achieving health.
Pitfall #1-Failing to modify
Something that is abundantly clear in Western medicine that somehow we in Chinese medicine lose sight of is the idea of habituation. A short explanation of this phenomenon is this: when the exact same treatment-of any kind-is repeated enough, the body or the agents of disease will adapt to it making the treatment no longer effective. This can actually be viewed from a couple different viewpoints. One is that the patient is rarely in the exact same situation two visits in a row (“you can never step in the same river twice”), especially where acupuncture is concerned. Another is that if you are dealing with an intelligent pathogenic agent (virus, bacteria, spirochete, etc.) if you continually show it the same attack it will eventually adapt, making the attack ineffective. Think MRSA.
This is fairly easy to deal with in acupuncture, as you can throw in subtle variations to the treatment that meet the patient exactly where they are at that moment in very specific detail. With herbs it’s more difficult as in these types of cases you’ll need the same formula for months at a time. The key to this then is having a good enough grasp of your root formulas and also of the nature of your individual herbs so that you can switch in and out appropriate substitutions that still get you where you want to go. Now obviously, no two herbs are a perfect trade for each other as even different parts of the same plant behave very differently and have very different properties. In the context of a carefully modified formula, however, the structure that is not changed will help keep what has been changed moving in the right direction.
This concept is most vitally important for cases where there is an organism on the other end that is being dealt with as part of the process (like Lyme Disease for instance), but this also holds true for other deep diseases, though you may not need to rotate as often. In a fast-reacting case (like Lyme) I generally look to rotate ingredients every three weeks or so. I usually look to rotate major (and powerful) components of the base formula I’m using that I’m confident I can get a good trade for. So if the base formula is Gui Zhi Tang, I would have the option to rotate just about any ingredient in the formula. Rou Gui for Gui Zhi, Gan Jiang or Pao Jiang for Sheng Jiang, Chi Shao for Bai Shao, Gan Cao for Zhi Gan Cao. In this particular case I would probably only rotate two ingredients (unless I had a very good reason for doing otherwise-always a caveat!) and try to stick to the soul of the formula by changing Gui Zhi less frequently than the other ingredients. Obviously this applies to any formula that you could use long-term. Note that in some cases (and with some patients) you’ll need to rotate more frequently or more creatively, with other cases you can get away with longer waits. Your mileage will vary.
If you fall into the pitfall of failing to modify you will certainly see the case stall out, which can mean not only a simply stalling of progress but can frequently be the first step into a quick regression depending on what else is going on in the patient’s life. You want to avoid this at all costs.
Next week we’ll discuss the pitfalls of Treating Erratically and Too Many Doctors Spoil the Case.
Strategy in Chinese Medicine: Timing and Momentum, pt. 3
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Filed under Alternative Medicine, Holistic Healing, Natural Health Care by on Jun 23rd, 2010. Comment.
Last week we began by exploring the concept of timing in acupuncture. This week we’ll move on to herbs.
Timing in Herbology
Timing is equally important in herbology, as knowing where in the system the disease currently is will dictate what formula you prescribe and what modifications have to be made (I discuss this in an upcoming free PDF entitled “Beginners Guide to Acute Respiratory Disease”).
For this, the Six Conformation model used by Zhang Zhongjing (called the Six Channel Model in TCM) is without question the most powerful tool we have at our disposal, telling us where the disharmony is, what its nature is, and what principles are required to fix it. This applies in acute as well as chronic cases. For example – If the problem is diagnosed as a Cold invasion of the channels of Taiyang we know several things at once:
- We know that since the invasion has penetrated into the channel that the surface is open, which removes the need for the pure surface opening action of Ma Huang Tang.
- We know that Taiyang is a Yang conformation. Therefore, our efforts are going to be centered on expelling the Cold pathogen and that if resolved correctly there won’t be any long term consequences of the invasion having taken place (as opposed to an invasion of the Yin conformations which tends to leave the need for a significant cleanup operation after being resolved).
- We know that according to the Five Phase (or Five Element) model Taiyang is associated with Cold Water of the North. Taiyang invasions tend to be accompanied by all over muscular aches of varying degrees (depending on the situation). If we envision the Taiyang channels (UB/SI) as being rivers of cold water coming down from the mountains to nourish the plains (read about Mt. Kailash for the ultimate example of this) we can see that when those rivers get more cold, they freeze over and stop flowing. The Chinese characters for pain ?? (teng tong) indicate a state of cold and of obstruction of movement, much like the frozen river analogy. This tells us that we need to “melt the ice” by warming up the channels and re-establishing uninterrupted flow.
The formula that answers all of these requirements is Gui Zhi Tang. If given on time (meaning before the pathogen passes on to, say, the Shaoyang level) the patient will recover quickly. Aside from the diagnostic timing, however, the Shang Han Lun tells us about another necessary element of timing. An all important feature of timing and momentum in Chinese herbalism is the method and length of time to apply treatment.
The text that introduces Gui Zhi Tang makes very clear that the formula must be prescribed under very specific conditions. One of them is the instruction to give the decoction to the patient warm, then have them bundle up to await sweating. However it also makes very clear that once the patient sweats the formula must be stopped immediately.
The danger here (one that I have seen happen many times and have even experienced personally) is that the patient over-sweats and suffers damage to their Yang Qi, thus creating a different or more complex condition that now has to be treated. In a Gui Zhi Tang type situation, over-sweating can lead to a combined Taiyang-Shaoyin condition of external invasion with underlying Yang deficiency (needing a formula such as Gui Zhi Jia Fu Zi Tang).
Strength and Focus
The other side of this is the question of strength and focus. A principle that Heiner Fruehauf often points out is that you must have not only the right formula with the right herbs, but also of sufficient quality and enough of them.
A practice of a lot of TCM-trained herbalists (including those from China and even those who have been in practice since the early days of the PRC) is one of adjusting downward individual herb dosages in formulas for the purposes of safety or according to someones weight. This is especially true for Shang Han Lun formulas, which seem overly aggressive in comparison with modern “gentle” formulas.
TCM herbalists will take a formula like the aforementioned Gui Zhi Tang and begin stripping it of its curative power by ratcheting downward the dosages of the warming herbs Gui Zhi and Sheng Jiang by as much as half, then playing around with the amounts of Da Zao, Bai Shao, and Zhi Gan Cao according to some paradigm known only to themselves. The result is the equivalent of cooking a complex dish in the kitchen while randomly choosing ingredient amounts and never tasting the results. This results in a grossly ineffective formula (I’ll save a critique of the practice of ingredient carpet-bombing for another time).
Native Dosage
An absolute fact in Chinese herbology is that each herb we use behaves differently in both different dosages and different ratios within each formula. Each herb also has what I think of as a “native dosage”, meaning the amount that you are most likely to see it prescribed at effectively. For example, Gui Zhi at 9g, Chai Hu at 24g, Ban Xia at 12g, etc. Going away from these amounts (without very good reason) usually translates into outright failure in my experience. If you need Gui Zhi Tang, you also need Gui Zhi at 9g. If you need Xiao Chai Hu Tang, you need Chai Hu at 24g. Going away from this is a good way to not be successful vs. the condition you are treating.
When you change the dosage of herbs you change the functional emphasis of that herb within its formula. The best example of this principle in my opinion is with Fu Zi. Fu Zi in most TCM clinics-if used at all-is used at a very low dosage, usually in the range of 3-6g. The fear is that because Fu Zi is so “toxic” that more than a small amount will give the patient headaches, nosebleeds, hot flashes, etc.
Paradoxically, Fu Zi in this small amount causes its energy to rush outward to the exterior and to the head, causing the very situation that they were trying to avoid in the first place. However, once the dosage crosses a certain line (around 18g in my experience) its entire behavior changes. Now instead of warming the Yang and sending it rushing outward and upward, it grabs the Yang qi of the body and causes it to descend into storage (the lower Dantian in Qigong parlance) where it is now able to recharge. Rather than feeling hyperactive, patients on the receiving end of recharge formulas like Qian Yang Dan (in which I usually use 30g of Fu Zi) have the overwhelming urge to go to sleep, which is exactly the aim of the formula.
Ratio
Finally, one must account for the ratios of herbs in formulas. In the Shang Han Lun there is an army of formulas that are essentially Gui Zhi Tang with one ingredient changed in some way. This small shift significantly changes the impact of the formula.
For example, if in the case of Gui Zhi Tang you increase Gui Zhi to 15g you now have the formula Gui Zhi Jia Gui Tang. Now, instead of treating a case of the common cold, the formula treats the anxiety disorder known as Running Piglet Syndrome. The increased Gui Zhi stokes the Fire of the Heart. The Heart, in turn, is now able to descend and overcome the amassed cold in the Lower Jiao. This amassed cold was what the patient’s Yang qi was counterflowing away from - causing the Running Piglet sensation. Problem solved.
Another example starting with Gui Zhi Tang. If we remove Bai Shao altogether we get the formula Gui Zhi Qu Shao Yao Tang, which treats conditions of fullness in the chest and skipping pulse. These symptoms point toward Upper Jiao blockage as well as deficiency of the Heart itself. Removal of sour flavored Bai Shao also removes the formulas restraints on the Wood energy of the body (due to Bai Shao’s affinity with Metal and Metal’s husband-wife relationship with Wood). Wood is now more able to feed the Fire energy (due to Mother-Son relationship) and release the body’s Earth energy (again, husband-wife relationship) which makes up half the Middle Jiao!
Formula Strength
There is also the question of amount of herbs taken. Zhang Zhong Jing was very clear on the necessary amounts to be taken for all of the formulas in his book, as well as specific preparation instructions. A close inspection of the Shang Han Lun’s preparatory methods reveals formulas that are orders of magnitude more concentrated than their modern descendants, using significantly less water both at the start of decocting as well as the final dose.
In both individual herb dosages as well as the total amount to be taken, these formulas were very much built upon the idea of the right intervention at the right time and in concentrated strength. It’s no good to just try and push a boulder any old way in hopes that it will move. You have to push at the right spot (the fulcrum) and use sufficient force in order to accomplish the task.
The point here is that as herbalists we absolutely must know what our herbs do inside and out, right down to the effects of differing amounts. This will prevent the useless (and potentially dangerous in the hands of the over-enthusiastic) practice of trying to assign random amounts and percentages to our formula components.
Next week we’ll begin tackling the issue of momentum.
Strategy in Chinese Medicine: Timing and Momentum, pt. 2
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Filed under Alternative Medicine, Holistic Healing, Natural Health Care by on Jun 16th, 2010. Comment.
“When a falcon strike breaks the body of its prey, it is because of timing. When torrential water tosses boulders, it is because of momentum.”
Timing
In the current culture of TCM, the evidence-based protocol is king. A hypothetical example: “On 6-14/09 Patient K. was diagnosed with asthma. UB-13, UB-23, Ding Chuan, and Lu-9 were needled with reinforcing method for 30 minutes. Treatment was repeated daily for 7 days. Upon re-evaluation patient’s spirometer performance increased 15%. Therefore, this protocol is useful in treating asthma. ” This is how case studies are presented to us in our primary textbooks. This is also the primary research method in Chinese TCM hospitals presently, thus making it the perceived superior method of research and treatment amongst the standardized professional Chinese medicine community in the West.
However, this method has an ocean of problems, chiefly that it doesn’t work very well when replicated in clinic. Leaving alone for now the problem of misunderstanding what particular points/methods/herbs/formulas really do, it also neglects the necessity of meeting the patient exactly where they are at that very moment. This is what I mean by timing.
No matter how effective a formula or protocol has been in the past, if applied to the wrong situation it will not only not be effective, it may actually make the situation worse.
The importance of accurate diagnosis cannot be overstated. As a clinician, it’s the heart of your job to figure exactly what is going on with the patient in front of you at that moment, work out specifically what needs to be done, and apply it correctly. It’s no good giving a patient Gui Zhi Tang because they have a “Wind-Cold Invasion” when in fact the disease has moved on to a deeper level and the patient now needs Xiao Chai Hu Tang. You may have been needling St-36 and Sp-3 for the past three visits and seeing improvement in the patient’s digestive condition, but continuing to needle it would be a huge mistake if this week they’re having back spasms and can’t walk.
Timing in Acupuncture
The image of a falcon crashing into its prey from a steep dive at a hundred miles per hour is an accurate description of how effective doing the exact right thing at the exact right time is. However if we imagine the situation from the reverse angle, we can imagine the falcon arriving at the wrong time and completely missing its intended target. As the Lingshu says: “At the moment the energy arrives, [the physician] does not stray even by a hair; and if he is unaware of it, no results are produced. Therefore it is necessary to discern the arriving and departing movements of energy in order to intervene in time. The mediocre physician ignores this rule; the skilled physician respects it.”
This is a good time to clear up a common misconception among acupuncturists about this “arrival of energy”, usually referred to as De Qi. The commonly held belief is that De Qi is when the patient experiences a jolt or shocking sensation. This is held to be the sign that things are working and that now the patient should be left to relax with needles in for twenty minutes or so in order to allow the Ying Qi to make a full circuit through the body.
What the text is actually referring to when it talks about the arrival of Qi is the moment of regulation, the specific and clearly perceivable moment when the channel imbalance has been corrected. The higher level of perceiving this moment of regulation relies upon the acupuncturists ability to experience the unseen energy of the patient, a subject I don’t feel currently qualified to address. However the lower method (one that can be used by everyone fairly easily) is to monitor the state of channel balance via the Renying-Cunkuo pulse method where the very moment of balance can be felt by comparing the strength of the pulse at Renying St-9 and Cunkuo Lu-9 while needling the affected channels. The timing for this is so delicate and vital that the Lingshu says: “When needling, if the energy does not arrive, the number of needles is insignificant. If the energy arrives, stop needling.”
This timing is important not only for good results, but also for avoiding bad ones. You can imagine the falcon missing its target so badly that it crashes into the ground face-first. This is a very real possibility in everything we do. Contrary to popular belief, the Lingshu makes very clear many times throughout its text that the patient can be significantly harmed by incorrect acupuncture technique. To wit:
“Needling presents two risks:
- Not removing the needle once it has reached the affected zone, which may cause the loss of Jing
- Removing the needle as soon as it reaches the affected zone, which may cause the Xie Qi to return.
The loss of Jing exacerbates the illness with nervous exhaustion, and the return of Xie Qi is the origin of abscesses and ulcerations.”
Our primary concerns for harming the patient in our schooling are things like puncturing the pleura, the peritoneum, or an organ. However, the Lingshu rarely talks about physical damage due to incorrect needling and instead frequently cites examples of energetically-caused damage from doing the wrong thing at the wrong time, including different forms of insanity and even death. Clearly, the acupuncture needle is a powerful tool, one that must be treated with the same respect as a sharp knife or sword.
My point here isn’t to scare people, but rather to insist that if we are going to use any tool in the pursuit of altering the health of another person for a fee it’s our responsibility to be very very good at what we do and to not mistakenly believe that we can get away with following a protocol cookbook. Our practice of a natural and holistic medicine in no way lessens our responsibility to practice safely and effectively to the utmost of our abilities and the ability of our medicine. Acupuncture is capable of a lot, and the Neijing repeatedly talks about it in the context of treating very serious illness. However, it only works when you do it correctly.
Next week in this column we’ll discuss timing in herbology. If you want to talk more, please leave a comment or drop by the Deepest Health Community Forum.
See you Wednesday.
Strategy in Chinese Medicine: Timing and Momentum, pt. 1
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