Posts filed under 'My Thoughts'

Emptying Our Soul Creates Room For Happiness

This is an old Daoist principle that a teacher told me several years ago.  He explained why money doesn’t always buy happiness, and why many rich and famous people are troubled.

He explained how our soul and spirit works in a similar way to our digestive system, it is designed for things to flow through it, not just in.  for example; If you constant eat and never excrete the waste, then you feel very sick, like to want to burst.  Similarly if you over-eat more than you should you feel very sick, as you have over-filled your stomach.

Our spirit works in a similar way.  Famous people are a good example, as they recieve so much in the way of; money, admiration, attention and so on.  but how many give an equal amount back?  They are effectively recieving all this Qi but not letting any out, thus their spirit becomes full to the point they cannot take in anymore. their spiritual Qi becomes stagnant.  Qi by nature wants to constantly move, otherwise it causes disharmonies.

However, if you receive things and also give, whether it be in the form of volunteering, donations, helping out friends and family etc.  then your soul and spirit is being emptied and ready to receive fresh Qi.  When someone constantly takes and takes from others, then this causes stagnation, which is why they never seem trully happy.  they are stagnant spiritually.

This is largely comes from the Daoist principle of “going with the flow”.  A healthy soul and spirit is one that lets Qi flow through, not just in.

Think of it as not being a spiritual glutton.

1 comment July 14, 2008

Analytical versus Poetic Medicine

Both Western and Eastern medicine have their own frameworks for explaining illness and pathogenesis.  Due to this fundamental difference, it is borderline impossible to explain one medicine’s theories using the others framework.  If though, you gain an understanding of the key differences in principles and perception, understanding each medicine’s viewpoint becomes much easier.

To Western Medicine, understanding illness means finding a single distinct entity which is separate from the patient’s being; In Chinese Medicine, understanding means witnessing the relationships between all the patient’s signs and symptoms in the context of their life.  Let me explain what that text book example means:

In simplest terms, The western view is about “What X is causing Y?”, whereas in Chinese Medicine the importance is on “What is the relationship between X and Y?”

Western Medicine is far more analytical and clinical in its approach looking for a singular causative factor, where as Chinese Medicine works to paint a more poetic description of the person as a whole.  Both approaches achieve the same goal, providing the practitioner with a framework for treatment.  Western medicine works on finding, isolating and either controlling or destroying the entity.  Chinese medicine views it as a “Pattern of Disharmony”, whereby the individual needs to be returned to a state of balance.

This difference in approach shows in many studies performed in China, where for example, 6 patients are all be diagnosed with “stomach ulcers” by western physicians.  The Chinese Medicine doctors however see 6 different patterns of disharmony, as each individual always paints a different picture.  As a result, in Biomedicine all 6 patients receive the same treatment, whereas in Chinese Medicine, each patient receives a slightly different treatment to match their individual presentation.

Add comment July 7, 2008


 

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