I receive lots of questions about how Chinese herbs “work”. My post today is just one way in which I hold
the power and beauty of herbs.
One way to think of how the body works is to liken it to an
orchestra. Each organ is an instrument,
and the quality of the sound from each instrument affects the entire
orchestra. Each instrument has a particular
resonance, and the music that the orchestra plays is beautiful in its
uniqueness, layered complexity, and synergistic nature of the sections playing
together. What is so beautiful about
Chinese medicine is that my symphony sounds completely unique from anyone
else’s symphony. To me, this is the gift
of Chinese medicine – to help each person reach his or her destiny, to allow a
person’s true nature to blossom. I can
feel this in the pulses. Each person’s
pulses are sacred because they are a reflection of how qi moves through the body.
In Chinese medicine we use the pulses as a diagnostic tool to understand
how someone’s orchestra sounds, to get an idea of what instruments are a bit
out of tune and how the different sections of the orchestra work with one
another. When I feel a person’s pulses, they
give me an idea of the person’s body, mind, and spirit. And after an acupuncture treatment, or after
taking herbs for a few days, the pulses often truly do sound like a symphony –
I can feel through my fingers the resonance of the instruments, how certain
sections of the orchestra have come into tune, how all the pulses reflecting
each section of the orchestra communicate with one another. And because the pulses are made of qi, when the pulses are harmonious, the qi is harmonious (and vice versa). The
symphony is playing at its best. Even
when there is a hiccup in one section, because the orchestra as a whole is
strong, it tends to recover quickly.
In this medicine we are interested in how the entire
symphony sounds. Some forms of modern medicine
focus mainly on one organ, or one body system.
In Chinese medicine we are concerned with how the whole symphony
sounds. The string section (let’s say
it’s digestion in this metaphor) may sound beautiful on its own, but put it
with the wind section (which as the respiratory system also sounds pretty
good), together for some reason they sound a bit, well, off. The beauty of Chinese
medicine is that with acupuncture needles or herbs we support the wind and the
string sections to help them communicate, help them follow the conductor, help
them create harmonious music together.
If you think about an orchestra that sounds more like an
elementary school band, the solution is rarely to just add a few talented
musicians. A better solution would be to
identify some folks who have been proven to be able to help struggling
musicians improve their craft, as well as some folks to help the different
sections of the orchestra to work better together. These folks are the herbs. Each herb has a personality, a particular
resonance, and qualities that make it suitable for certain tasks. As an herbalist, it is my job to put together
a team of herbs that resonate in such a way that will create the conditions for
a particular patient’s orchestra to play at its optimum level. It is extremely rare in Chinese medicine to
prescribe only one herb to a person.
Instead, we look to create a blend of herbs so their particular
personalities (or energetic resonances if this makes more sense to you) can
interact with each other in a way that strengthens and harmonizes a particular
person’s orchestra. And because I am
dealing with dehydrated herbs (also called raw herbs) rather than prepackaged
pills, I tweak the blend to fit your unique needs. This means that two patients experiencing the
same symptom of acid reflux will not have the same herbal prescription.
So back to the original question: How do
Chinese herbs work? The answer will
likely evolve throughout my study and practice of herbs. After all, the Chinese have been using herbs
for thousands of years and throughout this time herbal strategies and
philosophies have always continued to change and evolve. But the simple answer may be something along
these lines: Chinese herbs have a
resonance that, when blended in a particular manner for a particular person, brings about harmony on the levels of mind, body, and spirit. Chinese herbs are not about curing or fixing a
person; they are about creating the conditions for this person to heal from the
inside out.
.
Beautiful analogy. Well thought out and written.
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