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Sunday, December 31, 2006









Yin-Yang Symbol (Tai Chi symbol)




Yin and Yang in Acupuncture and in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM)


The idea of harmony and balance are also the basis of yin and yang. The principle that each person is governed by the opposing, but complementary forces of yin and yang, is central to all Chinese thought. It is believed to affect everything in the universe, including ourselves.

Traditionally, yin is dark, passive, feminine, cold and negative; yang is light, active, male, warm and positive. Another simpler way of looking at yin and yang is that there are two sides to everything - happy and sad, tired and energetic, cold and hot. Yin and yang are the opposites that make the whole. They cannot exist without each other and nothing is ever completely one or the other. There are varying degrees of each within everything and everybody. The tai chi symbol, shown above, illustrates how they flow into each other with a little yin always within yang and a little yang always within yin. In the world, sun and fire are yang, while earth and water are yin. Life is possible only because of the interplay between these forces. All of these forces are required for the life to exist. See the table below to understand the relationship between yin and yang.
Yin Forces/Aspects Yang Forces/Aspects

Dark Light
Moon Sun
Water Fire
Passive Active
Descending Ascending
Female Male
Contracting Expanding
Cold Hot
Winter Summer
Interior Exterior
Heavy Light
Bone Skin
Front Back
Interior of Body Exterior of body

The yin and yang is like a candle. Yin represents the wax in the candle. The flame represents the yang. Yin (wax) nourishes and supports the yang (flame). Flame needs the wax for its existence. Yang consumes yin and, in the process, burns brightly. When the wax (yin) is gone, the flame is gone too. Ying is also gone at that time. So, one can see how yin and yang depend on each other for their existence. You cannot have one without the other.

The body, mind and emotions are all subject to the influences of yin and yang. When the two opposing forces are in balance we feel good, but if one force dominates the other, it brings about an imbalance that can result in ill health.

One can compare the concept of yin and yang to the corresponding principle of tridoshas in Ayurveda, the ancient remedy from India. Ayurveda proposes that every person has vata, pitta and kapha. When these are balanced, there is the state of perfect health. When there are imbalances then there is disease.

One of the main aims of the acupuncturist is to maintain a balance of yin and yang within the whole person to prevent illness occurring and to restore existing health. Acupuncture is a yang therapy because it moves from the exterior to the interior. Herbal and nutritional therapies, on the other hand, are yin therapies, as they move from the interior throughout the body. Many of the major organs of the body are classified as yin-yang pairs that exchange healthy and unhealthy influences.

Yin and yang are also part of the eight principles of traditional Chinese medicine. The other six are: cold and heat, internal and external, deficiency and excess. These principles allow the practitioner to use yin and yang more precisely in order to bring more detail into his diagnosis.


Can Acupuncture Help You?

Author: Liz Langdon

Article:
Acupuncture is one of the oldest, most commonly used holistic
healing methods in the world. The method originated in China
more than 2,000 years ago and is one of the basic healing arts
in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM).

The practice of Acupuncture involves the insertion of fine,
solid metallic needles into specific points along special
pathways that run throughout the human body.

These specific points are called acupuncture points or
"acupoints." The special pathways are called "meridians" or
"channels."

Once the needles are inserted into the acupoints, they are
manipulated by hand (plucked, twisted) or by low-voltage
electricity.

The symptoms or the type of illness the patient has determine
which acupoints are selected for treatment.

According to TCM, the stimulation of the acupoint by the
acupuncture needle releases or energizes the flow of "Qi," the
vital energy or life force of the body. As the flow of Qi
returns to normal, the health of the body is re-established.

Acupuncture as a treatment method has undergone many clinical
studies in the Western World. The method has gained medical
approval for many specific treatments, although modern science
has yet to explain "how it works."

One of the most common uses is for prevention and management of
post-operative nausea and vomiting (Anaesthesia 2004 Feb;
59 (2): 142-9).

Several studies have also found that acupuncture significantly
reduces nausea and vomiting for cancer patients receiving
chemotherapy (Integrative Cancer Therapies 2005 June; 4
(2): 131-43).

Acupuncture significantly improved fatigue and anxiety in a
study of fibromyalgia patients (Mayo Clinical Proceedings
2006 Sep; 8: (9)).

In another clinical trial, patients with osteoarthritis of the
knee showed improvement in function and pain relief after 26
weeks of acupuncture treatment (Annals of Internal
Medicine
2004 Dec 21; 141 (12): 901-10).

Patients with chronic, non-specific low back pain reported being
pain free at least 12 months out of 24 and had been less likely
to use pain medication with acupuncture treatments (Health
Technology Assessment
2005 Aug; 9 (32): iii-iv, ix-x, 1-108).

In a report from Norway in 2002, women in normal, active labor
were offered acupuncture as a means of pain control instead of
traditional pain relief such as an epidural. The results showed
that not only did acupuncture reduce the pain experienced during
labor, it also reduced delivery time (Acta Obstetricia et
Gynecologica Scandinavica
2002 Oct; 81 (10): 943-8).

Many additional studies are posted on the PubMed website
accessible through the http://www.nccam.nih.gov">National Center for
Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM).

Today's medical establishment has a difficult time accepting a
treatment that seems to work, but has no scientific
documentation on how it works. This viewpoint keeps a
viable alternative method of pain control from being prescribed.
A larger percentage of the population should be receiving the
benefit of this natural, holistic treatment - acupuncture.

Regrettably, it is not.