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so how does traditional Chinese medicine work then?
Well, yin-yang is perhaps the most general of several key concepts. The holistic approach of Chinese medicine means that both mind and body are seen as interconnected.
The passions chronic fear, sudden fright, anxiety, over-excitement,
over-thinking, sadness and irritability - are seen as
both the cause but also the symptoms of internal disharmony
and illness. You may be feeling a lingering sadness
due to a lung condition, but equally the emotion may
be physically weakening your lungs.
So, when you meet a Chinese medicine practitioner they
are just as likely to ask you what mood you're in as
they are to listen to your chest.
is diagnosis different to western medicine?
Traditional Chinese medicine often refers to the four
pillars. These are: looking (at the facial colour,
the skin, the tongue), smelling (the breath, the body
odour), palpation (for example feeling the wrist pulse),
and listening (to the patients symptoms but also to
the tone of the voice or the sound of a cough).
These methods enable a practitioner to assess the physical, psychological and energetic state of the patient and are often used together with Western diagnoses to form a powerful combination of disease detection.
The idea of organ networks is another central concept
and was developed by ancient Chinese to explain the
relationship between a healthy body and a healthy mind.
how are the organ networks used?
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