We're into week 2 of practicing Foundation Training daily (during the middle of morning yoga asana practice). We finish each 15 minute practice sweating, shaking, and grinning. The whole body-mind is engaged during these active isometric contractions. It eases lower back pain and chronic injury by engaging supporting muscles, while improving posture and optimizing movement. Dr Eric Goodman has some excellent free resources on Youtube below. See the main site for more detailed information, or to get a subscription to stream more videos.
7.19.2019
7.08.2019
surf
take a moment
between the waves
to
g u l p
in
some air
and
s p i t
out
some sea water
find the
spaces
between the swelling tides
to
swim towards the horizon
then
when it's time
back towards shore
keep
swimming
6.15.2019
6.09.2019
Clinical gaze
"'Clinical gaze'... to look at something seemingly very complex, and see simplicity within it... that's the challenge and goal in every clinical interaction. To find the elegant simplicity that underlies all the things that are happening."
- Phil Settels LAc, from Qiological podcast #Qi084 ("Following the Process: Classical Thought in the Modern World")
(listen to 41:20 for how open-close-pivot (開闔樞) relates to the Six Conformations (六經) of Chinese medicine, from the Shang Han Lun 傷寒論 perspective)
Qiological is my favorite Chinese medicine podcast in English. I think it's our best podcast for Chinese medicine practitioners in the USA. It might be a bit much for the lay person, but still very interesting. Give a listen!
Podcasts - qiological
Becoming a Qiologician helps us at Qiological to bring you the weekly conversations you love. It also gives you access to some special content that is exclusively for those who help to support the podcast. Check out the Qiologician page for more details!
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Pictured: "Owl shaped pottery jars with ash glaze" from the National Palace Museum in Taipei, Taiwan. From the Han dynasty (206 BCE- 220 CE)
6.07.2019
6.04.2019
Kaptchuk, Placebo, and Acupuncture
Ted Kaptchuk wrote "The Web That Has No Weaver," one of the first books about Chinese medicine in the USA. He's been doing research about the placebo effect, and its relationship with Chinese medicine. Fascinating. Two studies (described here) show that acupuncture is almost twice as effective as optimal mainstream care in treating chronic lower back pain. However, acupuncture and sham acupuncture achieve similar clinical effects... but work in the body in different ways.
"... while both genuine and sham acupuncture equally reduced noxious stimuli, needle stimulation inhibited incoming noxious stimuli with a peripheral-central bottom up somatosensory modulation, while sham acupuncture activated a top-down modulation of pain and worked through the brain's emotional circuitry." (1)
Read the whole article, here:
http://media.virbcdn.com/files/59/FileItem-112513-KaptchukCJIMRESPONSES2010.pdf
See more of Kaptchuk's research, here:
http://tedkaptchuk.com/selected-publications
References
(1) Kaptchuk TJ, Chen Ke-Ji, Song Jun. Recent Clinical Trials of Acupuncture in the West: Responses from the Practitioners. Chin J Integr Med 2010 Jun;16(3):197-203
from
Kong J, Kaptchuk TJ, Polich G, Kirsch I, Vangel M, Zyloney C, et al. An fMRI study on the interaction and dissociation betwen expectation of pain relief and acupuncture treatment. NeuroImage 2009;47:1066-1076.
5.31.2019
The Process
The Process
Connective exercises for journaling and walking in nature. Nature connection, plant connection... internal and external connection.
-
observe
-
internal (notice thoughts/ feelings arising and passing)
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external (fully-embodied sensory observations)
-
-
engage
-
gift
-
inquire
-
notice
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engage/ record (journal/ draw/ move)
-
-
gratitude
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share
-
oral (word, song)
-
written (read)
-
visual (share drawing/ movement)
Questions
(on emotions)
-
when do you experience this
-
how do you process it
-
3 actions to transform my current relationship with it
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