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Handbook of Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda
An Integrated Practice of Ancient Healing Traditions
Table of Contents
About The Book
• Details the foundational principles of each tradition and the many concepts they share, such as qi and prana, meridians and nadis, and energy centers and chakras
• Provides tools for self-assessment including a primer on tongue diagnosis and a mental, emotional, and physical constitutional questionnaire
• Offers breathing exercises, dietary regimens, herbal recommendations, and guides for detoxification, including safe and gentle at-home cleansing
Chinese medicine and Ayurveda are two of the oldest healing systems in use today. Each is a complete art, in and of itself, and has profoundly contributed to the health and well-being of millions of people around the world. Drawing on their shared roots and spiritual principles, Bridgette Shea, L.Ac., MAcOM, shows how these two practices integrate seamlessly, with the two traditions’ individual strengths harmonizing to form a practical basis for prevention, wellness, detoxification, and treatment.
The author explains the foundational principles of both Chinese medicine and Ayurveda in detail, providing the reader with a working understanding of both disciplines. She examines shared concepts such as qi and prana, meridians and nadis, and energy centers and chakras. She explores the strengths of each practice, such as the clinical efficiency of diagnosis and the use of acupuncture for pain relief, improving fertility, and stress reduction in Chinese medicine and the dietary, detoxification, and spiritual guidance of Ayurveda, including the detox branch of Ayurveda known as Panchakarma. Moving beyond theory into practical application, she explores the Elements, known as the Five Phases and the Panchamahabhutas, and how they affect our well-being. She provides tools for self-assessment including a primer on tongue diagnosis and a mental, emotional, and physical constitutional questionnaire. Offering treatment and prevention strategies that draw from both disciplines, she encourages the reader to implement an integrated practice of these two systems in daily life or clinical practice. She details breathing exercises, dietary regimens, herbal recommendations, and guides for detoxification, including safe and gentle home cleanses, all rooted in the holistic synergy between Ayurveda and Chinese medicine.
Sharing case studies that highlight the interconnectedness of these approaches, Shea provides a comprehensive guide for self-healing of body, mind, and spirit and a practitioner’s resource to cross-reference complex questions with respect to both healing traditions.
Excerpt
In the Beginning: The Roots of Ayurveda and Chinese Medicine
Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda are built upon several thousand years of cultural belief systems and philosophies. Although these theories of life may differ in tone and focus, there are universal themes that run through both traditions’ roots. Both have a cosmology, a constitutional theory, a theory of elements, a science of taste and diet, and observational diagnostic tools like tongue and pulse diagnosis. What differs is the lens through which their originators perceived the world. That lens has colored the foundational cosmology of each system. In this chapter we will look at these underlying beliefs and cosmologies.
Both systems have emerged from a primary cosmology that applies to all life--and beyond life to everything that exists. Each system’s cosmology applies to the birth and function of our universe, our minds, and our cells. The origin theory that underpins Chinese medicine is Taoist. Ayurveda is based largely on Sankya philosophy. Taoism is the philosophy underlying the study and practice of energy cultivation systems such as tai chi, qi gong, and Chinese martial arts. Sankhya philosophy is one of the main underlying systems of thought in India. It is the foundation for much of the yoga philosophy and practice so popular throughout India and the West today.
Philosophy
Sankhya cosmology explains the journey of consciousness into matter--the qualities of matter, the senses, and the mind. According to Sankhya, two primordial entities manifested from their unmanifested state--Purusha, consciousness, and Prakriti, primordial matter. The interaction of these two creates a fine material called Mahat, or universal intelligence, and from Mahat emerges the stuff of individual self-awareness and differentiation, ahamkara or ego. This egoic energy allows for further substance to arise: the three gunas. These are the qualities of sattva (clarity), rajas (turbulence), and tamas (inertia). The three gunas correspond to our state of mind. If we are in a sattvic state, we are peaceful, calm, and clear. If in a rajasic state, we are unsettled, agitated, discontent. In a tamasic state there is lethargy, fogginess, veiled awareness.
You may be familiar with the Taoist taiji symbol. It’s that half-white, half-black circle with a dot of white in the black half and a dot of black in the white half. The circle symbolizes the whole of existence.
The line dividing yin and yang is not static; it is wavering. This symbolizes movement. The two are constantly interacting with one another, sometimes yin dominates, sometimes yang. The friction that is created by their interaction is the qi. Qi is one thing and everything. It is lifeanimating energy or vibration. Qi is what everything is made of, how everything functions, and it takes many forms.
In Sankhya philosophy, the qi is called prana. Prana emerges from one of the three primary gunas. From sattva or equanimity came the quality of mind, from tamas or inertia came the body, and from the guna of rajas, or activity, prana.
All things are made of prana, even inanimate objects, but when prana circulates in its vital form a being is alive. This vital prana is said to travel along specific pathways in the body called nadis. In Chinese medicine, these pathways are called channels or meridians. In both meridians and nadis there are intersection points along the pathways that allow for multitissue communication within the body and communication between deeper parts of the body and the prana outside the body.
Qi or prana is not just form, it is not just function, it is not just vitality, it is not just the communicator between cells and individual minds and bodies. It is all of the above. Everything in existence is connected to everything else. Look at distance healing. How fascinating that a human can focus his or her intention upon someone inches or miles away and effect a healing response. Prana knows where to go. A good illustration of this is the story of one of my first Reiki experiences.
While working out of a storeroom in a friend’s metaphysics shop, I encountered a woman who was interested in experiencing a Reiki healing. She was in her thirties and told me she had joint pain from systemic lupus. She sat down, and immediately my hands felt drawn to her neck.
Now, knowing that she had systemic pain, I thought she would feel that I didn’t know what I was doing if I didn’t do the hand positions on various places around her body. So I worked on some other areas but still felt drawn to her neck. I finally surrendered to it and brought my hands there. I had them about six inches away from her body, one facing the front of her neck and one facing the nape. I started feeling a cold breeze coming into the palms of my hands. . . the cold air intensified and it was all I could focus on. I didn’t know what it was or what to do, so I just did what felt right and stayed in position. Within a minute or so, there was a loud CRACK! It was like the sound of a good home run. We both jumped and she said, “I think you just cured my whiplash!” What? She said lupus, not whiplash! It turned out she had been in an accident six months prior and seeing a chiropractor several times a month.
There are a few points here. One is that I didn’t cure anything. She was in the right place at the right time and her body was given the opportunity to heal itself. Second, in Chinese medicine we talk about how cold can lodge in the body and cause pathological changes. I believe this was the case for her and that I actually felt the cold leave her body. Finally, you don’t even need to touch someone in order to effect a healing response. The qi knows where to go and what to do, we just need to listen.
Product Details
- Publisher: Healing Arts Press (July 17, 2018)
- Length: 384 pages
- ISBN13: 9781620556177
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Raves and Reviews
“Unless we understand the cultural roots of a medical system we can’t appreciate its depth, its diagnostic methods, or the reasoning for its prescriptions and treatments. If we don’t compare the teachings of a medical system with other systems, we cannot understand it in a truly holistic way. In Handbook of Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda, Bridgette Shea provides insights into both the cultural roots of Chinese and Ayurvedic medicine as well as a comprehensive comparison of their similarities and differences. This perspective and its practical applications are valuable and relevant for patients seeking more information about the treatments they are receiving and invaluable for deepening the knowledge of clinicians who may be trained in only one system of healing.”
– David Crow, L.Ac., master herbalist, aromatherapist, and acupuncturist and founder of Floracopeia
“Bridgette Shea, in Handbook of Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda, has brilliantly captured the heart of two great and enduring Asian healing traditions. She illuminates and clarifies for the practitioner and layperson alike, in a clear and practical way, how these ancient systems can work together to enhance health and well-being. Without doubt, this is a timely and invaluable contribution to the study, practice, and integration of Chinese medicine and Ayurveda in the West.”
– Arnie Lade, author of Energetic Healing
“In Handbook of Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda, Bridgette has made a significant contribution to the translation of profound wisdom from two major health traditions into language that is readable, accessible, and true to the traditions from which it comes. As a practitioner of Chinese medicine, I recognize in this text a contribution to what we call the Life Nourishing tradition. In that aspect of our medicine, the practitioner strives to first embody and then educate patients about how to be engaged in their own healing. This book will be very useful to have around the clinic—not only for patients but for me as well!”
– Jason D. Robertson, M.S., L.Ac., E.A.M.P., owner of Kentucky Ginseng
“Tackling the comparison of Chinese and Ayurvedic medicine is no small feat, so kudos to Shea for attempting it, along with an interpretation of their evolution. The systems share historic roots and some general concepts, although I do not see them integrating quite so seamlessly as the book claims. The text itself tends to cover one healing system, then move on to the other, leaving detailed comparison up to the reader. This becomes a rich exercise in itself. In all, Shea, LAc, MAcOM--a Chinese and Ayurveda medicine practitioner--provides the reader with plenty of food for thought on both of these medical systems.”
– Kathi Keville, American Herb Association Quarterly Director
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