Dear Amanda,
Nice to meet you here online!
You are welcome to study Medboo courses of traditional Chinese medicine and to log on this forum.
I’m sure you can learn something from your study with Medboo.
Now let’s discuss your questions.
Yes, there is a standard anatomical position in traditional Chinese medicine, i.e. facing south, arms fall down naturally, and body trunk, as well as legs is straightened up.
Of course it’s the head up and the feet down. We can never say the head should be down, while the legs are up.
Are you sure the text says the Yin is left and the Yang is right?
Please make sure about it.
Yes here we use Yang to overcome the Yin, but you have to be sure it’s normal Yin or pathological Yin!!!
If it’s a good balance of Yin and Yang, why shall we make trouble to use one against another?
The Yin and Yang include many aspects, you are talking the Qi and blood, but in fact here it’s the excess and deficiency, in another word, the pathology or physiology, the good balance or imbalance.
It’s not the way of using Yang to control Yin, but just on contrary, it’s reinforcing Yang to promote the cultivation of Yin.
Of course the two methods are not contradictory, not at all!
Yang is not used to “kill��?Yin!!! Yang can neither grow Yin!
When you study the Eight Principles, you will have a better picture to understand it better.
You are talking about the physiology, the clinical treatment, but you forget the bridge between them, the pathology and pathogenesis.
To study Yin and Yang, it’s not the object in TCM, the object is to understand the physiology and pathology and pathogenesis.
So you try to leap, but you even cannot walk well at the moment.
You cannot build up Rome in a day.
Very sorry to tell you, at the moment we don’t have the clinical cases to supply, especially for course A, it’s nothing to do with clinical study at all!!!
I would like to stress once more, please walk stably first, then try to leap.
It seems you have Chinese background, I think that’s very helpful to your study of TCM.
But it’s still not an easy job to study traditional Chinese medicine, it would take many years to grasp it, not some days or some months, it’s years and years!!!
Later, you do need the face to face instruction, including both clinic and lectures.
In China, TCM students in colleges and universities would study five years in full time, but many of them cannot treat patients after graduation, so they need to either practice for several years or to take the postgraduate study for several years, so maybe all together 10 years, the students could become more or less a doctor of traditional Chinese medicine.
To be a very good and experienced doctor is another matter!
You have to have a good chance to follow a teacher, a good one for some years, 3, or 5, or even more.
So, 10 years plus 3 or 5, maybe up to the age of 40, you can be a good doctor of TCM, if you have the good luck, and good talent, too!!!
Ok, so far so much!
Sincerely yours
Tutor |