Hello dear co student Sergiy
Sorry for the delay to answer your question about Chinese six point technique .. the article that I was writing
Were from a library of a computer program that I have .. but unfortunely is not written the source of reference.
Anyway our tutor was right .. all these are surly Chinese methods and many Korean doctors took Chinese wisdom
Of medicine and made their own product (this is my personal opinion) !!!
Nevertheless I put an article for the four technique of so called Korean method !!
In the sixteenth century, the Korean Buddhist monk Sa-Am felt that treatments could be made
more effective by not only tonifying the mother phase in cases of deficiency, but by additionally
sedating the controlling phase on the same and the related meridian.
To cite the example of Lung-Metal deficiency, not only would L-9 (earth of metal) and Sp 3 (earth of
earth) be tonified, but additionally, L 10 (fire of metal) and H 8 (fire of fire; some sources prefer P 8,
considering heart fire as sacred and not to be used), would be sedated.
Conversely, if the lungs were overactive (excess), L5 (water of metal) plus K 10 (water of water)
would be sedated, while L10 (fire of metal) and H8 or P 8 (fire of fire) would be tonified.
Stated simply, in this example:
For lung, i.e., metal, deficiency:
Þ tonify earth of metal plus earth of earth;
Þ sedate fire of metal plus fire of fire.
For lung-metal excess:
Þ sedate water of metal plus water of water;
Þ tonify fire of metal plus fire of fire.
This method may also be used to treat cold and heat illnesses. Instead of using tonification and
sedating points, use fire and water points on the affected meridians.
There are several methods to implement this technique. Many Korean practitioners use a
spring-loaded "flying needle" technique, rapidly tonifying or sedating points according to direction of
meridian flow. Other practitioners use more traditional tonification and sedating techniques, e.g., in
cases of deficiency, first inserting needles at the tonification points, and removing them before
inserting needles at the sedating points. The reverse would hold in cases of excess.
I hope you find the right technique by what is valid and what is useless
Follow your heart
Best regards
D.V.
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Dionisios
Posted: Sat Feb 17, 2007 4:00 pm |