Category Archives: self-care

Blood Electrification Treatment

In our modern world people’s immune systems are burdened by exposure to toxins in food, air, fluoridated water, etc.  The good news is that electrical acupuncture medicine is a game changer, a new paradigm in modern medicine that shows measurable benefits. Electricity that is congruent with the body’s systems gets delivered to the circulatory system allowing red blood cells to regenerate faster.  The electricity alkalizes the blood through the absorption of electrons. 

This more alkaline and enlivened blood is less viscous so it is able to move more freely through small capillaries and to all areas of the body providing better responses to treatment.

From these live blood cell analysis photos below, we can see the before and after in cellular terrain from electro acupuncture.  These photos taken by Dr. Jeremy Steiner, researcher and practitioner of electro acupuncture medicine, show prior to treatment, in the top row, thick and sticky red blood cells clumped together, and white blood cells that are atrophied. 

The bottom left photo shows the same person’s blood one week later.  Notice how the blood cells have become uncoagulated, meaning more able to move through the smallest blood vessels while the white blood cells (bright clusters) which are the neutrophils of the immune system have grown larger from cleaning up the plasma terrain which is the black background.  From the bottom right photo taken two weeks later we can see the black background which is the plasma terrain has becomes less cloudy as the white blood cells have finished cleaning up blood parasites, while the red blood cells are still maintaining reduced viscosity.

Modern research has demonstrated how white blood cell activity is increased by stimulating certain acupuncture points. 

This can be useful for those who get frequent colds and flus.  Additionally, it can help those undergoing conventional cancer treatments that have caused a low white blood cell count.

How often is blood electrification treatment done?  Because of the pervasive nature of the immune system and the toxic burdens of modern life, regular blood electrification treatment is very recommended. Blood Electrification is a one point electro-stimulation that can be added in to your regular acupuncture session for better outcomes.  It can also turn around issues that have previously had poor response to treatment due to immune dysregulation or blood viscosity which are both very common issues.  For chronic conditions, daily home treatment is recommended using the silver pulser, a self treatment device that can be found here  Silver Pulser – SOTA Instruments.

Let’s get you started.  Call Kingsville Acupuncture at 519-800-4903 and we can discuss how to best incorporate blood electrification treatments into your health routine.

Yours in health,

Cynthia McGilvray, R.Ac.

Healing Osteoarthritis

Osteoarthritis is said to affect 500 million worldwide and one in five adults in the US. With so many affected it’s good to know the ins and outs of how it develops and how it gets treated for pain relief, healing and prevention.

You may have had it explained by your doctor that your arthritis is “bone on bone” and as the bones of the joint rub together, the cartilage at the end of the bone wears away leaving a rough surface instead of a smooth surface. When the joints rub against a rough surface this can inflame the tissues and create more pain.

You may still be wondering what caused the cartilage to wear away?

In essence it comes down to a deficiency of the affected channels and tissues. This also correlates with why we see more osteoarthritis is older people who also tend to have more channel deficiency. For example, osteoarthritis of the hip joint reflects a deficiency of the Gall Bladder channel that runs through the femoral head.

Osteoarthritis of the knee

joint reflects either a Stomach or Spleen channel deficiency in most cases. The Stomach channel runs through the lateral knee and the Spleen channel runs through the medial side of the joint. Similarly, after a trauma, osteoarthritis may begin to form whereby the original trauma creates a deficiency in the channel which, if unresolved, can lead to incomplete healing of bone and sets the stage for osteoarthritis.

How is Osteoarthritis treated conventionally?

The most common treatment for osteoarthritis is medication: NSAIDs, cortisone shots, and Tylenol. While medications may provide temporary relief, they do come with some serious side effects when used long term. I will go over this below. Physiotherapy can help strengthen muscles surrounding the joints however this alone is not healing bone tissue. Surgery is a last resort and can often be prevented by using acupuncture and nutrition as described further below.

NSAIDs refers to non- steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. These include ibuprofen, naproxen, and Voltaren. NSAIDs reduce the pain but harm the stomach. NSAIDs stop prostaglandins from being made by the stomach. Prostaglandins are a substance that protects the lining of the stomach from stomach acid. Without prostaglandins, the stomach forms ulcers. Patients will need

to be on broad spectrum digestive enzymes for 3 – 6 months to fix this issue. When the stomach organ is weakened it leads to all kinds of nutritional deficiencies down the road.

Cortisone shots are used to quell the inflammation because cortisone is a natural anti-inflammatory. However, cortisone shots are a hormone therapy. Hormones work on feedback loops so that the exogenous cortisone causes the body’s own innate production of cortisone to stop. When this happens, you have less cortisone and the effect of the shot stops working.

If Tylenol is being used for osteoarthritis pain, the main concern is liver damage. Tylenol creates liver inflammation and liver damage. Tylenol-induced liver damage can be treated using electrical acupuncture on the Liver channel and the dermatome spinal level that supplies nerves that feed into the liver. Although you may not be ready to go off pain meds completely, you can take a gradual approach of tapering down the pain meds as the acupuncture effects kick in.

How does acupuncture treat pain?

Electrical acupuncture at a low hertz causes the release of ACTH and beta -endorphins that have up to 30 times the power of morphine. There are also specific acupuncture points that produce a global reduction in pain and inflammation due to the endorphin production. The effect of these is not instant, because the body takes about 24 hours to make endorphins in response to acupuncture treatment. In this way acupuncture addresses the main symptom which is pain as well as the underlying tissue damage which I will go over below.

Many studies have shown that acupuncture is an effective treatment for osteoarthritis. One study looking at 18000 patients found that acupuncture was effective for multiple pain conditions including knee osteoarthritis.

How can acupuncture heal osteoarthritis?

To understand how the cartilage got stripped off the bone and how that gets reversed, we need to look at pH. In terms of health, the ideal pH of the blood cells needs to be at -7.365. Unfortunately, many people in the world have acidic blood. What happens when blood becomes acidic? Acidic blood cells will pull calcium ions from the interstitial fluid to buffer the acidity. This now creates more acidic interstitial fluid. What happens when the interstitium becomes acidic? It pulls calcium ions from the bones to buffer it. This bone tissue, having lost ions, then starts to break down and become rough, making movement of the joint painful.

Acupuncture heals osteoarthritic tissues by healing deficiency of electricity in the affected channels as well as deficient dermatomes and tissue levels.

Electrical acupuncture heals the bones and joints by restoring alkaline pH as electrons move from the electrode wire to the acupuncture needle into the tissues. In essence, pH means the percentage of hydrogen atoms that creates a negative charge. Healthy blood is pH -7.365 = -20.8 millivolts. To restore healthy pH, electrons, which are negatively charged are added comfortably to the channels and tissues via electrical stimulation acupuncture. This results in healthier tissue terrain that is alkaline. Alkaline blood transfers excess alkalinity to the interstitium. When the interstitium is alkaline, the surplus of negative ions are then donated back to the bones to form smooth cartilage so that joints can move easily and without pain.

What nutrients are most important for healing osteoarthritis?

In addition to acupuncture, best results can be obtained by providing the right nutrition to the joints. Three common issues with osteoarthritis are: calcium-magnesium balance, vitamin D and digestive enzymes.

What is the correct calcium-magnesium balance?

When the body is putting calcium deposits on the bones, as in bone spurring, osteophytes, this is an issue of calcium not being properly absorbed which is often due to magnesium deficiency. Most people need more magnesium because modern diets tend to be low due to soil depletion and many food products are fortified with calcium which throws off the correct calcium-magnesium balance.

Magnesium levels should be at least half or equal to the amount of calcium in your intake. You can try magnesium malate or chelate, however if there are digestive issues with magnesium you may

need to try another version of magnesium and try to not take too much at once. A easy way around any digestive issues is to use a topical magnesium like a spray or a rub-on oil. You can rub this all over your arms, legs and abdomen morning and night. This may feel itchy at first and if so, it’s a sign that your magnesium levels are too low, In this case keep supplementing magnesium and the itching or tingling will go away as your magnesium levels normalize.

How much vitamin D do I need? Vitamin D allows calcium to move into the bones. 2000 IUs is the minimum daily dose. I do recommend 30 000 IUs per week which amounts to 4000-5000 IUs per day.

Why do I need digestive enzymes? The mesoderm of bone is largely supplied by the energy of the Spleen and Stomach channels. The majority of the population has deficiency in the Stomach and Spleen channels. One simple way to effectively improve the functioning of the Stomach and Spleen channels apart from acupuncture is to take a broad spectrum digestive enzyme before meals. Minerals that make up bone tissue are also the hardest micro nutrient to break down especially when there is low stomach acid or low stomach functioning.

How can osteoarthritis be prevented?

The cause of osteoarthritis is a deficiency of electrical charge of the channels and tissues plus nutrient deficiency/toxins. This means that the prevention of osteoarthritis involves:

  1. Maintaining healthy pH in the channels and tissues. This is done both through regular electrical acupuncture and very importantly though blood electrification which can be done as part of an acupuncture treatment or as a daily self-treatment using the Silver Pulser (sota.com) or similar device. Blood electrification helps keep the blood and thereby all tissues alkaline which not only benefits osteoarthritis but also helps in the healing and prevention of all disease.
  2. Optimal levels if minerals through maintaining correct calcium-magnesium balance, vitamin D and digestive enzymes to ensure complete breakdown and absorption of minerals from food. Most people in the developed world are low in magnesium, vitamin D and have poor stomach functioning.
  3. Removing energy leaks that prevent healing such as exposure to dirty electricity (EMF, cell phones, smart watches, oura rings, etc). Take steps to protect yourself from dirty EMF such as by not carrying cell phones close to your body or in the bedroom at night, and by using grounding mats or grounding straps on your shoes and boots to discharge the dirty electricity (earthingcanada.ca, or earthing.com) . Other forms of energy leak can come from dental issues (mercury, root canals), stuck magnetic fields, and toxins.

If you or a loved one has been experiencing pain from osteoarthritis without relief, now is the time to take action. Call Kingsville Acupuncture at 519-800-4903 and let’s get your bones and joints healing up and aching less.

Yours in health,

Cynthia McGilvray, R.Ac.

Headaches and Migraines – Diagnosis and Treatment

Is acupuncture effective at treating headaches and migraines?
When it comes to treating headaches and migraines, large studies show that acupuncture is as effective at treating the pain as pharmaceutical drugs, and without the side effects. Effectiveness and Safety of Acupuncture for Migraine: An Overview of Systematic Reviews – PMC (nih.gov)

Effectiveness and Safety of Acupuncture for Migraine: An Overview of Sys…Migraine is a common neurological disease, which burdens individuals and society all over the world. Acupuncture…

How does acupuncture help headaches and migraines?

Acupuncture can relieve headaches and migraines in five main ways:

  1. Reduces inflammation . Inflammation leads to pain, when inflammation is treated, pain is reduced or cleared altogether.
  2. Mitigates pain. Beta-endorphins (natural pain-relievers made by the body in response to electrical acupuncture) are produced in response to a low hertz frequency.
  3. Relieves muscle tension in head, neck and shoulders. Muscle tension is often related to stress-headaches. By relaxing muscle groups in these areas, headache pain can start to disappear.
  4. Increases micro-circulation to the head, neck and shoulders. When the muscles in the head, neck and shoulders are relieved of tension through regulated blood flow, the outcome is pain relief.
  5. Improves physical health and well-being. When stress modulated hormones (cortisol, dopamine, adrenaline, serotonin) are balanced, it is much easier to manage stress and less likely for stress to trigger a headache.

How are headaches and migraines diagnosed in acupuncture medicine?

At the beginning of the session you will be asked where your headache pain is felt. The areas of pain are a key aspect of treatment as they relate to excesses and deficiencies of the main channels covering the head.  These issues involve the:

1) The Stomach channel (yellow line)  – relates to frontal headaches, cheek and jaw pain

2) The Bladder channel (blue line) – relates to inner eyebrow pain and occipital headache

3) The Triple Warmer channel (purple line)- relates to temporal headache that may also involve neck, ear and shoulder tension

4) The Gall Bladder channel (green line) – covers a large portion of the sides of the head and forehead and is the most common issue with headaches

5) Liver system – relates to pain behind the eyes and/or crown of the head

What about women with migraines? 

Women may experience a pattern of migraines or headaches around or just before their menstrual cycle.  If you are a cycling woman and you don’t know your headache triggers you may want to track the timing to see if it lines up with your cycle.  If hormone shifts are part of your headache picture, your acupuncture treatment can address your hormones so that you can achieve hormone balance as well as headache relief.

Migraines in particular tend to follow a pattern of Liver / Gall Bladder Stagnation with Stomach/Spleen Qi Deficiency. The Liver and Gall Bladder system becomes “Excess” which is why there may be a visual aura (the Liver channel “opens to the eyes” and is responsible for healthy vision). The Excess of the Liver and Gall Bladder systems then overpowers (weakens) the Stomach and Spleen systems creating the common experience of nausea and in severe cases vomiting. All the endocrine glands fall directly within the Stomach and Spleen channels so this explains one way the hormones go out of balance when these channels become depleted.

How are headaches and migraines treated with acupuncture?

The strategy for treating headaches and migraines is to first assess which channel(s) are affected and treat those. The second is to use pain relieving points that cause your body to make the feel-good chemicals, the endorphins. Stimulation of endorphin-producing points will take about 24 hours to achieve their full effect as it takes this long for the body to make endorphins in response to acupuncture. The third aspect of treatment is to address nutritional deficiencies or toxins that may be causing the headaches/migraines or interfering with their healing.


What about head trauma? 

For head pain that results from physical trauma to the head after an injury, the Pointoselect tool is used to measure low electrical resistance on the skin on points related to areas of the brain (i.e. frontal lobe, occipital lobe, parietal lobe, etc.) that may have been injured.  Electrical acupuncture is then applied to those areas indicating low electrical resistance (low energy) to provide healing energy to the areas that need it the most as identified by the Pointoselect.

How will I know if the acupuncture is working?

Typically, in the case of headaches and migraines, and depending on your pattern of occurrence, you will begin to notice at first either a reduction in intensity of pain, shrinkage of areas of pain and/or reduced frequency of headaches. Usually there is some change within the first three treatments.

If you’ve had headaches or migraines for 20 years, your first change may be that left side headache pattern shifts to right side or some other change in location. This is considered a very good sign because pain that starts to move means your headache pattern is breaking up. If I can get the pain to move then it’s the beginning of getting the pain to move out of your body completely. A change in pain location is much better than pain that remains fixed in the same location all the time.

It’s also important to understand that pain is by nature competitive. This means that the nervous system which modulates pain can only signal a few areas of strong pain at any one time. So you will usually only feel one or two main areas of pain at once. Then when the initial pain area starts to heal, other areas may start to feel painful, that previously were not painful. It’s not that you suddenly have new pain but more that since other areas have resolved, you can now receive the pain signals from these other layers that are being uncovered, similar to peeling an onion.

You may notice that these other areas of pain have had issues in the past that didn’t get resolved. For example, before your headaches started, you were having hip pain. The headache pain got worse and you stopped noticing the hip pain and forgot about it. Now that the headaches are resolving, you feel your hip pain again. These older layers that got put on the back burner can now get fully resolved.

What else can I do to relieve or prevent headache or migraine pain?

  1. The first step is to rule out dehydration since lack of water or fluids is an easy fix and a common cause of irregular headaches. Sometimes dehydration is not easily fixed by simply drinking more water. If you find that you are still thirsty after drinking more water and are peeing out the water more than usual, the solution may be that you need electrolytes. A simple way to add electrolytes is to use Celtic or Himalayan sea salt (try one 1/4 teaspoon added to your water) or drink coconut water. If that doesn`t solve it, you may need a more comprehensive electrolyte blend such as Re-Lyte or similar that is a mix of sodium bicarbonate, magnesium, calcium and potassium in a powder form. Mix with water for a nice-tasting drink.

2) Keep a headache diary. Consider the time when the headaches/ migraines first appeared, triggers and anything relating to their recurrence. Caffeine withdrawal from quitting or reducing intake of coffee or even tea can create severe headache for a day or so.

3) Since many headaches and migraines have a Liver/Gall Bladder channel imbalance as part of the picture, you may want to look for things in your diet/lifestyle/medications that could be causing this imbalance.

4) Rule out side-effects of your medications by looking them up on drugs.com. Lyrica has headaches listed as a common side-effect. Tylenol is hard on the liver. Relying on Tylenol for long term pain relief may be significantly contributing to headaches and migraines. There are other alternative forms of pain relief, acupuncture being a major one. Acupuncture can also be used to detox and repair liver damage from medications.

5) In terms of diet, foods that are harder on the liver/gall bladder include alcohol, plasticky “fake” fats such as margarines, or any hydrogenated oils such as hydrogenated peanut butter, denatured oils found in processed canola oil, factory processed baked goods, and deep-fried seed oils such as that found in potato or tortilla chips. Try reducing these fats and replacing them with coconut oil, extra virgin olive oil, organic butter and /or organic tallow or lard for liver-friendly fats that remain more stable at high temperatures. The liver is the body`s chemical processing plant so anything that is unnatural is unrecognizable and puts an added burden on the liver (think Splenda, aspartame, artificial flavourings, colourings, GMO foods).


If you or a loved one has been experiencing headaches or migraines without relief, now is the time to take action.


Call Kingsville Acupuncture at 519-800-4903 and let’s discuss how to best help you or a loved one get relief from pain and bring things back into balance.


Warmly,

Cynthia McGilvray, R.Ac.

Healing Dupuytren’s contracture with Acupuncture

If you are experiencing tightness, knotted tissue, poor mobility and pain in the palms of one or both hands, you may be suffering from a condition know as Dupuytren’s contracture.

Dupuytren’s contracture is a condition where the connective tissue under the skin of the palms becomes contracted, thickened and shortens over time.

This condition is inherited and tends to be more common in people of Scandinavian or Northern European descent, and more often in older people and in men . While there is no known cause, research has suggested correlations with other medical issues such as alcoholism, smoking, diabetes, seizure medications, and interestingly, hypothyroidism.

Symptoms of Dupuytren’s contracture include:

  • inability to extend the hand flat on a table
  • one or more small sore nodules on the skin of the palms
  • nodules of hardened tissue that is most often seen to connect with the ring finger or middle finger
  • the nodules tighten and thicken into bands and cause the fingers to fold forward
  • difficulty using the affected hand

What are conventional treatments for Dupuytren’s contracture?

Surgery or steroid injections are the main forms of conventional treatment. Surgery I feel should be used a last resort. More conservative treatments can be tried first. Surgery in this case involves opening up the skin over the cords and removing fibrous tissue. Surgery is not curative and the condition may return at a later time. Steroid injections come with side-effects. Steroids are hormones that alter the delicate overall hormonal balance of the body.

Left untreated, this condition can cause inability to use the hands for certain tasks. Gripping objects and straightening the fingers becomes harder.

Thankfully, there are alternative treatments.

How does acupuncture treat Dupuytren’s?

A newer conventional form of treatment is needling into the cords to break the cord that is contracting the finger. This form on treatment is described on the Mayo clinic website. The main advantage of this treatment is that there are no large incisions to heal as with surgical treatment. It can be performed in an office on an out-patient basis.

However, conventionally-used needles are still large enough to carry risk of tendon and nerve injury. The advantage of having this done by an acupuncturist is that an acupuncturist’s needles are much smaller so there is no risk of injuring tendons or nerves in the hands and there is no need for any recovery time.

Acupuncture is applied along the cords. Healthy terrain is restored using electrical stimulation whereby electrical stimulator wires are attached to the base of the acupuncture needle. You will feel either nothing at all, or a mild tapping or pulsing sensation. The amount of voltage is always carefully done to your comfort level. As healing electricity flows through the wires it moves into the tissues to support faster healing than simple acupuncture alone.

From an acupuncture point of view, Dupuytren’s contracture is a tendon issue. The tendons are governed by the liver system. This would also explain why Dupuytren’s is correlated with other conditions where the liver is compromised such as alcoholism, and seizure disorders.

Dupuytren’s is found mainly along the Pericardium and Heart channels

of the hand. Treating these unbalanced channels is essential to treatment. When disease forms along a channel it signifies that healthy terrain has been lost.

Will acupuncture reverse the contractures and nodules?

If treatment is started in its early stages complete resolution is possible and does happen in a shorter period of time than if treatment is delayed. If treatment is started in later stages, Dupuytren’s may be stabilized and more treatments will be required.

Is there anything else I can do to heal the hands?

A great self-care tool you can use is guasha on the palms, over the contractures and nodules. You will need a guasha tool and these can be found on Amazon and sometimes in your local Chinese herb shop.

  1. Apply a small amount of massage oil of any variety on to the palm .
  2. With the guasha tool, use forceful strokes over the nodules and contractures to loosen up the tissues.
  3. Stop when it becomes too uncomfortable.
  4. Repeat this process daily.

Other self-care advice:

Soak hands in hot water or apply hot compress for 15-20 minutes daily.

Massage and stretching of the hand and fingers will also help soften the tissues.

Yours in health,

Cynthia McGilvray, R.Ac.

How to Dissolve Kidney Stones

Greetings Dear Readers,

If you have kidney stones or are worried about possibly having them, here is a self-care tip:

Asparagus.

Go down to your local market and pick yourself up 2 or 3 bunches.

Raw Asparagus spears

Eat one cup of asparagus (steamed or juiced) each day for 3 or 4 days.  You’ll know this is working when you see the appearance of a white sand in your urine or cloudy urine .  This is the dissolved kidney stone material leaving your body.

Asparagus dissolves the oxalic acid crystals as well as the calcium stones caused by too much calcium supplementation either in pill form or from drinking calcium-fortified soy or almond milk, etc.  Read the labels. The body only needs a set amount of calcium at one time and will deposit excess calcium in various places in the body such as the arteries (arterial plaque) , bone spurs, and the kidneys (stones).  The body will also deposit  calcium into these tissues because it lacks various co-factors such as vitamin D which assists in the absorption of calcium into the bones, vitamin K2 and magnesium, which is extremely deficient in modern diets owing to poor soil quality.

Yours in health,

Cynthia

Eating According to Your Menstrual Cycle

Greetings Dear (Women) Readers,

Many people promote the idea that for health we need to do the same habits every day consistently.   This seems quite logical in many areas of health such as dental hygiene for example.  However, for women who are in their fertile years, the Yin and Yang fluctuations happening monthly with the menstrual cycle ask that we accommodate with subtle shifts in our diet and lifestyle.

Do you notice changes in your body at different times of your menstrual cycle?  Do you crave certain foods at different times of the month?  The wisdom of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), dating back thousands of years, details four phases of the menstrual cycle and how they affect women’s health.  Below I’ve added diet and lifestyle tips to help you synch your lifestyle with your menstrual phase for improved health.  Acupuncture can also greatly assist with symptoms associated with each phase.

The Four phases to the menstrual cycle according to TCM:

**please note that for women who have shorter or longer cycles, you will still experience these phases but the number of days for each will be different.  For more detailed information on how to understand your menstrual cycle I recommend reading the very informative book, Taking Charge of Your Fertility by Toni Weschler.

Menstrual Phase (Day 1-7)

This phase starts from the first day (Day 1) of heavy bleeding or flow (not spotting).  Due to the loss of blood, some women naturally feel tired at the start of their menses.  Some spend the day in bed.  Generally, more rest is needed at this time.  During this phase the endometrial lining is shed and then rebuilt.  The endometrial lining is building itself up in preparation for conception.  At this time it is important for women to eat Blood-building foods to assist the body in creating a rich endometrial lining which may become nourishment for a developing fetus.  To balance the body during this phase, eat more Blood-building foods such as dark leafy green vegetables and mineral-rich organic foods such as beets, carrots, black cherries, kale, spinach, hawthorne or goji berries, alfalfa, dates, apricot, prunes, wheatgrass and nettle.

Pre-ovulation Phase (Day 8 – 14)

During this phase which starts at the end of the menstrual flow, the ovaries are preparing several folicles (eggs) for ovulation.  The body becomes high in estrogen at this time.  In TCM estrogen is a Yin substance.  During this phase it is important that the body has enough Yin energy to create fertile mucous (looks like egg whites) which assist the sperm in travelling through the cervix to meet the egg.  To help the body build Yin substance it is helpful to eat Yin-building foods such as persimmon, lettuce, radish, grapes, berries, watermelon, string beans, seaweed, and mung bean sprouts.

Ovulation Phase (Day 15 – 21)

Actual ovulation lasts about a day, normally day 14 or 15 in the cycle.  The shift in hormones that occurs on this day causes the body to go from Yin to Yang.  Yang = heat and it is at this time that  a woman’s body temperature will rise by 0.5 degrees Celcius which is a key indication that ovulation has taken place.  This increase in Yang energy should continue until the end of the cycle.   At this time it is important to support the Yang energy of the body.  To support this temperature increase it is important to eat foods that have more Yang (warm, invigorating) energy.  You may have cravings for spicy warm foods such as cinnamon and ginger and feel worse from eating cold foods like bananas.  TCM recommends foods and herbs which “Nourish Essence” at this time such as walnuts, wheatgrass, ginseng, rhemannia root, chlorella, spirulina, black sesame seeds, raspberries, and blackberries.

Post-Ovulation/Pre-Menstruation Phase (Day 22-28)

During this phase the Yang or warm energy is still normally present and the focus now becomes moving the energy.

Many women notice they have more energy during the later half of their cycle and it is very beneficial to use this energy to do exercise.  Lack of exercise at this time can lead to stagnation in the Liver Qi channel resulting in breast tenderness, clotted blood flow and painful cramps.  A diet high in trans fats, processed foods and unhealthy chemicals can burden to the Liver channel.  If the Spleen energy is weak there may be heavy bleeding (Spleen controls Blood) or early menstruation.  Exercise combined with eating whole foods and healthy fats at this time will reduce breast tenderness, clots in the blood flow and cramping.  Liver Qi moving foods include spearmint, garlic, fennel, cayenne, ginger, black and white pepper, cloves, vinegar, basil, onions, leeks, scallions.  Use of moxabustion can also be used to “warm the Spleen” in cases of heavy or early bleeding.

Do you change your lifestyle according to the time of the month? Love to hear your comments and questions.

Yours in Health,

Cynthia

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Creating Harmony with the Autumn Season

Greetings dear Readers,

Autumn is upon us, the entrance way to the cooler and more introspective phase of the year. For some this brings sadness and longing for the return of warmer days and so I thought I’d share my thoughts on the Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) perspective on how to live in harmony and actually enjoy fall, also called “Metal” season according to the TCM 5 Element system.

In the 5 Element system, spring corresponds with the Wood element, the colour green, new beginnings and vigorous energy. We can see this evidenced in our world during spring when many little plants are pushing forth through the earth with great vigor, green buds on the trees that looked so lifeless only a few weeks prior, people coming out of hibernation and taking to the outdoors on bikes or walks in the park, birds laying eggs and the whole celebration of Easter as a resurrection, new life.

But how are we to understand the Metal element in our daily life? Nature seems to be betraying us with the death of much greenery, the end of the harvest, the shorter days and the need to be indoors. Metal seems to represent loss, death and the shrinking of life which sounds anything but health-promoting. In the TCM view, in order to promote balance in one’s body, mind, spirit and society as a whole we learn to embrace each phase of the year through harnessing the virtues of each element.

Standing in front of a polished brass sculpture I see my own reflection. Of the five elements, only two, water and metal, have the capacity to reflect surrounding images. Metal and water, being the two most yin elements of the 5 Elements (Wood, Fire, Earth, Metal and Water) can be associated with the yin capacity for reflection, a quiet time of inaction to allow for deeper insight. Reflecting on one’s being, one’s life, is part of the inner journey, a yin journey. Reflecting is also yin in the sense of receiving something, more passive, as opposed to yang which is more active and acts upon things. A visual message is received and is imprinted on to the shiny metal in a passive way unlike what the Wood element does when it actively pushes out roots and branches or the way fire spreads “like wild fire”. No, metal is not that. Metal sits and reflects the surroundings.

Metal, although malleable, holds its shape under most conditions. It is quite stable. It is strong, perservering and holds it’s value. Metal coins were perhaps the first monetary system of civilization to replace barter and trade economies because the stable element metal can “hold” the value of goods and services. Even during an economic recession like the one we are in now, we can see how gold trading is at its’ prime. It is the stable value that makes people want to invest in metals such as gold when many other investments are volatile and risky. During hard times and economic collapse, gold is unchanging, holding lasting value. The expression, “born with a silver spoon in one’s mouth” expresses how metal’s quality of holding value is shown in the way we associate refined or higher class culture with precious metals such as silver and gold. Similarly, on the mental plane the virtue of metal is the capacity for integrity, maintaining one’s value system even under difficult conditions.

On the human level we can also see the virtue of metal in those that have a strong sense of self-worth. When metal energy is unbalanced, a person looses sight of their own value, their self-worth. It has been suggested that a person with a metal imbalance may seek out external things like money, reputation, fame, and respect from the outside in order to compensate for the lack of self-worth they feel within. It is also suggested that such a person may have a hard time letting go of various outdated attachments, achievements, possessions and attitudes because their self-worth is so strongly tied to these things.

This last point brings us to another quality of Metal: letting go. This quality is personified quite clearly in the two metal element organs: the lungs which take air in then let it go and their partner organ, the large intestine which holds the end products of digestion, then lets them go. A 500 mL tin can hold two cups of water only, any more will spill out. Metal is often used to hold things, a metal airplane holds cargo, a car holds passengers, a pail holds water. Metal brings us down to the essentials of life in preparation for the next phase after Metal, the time of Water, or the winter season, a time of conserving energy, hibernation and retreat. I have seen this process in my own life as my dear grandfather passed away at the end of summer. As a family we must let go and grieve for a family member who has passed on. Interestingly, in many parts of Asia, the colour worn at funerals is white, the colour associated with Metal.

This transition from Metal to Water reminds me of the way Theravadan monks and nuns live their lives with a lot of metal themes such as their vow to have only five personal possessions such as a begging bowl, a razor to cut their hair, notepad and pen. Their way of concentrating on the bare essentials of life gives them the time and energy for their spiritual pursuits such as meditation, helping others and gaining realizations. Here we see the meaning of the ancient TCM view that “Metal is the mother of Water”; metal (concentration) gives birth to of water (spiritual realizations).

Even in the west we have a very metal expression “to cut dead wood” meaning to let go of aspects of our lives that will no longer bear fruit (unworkable projects, useless possessions, meaningless activities) to allow enough time and energy for important things we need to do. In other words, we let go (Metal) of what is not beneficial to us to avoid wasting our time and resources in preparation for the winter season. In winter there is less daylight time and sun (yang) energy to invigorate the body to accomplish tasks. One prepares for this period by using the fall season to pair things down. Interesting while metal often holds things, it also lets them go: many tools used to cut things down or off are made out of metal (scissors, knives, saw, axes).

I see this element playing out for me this autumn season as I let go of old projects from the summer that will never get completed or “bare fruit” so that I can concentrate on what is most essential. The abundant growth and fun and frivolousness of summer gives way to an energy of structure, concentration and settling, getting down to business. It is a sobering, contracting and minimalizing energy, as well as a grieving one as one must let go of the warmth and fruits and joys of summer for a more cold and barren (externally) season ahead. Nature is less bountiful at this time so one must use one’s limited resources more carefully.

I also notice the quality of refinement in Metal. To “sharpen the saw” is an expression about fine-tuning or refining one’s talents and skills. In the same vein, the Metal element in TCM is said to represent the adult years in the life cycle, a time when one has already acquired many skills and abilities from one’s youth (Wood and Fire phase) which can now be refined and used in the service of humanity. Similarly, the phrase to “separate the wheat from the chaff” (presumably accomplished with metal tools or machinery) expresses the same quality of letting go of what is not needed, refining, concentrating, getting down to the essence.

Metal holds structure. On a societal level structure takes the form of routines, discipline and formality. The Metal season of autumn marks a return to school for many young people, a place where academic disciplines are taught and there is a lot of structure to the day. Similarly, a marriage is a ceremony that takes a relationship to a more formal level and is often seen as the foundation of the structure of the family, and interestingly, the occasion is marked by the exchange of metal (such as gold) in the form of a ring.

Finally, with all of its structure, Metal also represents boundaries. The skin is governed by the Metal element where the lungs control the pores’ opening and closing. Our skin is the dividing boundary where the outside world ends and we begin. Skin is where we make contact with things outside of us and where we first receive other’s contact. When a baby leaves its’ mother’s womb it first feels the world through the air on it’s skin and takes its’ first breath through the lungs. Similarly, Metal forms what TCM calls our “Defensive Qi” or another word for immunity. The lungs help form the defensive qi that resides below our skin to keep pathogens out.

On a mental level, Metal’s virtue of boundaries is conveyed in the expression “good fences make good neighbors”. A person with healthy Metal can maintain healthy boundaries in relationships. They know what they are responsible for and what they are not. They know where to respectfully draw the line and stay within the boundaries of one’s roles in relationship, family, or community as friend, parent, worker, employer. ect. A person with a metal imbalance is more likely to verge on the side of co-dependence where they experience fuzzy, unclear, indistinct boundaries. They have trouble maintaining the Metal quality of respect for themselves and others in their relationships.

So here are some things you can do for yourself to experience more health and contentment in autumn:

For the physical plane:

1. Keep some sort of exercise routine. The Lungs correspond with Metal and one major way to enhance Lung energy is through deep breathing. Practicing Qi Gong, Tai Chi, yoga
or any such mind-body exercise that includes deep breathing, breath awareness and a more introspective approach will enhance Metal.
2. Thyme tea benefits the Lungs.
3. Eat orange and dark green vegetables. The beta-carotene benefits with Lungs while
the fiber-richness of the vegetables gently cleans the Large Intestine, the Metal element organ pair of the Lungs.

For the mental plane:

1. de-clutter. If you haven’t done so already, it’s time to put away the summer clothes, shelve some projects, shred old papers, clear the email inbox, pack things up and practice some “less is more”. The goal here is not to be an aesthetic or any kind of extreme, it’s just about creating some “breathing space” for the mind. With a mind less encumbered by all the junk lying around and never-ending “to-do” lists, you will have mental space to have gratitude for life’s gifts, the real meaning of Thanksgiving which is right around the corner.
2. Think about where your boundaries are (physical, emotional, mental, spiritual) and decide what in your life right now is crossing your boundaries and stressing you out. You will feel this in your body when you are in stressful situations. Your feelings are guides to where your personal boundaries are. Give yourself permission to redraw those boundaries. This can take the form of learning to say “no” to certain activities that are no longer supporting your growth, or deciding which foods do not benefit your health and deciding not to eat them or paying attention to your thought patterns and re-directing your thoughts in more positive, hopeful direction when you notice negativity creeping in.

For the spiritual plane:
1. Clarify your value system. Ask yourself “what do I believe in?” and “how do I uphold this value and belief in my daily life?” Seek out a counsellor or spiritual teacher for help.
2. Think about things you’ve had to let go of in the past that served a greater purpose. Reflect with joy and how you let go of those things you didn’t need. Celebrate the courage it took to have faith that the letting go could be beneficial. For example, as kids we lost baby teeth, it hurt for a while but then we got adult teeth which were better suited to our soon-to-be adult body. We had girlfriends or boyfriends that we broke up with. The loss hurt at first and later we felt glad to have room in our life for someone more suited to us.

I look forward to hearing your comments and questions.

Hope you have a happy fall!!