Hey, it's Nicholas! 👋 Summer officially started last week, and it's hot! So let's talk about living in harmony with the season, and some strategies for beating the summer heat... Summer According to the ClassicsChapter 2 of the Su Wen gives us advice on how to live in harmony with the seasons. Here's what it has to say about summer: The three months of summer, they denote opulence and blossoming. The qi of heaven and earth interact and the myriad beings bloom and bear fruit.
Go to rest late at night and rise early. Never get enough of the sun. Let the mind have no anger. Stimulate beauty and have your elegance perfected.
Cause the qi to flow away, as if that what you loved were located outside.
This is correspondence with the qi of summer and it is the Way to nourish growth. Opposing it harms the heart. In autumn this causes jie and malaria, and there is little to support gathering.
Summer is a very yang time of year, so it's appropriate to be active. Get up early and stay up late. Go outside and let your qi flow. If your pulse feels Surging (洪脈 hóng mài) and overflowing, that's ok. That's just the influence of the season. But even though the Nei Jing tells us to "never get enough of the sun," many areas are experiencing heat waves. This is a normal time of year to be yang and warm and active, but we still need balance. Too much heat can be damaging. How can we protect ourselves from getting too much summer heat? Cooling Foods from the Materia MedicaRemember, summer-heat is one of the six environmental qi, or one of the six external evils. It's basically heat that happens during the summer. (You can think of this as being similar to heat stroke or sunstroke.) Luckily we have some foods that can help you beat the heat: 西瓜 Xi Gua - WatermelonXi Gua (citrulli fructus) is cold, sweet, and bland. The cold temperature counters heat, the sweet flavor generates fluids, and the bland nature facilitates urination. So Xi Gua is especially useful for summertime heat with significant thirst, dark scanty urine, or dry heaves. 绿豆 Lu Dou - Mung BeanLu Dou (phaseoli radiati semen) is from the Heat Toxicity category and it also clears summer-heat. It's especially useful when thirst is an important symptom. Bensky says you can make it as a tea, but I usually just make it in congee. 白扁豆 Bai Bian Dou - Hyacinth BeanBai Bian Dou (lablab semen album) is another type of bean, this one from the Tonify Qi category. It's used for summer-heat dampness with diarrhea or vomiting. 荷叶 He Ye - Lotus LeafHe Ye (nelumbinis folium) is also from the Heat Toxicity category and is especially useful for summer-heat with diarrhea. You can get lotus leaf in Asian grocery stores, but you can't really eat it (it's too tough and fibrous). You would usually wrap other food in lotus leaf and steam it, or you can make it as a tea. But Don't Overdo It!When it gets really hot, it can be tempting to drink a lot of cold beverages and seek out cold places. But remember we have to stay balanced! It's actually possible to contract wind-cold during the summer months. This is what the formula Xiang Ru San (elsholtzia powder) is for: cold contracted during the warm summer months. Because the pores and interstices are open, you are more susceptible to sudden drafts or exposure to cold. So beware of strong air conditioning! Hopefully that gives you some ideas for staying cool this summer! If you want to get more herb facts like this, consider signing up for the 40 Daily Herb Facts course. It's 10 CEUs/PDAs for just $50. What's coming up at TCMStudy:I'm back from visiting my dad, and I just need to put some finishing touches on the Four Gates course in order to release it. After that, it's onto the next CEU course! However, I'm a bit undecided: I was originally going to embark on a long course about postpartum depression (with some lactation thrown in). But this last week, I've had really bad allergies. So that got me thinking about making a course on season allergies (herbs and acupuncture). So which would you like to see first? (Let's see if this poll thing works...)
Hope you're staying cool out there (and not on fire)! Nicholas
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TCMStudy Newsletter 07/05/26 Hey, it's Nicholas! 👋 Lately we've been talking about the point combination Four Gates for moving Liver qi, and last time we talked about some Jueyin alternatives that might be a better choice. This week we're going to switch over to the yang channels and talk about Shaoyang point pairs for moving qi. So what are these Shaoyang points, and when would we choose them over the Jueyin pairs? The Shaoyang Alternatives to Four Gates When we talked about Four Gates, we...
TCMStudy Newsletter 07/05/26 Hey, it's Nicholas! 👋 Last week we talked about Four Gates for moving Liver Qi—where this point combination came from and what we can use it for. This week we're going to talk about some alternate point pairs that you might want to use instead of Four Gates. And both of these pairs are Jueyin points: LV-5 (Ligou) + PC-6 (Neiguan) LV-2 (Xingjian) + PC-7 (Daling) So let's go ahead and dive back into Liver Qi Stagnation... Coming Soon: Post-Natal Depression But...
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