Chinese medicine encompasses mind, body and spirit
WIDE ANGLE: "You can't just talk
about symptoms. You have to go beyond symptoms to know a person more in
depth," says Mary "Cissy" Majebe, president of Daoist Traditions
College of Chinese Medical Arts in Montford. Photo by Tim Robison
In the health and wellness world,
“mind-body connection” has become something of a buzzword. But in Chinese
medicine, understanding the relationship between psychology and physiology
is ancient — not trendy.
Mary “Cissy” Majebe, president of Daoist Traditions College of Chinese Medical
Arts in Montford, puts it this way: “From a Chinese medicine perspective,
there’s really not even a distinction between the mind and the body. We are an
integrated whole emotionally, spiritually and physically.”
It makes sense that, as a holistic
view of health has become more mainstream, Chinese medicine has enjoyed more
popularity among people seeking help with conditions ranging from pain
relief to infertility to vertigo. Majebe has been practicing acupuncture for
over three decades and, perhaps more than any local person, has experienced
firsthand the shift in the way acupuncture and Chinese medicine has
been received by the Asheville community. “It’s sometimes mind-boggling
the changes that have occurred in 31 years,” says Majebe. “I think most
everybody knows that in 1990, my offices here in Montford were raided by the
North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation.” The raid followed a formal
complaint by the N.C. Board of Medical Examiners alleging she was practicing
medicine without a license. After three years of legal proceedings, this
claim ultimately was determined to be unfounded. The ordeal led to the
establishment of the N.C. Acupuncture Licensing Board, which Majebe
spearheaded.
“The interesting thing is,” she says
with apparent satisfaction, “about three years ago, I helped write the rules
and regulations for credentialing acupuncturists at Mission … and that shows
just part of the changes that have happened.” She adds that physicians are now
one of her largest referral bases.
While its popularity is growing,
especially with the rise in research connecting the ancient practice to
biomedicine, Chinese medical theory can still be quite foreign to the average
American patient. For instance, each organ, explains Majebe, has a connection
to a specific emotion. The lungs, she says, are a prime example. “If we look at
what happens when a person gets really, really sad, one of the things that a
person will talk about is a stifling feeling in the chest. It feels like there
is a weight on the chest, and it’s really hard to take a deep breath,” she
explains. “Well, the Chinese saw this, and from our perspective, the lungs are
associated with the emotion of grief.” The kidneys, she says, are associated
with shock and fear. “Everybody has heard: ‘I was so scared I almost peed my pants,’”
she says. “In Chinese medicine, fear and shock basically impact the kidneys.
And when that occurs, it is common to lose the ability to contain and hold the
urine. So all of these things have basis.”
But beyond the theoretical
connections between organs and emotions, the underlying concept for mind-body
medicine from the Chinese perspective is fairly simple. “Everything that is
impacting on us physically is going to also have an emotional impact,” says
Majebe. “When someone comes in to see me, and they have back pain and they’ve
had back pain for five years, and their doctors have said, ‘Well, I think you
might also be depressed.’ It’s like, well of course they’re depressed. You
can’t have pain without it creating other issues.”
This holistic viewpoint is why
a typical intake appointment at an acupuncture office will include a long list
of questions — some of which seemingly having nothing to do with the chief
complaint. But getting a full picture of the patient’s health requires more
information than a list of symptoms. “How would you think that you could help
[a patient] to heal — whether it’s a pain disorder or a neurodisorder or any
kind of disorder — if you don’t know who they are?” asks Majebe. “And this is
something that is very similar to the family practice doctor when I was a child
in the ’50s because the doctor knew the family. He knew the children, the
parents, the grandmothers.”
This goes beyond any sort of
psycho-emotional diagnosis as well. “When you are seeing a Chinese medicine
doctor, it’s not just about the emotions, but it’s about lifestyle. Do you live
in a home where you’re loved and supported, or is all of your life a struggle?
… All of these things impact on our ability to go out in the world and be happy
in the world. So you can’t just talk about symptoms, you have to go beyond
symptoms to know a person more in depth.”
For that matter, says Majebe, the
mind-body approach to health doesn’t cut it. “It’s not just mind-body, it’s
mind-body-spirit,” she says. “And it’s not about religion, it’s about one’s own
spiritual connection. From my perspective, we need to move to that awareness,
rather than just looking at the mind and the body.”
The source of the article is here.
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