YIN AND YANG HEALING
by Dr. Lawrence
Wilson
©
May 2023, LD Wilson Consultants, Inc.
All information in this article is for
educational purposes only. It is
not for the diagnosis, treatment, prescription or cure of any disease or health
condition.
DEFINITION
Yang and yin is an ancient and basic concept in physics. It has to do with complementary
opposite forces, the speed of atomic particles, and more. The Old Testament of the Bible begins
with references to this idea:
Genesis, Chapter 1:
Verse 5:
"He separated light from darkness."
Verse 7:
"He separated heaven from earth".
Verse
10: "He called the dry land earth, and the gathering of the waters He
called seas".
Verse
14: "Let there be lights in the heavens to separate day from night".
Verse
27: "In His image, He created male and female."
- Genesis, Chapter 1, The New English Bible
Yang means warm,
contracted and more centripetal in nature. Yin means colder, more expanded and more centrifugal in
nature.
We use the words yang and yin because
the English language does not have good equivalents. These words are found in very ancient Hebrew (Ebre) and in some Oriental languages.
YIN AND YANG IN DEVELOPMENT SCIENCE
Applying the
principles of yin and yang properly is a key idea in development science. It is one of the main differences
between development and most other healing systems. The concept is not used much in either conventional medical
or natural Western methods of health care.
We use it in
relation to diet, nutritional supplementation, lifestyle, detoxification
methods, metabolic typing, toxin avoidance, drinking water, all the recommended
healing procedures, and even beliefs and attitudes that we find favor health
over disease. That is how important
it is in development science!
We find that
balancing yin and yang 1) reduces stress enormously, 2) leads to spiritual
development in a balanced way, 3) removes many more toxic metals and toxic
chemicals, 4) favors most enzyme reactions in the body and 5) improves vitality
in a way that nothing else can do.
It is as though the
body is like a seesaw and extremes of yin or yang energy unbalance it, like
swinging wildly to one side or the other side. This places tremendous stress on the body and leads to
illness. Keeping oneself balanced,
on the other hand, reduces stress and greatly favors healing. Let us examine how balancing yin and
yang is used in development science.
METABOLIC TYPING
The ideas of two complementary opposite forces is the most
comprehensive system available regarding metabolic types. It is the basis for typing the bodies
as fast or slow oxidizers.
Fast oxidation is much more yang, while slow oxidation is more
yin. In general, the more extreme the
oxidation rate, the more extreme the yin-yang imbalance. Several acupuncturists have confirmed
for me the correlation between yin and yang and the oxidation rate, as
determined via hair mineral analysis using Dr. EckÕs ratios as standards.
Other doctors assess
the oxidation rate in other ways, and their methods are not as accurate, in my
experience. Beware of using blood
or urine tests, questionnaires or other means to assess the oxidation rate for
this reason.
Hair mineral ratios
and yin and yang. A higher sodium/potassium ratio is more
yang, while a lower ratio is much more yin. Other ratios are less clear, although most likely a lower
calcium/magnesium ratio is somewhat more yang, while a high calcium/magnesium
is often, though not always much more yin.
Supplements. All synthetic and
even natural vitamins, minerals and herbs tend to be yin compared to whole,
natural foods. Therefore, I try
not to use many supplements of any kind.
Detoxification procedures.
Those that are hot and dry such as sauna baths are more yang. Those
that are cold and damp such as juice therapy, homeopathy, herbs or any baths
are more yin.
Toxins. Most toxins are
extremely yin because they disrupt life.
This includes toxic metals, and toxic organisms such as bacteria and
viruses. Their effects on the body
can be either yin or yang, but generally their effect is yin. Fungi and parasites such as worms and
amoeba in the body are even more yin.
Most medical drugs
and almost all herbs, along with the isolated vitamins and isolated minerals
are yin, especially homeopathic remedies.
For this reason, all should be used sparingly.
Electromagnetic fields generally have a very yin effect, as does
ionizing radiation from nuclear power plants and A-bomb fallout. Yin is generally harmful on planet
earth today and best avoided.
WHY ARE SO MANY BODIES TOO YIN?
Traditional
Chinese medical practitioners would say the reason for so many yin bodies is
deficient chi or vital energy.
Many factors can deplete the chi including one's diet, lifestyle, stress
and other factors.
In
particular, since 1940 or so, several factors have combined to render most
bodies extremely yin.
á
Ionizing radiation. The atomic bomb, through testing and accidents,
has spread radioactive fallout all over the planet. Low-level emissions occur from nuclear power plants, smoke
detectors, computer monitors, television sets and fluorescent lamps. Widespread medical and dental use of
x-rays, radioactive dyes and radiation therapy add to radiation exposure. Uranium mining is another source of
low-level contamination.
Fortunately, humanity has learned a lot about radioactive fallout and
the safety is improving. However,
the problem of rogue nations developing weapons and using them remains a
serious problem.
á
Electromagnetic pollution.
This is also very yin and growing at an astronomical rate with the
advent of cell phone towers everywhere, computers in every home, especially
laptop computers and hand-held devices like portable telephones. These all give off fields that are very
yin and chaotic.
Riding in airplanes with large spinning turbines in them near your
head, and even riding in automobiles with large alternators spinning nearby,
also give off electromagnetic waves of varying degrees of chaos. Even house wiring and common radio and
TV signals are quite yin, though not nearly as bad as cell phone radiation.
á
Toxic metals and chemicals everywhere. Industrial
development and growth of the chemical industry has spread thousands of yin
toxic chemicals throughout the environment. These include toxic metals such as lead, mercury, cadmium,
arsenic, aluminum and beryllium.
It also includes thousands of toxic chemicals such as solvents,
pesticides, plastics and many other classes of compounds.
á
Changes in the food supply. These have been massive in the 20th
and 21st century, and almost all are more yin. They include: soils depleted of
minerals due to soil mining, essentially, use of hybrid crops, use of
pesticides, use of superphosphate fertilizers. For example, wild fruit, like
crab apples, are small, hard and not too sweet. Cultivated fruit is often larger and sweeter (more yin).
Also,
food is grown far away and transported thousands of miles in many cases to get
to you. Also, some is irradiated,
another very yin procedure.
á
Food refining. Most food
processing and refining have made food far more yin. This includes refining of wheat, sugar, rice and other
grains. It also includes adding
thousands of toxic chemicals to prepared food, most of which are yin or have a
yin effect.
á
Dietary changes. The
diets have also become more yin, with the consumption
of much more white sugar, white flour instead of whole grains, and less red
meat and fat consumption. Items like
soda pop, beer and wine are also far more yin than water, tea or coffee. Sugar-eating
is probably the most important of all of these dietary shifts.
á
Medical drug use. This is a more yang approach to health care than some types, but
now has turned yin because it is so overused. Especially the passage of Medicare and Medicaid in America
in 1967 and similar socialized programs in other nations,
have resulted in tremendous use of yin chemicals as medicines. Almost all prescription drugs are
yin. This includes most popular
drugs such as antibiotics, anti depressants and many others. Surgery and radiation therapy are also
extremely yin.
á
Recreational drug and alcohol use. This includes marijuana, heroine,
alcohol, tobacco, ecstasy, cocaine, psilosybin or
magic mushrooms and other drugs are very yin. They cause a Òyin highÓ.
á
Planetary pollution. This
has caused a mixture of more yin and more yang conditions. As explained earlier, toxic metals are
yang, of themselves, but they cause chaos in the bodies, making them much more
yin. Oxygen in the air is reduced
in the cities, which is more yang. However, this also causes disease that
is yin. Polluted air, water and
food, overall, has a very yin effect on mankind today.
With these rather
severe changes have come new diseases, while some older ones such as
tuberculosis and typhoid fever are not as prevalent. This is how yin and yang, as well as nutrition, interact
with disease states, another complex topic for another article.
CORRECTING THE YIN-YANG BALANCE – FOOD AND DIETARY CONCEPTS
Principles:
1. The balance
of yin and yang in the body is often determined by the food one eats more than
any other single factor. Thus,
a basic understanding of how food affects oneÕs yin and yang balance is essential.
2. Many qualities of a food affect its yin or yang qualities. These include, but are not limited to its
freshness, nutrient content, animal or vegetable derivation, how it is
prepared, how and where it grows, toxins it contains, level of etheric energy, and even such things as its color, texture
and other qualities.
3. The yin-yang balance in foods has little to do with a
ÒbalancedÓ diet in modern dietetics.
The Western idea of a balanced diet is based on balancing various food
groups such as fruits, vegetables and grains. This is a different idea.
4. Toxins, nutrients, fiber and other chemical factors found in
all foods can be yin or yang, depending on their chemical nature.
5. Freshness is a very important quality to determine yin or yang. Fresh food is far more yang in almost all
cases. Denatured, processed,
refined, old, stale, wilted, or spoiled food is much more yin. This has to do with the etheric energy of foods, discussed below.
Yang quality and etheric energy. Etheric energy is sometimes also called vitality or life
energy. Some people have
instruments to measure it. A
food that is higher in etheric energy, or a cooking
method that preserves or enhances etheric energy,
will be more yang. Fresher foods
have much more etheric energy and are therefore much
more yang. Old, stale or canned
foods have much less etheric energy and are more yin.
Frying food actually
seems to preserve the etheric energy a little
more. This is why Oriental cooking
recommends stir-frying, and it is one reason that organic blue and yellow corn
chips may be excellent foods, even though they are made with cooked vegetable
oils.
6. Macrobiotics is a modern version of this approach to dietetics. This
science was introduced to America by Mr. Michio Kushi in the 1960s from Japan. While some of it is excellent, some
parts of it must be changed, in my opinion, based upon hair mineral analysis
research. For
more on this subject, read Macrobiotics, And
Modifications For Development Science.
Macrobiotics is
based on ancient Japanese and Chinese Taoist philosophy. It divides foods into those that are
more yin in nature, versus those of a yang
nature. The chart below depicts
the way foods tend to be classified on a scale from yang to yin:
Salt Eggs Red Meat
Poultry Fish Grains Vegetables
Fruit Sugar Drugs/Alcohol
YANG NEUTRAL YIN
Yang foods. The most yang foods are sea salt, meat, eggs, poultry, fish and
cooked vegetables. Plants that grow
beneath the ground are more yang, while those that
grow up in the air such as most fruit, are more yin. Cooked grains, cooked beans and cooked vegetables are in the
middle.
Yin foods. Raw vegetables, and even more so fruits, juices, sugars, alcohol
and drugs are more yin (watery and expansive). Also, anything made with water is much more yin such as
soups, smoothies, and watery foods such as eggplant and all fruits. Dried fruits are less watery, but are
still extremely yin due to their sugar content. Most raw plants and herbs are also very yin. Also, chopping a food into tiny parts,
grinding it up, blending it, pureeing it, or juicing it also causes the substance
to become much more yin in nature.
In contrast, whole foods that are not chopped up are more yang. Let us
discuss specific types of foods:
Specific Foods.
Meats. The most yang are cooked eggs and red meats such as lamb, beef,
rabbit and especially wild game.
The next most yang are poultry such as chicken,
ostrich, duck and turkey. Dark
meat is more yang than white meat due to its iron content and other
differences. Fish tend to be more yin, especially today as they contain more mercury and other
toxins due to contamination of the oceans.
Cooking the meat and
adding some salt makes it even more yang.
Eating food raw or pureed makes it more yin.
Grains. Grains that are most
yang include millet, rice, amaranth and
buckwheat. Corn is somewhat less
yang. However, blue corn is a
superior food today because it is less hybridized and contains a very helpful
form of selenium.
Quinoa, kamut and other grains are slightly more yin, but fine to
eat. Oats, rye, barley and wheat
are less yang due to extensive hybridization. These are not as healthful today mainly
for this reason. Please avoid all
wheat, as it has become an irritating food due to hybridization.
White rice and white
flour are much more yin than natural brown rice and natural whole wheat. This is one reason we recommend brown
rice, in addition to its superior nutrient content.
Methods of preparation:
Cooking grains or any food, and adding some salt, makes them more yang.
Pressure cooking makes a food a
little more yang, which is generally very good. Cooking at high temperature (baking or
roasting) or cooking for a long time is also more yang,
but damages the nutrients in the food, so I do not recommend it. Some baked vegetables are okay, but do
not use baking or roasting exclusively.
Fermenting grains or any food, tends to make
them more yin because ferments (yeasts and fungi) are very yin organisms. Also, aldehydes
produced by most fermenting organisms are a more yin toxin.
Sprouting grains makes them more yin. Soaking any food makes that food a little more
yin.
Stir-frying or deep frying has a mixed effect. The high heat tends to make food more yang. However,
it is too high and damages the food, which has a yin effect. Also, just stir-frying does not cook
vegetables enough. We need them
soft, not crunchy. So if you
stir-fry, add water to the pot and let the vegetables cook more in the steam
until soft.
Vegetables. Those that grow
below ground are more yang such as rutabaga, carrot,
onion, daikon, shallots, garlic, horseradish root,
celery root and ginger.
Stems and leaves of
plants are a little less yang than vegetables. They include cauliflower, broccolini, red cabbage, Brussels sprouts, celery and a few
others.
Nightshade vegetables are much more yin because they are really
fruits. The botanical definition
of a fruit is something with seeds.
Said differently, a fruit is an expanded ovary of a plant. The seeds are like the eggs of a plant.
The nightshade
vegetables include potatoes, tomatoes, eggplant and all peppers. They contain a toxin called solanin. These
include white and red potatoes, all types of tomatoes, eggplant and both sweet
red and yellow peppers, green peppers, ground pepper, and all hot chili
peppers. These are all best
avoided.
Other vegetables that are really fruits and therefore more yin are cucumbers, okra, and the entire squash family. These include zucchini, summer squash,
butternut, spaghetti, acorn squash and others. Some of the winter squashes are not too yin (butternut,
spaghetti, and acorn types), but the summer squashes such as zucchini are quite
yin and best avoided.
Fungi, such as
mushrooms, are more yin because this is a quality of
all yeasts and fungi.
To review, raw
vegetables are far more yin than cooked vegetables. Fermented vegetables such as sauerkraut are more yin than
cooked vegetables.
Eggs and dairy
products such as milk, cream, cheese and yogurt. These foods are fairly yin. Fresh, unpasteurized and unhomogenized dairy is best, as it is more yang.
Pasteurizing adds heat, but damages the milk so it becomes toxic and
thus more yin.
Cheese and yogurt
are more yang than milk because they contain less sugar. However, they are still quite yin foods
and need to be eaten only in small quantity for this reason. Ghee is similar to butter.
Fruits: All fruit tends to
be very yin. Fruit grows above
ground, and anatomically all fruits are expanded parts of plants. The least yin are
small, tart fruits such as some berries.
The sweeter the fruit, the more yin, since it
contains more sugar. Some, such as
strawberries are very yin, even if they are not sweet. This is due in part to the fact that
the seeds are scattered throughout and on the outside of the plant.
Juicy fruits such as
apples, peaches, pears, plums, apricots, loquats, and others are in the middle
among the fruits.
The most yin fruits
are:
1) Very sweet fruits,
(figs, dates, raisins and bananas).
2) Tropical fruits,
such as coconut, palm, avocado and all citrus fruits. These include orange, lemon, lime, tangerine, pineapple and
grapefruit). Of these, grapefruit
is probably a little better as it is less sweet, but all are very yin and are
forbidden on a development program.
Water for drinking. Quality spring or mineral water is the most yang. The quality will depend upon the
minerals that are in the water. Tap water is
often a little more yin due to the toxic chemicals
found in it and the chemicals added to it such as chlorine and fluorides. Soft water is more yin than hard water, which
contains more minerals.
Distilled and reverse osmosis water are
significantly more yin, as they contain virtually no minerals. Reverse osmosis is extremely yin and to be
avoided.
Artificially alkaline water is quite yin and harmful for this reason.
The amount of water one drinks.
Drinking the correct amount of water, which we find is between 2 and 3
quarts, or 2 and 3 liters or 64-96 ounces, tends to make the body much more
yang.
One might think that
drinking less water would make the body more yang, but
it does not. It makes it more yin, perhaps by upsetting digestion and elimination,
affecting the kidneys, or for other reasons. Drinking too little also seems to raise blood sugar, a yin
condition.
Drinking too much
water – more than about 3 and a half quarts or liters, also makes the
body more yin.
Other beverages:
Juices are all very yin!
This is because they are raw, cold, and broken apart. We suggest that adults may have 10-12
ounces of carrot juice due to its superior nutritional qualities, but no
more.
1-2 ounces of fresh
wheat grass juice is an alternative
Teas are cooked
vegetables, basically, and are more yang than juices, for example. Non-caffeinated mild teas are okay, but
do not add sugar or other sweeteners, as that would make them more yin.
Coffee is a more yang beverage, and one cup
daily of regular coffee (not cappuccino, or other strong coffee) is generally
okay. Adding sweeteners,
chocolate, etc. makes the coffee much more yin, however, and makes it much less
healthful.
Alcohol is extremely yin and to be totally avoided in all forms. If you must have a little alcohol, beer
is probably the best alcoholic drink, in our experience. Wine is not only yin, but generally
contains many more pesticide residues with arsenic and lead. Distilled alcoholic beverages such as
gin, whiskey, vodka, tequila and others are even more yin as most of the
minerals have been removed during distillation.
Food additives. Almost all food
additives such as preservatives, sweeteners, dough conditioners, natural or
artificial flavors and colors, and thousands of others, are almost all very yin.
Food Processing.
Cutting up vegetables, grinding grains, refining food, juicing it or eating
food raw is more yin. Eating foods whole is much more yang.
Cooking adds heat energy and this makes food more yang,
unless the food is overcooked.
YIN AND YANG NUTRITIONAL SUPPLEMENTS
Minerals. Mineral supplements
are more yang than most other supplements.
Animal-derived products such as glandulars
are also fairly yang supplements.
Food-based and
all-natural products. These tend to be more
yang than synthetic vitamin supplements, although it depends how they are made.
Synthetic supplements such as ascorbic acid, MSM, and synthesized
B-complex vitamins tend to be somewhat more yin.
Herbal extracts, teas, powders and others. Almost all herbal
extracts are yin and should be used only in small amounts for short periods of
time for this reason. Those made
with alcohol are more yin due to the alcohol. Glycerin is less yin. Kelp has a lot of salt in it, so it is
a lot more yang than most other herbal supplements. For details, read Herbs.
Products derived from bacteria, yeasts, algae and fungi. These are very yin
due to their origin. This is generally not helpful. They may include yeast-based vitamins, fungally-derived Òvegetable
enzymesÓ, and algae such as spirulina, chlorella,
blue-green algae and others. The
latter appear to be toxic as well.
Chlorella is a chelator, and not helpful for
this reason. For more details,
read Chelation.
Salt. Salt tends to
contract foods and dry them out, which is more yang.
Herbs and spices. A little dried herb
on foods is okay. Using a lot
makes the food more yin.
Chemicals. Adding chemicals
always makes food more yin.
Soaking grains, beans, nuts or seeds tends to make them more yin.
Sprouting beans, seeds or grains makes them more yin.
Wine, vinegar,
fruit, sugar, honey and sweet herbs.
These add a lot of yin energy to oneÕs cooking.
Fermenting foods tends to make them more yin, because the
ferments are fungi or yeasts, which are very yin. Some fermented foods are okay such as cheeses, yogurt,
kefir, miso and sauerkraut. For details, read Fermented Foods.
Canned and frozen
foods. These are more yin than fresh food
Drying food makes it a little more yang, as it removes water.
Older, spoiled and rotten food is much more yin.
FOOD QUANTITY
Overeating or undereating makes one more yin.
Fasting has a yin effect today because the bodies are so depleted that it
makes them worse. In the past,
fasting had a more yang and healthier effect, which is why fasting
is in the Bible and other ancient books.
Today, this has changed, however, and fasting is not so good.
A fast of a day or
two is not too bad. Longer fasts are
harmful because they deplete the bodies even more. There will be benefits of fasting, such as resting the
digestive system. However,
everyone we work with who has done fasting is more depleted after the fast.
For this reason,
books about fasting written 50 or 100 years ago do not apply today. The author worked as the medical
director at a Natural Hygiene fasting spa for several years, and was
disappointed in what he observed.
LIFESTYLE, AND YIN AND YANG
Rest. Enough rest makes
the body much more yang. This is
about 8 to 10 hours nightly and perhaps a short nap during the day. Not enough rest, or too much laying in bed all day, for example, tend to make the body
more yin. Too much rest is not a
problem today. Not getting enough
rest is almost a universal problem.
Bedtime is important. Going to bed earlier – by 9 PM or earlier
– makes a person quite a bit more yang. Going to bed later – after 11 PM – makes a
person more yin.
This is quite an important factor in some cases. Napping is very good to make one more yang as
well. The nap need not be a long
one. Fifteen minutes or so is
fine.
Muscle tension is also very yangizing,
at least for a time. Muscle tension is a
compressive force, so it tends to make one more yang. To tense up the body is a common yang or confrontative
response to stress.
Of course, if the muscle tension
continues too long, or squeezes off the blood or nerve supply to an area of the
body such as the neck or back, then it eventually becomes a yin force as it
destroys the body.
Exercise. A little exercise,
which tenses the muscles and causes deeper breathing, makes the body a little
more yang.
However, too much exercise, especially vigorous exercise, wears out the
joints, depletes nutrients too much, weakens the adrenals, and makes one more
yin, over time.
The correct amount
of activity and exercise is helpful to make the body a little more yang. Not much is needed, however, for most
people, such as a half-hour walk or gentle workouts with a treadmill or weights
several times a week. No exercise
makes the body a little more yin.
Exercise is not as important a factor in making a body yin or yang
compared to diet
and rest.
Sexual activity. Sexual activity with
orgasms and ejaculation tends to make a person much more yin. Sex play without orgasms and
ejaculation is not a problem, however.
No sexual activity
tends to preserve a certain yang energy in the body,
unless a person is so unhappy without sex that this impairs mental
functioning. In this case, a
little sex is best to keep the mind and body in balance.
Sex with orgasm and
ejaculation more than once weekly is excessive for most people. It definitely makes the body more yin, as it depletes zinc, selenium and other vital
minerals.
Women reabsorb some
of their sexual fluids, and they obtain some minerals from the menÕs sexual
fluids, so regular sex affects them less in a nutritional manner. However, womenÕs energy field usually
opens up wide during sex, which is another yin effect of sex for women. Orgasm for a man, however, is quite
depleting of yang energy, according to Chinese acupuncture philosophy.
Breathing. Deep breathing makes
one more yang by removing toxins, improving circulation and oxygenation of the
body, enhancing the oxidation rate, and perhaps by other means such as
balancing the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems.
Toxin exposure. Living a very clean
life with little toxin exposure definitely makes one more yang today. Exposing oneself to poor quality air,
toxic and chemicalized foods, toxins in water, or
other toxins through contact, for instance, makes one much more yin.
Stress. Stress in oneÕs life can have a yang effect or a yin effect. It depends on the type of stress and on
the individual. This is more
complex. Stress can be a
compressive or yang force, but it can also destroy or just scare the person,
and this would be an extremely yin effect.
Three highs or four
highs pattern. This is seen on hair
tests in which a person is in a four highs pattern and appears like a fast
oxidizer in many ways. However,
when the person relaxes, he or she changes to slow oxidation and the attitudes
and attributes change to a more yin tendency. In Chinese acupuncture, three or four highs pattern is
called yang rising, or perhaps toxic yang. This is the same as saying a stress yang, rather than a
healthful yang quality.
A calcium shell
pattern on a hair analysis is a more yin response to stress, in contrast. Here the person withdraws and hides,
essentially.
Excessive stress. Too much stress, however, depletes vital
nutrients, allows toxic metals to accumulate, damages body tissues and
structures, and eventually destroys the body, making it far more yin. This is what happens when one is in
slow oxidation as one ages.
Also, in many, but
not all slow oxidizers, when more stress is applied, they tend to become slower
oxidizers. This has to do with the
type of stress and the general condition of the body.
Responses to stress: dissociative or yin versus confrontative
or yang. While some stress
elicits a yang response, other types of stress in some people elicits a more
yin or dissociative
effect. For example, a calcium
shell pattern is extremely yin and represents a dissociation of splitting off of
the personality, which we say is a withdrawal from society
psychologically. This is very yin
or hiding or running away.
Four highs, in
contrast, is a more confrontive response to stress or more
yang response of fighting back.
Why some respond in a yin manner and others in a more yang manner has to
do with many factors including oneÕs nutritional state, psychological
tendencies, early childhood traumas, and perhaps other factors.
BALANCING THE SYMPATHETIC AND PARASYMPATHETIC NERVOUS SYSTEMS
The
sympathetic nervous system has a yin or catabolic and destructive effect on the
body. However, it is yang in
nature, meaning hot and active.
The parasympathetic nervous
system has a more yang effect on the body, as it is regenerative and
restorative of health. However, it
is much more yin or passive in its quality. The parasympathetic nervous system is associated with rest
and relaxation.
This is a good example of where
a factor may appear one way (yin or yang) but its effect on the body is the
opposite.
PSYCHOLOGY AND YIN-YANG BALANCE
Another powerful
factor that modifies the yin-yang balance as much as food in all cases is
psychology. This means that
certain approaches to life, attitudes, emotions and such, are yin and others
are yang.
Here is where a
total approach to healing is so important, rather than just diet, or just
lifestyle, or just some therapy.
Without this total approach, many factors will
invariably be missed by the practitioner. It may not be necessary to consider all the lifestyle,
dietary and other factors in the beginning, but eventually they matter a lot.
Here we also see why
in ancient Chinese holistic medicine the doctor was taught to look at many
things, from the shape of the head, the hands and other body parts, to the
color of the skin, the tongue, the pulse, the excretions and more. We must do some of this, too, though
the hair analysis offers a remarkably simple means to evaluate a personÕs
overall condition, though it does not always tell us why one is the way he or
she is. Along with a few other
simple items we will discuss later, it will suffice in most cases.
Yang Psychology = fast oxidizer psychology. The fast oxidizer
mentality is yang. People with
these traits tend to be more confrontive, more
engaging, more expressive emotionally, and more aggressive, arrogant, tight or
uptight, angry overtly or easily angered, and in extreme cases paranoid.
The voice tends to
be higher, and the person more extroverted, positive in outlook, fun and happy,
usually physically stronger and future-oriented rather than past-oriented. There is usually more interest in sex,
especially among the men. They are
ÒhotÓ, to use a teenager term, meaning they have higher hormone levels and are
more interested in being social and sexual. These traits are understood chemically very well and
explained in the book, Development And Hair Mineral Analysis and other articles.
Other yang
psychological qualities are groundedness,
centeredness, reality-based rather than fanciful, hard-nosed, domineering,
controlling, practical, business-like, on time, detail-oriented, mentally sharp
and basically present in this reality.
In excess, they are too grounded and self-centered, closed to new ideas,
selfish or self-centered, and too hard-nosed.
Yin Psychology = slow oxidizer attitudes and traits. These traits tend to include being more
relaxed, slower-moving, weaker, more emotional, often
more fearful and depressed, apathetic, cloudy or mentally foggy, ethereal, and
not nearly as well grounded or centered.
They tend to be less confronting, and more repressed or suppressed
emotionally. Their general
demeanor is more ÒshatteredÓ, which is a very yin tendency or direction of
movement.
They are often
eccentric in a different way, with lower energy, more confusion, and sometimes
less interest in sex. They are
often more serious, definitely more negative in their outlook, and more often
think and live in the past or what they believe was a happier, more glorious
past. They are more likely to use
yin drugs such as marijuana, and are more dependent and often more
child-like. Children, however, are
actually more yang than most adults because they are healthier and their bodies
are more compact. Hippies, for
example, are much more yin in their attitudes and behavior than are most blue
collar and physical laborers, who tend to be far more yang in their attitudes.
Most people, of
course, are a mixture of these traits, just as their body chemistry is a
mixture of various imbalances both yin and yang. However, one or the other prevails. A hair mineral analysis is often
amazingly accurate to help one to know which set of traits is more likely
present. Note that all adult fast oxidizers are just
slow oxidizers under a tremendous amount of stress, even if the mineral ratios
appear good. However, an adult
with a fast oxidation pattern is much more likely to demonstrate more yang
psychological qualities.
Other Major
Influences On Yin And Yang. Personal habits matter, such
as answering the call of nature quickly. Otherwise one becomes quite depleted and yin. Other factors are the colors one wears, aloneness versus being more social, oneÕs
companions and partners, and more.
These may be discussed in a later article. However, they are generally not as important as the factors
discussed above.
RELIGIOUS SYMBOLS OFTEN SIGNIFY THE BALANCE OF FORCES OF NATURE
It is interesting
that the symbols of most major religions are those of balancing the forces of
yin and yang. This applies to the
Christian cross, the Jewish star, the Taoist circle of yin and yang, and some
others. The Muslim symbol is not
one of balance, interestingly.
Environmental Yin And Yang.
Colder and wetter climates are more yin, while tropical or hotter and
drier areas are far more yang. Yin
climates require more yang foods.
This can be why Eskimos do well on a diet of mostly meat and fat, two
yang foods.
In contrast, people
who live in tropical climates often eat more fruit and less cooked food, in
general. When people in a hot country
eat more meat, they become too yang and often ill. This often translates into aggressiveness, for example, as
seen in a hot area – the Middle East. Similarly, Eskimos would not fare well on a diet of fruit
and would become ill. Even the US
army discovered this during World War II and had to alter its rations for the
soldiers depending upon where they were fighting and living.
People in tropical
climates often eat more hot peppers, in such nations as Mexico, India, Thailand
and many other nations. At first,
this might seem strange since the peppers are ÒhotÓ in their taste. However, peppers are, in fact, very yin
foods although they may taste spicy or hot.
Altitude and other
environmental factors. A higher altitude is
more yang, while a lower altitude is more yin. This has to do with air pressure,
specifically of oxygen, a very yin element. So, for example, living by the ocean in sunny, warm
California is quite yin. One
notices the attitudinal differences here, compared say to living in cold, high
altitudes of Asia or even America.
The elements. Solid, heavier matter is more yang,
while lighter elements are more yin.
So uranium, lead, cadmium and mercury, for example, are more yang. However,
radioactivity is extremely yin, so uranium is not quite as yang as the other
heavy metals for this reason.
Lighter elements
such as lithium, zinc, selenium, magnesium, and even calcium and aluminum are
more yin elements. They also
happen to be more alkaline-forming as well.
This is confusing,
however, because although as one becomes healthier one removes the heavy
metals, replacing them with the lighter, more yin elements, the
body becomes much more yang, overall.
The reason is that the heavy metals, while more yang,
are also incorrect for the body and cause total chaos, which is a very yin trait. Reducing their amount and effect in the
body thus reduces chaos and this has a very yangizing
effect.
Weight and yin-yang balance.
An overweight body tends to be more yang
in some ways because it is more massive.
However, in most cases today, the overweight people are far more yin
because they are more ill, chaotic, ÒexpandedÓ and toxic with too much sugar,
water and other yin material.
Often, overweight people look waterlogged or ÒpuffyÓ and expanded.
It is very different
from a body that is large but muscular only. This body is much more yang, as muscle is more yang and
dense than fat and water.
Body shape. The shape of the body is also related to yin and yang, as is
everything. Tall tends to be more yin, generally, while short and chunky is more yang. This has to do with glandular effects,
diet, genetics and other factors.
Not surprisingly, fast oxidizers tend to have a shorter, chunky
build. Slow oxidizers often have a
tall and more light weight build.
A heavier body can
be more yang if the weight is mainly muscle. Today, however, a heavier body means
the body is more expanded, which is definitely a more yin quality. Some bodies are obviously more yin
because they look like a balloon and have a definite hollow and expanded look
to them. In contrast, those who
are very slender or skinny are usually a little more yang because the body is
more compact and compressed or tight.
Sunglasses. Wearing sunglasses
all the time might make the body a little more yin
because it blocks the sun, which is more yang.
YIN AND YANG HEALING
Western
medicine largely ignores the concept of yin-yang balance in healing, but it is
still a central idea in many Eastern systems of healing, particularly acupuncture. It creeps into Western medicine as
normal ranges for blood sugar, blood pressure and many other functions. One knows that too much or too little
of these are indicative of disease.
About
ninety-five percent of bodies today are yin in Chinese medical
terminology. Many are extremely
yin. Yin is associated with the
qualities of being cold, still, expanded and chaotic.
This corresponds
exactly to slow oxidation on a properly performed and interpreted hair mineral
analysis. The hair must not be
washed at the laboratory and the oxidation rate is determined by calculating
the calcium/potassium and the sodium/magnesium ratios. Yin or slow oxidation is defined
as a calcium/potassium ratio greater than 4:1 and a sodium/magnesium ratio less
than 4.17:1.
YIN AND YANG ILLNESSES
Illness
may be classified anatomically as yin or yang. For example, osteoarthritis is characterized by deposition
of calcium and other substances in the joints and may be said to be yang. Rheumatoid arthritis is a degeneration
of the joints and is more yin. Solid tumors are more yang, while blood cancers such as leukemia are more
yin. Inflammation is
generally ÒhotÓ and more yang, as are all painful
conditions. In contrast, the
growth of silent tumors inside the body, as with most cancers, tends to be a
very yin condition. Indeed, cancer
cells are somewhat like yeasts and fungi in their metabolism and these are
ÒcoldÓ infections. Meanwhile,
bacteria tend to cause ÒhotÓ or yang infections. This can get quite complex.
More important
for the correction process is whether the cause is yin or yang. Many times the same symptom can have
either a yin or a yang cause. In
hair analysis interpretation, one finds that the same symptom may be due to
fast oxidation or slow oxidation.
This is saying the same thing – that the cause can be yin or
yang.
Osteoporosis, for
example, may be due to a calcium or copper deficiency in a fast oxidizer. Part of the sympathetic nervous system
response is excretion of calcium.
However, the same symptom may be due to biologically unavailable calcium
in a slow oxidizer, a more yin condition.
Since
most bodies today are yin, most illness has a yin cause at its basis. The symptom may appear yang - hot, hard
or contracted. However, the
underlying cause is usually a yin imbalance. A yin therapy such as surgery, radiation or chemotherapy may
eliminate a hard tumor, but the long-term effects are less curative and usually
harmful.
YIN AND YANG HEALING METHODS
Yang therapies. Among healing methods, the most yang are those involving heat and
dryness. Dry saunas, hyperthermia,
fever therapy, sweating, heating herbs like ginger and burdock, coffee enemas,
hot baths, exposure to the sun, heat lamps and fasting are examples.
Other are
chiropractic manipulation, biofeedback, acupuncture, acupressure, some
meditation that moves energy downward, some psychotherapy when it involves
confronting the person, some hands-on healing or body work, and some color
therapy with reddish, orange or yellow light.
Yin therapies
include raw foods, juices, cool or cold baths, colonic irrigation and Epsom
salt baths. Others are homeopathy,
visualization, imagery, psychedelic drugs and the use of electrical machines. Still others include most
pharmaceuticals, surgery, radiation therapy and the use of most herbs and
nutritional supplements. Most
meditation, relaxation and self-hypnosis also has a
more yin effect.
Detoxification. Yin detoxification methods flush toxins with cool and watery
energy. They slow down overheated
metabolism and reduce congestion.
Yang detoxification methods tonify and
energize the system, and contract the cells, forcing poisons out. The
principles of yin and yang healing apply equally to conventional as well as
holistic therapies.
A
need for yang therapies today. As more people become yin, they
require more yang therapies. This
is one reason for more and more problems occurring with antibiotic overuse and
vegetarian diets – both of which are more yin.
It is also a problem
with some natural therapies. For
example, a friend is a cancer counselor who has observed the results of many
alternative cancer therapies. She
reports poorer results with the Gerson therapy and
related approaches that rely on raw foods and juices.
This therapy used to
offer excellent results. Most
likely, this is because more bodies were more yang at
the time Dr. Gerson developed the therapy in the
1920s and 1930s. Yin therapy may
get rid of tumors which are yang, but cannot fully
rebuild a body that is more yin.
YANG HEALING
This
is the approach I suggest for most people. It involves a diet of kelp, sea salt, meats and
especially cooked yang root vegetables. One avoids yin foods such as sugar, sweet juices, most
fruit, most raw food, and the nightshade vegetables and other vegetables that
are botanically fruits.
To
this are added food supplements and herbs that are primarily yang or less
yin. We do not use most herbs,
most green drinks, or high doses of vitamin C or other vitamins, for example.
More yang herbs include ginger, burdock, dandelion, milk thistle, skullcap,
nettles and black radish.
Mineral therapy
is somewhat yang and very necessary today due to congenital nutrient
deficiencies, refined food diets, poor quality food, stress and other factors
that deplete nutrients.
Yang
procedures. Development may also involve dry sauna therapy, infrared lamp
therapy and red light therapy. Red
light assists the first energy center and organs such as the liver, kidneys and
adrenal glands. This is exactly
what most people need.
Some
say light therapy should focus on the upper centers - blue, green and
violet. However, I find that most
patients I see live in those upper centers most of the time. Copper toxicity, which is very common,
has the effect of speeding up mental processes and enhancing emotions and
analytical thinking.
Rest
and sleep, and other lifestyle factors. Another vital yang therapy is rest and
sleep. Most people do not get
nearly enough rest. I also suggest
spending about half an hour a day in the sun, if possible, another yang
therapy.
Also excellent is to
let go of all victim thinking, as this is very yin and
disempowering. This includes all
political philosophies that endorse and promote the concept of victims and
victimhood. Feeling sorry for some
group or other, and offering them special benefits is extremely popular today,
but not particularly beneficial for anyone.
Much
better are political and moral belief systems that support people learning to
help and govern themselves, rather than accepting
'benefits' or 'entitlements' of any sort.
This view promotes personal empowerment and is more yang. Unfortunately, this perspective is not
so popular today.
Yang
therapy is appropriate for about 95% of adults and a somewhat smaller percentage
of children. The others require
less cooked vegetables, less animal products, fewer saunas and more fruit and
juices.
Many who appear yang
are not really so. They are merely
toxic in a certain way that appears yang.
Certain toxic metals such as cadmium are either
so yang themselves or they cause changes in the nervous system that make a
person appear very yang. However,
they are weak underneath, often extremely so. When toxins such as cadmium, lead, mercury and others
are released, the personÕs true yin condition becomes obvious.
Understanding
yin and yang detoxification helps explain why a particular therapy may work for
a while, but then stops working.
It also explains why a therapy may have worked well one hundred years
ago, but is less helpful today. It
can also explain why a therapy or approach such as drug medicine helps some
people, but not others.
YIN AND YANG APPLIED
TO RELAXATION AND REPOSE
I suggest that yang methods of relaxation are far better today, mainly because our world is more yin today. This means that more yang methods are far more likely to balance the body than the yin methods.
Examples of more yang methods of relaxation include napping and sleeping, the Roy Masters meditation, walking, gardening, mild or gentle exercise, hugging or kissing, and some body therapies such as Rolfing, structural integration and a few others.
Examples
of more yin methods people use to relax include having sex, use of drugs such
as marijuana and other sedatives, use of stimulant drugs, some types of
vigorous exercise such as running or jogging, and the use of many types of
meditation that scatter oneÕs thoughts or move energy upward through the
body. While these methods are
effective in some cases, I do not recommend them in development science, as
they tend to be far more harmful for the body and mind.
MORE ABOUT YIN AND YANG
There
is some disagreement among acupuncturists and those who study oriental
philosophy regarding what is yin and what is yang. Most agree, however, that yang is contracted, hot,
masculine, active, aggressive, salty, loud, red in color and under the earth as
opposed to above. Yin is cold,
damp, still, receptive, feminine, grows above ground, blue or purple in color
and more ethereal.
Yin
and yang organs. Hollow
organs are more yin such as the lungs, intestines,
heart and stomach. The lungs are
the most yin, as they are literally spongy and
airy. The more solid organs are
more yang such as the liver, kidneys, spleen, pancreas
and all the glands.
For
more about acupuncture and development science, read Acupuncture
on this website.
ARTICLES ABOUT YIN AND
YANG ON THIS WEBSITE
References
Kushi, M., Order Of The
Universe (magazines) 1970+
Nickel, D., 1995, Int. J. Acupuncture and Oriental Med, 6:1-4; p
26-29. (this
article explores how supplements used in development science correlate with acupuncture
herbs in their mineral content.
The latter are based on assessing yin and yang with the acupuncture
pulses and many other methods of assessment.
All information in this article is for
educational purposes only. It is
not for the diagnosis, treatment, prescription or cure of any disease or health
condition.
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