Best Self Healing Tips To Help You Practice TCM At Home
This four-step self healing plan can help you prevent and treat symptoms of many diseases. Best of all, you can do them right at home.
elf healing is a primary concept in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), which focuses on both disease prevention and treatment.
It has been practiced for thousands of years in China. Today, it’s gaining more prominence globally.
TCM believes that good health results from the harmony of body and mind. This contributes to the concept of yang sheng, or “nourishing life.” Did you know you can practice many self healing TCM techniques right at home?
This guide will explain the importance of harmonizing the body using self-care from a TCM perspective. You’ll also learn tips for how to practice TCM right at home.
Yang sheng refers to a set of lifestyle practices that promote longevity and good health. It focuses on maintaining jing (life force), qi (vital energy) and shen (“spirit” or mental health).
Modern self healing practices such as acupressure, breathing exercises (Qigong), and a mindful diet have their roots in yang sheng.
One method to promote self-healing and to nourish jing, qi and shen is through consuming the right nutrients. Aside from regular food, Chinese herbal decoctions and tisanes are often consumed to bolster good health.
As TCM gains mainstream popularity, common TCM herbs are more accessible for purchase, be it in traditional markets or supermarkets. Furthermore, making basic herbal tisanes is not much different from brewing tea, so consuming them is a convenient way to unwind and help your body heal from daily stressors.
How To Make Herbal Tisanes
You’ll need tea bags (food-grade cotton preferable over nylon ones) measuring 6×8 centimeters for 10 grams or 7×9 centimeters for up to 15 grams of herbs.
Pour hot boiled water (200-350 milliliters) over the filled bag of cleaned herbs and steep for five minutes or more for best results. Unlike tea leaves, the herbs can be steeped longer for a bolder flavor.
Below are some TCM-based simple tisane combinations you can steep or brew at home. Serve them warm for an instant pick-me-up!
To refresh tired eyes from long hours of blue-screen exposure, try a combination of white chrysanthemum flowers (3 to 6 grams), goji berries (3 to 6 grams), and red jujubes (1 to 2 whole jujubes or around 4 to 8 grams).
White Chrysanthemum flowers (bai ju hua) clear Heat from the Liver, which benefits the eyes while goji berries (gou qi) strengthen Kidneys for sufficient yin essence that nourishes the eyes.
Red jujubes (da zao) add sweetness, have anti-inflammatory properties, and are rich in antioxidants that boost your immunity.
Another TCM-based tisane combination you can brew is peppermint (bo he) and unprocessed Chinese licorice (sheng gan cao) tisane. This tisane can help to expel Wind-Heat and relieve the first signs of the flu, inflamed throat or headache.
Firstly, wash the herbs (9 grams of mint, and 3 to 6 grams of Chinese licorice) to remove dirt and dust. For this combination, it is recommended to brew the herbs in about 500 milliliters of boiling water for 10 minutes. You can also add a little sugar to taste.
Peppermint aids in releasing trapped Heat, which can cause tension headaches, eye strain, a blocked nose, and muscle pain.
Chinese licorice helps to clear Heat. Note that this tisane can help induce sweating, so people with Yin Deficiency (characterized by dry symptoms) or those who sweat profusely might want to avoid consuming it without a TCM physician’s advice.
Four-Step Self Healing Plan
Yang sheng may date back to ancient China, but its underlying concept of a holistic lifestyle is increasingly prevalent in modern health practices.
In his book How to Make Disease Disappear, Dr. Rangan Chatterjee proposes a plan to counter the onset of chronic diseases.
Four lifestyle aspects are involved: relax, eat, move, and sleep. Incorporating sufficient time to relax, sleep, as well as eat and move in moderation can calibrate your body to work optimally and heal itself from the onset of chronic diseases. This is what self healing and yang sheng is all about.
Most of us try to live a balanced lifestyle, but there’ll be times when our schedules are just too tight to fit in all the self healing practices.
On such occasions, you can try supplementing your meals with herbal soups using herb mixtures based on traditional Chinese recipes, such as the Ning Shen Calming herbal soup.
Aside from nourishment for the body, it contains herbs such as lily bulbs (bai he) and Solomon’s seal (yu zhu), which help relax the shen or calm the Heart for a wholesome yang sheng treat.
Seek Help If Self Healing Isn’t Working
Self healing can bring you some peace of mind and is a great pick-me-up routine you can do every day.
But remember, there are conditions that require medical attention, especially if you experience discomfort that hinders you from performing daily activities.
Always be in tune with your health, and your body will reward you greatly.