Search results for tibetan medicine (48)
THE BOOK OF TIBETAN MEDICINE
Tibetan medicine is a centuries-old traditional medical system that employs a complex approach to diagnosis, incorporating techniques such as pulse analysis and urinalysis, and utilizes behavior and dietary modification, medicines composed of natural materials (e.g., herbs and minerals) and physical therapies (e.g. Tibetan acupuncture, moxabustion, etc.) to treat illness. The Tibetan medical system is based upon a synthesis of the Indian (Ayurveda), Persian (Unani), Greek, indigenous Tibetan, and Chinese medical systems, and it continues to be practiced in Tibet, India, Nepal, Bhutan, Ladakh, Siberia, China and Mongolia, as well as more recently in parts of Europe and North America. It embraces the traditional Buddhist belief that all illness ultimately results from the „three poisons“ of the mind: ignorance, attachment and aversion. Read more: > Here <
The first illustrated guide to this holistic healing system, The Book of Tibetan Medicine, explains how the ancient Tibetan medical wisdom can be used to achieve spiritual well being in the modern world. Forward by His Holiness The 17th Karmapa.
Tibetan Medicine is an ancient medical system that has been successfully practiced for over 1,000 years and saved by His Holiness The Dalai Lama. A holistic approach combining dietary and behavioral changes, herbal cures, massage and meditation, this unique approach to healing utilizes the ancient wisdom of Tibetan masters. As well as the science of Tantric Buddhism.
http://thebookoftibetanmedicine.blogspot.com/ www.dharma-haven.org/tibetan/medicine-books.htm
The Book of Tibetan Medicine is now available in 11 languages worldwide. The forward has been written by His Holiness The 17th Karmapa. The book has been given excellent reviews by Shambhala Magazine, Mandala Magazine and Yoga Abode to name a few. The author is Ralph Quinlan Forde – Holistic Medicine Consultant – who is the founder of The Medicine Buddha Foundation.
TIBETAN MEDICINE – Tibetan massage
> TRADITIONAL TIBETAN MEDICINE <
Tibetan medicine is a centuries-old traditional medical system that employs a complex approach to diagnosis, incorporating techniques such as pulse analysis and urinalysis, and utilizes behavior and dietary modification, medicines composed of natural materials (e.g., herbs and minerals) and physical therapies (e.g. Tibetan acupuncture, moxabustion, etc.) to treat illness.
The Tibetan medical system is based upon a synthesis of the Indian (Ayurveda), Persian (Unani), Greek, indigenous Tibetan, and Chinese medical systems, and it continues to be practiced in Tibet, India, Nepal, Bhutan, Ladakh, Siberia, China and Mongolia, as well as more recently in parts of Europe and North America. It embraces the traditional Buddhist belief that all illness ultimately results from the „three poisons“ of the mind: ignorance, attachment and aversion. Read more: > HERE <
What is Tibetan Medicine
Tibetan Medicine (TM), one of the world’s oldest healing traditions, has been practiced for more than four thousand years in Tibet and the Himalayan region. TM, called „Sowa Rigpa“ in Tibetan, means the knowledge and science of healing. „Sowa“ means to heal the imbalanced and „Rigpa“ means the knowledge or science of a particular subject. Along with five treatises of Buddhist Doctrine such as technology, medicine (Sowa Rigpa), studying of sounds, logic, and philosophy, Sowa Rigpa is regarded as one of the most important sciences in Tibet.
The Fundamental Principle Of Tibetan Medicine
The fundamental principle of Tibetan medicine is that the body, the disease, and treatment, all share common principles and are comprised of the five elements, earth, fire, water, air, and space. This approach recognizes that every thing in the universe – plants, animals, and human beings including all our body tissues, internal organs, skin, skeletal system and even emotions, are composed of these five elements. Each one of them plays a major role, both individually and in combination as aspects of all matter. The five elements maintain reciprocal relationships. When they stay in balance, it results in a healthy body, speech, and mind. However, if any one of these elements becomes out of balance, either excess, deficient, or disturbed, not only does the affected element manifest disharmony, but also it will cause the rest of the elements to lose their balance and manifest particular syndromes or symptoms. Since each individual disease is caused by disharmony or disturbances in one of the five elements, the treatment principle is to balance the elements through diet according to an individual’s constitution and behavior, utilize herbs, and other accessory therapies such as blood letting, Mey-Tzar (Tibetan moxa ), external therapy (heat or cold), natural or medicinal bath, enema, and Ku Nye ( Tibetan Massage ).
About the Shang Shung Institute
The Shang Shung Institute (SSI) is an international organization that seeks to broaden the world’s understanding of traditional Tibetan culture. At this moment in history the preservation of this rich and beautiful culture is of utmost importance as it is in real danger of being lost. As such, the SSI promotes programs and initiatives that support the continuation and survival of this rich cultural heritage.
The SSI was founded in Italy in 1989 by Chögyal Namkhai Norbu, a renowned scholar of Tibetan culture, as well as one of the foremost living Dzogchen Masters. Other branches of the SSI have since been established in North America, Austria, Russia, and Argentina.
The SSI develops and maintains projects in various countries including: the translation, publication, and archiving of Tibetan texts; the organization and presentation of international cultural and educational events to share and preserve Tibetan heritage; and formal courses of study that train students in ancient Tibetan arts and sciences, including art, language, and traditional Tibetan medicine.
The Institute is active in four main areas of interest:
- Archives and multimedia
- Culture and events
- Traditional Tibetan medicine
- Tibetan language study and research
> Meet the Book of Tibetan Medicine in facebook <
Introduction into Trad. Tibetan Medicine
> Grundlagen der Tibetischen Medizin <
First Seminar Cycle “ Introduction into Traditional Tibetan Medicine “ successfull:
Around half of the participants of the seminar „Introduction into Traditional Tibetan Medicine“ were eager enough to take the exam at the end of the first seminar cycle. After having written their homework, the participants came from different parts of Austria (Vienna, Upper and Lower Austria, Styria, Carinthia) and Germany in order to accomplish the challenging 3-hour exam on March 21.
„The exam motivates me to deepen the knowledge. The Tibetan Medicine is rather complex and I would like to make use of it later on at my own small clinic. Therefore the studies are very important“, said doctor Z. from Vienna.
These introductory seminars delivered a „first sight“ into the diversity and depth of the Traditional Tibetan Medicine. Many of the participants want to continue and plan to attend the diploma course next year where they can extend their gained knowledge and get a deeper insight into the fields of „Tibetan Massage“ and/or „Gentle Therapies in the TTM“. In addition, special seminars for doctors are offered in the field of „Diagnostic Methods in the TTM“ where authentic Tibetan doctors will teach the art of pulse and urine diagnosis.
„I am happy that there is a big interest in the traditional Tibetan art of healing. This will help spread the TTM authentically in the West“, says Ven. Geshe Tenzin Dhargye, director of the Tibet Center. „A lot of our participants are doctors. Therefore we want to cooperate more closely with Austrian doctors in the future and thus want to cultivate the dialogue among experts“, explains Geshe T. Dhargye.
Tibetan medicine is a centuries-old traditional medical system that employs a complex approach to diagnosis, incorporating techniques such as pulse analysis and urinalysis, and utilizes behavior and dietary modification, medicines composed of natural materials (e.g., herbs and minerals) and physical therapies (e.g. Tibetan acupuncture, moxabustion, etc.) to treat illness.
The > Tibetan medical system < is based upon a synthesis of the Indian (Ayurveda), Persian (Unani), Greek, indigenous Tibetan, and Chinese medical systems, and it continues to be practiced in Tibet, India, Nepal, Bhutan, Ladakh, Siberia, China and Mongolia, as well as more recently in parts of Europe and North America. It embraces the traditional Buddhist belief that all illness ultimately results from the „three poisons“ of the mind: ignorance, attachment and aversion.
Doctor of Traditional Tibetan Medicine
>> Kagyu Samye Dzong London <<
Doctor of Traditional Tibetan Medicine Working with the Tara Institute of Tibetan Medicine (Please note: Dr. Soktsang has recently changed his name from his former title of Dr. Dhonden.)
Dr. Soktsang is highly experienced in the field of Traditional Tibetan Medicine, having studied and practised over the past twenty years.
He commenced his studies in Tibet for a period of five years under the guidance of an uncle, who was also a doctor. This enabled him to enter the Central Medical Institute for Traditional Tibetan Medicine in Lhasa, where he studied for a further five years until he graduated with the MEN-RAMPA, (Tib.) or Masters Degree of Tibetan Medicine. After graduating, he went to work at the Lhasa Mentse Khang Hospital, the premier centre of excellence of Traditional Tibetan Medicine.
HERBAL SOURCES OF TIBETAN MEDICINE
> HERBAL SOURCES OF TIBETAN MEDICINE <
Protecting the Himalayan varieties used in Tibetan medicines, exploring growing them as crops, and evaluating the healing properties of plants that grow elsewhere.
Tibetan medicine is celebrated as a source of sustainable and affordable healing preparations that are effective without lasting negative side effects. Our goal is to give people all over the world access to this unique insight into human well being.
Along with the need to provide training for a new generation of physicians and herbal pharmacists, and to translate the Tibetan medical so that students can begin their training without first having to learn to read Classical Tibetan, the main obstacle to wider use of Tibetan medicine is the limited supply of many herbs used in compounding the medications, some of which are already endangered by excessive non-professional harvesting.
His Holiness The Dalai Lama has warned that the health of the billions of people in the world cannot be sustained by medicines made with rare and endangered Himalayan plants. Even now, when Tibetan medicine has hardly begun to be practiced in Western countries, the herbs needed for making many of the medicines are in short supply. For example, the Men-Tse-Khang pharmacy in Dharamsala, India — the most respected source of Tibetan medicines — turns away all requests for medications except those accompanied by a prescription written by one of their own doctors. They will not accommodate even orders from their own graduates, those who have emigrated from India to other countries, explaining that to do so would deplete the supply of medicines needed in their branch clinics in India and Nepal.
Three different approaches to this scarcity of medicines are being explored. The most obvious and the most urgent is to preserve whenever possible the plants and animals currently used in Tibetan medicines, by protecting the ecologies that support those organisms, planting some species to increase the supply, and developing resources like seed banks to insure these species against extinction.
A second strategy is to extend the area where the herbs grow by planting in the wild and by finding ways of cultivating some species, as a way of preserving those that cannot be preserved in the wild, and as a way of increasing supplies.
The third is to evaluate the medicinal qualities of plants in other areas. Tibetan doctors have always used many imported materials in making their medicines, and believe that using substitute materials with similar therapeutic action is entirely appropriate when the ingredients of choice are unavailable. Tibetan physicians can identify plants indigenous to other areas that are suitable for use as substitutes for ingredients in traditional formulas and in developing new preparations.
Herbal medicine systems from other cultures will be useful in identifying promising species. Especially promising are two other systems which have ancient connections with Tibetan medicine and are still practiced: Indian Ayurvedic medicine and Chinese herbal medicine. Many of the herbs used in these systems are already used in Tibetan medicine.
The research needed for effort seems endless. The newsletter of the Chakpori Tibetan Medical Institute in Darjeeling, India, comments on some of the main issues: „To know which plants are vulnerable, endangered, or close to extinction, detailed studies have to be made. Also, the cause of rarity should be investigated (e.g., environmental causes, over exploitation by non-expert gathering, etc.). An important decision has to be made to replant not only the economically valuable plants but also the plants that are environmentally valuable and supportive of the total environment.
„Replanting sites should have the same characteristics as the original habitat. In traditional Tibetan medical texts, the side of the mountain, altitude, climatic condition, soil composition, etc. are mentioned [as important influences on the properties and potency of the herbs] …. research findings are essential guidelines for replanting the herbs in their natural environment. The size of the replanting area is also crucial because of genetic diversity and the problems of insular ecology. Monocultures, like the usual big plantations, should be avoided: mass plantations of certain species will not have the desired quality or power.“
Here on this page we offer links to Web sites relevant to preserving the plant species used in making Tibetan medicines, and increasing the supply of those herbs or finding substitutes, along with books and audio tapes on Tibetan herbs and related topics. Another page, Medical Research, Tibetan Style, gives resources relevant to other aspects of the immense task of preserving Tibetan medicine and making it available to the world.
> Meet Tibetan Incense Group at facebook <
> Meet Herbs for All Group at facebook <
> Meet the “ HERBS “ Group at facebook <
Tibetan Medicine, Spirituality, Compassion
> CONGRESS – 10th anniversary of the New Yuthok Institute <
October 31 2009 (9h – 18h)
„Spirituality & compassion as cure of the body and mind“
Das > New Yuthok Institut < feiert dieses Jahr sein 10-jähriges Jubiläum. Aus diesem Anlass wird am 31. Oktober 09 ein Kongress in Mailand organisiert. Über ihre Erfahrungen mit Tibetischer Medizin im Westen berichten:
- Tibetische Medizin und Homöopathie, Dr. Victorine Cumero
- Beziehung zwischen Buddhismus und Tibetischer Medizin, Prof. Pasang Yonten Arya Tendi Sherpa
- Tibetische und Westliche Medizin, Dr. Med Walburg Maric’ Oehler
- Produkte der Tibetischen Medizin, Dr. Herbert Schwabl
- Tibetische Medizin und Onkologie, Dr. Alfredo Celano
- Mitgefühl und Tibetische Medizin als psychologische Therapie, Prof. Gioacchino Pagliaro
- Tibetische Medizin und alltägliche Probleme aus der Praxis, Dr. Simonetta Nicolai
- Präsentation ausgewählter Fälle, Dr. Tenzin Thupten
The New Yuthok Institute is an Association founded by Prof. Yonten Arya (T. Sherpa) with several medical doctors and psychologists to preserve and spread the age-old teachings of Tibetan Medicine.
This particular medical system is distinguished from all other Eastern Medicines because of its strong spiritual and psychological matrix linked to the connection initially created with Bon shamanism and, later and especially, because of its strong link to Tibetan Buddhism.
It is a well-known fact that Buddhism is at the center of Tibetan Medicine which began with the teachings of Buddha Shakyamuni, himself, and it is just this close and essential relationship with Buddhism which sets the Tibetan system apart from all others.
Tibetan Medicine, in addition to its high ethical values, gives us a detailed description of the mind, the mental states and how they function. Today, much of this large body of information has been scientifically validated by neuroscience. The Tibetan view takes not only the individual and biological aspects of the mind into account but also its energetic and spiritual dimension. It is this dimension which dictates how we view all things and how they take shape in our minds.
It is especially, though not only, for this reason that Tibetan Medicine has awakened great interest among the community of psychologists, psychiatrists and mental health workers.
Tibetan Medicine is also unique because it doesn’t isolate itself from medical-scientific views and, in fact, embraces and complements them to offer an extraordinary contribution not only because of the therapeutic results it achieves but also because of its ability to integrate with scientific medicine and with other complementary medicines.
Tibetan Medicine, today, provides the West with an extraordinary opportunity because TM can act as a bridge to unite the various scientific, medical and psychological disciplines and can provide a path to achieve the ‘humanization’ of medical care.
With this Congress, the New Yuthok Institute celebrates its tenth anniversary by presenting aspects of the important training it has provided to many psychologists, medical doctors, nurses, physiotherapists, naturopaths and health workers in general and the results it has achieved in the context of clinical applications.
> Geschichte der Tibetischen Medizin <
und die Modernen Aspekte der Tibetischen Medizin
Die Tibetische Medizin hat ihre Hauptwurzeln im Lande selbst und in der uralten Erfahrung und Geschicklichkeit des tibetischen Volkes, das seit jeher in enger Verbindung zur Natur gelebt hat und zu seinem Überleben in großer Höhe stets auf eigene Ressourcen angewiesen war. Im Laufe der letzten zweitausend Jahre hat aber auch die medizinische Weisheit anderer Länder und Zivilisationen Eingang in das einheimische System gefunden – entweder wurden neue Einsichten direkt und beabsichtigt übernommen oder durch natürliche gegenseitige Befruchtung der Kulturen über Jahrhunderte hinweg allmählich assimiliert. Nachfolgend einige wichtige Stationen
Seit Jahrtausenden entwickelt sich in Tibet eine medizinische Überlieferung, die als Bön-Tradition bekannt ist.
> TIBETAN TANTRIC YOGA AND LUEJONG <
Two day seminar
rLung, mind and physical Yoga (luejong)
Concepts and practice, level II
Prof. Pasang Y. Arya
November 07-08 2009
The Tibetan tantric yoga is a practice that has been done by Indian and Tibetan yogis for centuries, and is not like yoga usually practiced in the West. It is a practice of rLung (psychic wind) and exercise of the mind purely based on spiritual development, which was laid down by the tantric tradition of master Pundit Naropa and later masters. The exercice removes the negative energies from the channels and chakras by physical positions and movements which harmonize wind and mind and release inner stress and tension. Dedicated and genuine pratitioners may tame the wind, develop spiritual experience, and become able to control the mind and emotion. The life-long exercice with proper motivation and correct view can lead to the pure state of awakened Buddhahood. Generally the yoga technique basically helps stimulate the channels and chakras, and purifies the body/mind and promote the health.
Our main site will help you find the Palyul center closest to you and will introduce you to our teachers, their teachings, and teaching schedules.
Our mission is to uphold and preserve the teachings of the Buddha through study, practice and activity. Our goal is to make the teachings, particularly in the Palyul Nyingma tradition of Tibetan Buddhism, available to all.
> Yoga <
Our centers offer a complete course of study, prayer, and meditation practice for those who wish to follow the path to freedom. Our retreat centers offer places to focus on practice. Click for a guide to Palyul center locations around the world or select a center website from the menu at left.
> Meet Tibetan Medicine at facebook <
> Meet IASBS Communication Board Buddhist Studies at facebook <
> Meet Palyul Dhonyag Shedrub Ling at facebook <
THE BOOK OF TIBETAN MEDICINE
> The Book of Tibetan Medicine: <
How to Use Tibetan Healing for Personal Wellbeing by Ralph Forde (Author)
His Holiness The 17th Karmapa: >> KARMAPA NEWS <<
Tibetan Medicine is an ancient medical system that has been successfully practiced for over 1,000 years. A holistic approach combining dietary and behavioral changes, herbal cures, massage and meditation, this unique approach to healing utilizes the ancient wisdom of Tibetan masters. As well as the science of Tantric Buddhism. The Book of Tibetan Medicine is now available in 11 languages worldwide. Forward written by His Holiness The 17th Karmapa.
VIDEO: (http://buddhistcharity.ning.com/video/the-book-of-tibetan-medicine)
The Book of Tibetan Medicine: How to Use Tibetan Healing for Personal Wellbeing by Ralph Forde (Author), Product Description:
Welcome this first and most comprehensive guide to Tibet’s ancient integrative healing system-one of the world’s oldest forms. The Book of Tibetan Medicine provides a thorough overview of the origins and practices of this holistic approach and explains how it can contribute to maintaining overall health and happiness. You will learn how to balance body, mind, and spirit through diet, behavior, yoga, herbalism, acupuncture, Buddhist relaxation techniques, and medicines derived from natural sources. By taking an especially in-depth look at contemporary ailments-including stress and allergies-this highly accessible and lushly illustrated manual brings Tibet’s age-old and traditional discipline into the here and now, with invaluable advice on how to use it to improve your well-being.
About the Author
Ralph Quinlan Forde is a holistic medical consultant and health writer and a qualified herbalist and aromatherapist. He writes for Ultimate Health magazine, What Medicine, The Independent on Sunday and New Scientist.
Live Webcast: HHDL will bestow the Medicine Buddha Empowerment from Dharamsala, India on March 31st.
Live Webcast: HHDL will bestow the Medicine Buddha Empowerment from Dharamsala, India on March 31st. http://dalailama.com/liveweb
Le Japon au fil des saison http://bit.ly/1j0RFG5
McMohan Line Centenary: ‘India must clarify stand on Tibet issue’ http://goo.gl/fb/GUxpn
CTA holds conference to shed light on Tibet’s past international status http://goo.gl/fb/D2B7h
There will be a live webcast of His Holiness the Dalai Lama bestowing the Medicine Buddha Empowerment from the Main Tibetan Temple in Dharamsala, HP, India on March 31, 2014 starting at approximately 8:30am Indian Standard Time (IST = GMT+5.30). His Holiness will speak in Tibetan with a simultaneous English, Chinese, Hindi, Russian and Vietnamese language translations available.
All times Indian Standard Time (IST = GMT+5.30)
English language live webcast can be viewed here.
Tibetan language live webcast can be viewed here.
Chinese language live webcast can be viewed here.
Vietnamese language live webcast can be viewed here.
Hindi language live webcast can be viewed here.
Russian language live webcast can be viewed here.
For times in your region 8:30am IST on March 31st in Dharamsala, India is the same as 7:00pm PST on March 30th in Los Angeles, California, USA; 10:00pm EST on March 30th in New York City, USA; and 4:00am CET on March 31st in Paris, France.
#previous #articles #videos #DalaiLama
Freedom of Religion & Belief – China: Tibetan Monasteries Placed Under Direct Rule
Tibetan Yoga Center – Yoga Retreats
Contact: tibetanyogainfo@gmail.com
www.bhutanzopa.com.bt/AdventureTravel
The practice of Yoga is intimately connected to the religious beliefs and practices of both Buddhism and Hinduism. However there are distinct variations in the usage of yoga terminology in the two religions. In Hinduism, the term „Yoga“ commonly refers to the eight limbs of yoga as defined in the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, written some time after 100 BCE, and means „yoke“, with the idea that one’s individual atman, or soul, would yoke or bind with the monistic entity which underlies everything (brahman). In the Vajrayana Buddhism of Tibet, however, the term „Yoga“ is simply used to refer to any type of spiritual practice; from the various types of tantra (like Kriyayoga or Charyayoga) to ‚Deity yoga‘ and ‚guru yoga‘. In the early translation phase of the Sutrayana and Tantrayana from India, China and other regions to Tibet, along with the practice lineages of sadhana, codified in the Nyingmapa canon, the most subtle ‚conveyance‘ (Sanskrit: yana) is Adi Yoga (Sanskrit). A contemporary scholar with a focus on Tibetan Buddhism, Robert Thurman writes that Patanjali was influenced by the success of the Buddhist monastic system to formulate his own matrix for the version of thought he considered orthodox. Read More: HERE
Early Buddhism incorporated meditative absorption states. The most ancient sustained expression of yogic ideas is found in the early sermons of the Buddha. One key innovative teaching of the Buddha was that meditative absorption must be combined with liberating cognition. The difference between the Buddha’s teaching and the yoga presented in early Brahminic texts is striking. Meditative states alone are not an end, for according to the Buddha, even the highest meditative state is not liberating. Instead of attaining a complete cessation of thought, some sort of mental activity must take place: a liberating cognition, based on the practice of mindful awareness. The Buddha also departed from earlier yogic thought in discarding the early Brahminic notion of liberation at death. Liberation for the Brahminic yogin was thought to be the realization at death of a nondual meditative state anticipated in life. In fact, old Brahminic metaphors for the liberation at death of the yogic adept were given a new meaning by the Buddha; their point of reference became the sage who is liberated in life. Read More: HERE
Dream Yoga or Milam (T:rmi-lam or nyilam; S:svapnadarśana)— the Yoga of the Dream State are a suite of advanced tantric sadhana of the entwined Mantrayana lineages of Dzogchen (Nyingmapa, Ngagpa, Mahasiddha, Kagyu and Bönpo). Dream Yoga are tantric processes and techniques within the trance Bardos of Dream and Sleep (Tibetan: mi-lam bardo) and are advanced practices of Yoga Nidra. Aspects of Dream Yoga sadhana are subsumed within the practice suite of the Six Yogas of Naropa. Read More: > HERE <
Tibetan yoga center was established to provide a program of study and practice in the Tibetan Buddhist (Vajrayana) tradition that would integrate the essence of these teachings and present them in a suitable way for practitioners in the West. The program combines the core practices relying on visualizations, yoga of channels, winds and drops, and insight into the nature of the mind (rigpa) for efficient progress on the path. The core teachings of Tibetan Yoga Center are ‚The yogas of the six bardos‘ of the Nyingma lineage of Tibetan Buddhism, summarized in the curriculum as seven courses (see the program section). The founder and master teacher of the center, Khenchen Lama Rinpoche, was at numerous occasions encouraged by his teachers to focus on helping Western students, particularly through these practices. To help bring these teachings closer to the background of Western practitioners, the program of the Tibetan Yoga Center also integrates elements of Western neuroscientific research on changes in behavior, mind and brain as a result of meditation. Building on the tradition of enlightened householder yogis in Tibet, the program of the center was developed for yogis of the current era – serious practitioners leading busy lives with work and family commitments who want to bring their spiritual practice to swift fruition to fully benefit sentient beings.
Tibetan Yoga Center operates on principles of a social business, offering teachings mostly by suggested donation and for minimal possible fees to cover expenses. The aim of the Tibetan yoga of mind is to develop universal loving kindness and compassion coupled with the ultimate wisdom of the nature of phenomena, the ultimate truth. At the basic level of achievement, one wishes happiness for oneself as well as other people.
At the medium level of achievement one realizes that the source of ultimate happiness is the understanding of the true nature of phenomena. One realizes that the most profound way to benefit sentient beings is to achieve enlightenment and works very hard towards this goal. On this path, one completely purifies his/her mental afflictions – anger, attachment, ignorance, jealousy and pride. The highest level of achievement in the Tibetan yoga of mind is the experiential understanding of our own Buddha nature – the deepest level of the mind. When one continuously sustains this realization in his/her mind stream, s/he becomes the embodiment of the union of primordial wisdom and compassion, and benefits sentient beings in limitless ways. This achievement is the essence of the Tibetan yoga and the deepest meaning of the term ’naljor‘.
TYPES OF YOGA IN TIBETAN BUDDHISM – There are six yanas (modes of spiritual practice) in Vajrayana: 1. Kriyayana, 2. Upayana, 3. Yogayana, 4. Mahayoga, 5. Anuyoga, and 6. Atiyoga. In Nyingma lineage, the main focus of practice is on Mahayoga, Anuyoga and Atiyoga.
Teaching and Practice Downloads: This section contains general teachings given by teachers of the Tibetan Yoga Center at various occasions as well as specific teachings that are part of the curriculum of the center. These teachings are available for free, but proper reference to the teachings if used as part of other materials should be included.
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UNESCO – The Tradition of Vedic Chanting
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Introduction – Swami Vivekananda – Jnana Yoga
The Hindu approach to spiritual evolution leading to liberation or moksha or Self-realization is one of the four major paths or yogas:
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the path of knowledge or Jnana yoga,
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the path of mind control or Raja Yoga ,
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the path of devotion of Bhakti yoga and
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the path of action/work or Karma yoga.
#video Swami Vivekananda 1893 Speech at Parliament of Religions Part 1 of 4
Swami Vivekananda was the chief disciple of the 19th century saint Ramakrishna Paramahansa and the founder of the Ramakrishna Math and the Ramakrishna Mission. He is considered a key figure in the introduction of Indian philosophies of Vedanta and Yoga to the „Western“ world, mainly in America and Europe and is also credited with raising interfaith awareness, bringing Hinduism to the status of a major world religion during the end of the 19th century CE. Vivekananda is considered to be a major force in the revival of Hinduism in modern India.
He is perhaps best known for his inspiring speech which began: „Sisters and Brothers of America,“ through which he introduced Hinduism at the Parliament of the World’s Religions in Chicago in 1893.
The Council for a Parliament of the World’s Religions works to cultivate harmony among the world’s religious and spiritual communities to achieve a just, peaceful and sustainable world.
The first Parliament of Religions was held at the 1893 Chicago Columbian Exposition, and was the first formal meeting of the religious East and West. In 1988 the Council for a Parliament of the World’s Religions (CPWR) was founded to organize a centennial celebration of the original Parliament. Since 1993, three Parliaments have been held in Chicago, Cape Town, Barcelona and in 2009 the most recent Parliament was held in Melbourne, Australia.
Dr. Joachim Reinelt: Zur Zeit des indischen Mittelalters wanderten in weiten Teilen Indiens und Tibets tantrische Mystiker umher, die Nathas, Nathayogis oder Nathasiddhas genannt wurden. Sie praktizierten und lehrten Hatha- und Kundaliniyoga und hatten großen Einfluss auf das religiöse Leben der Menschen.
Gorakshanatha Saivism: Gorakhnath or Gorakshanatha Saivism is also known as Siddha Siddhanta and Nath tradition. It was founded by Gorakshanatha (Gorakhnath) who lived about 10th century AD. He is believed to be 3rd, 4th or 5th in a line of 12 prominent teachers of this tradition, which has followers in both Buddhism and Hinduism.
He was said to be a disciple of Matsyendranatha who was from in Nepal. Followers of this sect believe that knowledge of this tradition was received by Matsyendranath directly from Siva himself. Gorakshanatha is credited with such works as Siddha Siddhanta Paddhathi and Viveka Martanda. He composed them in Hindi. He also created 12 monastic orders across Northern India in an effort to preserve the Adinatha tradition. Other important works of this tradition are Hathayoga Pradipika, Gheranda Samhita, Siva Samhita and Jnanamrita.
History of the Nathas – The history of ancient Indian sadhu texts reveals a succession of several main groups. There were the Sadhs, Yatis, Siddhas, Nathas, Pashupatis, Sant-Mats, Dasnamis and Nagas. Apart from these, many small sadhu sects have existed and played their part in the great stream of Indian life. In early history, it would appear that some sects were interwoven with others, and some merged or developed into other sects. Some thus became extinct, and others are still with us.
Full Article: http://www.saivism.net
http://www.facebook.com/parliamentofreligions
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swami_Vivekananda
Bhutan http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gross_national_happiness
UN – The Challenge of Human Rights and Cultural Diversity
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UN – Nagoya biopiracy agreement ‚is unexpected success‘
http://www.twnside.org.sg/title2/books/The.Road.to.an.Anti-Biopiracy.Agreement.htm
Amnesty International – What are economic, social and cultural rights?
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China: Tibetan Monasteries Placed Under Direct Rule
(New York) – The Chinese government has ended a key policy of allowing Tibetan monasteries to be run by monks who comply with government regulations and have instead introduced a system that will place almost every monastery in Tibet under the direct rule of government officials who will be permanently stationed in each religious institution, Human Rights Watch said today.
The new system now requires an unelected „Management Committee“ – also referred to as zhusi danwei/gongzuozu („monastic government work-unit“)- to be established in every monastery, with up to 30 lay officials stationed in each monastery, depending on the size of the institution, according to a February 15, 2012 article in the government-run Global Times. The new „Management Committees“ will run the monasteries and will have authority over the previous „Democratic Management Committees,“ which will now be responsible for rituals and other matters.
The freedom to leave or discontinue membership in a religion or religious group —in religious terms called „apostasy“ —is also a fundamental part of religious freedom, covered by *Article 18 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.[2]
Freedom of religion is a principle that supports the freedom of an individual or community, in public or private, to manifest religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship, and observance; the concept is generally recognized also to include the freedom to change religion or not to follow any religion.[1]
#video Meeting with Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief, Heiner Bielefeldt As always saying something on the topic of freedom of religion or belief, to say it again, the most shocking experience when dealing with case of violations of freedom of religion is the extreme manifestation and degree of hatred “ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=81qyyKzntJw
http://www.hreoc.gov.au/human_rights/religion/index.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom_of_religion
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/FreedomReligion/Pages/FreedomReligionIndex.aspx
February 29, 2012
Australian Broadcasting Corporation – Exiled PM wants ‚fact finding‘ mission in Tibet
March 3, 2012
UN Human Rights Chief asked when she would visit Tibet
Mar 6, 2012
UN calls on China to stop forced settlement of Tibetan Nomads
8 March 2012
“Unfinished progress” – UN expert examines food systems in emerging countries reports* on China, Mexico and South Africa to the Human Rights Council. In China, local-level authorities often have allowed land-grabbing at the expense of poor rural households. And between 50 and 80 per cent of the 2.25 million nomads on the Tibetan plateau may be relocated into settlements close to rural cities, overhauling the food and farming practices of this vulnerable community as part of a programme to abandon nomadic life and modernize agriculture. ( Latest Water UN Report – World Consumption of modern agriculture on fresh water by 70% )
chinadialogue Tibetan herders are struggling to adjust to sedentary life on the edge of the city of Golmud. Xia Liwei visited one family and listened to their story. http://www.chinadialogue.net/–Who-are-these-people-now
chinadialogue As China seeks to protect a delicate corner of Qinghai, 50,000 herders have been moved off the grasslands. Ill-prepared for urban life, they face a bleak future, write Guan Guixia and Suonan Wangjie. http://www.chinadialogue.net/–Hard-times-for-eco-migrants
TIBETAN NOMADS Tibetan herder with a yak Nomadic herders are known as drokpa. They make up about 25 percent of Tibetans in Tibet. In some Tibetan counties they make up 90 percent of the population. http://factsanddetails.com/china.tibetan nomads
Traditional Food, Medicine & Biodiversity
The N.I. Vavilov Institute of Plant Industry
Nikolai Ivanovich Vavilov (Russian: Николай Иванович Вавилов) was a prominent Russian and Soviet botanist and geneticist best known for having identified the centres of origin of cultivated plants. He devoted his life to the study and improvement of wheat, corn, and other cereal crops that sustain the global population. While developing his theory on the centres of origin of cultivated plants, Vavilov organized a series of botanical-agronomic expeditions, collected seeds from every corner of the globe, and created in Leningrad the world’s largest collection of plant seeds. Read More: > HERE <
The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), known informally as the Biodiversity Convention, is an international legally binding treaty. The Convention has three main goals: 1. conservation of biological diversity (or biodiversity);2. sustainable use of its components; and 3. fair and equitable sharing of benefits arising from genetic resources. In other words, its objective is to develop national strategies for the conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity. It is often seen as the key document regarding sustainable development. Read More: >HERE<
Ensuring that the genetic diversity of the world’s food crops is preserved for future generations is an important contribution toward the reduction of hunger and poverty in developing countries. This is where the greatest plant diversity originates and where the need for food security and the further development of agriculture is most urgent.
About VIR: “The scientific network of VIR includes the institute’s headquarters with 9 plant resources departments, 13 fundamental research laboratories, and 12 experiment stations in different geographic zones of Russia. Its chief activities are Plant Genetics Resources (PGR) collections, conservation and study.”
This recent news item was originally reported on Science Magazine’s Science Insider news feed. Earlier reportage on this story came from The Scientist blog. Top Photo: Alaska wild “berries” from the Innoko National Wildlife Refuge; U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service employee (public domain). Bottom Photo: VIR, Pavlosk Exp. Station http://www.greendump.net
Last week, we described the plight of the Russian Pavlovsk Experimental Station: Plans for a housing complex threaten some 5,000 rare plants, including varieties found nowhere else on the planet. A court judgment last week meant that only the president or prime minister could save the plants, which scientists said would take years to relocate. Now government telegrams and a presidential tweet hint that the plants might have a chance. http://blogs.discovermagazine.com
Russia Defers Razing of Seed Repository – modest reprieve for a seed bank that is home to the world’s largest collection of European fruits and berries. http://green.blogs.nytimes.com
The Vavilov Institute in Russia is the oldest seed bank in the world with a collection of over 325,000 samples of seed. Video from The Vavilov Institute from The Seed Hunter on National Geographic Channel http://natgeotv.com
Vavilov Institut Alblinse, Russian Housing Plan Threatens Seed Bank
The Institute of Plant Industry http://www.vir.nw.ru/ was established in 1921. Nikolai Vavilov was the head of this institute from 1924 to 1936 and had, and still has, the world’s largest collection of plant seeds. During the early 1930s, he became the target of the Lysenkoist debate and was exiled. In 2010 the plant collection at the Pavlovsk Experimental Station was to be destroyed to make way for luxury housing
IRRI http://irri.org Rice Research is a nonprofit research and education center established to reduce poverty and hunger, improve the health of rice farmers and consumers, and ensure environmental sustainability
Navdanya http://www.navdanya.org is a network of seed keepers and organic producers spread across 16 states in India.Navdanya has helped set up 54 community seed banks across the country, trained over 500,000 farmers in seed sovereignty, food sovereignty and sustainable agriculture over the past two decades, and helped setup the largest direct marketing, fair trade organic network in the country.
ARCHE NOAH: http://www.arche-noah.at Wir sehen unsere Arbeit als Antwort auf die restriktive globale Saatgutpolitik. Die Vielfalt an Kulturpflanzen ist Lebensgrundlage für kommenden Generationen. Und Lebensqualität für uns alle ! Wir sind ein Verein, der sich seit fast 20 Jahren für den Erhalt alter Kulturpflanzen einsetzt, mit über 8.000 Mitgliedern, Förderern und aktiven ErhalterInnen.
Svalbard Global Seed Vault – Cultural plants for the future. http://www.regjeringen.no Since the climate conditions change so rapidly, it is extremely important to ensure the genetic diversity of all the cultural plants of the world. In these genes, we will find the necessary qualities to make effective cultural plants in the future. This is absolutely necessary to secure a satisfactory food supply for the global population. Within the next 40 years, the world’s food production must be doubled, says the Norwegian minister of agriculture and food, Lars Peder Brekk.
Was wären die Schwaben ohne ihre Linsen? Trotzdem stellten Ende der 50er Jahre die letzten Landwirte “auf der Alb” den Anbau von Linsen ein, da die Importe zu billig waren und den Verbrauchern egal war, woher ihre Linsen kamen. Im Pflanzenbau herrschte damals der Zeitgeist “höher, schneller und immer mehr”. Hauptsache, der Ertrag von Weizen, Mais und Kartoffeln stieg. Egal, wie viel “Chemie” dazu auf den Acker kam. Diese Ideologie war den hiesigen Bio-Bauern schon immer ein Dorn im Auge.
Außerdem vermissten sie ihre Heimatfrucht aus der Kindheit: “Die alten Bauern bei uns in der Gegend haben uns erzählt, wie sie noch Linsen angebaut haben, zusammen mit Gerste ( GERSTE IM AYURVEDA ) und Hafer, als Stützfrucht für die zarten Pflanzen. Beim Linsen essen haben wir davon geträumt, wieder Alb-Linsen auszusäen”, erinnert sich Woldemar Mammel. Der Bioland-Bauer aus Lauterach auf der Alb baut bereits seit den 80er Jahren wieder Linsen an und begeisterte auch andere für seine Idee. Mittlerweile machen elf Bäuerinnen und Bauern in der “Öko-Erzeugergemeinschaft «Alb-Leisa»” mit und bewirtschaften 30 Hektar mit Albleisen.
Unterstützung bekommen sie von anderen Verfechtern guter Esskultur: Vor zwei Jahren hat Slow Food Deutschland die Alb-Linse in die “Arche des Geschmacks” aufgenommen, um dieses traditionelle landwirtschaftliche Erzeugnis der Schwäbischen Alb vor dem Vergessen zu retten. Die Sache hat nur einen Haken: Die original schwäbischen Alb-Linsen waren bis vor kurzem unauffindbar und so mussten sich die Bio-Bauern mit französischen und italienischen Sorten behelfen. “Niemand hatte es für nötig gehalten, diese einzigartigen, im Bundessortenregister eingetragenen Linsensorten aufzubewahren”, beklagt Mammel.
Doch die verschollenen Linsen berührten auch andere schwäbische Herzen: 2006 machten sich unabhängig voneinander der private Pflanzenzüchter Klaus Lang und Klaus Amler von der Stuttgarter Agentur Ökonsult auf die Suche. Beide werden ein Jahr später in Russland fündig! Das Wawilow-Institut in St. Petersburg, das seit 1925 für die Genvielfalt der Nutzpflanzen kämpft, hat die zwei Sorten aufbewahrt.
RICE: Rice is first mentioned in the Yajur Veda (c. 1500-800 BC) and then is frequently referred to in Sanskrit texts. Today, the majority of all rice produced comes from India, China, Japan, Indonesia, Thailand, Burma, and Bangladesh.
Asian farmers still account for 92-percent of the world’s total rice production. Rice is grown in all parts of India. Genetics shows that rice was first domesticated in the region of the Yangtze River Valley. Read More: > HERE <
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UYGHUR – Trad. Medicine, Arts & Culture
www.unpo.org/Uyghuren Nederland (VUN)
http://turkmenfriendship.blogspot.com
The Uyghur (Uyghur: ئۇيغۇر, Uyghur?; simplified Chinese: 维吾尔; traditional Chinese: 維吾爾; pinyin: Wéiwú’Är; are a Turkic ethnic group living in Eastern and Central Asia. Today Uyghurs live primarily in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in the People’s Republic of China. An estimated 80 % of Xinjiang’s Uyghurs live in the southwestern portion of the region, the Tarim Basin. Large diasporic communities of Uyghurs exist in the Central Asian countries of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan. Smaller communities are found in Mongolia, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Turkey, Russia and Taoyuan County of Hunan province in south-central Mainland China. Uyghur neighborhoods can be found in major cities like Beijing, Shanghai, Sydney, Washington D.C, Munich, Tokyo, Toronto, Istanbul. Read More: > HERE <
Erkin Alptekin (born on July 4, 1939 in East Turkistan) is a noted international advocate for the rights of native and indigenous people. Among the organizations he has led are the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization, of which he was formerly the chairman, and the World Uyghur Congress, of which he was the first president. Read More: > HERE <
Erkin Alptekin is one of the foremost human rights advocates for the Uighur people of Eastern Turkestan, also known as the Xinjiang Autonomous Region of the People’s Republic of China. Mr. Alptekin was employed by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty from 1971 to 1994. He is one of the founders of the Unrepresented Nations and People’s Organization (UNPO), and currently serves as its General Secretary. www.dalailamafoundation.org
Uyghur Medicine – The Uyghurs had an extensive knowledge of medicine and medical practice. Sung (Song) Dynasty (906-960) sources indicate that an Uyghur physician, Nanto, traveled to China, and brought with him many kinds of medicine not known to the Chinese.
There are 103 different herbs for use in Uyghur medicine recorded in a medical compendium completed by Li Shizen (1518-1593), a chinese medical authority. The Tartar scholar Rashit Rahmeti Arat has written two valuable books in German entitled Zur Heilkunde der Uighuren (Medical Practices of the Uygurs) , in 1930 and 1932, relying on Uyghur documents discovered in East Turkestan. In his book, Arat gives important information on Uyghur medicine and medical treatment.
Among other documents he studied he found a very important sketch of a man with an explanation of acupuncture. Relying on this document, some western scholars claim that acupuncture was not a Chinese, but a Central Asian invention and the Uyghurs perfected the method. Traditional Uyghur medicine, which can be traced back for more than 2,700 years through written records, is still very popular in East Turkestan today.
Tibetan Buddhist Medicine/Ancient Uyghur Civilization
Medicine – Tatar scholar, professor Reşit Rahmeti Arat in Zur Heilkunde der Uighuren (Medical Practices of the Uyghurs) published in 1930 and 1932, in Berlin, discussed Uyghur medicine. Relying on a sketch of a man with an explanation of acupuncture, he and some Western scholars suspect that acupuncture was not a Chinese, but an Uyghur discovery. Today, traditional Uyghur medicine can still be found at street stands. Similar to other traditional medicine, diagnosis is usually made through checking the pulse, symptoms, and disease history, and then the pharmacist pounds up different dried herbs, making personalized medicines according to the prescription. Modern Uyghur medical hospitals adopted the Western medical science and medicine and adopted Western pharmaceutical technology to discover new and produce traditional medicines.
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The History of (Tibetan) Singing Bowls
> TIBETAN SINGING BOWL HISTORY <
Singing bowls (also known as Himalayan bowls, rin, medicine bowls, Tibetan bowls or suzu gongs in Japan) are a type of bell, specifically classified as a standing bell. Rather than hanging inverted or attached to a handle, standing bells sit with the bottom surface resting. The sides and rim of singing bowls vibrate to produce sound. Singing bowls were traditionally used throughout Asia as part of Bön and Tantric Buddhist sadhana.
Today they are employed worldwide both within and without these spiritual traditions, for meditation, trance-induction, relaxation, healthcare, personal well-being and religious practice. Read More: > HERE <
Bei einer Klangmassage, auch Klangschalenmassage, werden Klangschalen auf den bekleideten Körper aufgesetzt und angeschlagen bzw. angerieben oder direkt über den Körper gehalten, ohne ihn zu berühren. Auf diese Weise überträgt sich der Schall des erzeugten Tons auf den Körper. Dies wird als Vibration im Körper wahrgenommen. Die Klangmassage soll im Wellness-Bereich entspannend und beruhigend wirken und wird zum Beispiel bei Stress empfohlen. Im Esoterik-Bereich werden Klangtherapien angeboten, bei denen die Klangschalen in Zusammenhang mit den Chakras gebracht werden.
Die Wirkung der Klangmassage wird zum einen damit erklärt, dass der menschliche Körper überwiegend aus Wasser besteht, das durch die Schallwellen in Bewegung versetzt wird. Dieser Effekt wirke letztlich wie eine innerliche Massage der Körperzellen. Körperliche und auch seelische Verspannungen und Blockaden sollen so gelöst werden.
Wissenschaftliche Belege für diese Theorie gibt es nicht.
Die andere Erklärung geht davon aus, dass bestimmte Töne, die durch Klangschalen erzeugt werden, den verschiedenen Chakren zugeordnet werden können und diese beeinflussen. Bei „Störungen“ der Chakren sollen diese dann mit Hilfe der Klangmassage harmonisiert und positiv beeinflusst werden.
Der Autor Peter Hess ( www.peter-hess-institut.de / Sound Massage According to Peter Hess ® ) vertritt die Theorie, dass die Töne der Klangschalen die Behandelten in einen tranceähnlichen Zustand versetzt; diese Wirkung ähnele Ritualen von Schamanen. In diesem Zustand seien Veränderungen auf körperlicher, seelischer und geistiger Ebene möglich.
Burma VJ Nominated for the 2010 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature
> A MESSAGE FROM RICHARD GERE <
THE BEGGING BOWL, or alms bowl, is one of the simplest but most important objects in the daily lives of Buddhist monks. It is primarily a practical object, used as a bowl in which to collect alms (either money or food) from lay supporters….. http://www.religionfacts.com/buddhism/things/begging_bowl.htm
Im Wellness-Bereich werden Klangschalen nach persönlicher Vorliebe ausgewählt; die Klangmassage soll einfach die Entspannung fördern.
Bei einem so genannten energetischen Ansatz aus dem Bereich der Esoterik können Klang und Vibration der Klangschalen angeblich Blockaden im „feinstofflichen“, also seelisch-geistigen Bereich lösen. Mitunter versuchen die Klangmasseure, den Klang sowohl in die Aura als auch in die Chakren einzubringen, um diese „energetisch anzureichern“.
Wissenschaftlich lässt sich dieser Ansatz nicht nachvollziehen.
In der Körpertherapie kann, nach Aussagen der Therapeuten, die Klangmassage bei der Aufarbeitung von Traumatisierungen unterstützen. Die Klänge sollen in das „Körpergedächtnis“ vordringen und das Trauma lösen.
Therapien dürfen in Deutschland nur von therapeutisch ausgebildeten Personen durchgeführt werden.
Astrologisch orientierte Anbieter nutzen die mathematischen und astronomischen Herleitungen von Cousto, der die Umlauffrequenzen der Planeten durch Oktavierung in den hörbaren und auch sichtbaren Bereich gebracht hat. Bei Klangschalen, deren Klangspektren solche Tönen enthalten, spricht man von Planetenschalen.
Zudem existieren Klangwiegen aus Holz, in denen sich der Patient hineinlegen kann. An einer Seite befindet sich eine Öffnung, sowie Saiten, die von dem Therapeuten gezupft werden. Außerdem kann die Wiege zusätzlich geschaukelt werden.
Zum Ursprung – Der Ursprung der Klangschalen wird in Indien und im Himalaya vermutet, im Gebiet des heutigen Tibet. Es handelt sich um ein traditionelles Küchengeschirr.
Die handwerkliche Fertigung der Schalen wurde in der Himalaya-Region zwischen 1900 und 1940 fast völlig aufgegeben.
Im Westen entstand jedoch etwa in den 1980er Jahren die Überzeugung, dass es sich bei den tibetischen Metallschalen um „Klangschalen“ handelt, und sie lassen sich unzweifelhaft zum Erzeugen von Tönen verwenden.
Dass die Klangtherapie eine uralte buddhistische Methode ist, was häufig in der westlichen Esoterik-Szene behauptet wird, lässt sich nicht belegen.
Quelle: http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klangmassage
Tibetan musicologist, Indo-Tibetan art expert and meditator, Rain Gray personally tests tens of thousands of singing bowls each year in the Himalayas to select the 1/2 percent which are awarded our Master-quality® label.
Indo Tibetan Yogic Tradions of the 5 Rites
> The Indo-Tibetan Tibetan Yogic Tradition <
and the “Tibetan Rites of Rejuvenation”
The Five Tibetan Rites is a system of exercises reported to be more than 2,500 years old which were first publicized by Peter Kelder in a 1939 publication entitled „The Eye of Revelation“. Although practically nothing is known about Kelder, one source reports that Kelder was raised as an adopted child in the midwestern United States, and left home while still in his teens in search of adventure. In the 1930s, Kelder claims to have met, in southern California, a retired British army colonel who shared with him stories of travel and the subsequent discovery of the Rites. Originally written as a 32-page booklet, the publication is the result of Kelder’s conversations with the colonel.The Rites are said to be a form of Tibetan yoga similar to the more well-known yoga series that originated in India. However, the Five Rites and traditional Tibetan yoga both emphasize „a continuous sequence of movement“ ( Sanskrit: vinyasa ), whereas Indian forms focus on „static positions“. Although the Rites have circulated amongst yogis for decades, skeptics say that Tibetans have never recognized them as being authentic Tibetan practices.
The Five Tibetan Rites are also referred to as “ The Five Rites „, “ The Five Tibetans „, “ The Five Rites of Rejuvenation “ and most recently “ T 5 T „. Read More: > HERE <
Disputed origins – Although the origin of the Five Rites prior to the publication of The Eye of Revelation is disputed between practitioners and skeptics, a comparison of illustrations of the postures shows a remarkable similarity between the Rites and authentic Tibetan ‚phrul ‚khor exercises from a system rendered into English as ‚Vajra Body Magical Wheel Sun and Moon Union‘ (Tibetan: རྡོ་རྗེ་ལུས་ཀྱི་འཕྲུལ་འཁོར་ཉི་ཟླ་ཁ་སྦྱོར; Wylie: rdo rje lus kyi ‚phrul ‚khor nyi zla kha sbyor).
Chris Kilham, whose 1994 book The Five Tibetans helped respark the Five Rites‘ popularity, says, „As the story has it, they were shared by Tibetan lamas; beyond that I know nothing of their history.“Even though the historic lineage of the Rites prior to the publication of Kelder’s booklet remains to be ascertained, the Rites have nevertheless been affirmed by a lama and scholar of the Sa skya tradition of Tibetan Buddhism as being „a genuine form of yoga and were originally taken from an authentic Indo-Tibetan tantric lineage, namely a cycle of yantra-yoga associated with the Sadnadapadadharma.“ These techniques have been integrated into the well-known > “Six Yogas of Naropa”< (Sk. Sadnadapadadharma षड्नादपादधर्म Tib. na ro chos drug ན་རོ་ཆོས་དྲུག་).
However, it has been argued that the Five Rites predate yoga as we know it today by as much as seven hundred years or more and, therefore, could not have derived from either Tibetan or Indian forms of yoga. Moreover, it has also been suggested that the Rites are more likely to have originated from a system of Kum Nye which, like the Rites, date back 2,500 years.
Nevertheless, Chris Kilham also states that “ the issue at hand, though, is not the lineage of the Five Tibetans. The point is their immense potential value for those who will clear 10 minutes a day to practice.“
Tibetan Buddhism Trul Khor, by Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche
Records of Teachings Received by Tibetan Masters from the Sa skya Tradition – A Project of the University of Munich in collaboration with the Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center (New York), funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG):
About the Database: The „Records of Teachings Received“ (gsan yig) from which the entries of this database originate, form part of the collected writings of the renowned Sa skya pa master and historian A mes zhabs Ngag dbang kun dga‘ bsod nams (1597-1659).
This database contains references to almost 1,800 individuals (references to some of whom were previously scarce or non-existent) listed in 746 lineage records. Read More: > HERE <
Kum Nye and sKu-mNyé refer to a wide variety of Tibetan religious and medical body practices. The two terms are different spellings in the Latin alphabet of the same Tibetan phrase (Wylie: sku mnye), which literally means „massage of the subtle body“. Some systems of sku mnye are vaguely similar to Yoga, Tai Chi, Qi Gong, or therapeutic massage. Confusingly, „Kum Nye“ and Ku Nye are also used to transcribe the Tibetan phrases dku mnye („belly massage“) and bsku mnye („oil massage“), which are pronounced identically to sku mnye. dKu mnye and bsku mnye manipulate the physical body, rather than the subtle (energetic) one.
Systems of Kum Nye are found in many Tibetan Buddhist and Bön traditions. These can be entirely different both in purpose and in methods. For instance, some forms are very slow moving; others are intensely aerobic. Some systems are based in the Tibetan Medical Tantras (scriptures), and are mainly therapeutic. Other systems are based in Dzogchen, and are mainly religious in purpose. Read More: > HERE <
NÄropÄ or Naropa (Prakrit; Sanskrit: NÄropadÄ, 956-1041) was an Indian Buddhist yogi, mystic and monk. He was the disciple of Tilopa and brother, or some sources say partner and pupil, of Niguma . Naropa was the main teacher of Marpa, the founder of the Kagyu school of Tibetan Buddhism. As an Indian tantric Buddhist, he has a place in Vajrayana Buddhism as a whole, but he is particularly renowned in Tibetan Buddhism via his name being attached to the six yogas of Naropa, a suite of advanced yogic practices for the attainment of skills relevant to the completion stage of anuttarayogatantra.
Naropa was born a high status Brahmin but from an early age showed an independent streak, hoping to follow a career of study and meditation. Succumbing to his parents wishes, he agreed to an arranged marriage with a young brahmin girl. After 8 years they both agreed to dissolve their marriage and become ordained.
At the age of 28 Naropa entered the famous > Buddhist University at Nalanda < where he studied both, Sutra and Tantra.
He gained the reputation as a great scholar and faultless debater, essential at that time as the tradition of debate was such that the loser automatically became a student of the winner. He eventually gained the title „Gatekeeper of the North“; engaged in many debates, taught and won many students. Read more: > HERE <
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Articles:
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Booktipp: > Eye of Revelation: (Paperback) <
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Umbrella Association: > Die Fünf Tibeter Dachverband ® e.V. <
TCM – TRADITIONAL CHINESE MEDICINE
(Traditional Chinese Pulsediagnosis)
> ÖAGTCM: Österr. Ausbildung für TCM <
Traditional Chinese Medicine, also known as TCM, includes a range of traditional medicine practices originating in China. Although well accepted in the mainstream of medical care throughout East Asia, it is considered an alternative medical system in much of the Western world. TCM practices include such treatments as Chinese herbal medicine, acupuncture, dietary therapy, and both Tui na and Shiatsu massage. Qigong and Taijiquan are also closely associated with TCM.
Much of the philosophy of traditional Chinese medicine derives from the same philosophy that informs Taoist and Buddhist thought, and reflects the classical Chinese belief that the life and activity of individual human beings have an intimate relationship with the environment on all levels. Read More: > HERE <
TRADITIONAL CHINESE MEDICINE – Introduction – Traditional Chinese medicine (Simplified: ä医学; Traditional: ä醫學; Pinyin: zhōngyÄ xué) is the name commonly given to a range of traditional medical practices used in China that have developed over the course of several thousand years of history. It is one of the most important forms of Oriental medicine, a term which may also include other related traditional Asian medical systems such as Japanese, Korean, Tibetan, and Mongolian medicine. Chinese medicine principally employs a method of analysis and synthesis, inquiring on a macro-level into the internal systems of the human body and their mutual relationships with the internal and external environment in an attempt to gain an understanding of the fundamental laws which govern the functioning of the human organism, and to apply this understanding to the treatment and prevention of disease, and health maintenance. TCM is rooted in a unique, comprehensive and systematic theoretical structure which includes the Theory of Yin-yang , the Five Elements, the human body Meridian system, and other systems. Treatment is conducted with reference to this philosophical framework.
Uses – In the West, TCM is often considered alternative medicine; however, in mainland China and Taiwan, TCM is widely considered to be an integral part of the health care system. The term TCM is sometimes used specifically within the field of Chinese medicine to refer to the standardized set of theories and practices introduced in the mid-20th century under the government of Mao, as distinguished from related traditional theories and practices preserved by people in Taiwan, Hong Kong and by the overseas Chinese. The more general sense is meant in this section.
TCM developed as a form of noninvasive therapeutic intervention (also described as folk medicine or traditional medicine) rooted in ancient belief systems, including traditional religious concepts. Chinese medical practitioners before the 19th century relied on observation, trial and error, which incorporated certain mystical concepts. Like their Western counterparts, doctors of TCM had a limited understanding of infection, which predated the discovery of bacteria, viruses (germ theory of disease) and an understanding of cellular structures and organic chemistry. Instead they relied mainly on observation and description on the nature of infections for creating remedies. Based on theories formulated through three millennia of observation and practical experience, a system of procedure was formed as to guide a TCM practitioner in courses of treatment and diagnosis.
Unlike other forms of traditional medicine which have largely become extinct, traditional Chinese medicine continues as a distinct branch of modern medical practice, and within China, it is an important part of the public health care system. There are thousands of years of empirical knowledge about TCM conceptualized and recorded in terms appropriate to that system, and in recent decades there has been an effort to integrate the discoveries made by traditional Chinese medicine with the discoveries made by workers in the Western medical traditions. One important component of this work is to use the instrumentation and the methodological tools available via Western medicine to investigate observations made and hypotheses raised by the Chinese tradition.
That this effort has occurred is surprising to many for a number of reasons. In most of the world, indigenous medical practices have been supplanted by practices brought from the West, while in Chinese societies, this has not occurred and shows no sign of occurring. Furthermore, many have found it peculiar that Chinese medicine remains a distinct branch of medicine separate from Western medicine, while the same has not happened with other intellectual fields. There is, for example, no longer a distinct branch of Chinese physics or Chinese biology.
TCM is used by some to treat the side effects of chemotherapy, treating the cravings and withdrawal symptoms of drug addicts and treating a variety of chronic conditions that conventional medicine is claimed to be sometimes ineffective in treating. TCM has also been used to treat antibiotic-resistant infection.
A report issued by the Victorian state government in Australia describes TCM education in China: – Graduates from TCM university courses are able to diagnose in western medical terms, prescribe western pharmaceuticals, and undertake minor surgical procedures. In effect, they practice TCM as a specialty within the broader organization of Chinese health care.
TCM education in Australia, however, does not qualify a TCM practitioner to prescribe scheduled pharmaceuticals, nor to undertake surgical procedures or diagnose in western medical terms.
Theory – There are many schools of thought on which TCM is based. Because of this, the foundation principles of Chinese medicine are not necessarily uniform. Received TCM can be shown to be most influenced by Taoism, Buddhism, and Neo-Confucianism.
For over 3000 years (1200 BCE- present), Chinese academics of various schools have focused on the observable natural laws of the universe and their implications for the practical characterization of humanity’s place in the universe. In the I Ching and other Chinese literary and philosophical classics, they have described some general principles and their applications to health and healing:
- There are observable principles of constant phenomenal change by which the Universe is maintained.
- Man is part of the universe and cannot be separated from the universal process of change.
- As a result of these apparently inescapable primordial principles, the Universe (and every process therein) tends to eventually balance itself.
- Optimum health should result from living as harmoniously as possible with the spontaneous process of change tending towards balance. If there is no change (stagnation), or too much change (catastrophism), balance is increasingly lost and illnesses can occur.
- Everything is ultimately interconnected.
- Always use a systemic approach when addressing imbalances.
TCM is therefore largely based on the philosophical concept that the human body is a small universe with a set of complete and sophisticated interconnected systems. Those systems usually work in balance to maintain the healthy function of the human body. The balance is described as necessarily including qi, blood, jing, bodily fluids, the wu xing, emotions, and spirit (shen). TCM has a unique model of the body, notably concerned with the meridian system. TCM isn’t monolithic, however, and there are from minor to significant regional and philosophical differences between practitioners and schools which in turn can lead to differences in practice and theory.
Macro Views to Diseases – TCM has a macro view to most diseases: well-balanced human bodies can usually handle most everyday bacteria and virus, which are ubiquitous and fastly changing; diseases happens only if there are some unbalanced parts in a human body. Due to this macro philosophy, TCM usually does not care what exact bacteria or virus are causing the symptoms, but tries the best to find which parts of the body are unbalanced as well as to find a strategy to bring back the balance. At the meantime, TCM believes only symptoms matter because irregular symptoms from the human bodies are the only faithful sources to deduce the unbalanced parts in a dynamic, complex system like a human body.
Consequently, the treatments in TCM do not directly target to kill bacteria or virus but to bring back the balance of human bodis. It is very surprising but understandable that a TCM doctor may give very different herb prescriptions to patients affected by a same type of bacteria, because the different symptoms from the patients indicate different unbalanced parts in their bodies.
TCM’s macro view to diseases has some advantages and limitations compared to modern western medicine, which directly targets the external factors of diseases like bacteria and virus.
* The biggest advantage of TCM is that the internal reasons of diseases are addressed and the details of bacteria and virus can be largely ignored. The real potentials of the well-evolved human bodies are used to fight the bacteria and virus instead of simple antibiotics.
A correct TCM treatment will not only address current disease but also establish a strong balance to fight any other diseases. This is especially useful when the abused antibiotics fasten the mutation of bacteria and virus nowadays and it is increasingly difficult for doctors to develop right drugs to kill some specific variants. More over, the downside of western drugs is that they kill not only the bad bacteria and virus but they also severely intervene in the proper functioning of human bodies, which in turn worsen the unbalanced human internal system and make patients more susceptible to other types of bacteria and virus. This is the biggest dilemma in modern western medicine as exemplify by chemotherapy and radiotherapy treatments to cancers.
* A TCM doctor handles many types of diseases from hearts, livers, lungs, etc because the macro view of human body. A patient can be helped by just one visit to a TCM doctor in a comprehensive way. On the other hand, modern western medicine adopts a micro view. The diagnoses and treatments to diseases are highly specialized in terms of different causes. Patients have to judge first which specialist is going to help their problems.
* Judging the effectiveness of treatments in TCM is also based on a macro point of view. Genuine TCM does not rely on micro level lab test results like blood pressure, liver function, a report, bacteria numbers etc. Instead, macro level human feelings and behaviors are used: such as the sleep quality, feeling of enough energy to handle daily work, appetite to food, normal excreting, warmness of hands and feet etc. Modern western medicine relies on the lab tests to see the effectiveness of a treatment using drugs: like how many bacteria are left in the body. TCM doctors often criticize that western doctors pays too much attentions to individual metrics in lab reports and less concerns are given to the overall feelings of patients.
* The cost associated with TCM diagnoses and treatments are usually much less than modern western ways, which requires high-tech equipments and lab facilities to locate the external details. It is relatively fair for both the rich and the poor when seeing a TCM doctor and using Chinese herbs.
* The major problem in TCM is that a right disease diagnosis highly depends on the experiences of a TCM doctor. Even with a right diagnosis, a proper strategy using combined herb prescriptions must be used to bring back the dynamic balance in human bodies. As a result, it takes years or even decades to train a good TCM doctor who can deduce the unbalanced parts from complex symptoms from patients and find a right solution for it considering the interconnection between different parts in human bodies. There is a Chinese saying describing the wisdom and experiences needed for a TCM doctor: A good TCM doctor is also qualified to be a good prime minister in a country. In contrast, modern western diagnoses and treatments are more reliable than TCM in the sense that clear procedures are defined and the accurate information of bacteria and virus can be obtained.
* Finally, TCM may fail if a patient’s internal balance has been ruined too much and immediate, direct solution must be used to fight the diseases. TCM just does not know what bacteria and virus are the culprits.
It is natural for people to think a combined way to fight diseases from both internal and external point of views. Many doctors are researching into this promising areas.
Diagnostics – Following the macro philosophy, TCM diagnostics are based on overall observation of human syptoms rather than micro level labs. There are four types of TCM diagnostic methods: observe (望 wàng), hear and smell (聞 wén), ask about background (問 wèn) and read the pulse (切 qiè). Then a diagnosis is made using a system to classify the symptoms. As mentioned earlier, diagnostic based on symptoms, not bacteria or virus, is the essence in TCM because the internal reasons in human bodies matter.
Systems of diagnosis include:
- * Yin or Yang
- * Five Elements
- * Eight Principles
- * Zang Fu theory
- * Meridian (Chinese medicine)
- * Six Levels
- * Four Stages
- * Three Jiao
TCM diagnosis in China is becoming integrated with western diagnostic thought and is moving towards total integration of the two systems. Modern practitioners in China often use the two systems in combination to understand what is happening with the patient.
Because traditional Chinese medicine predates the more invasive medical testing used in conventional Western medicine, TCM requires skill in a range of diagnostic systems not commonly used outside of TCM. Much of this diagnostic skill involves developing the abilities to observe subtle appearances; to observe that which is right in front of us, but escapes the observation of most people. SEE Also: Traditional Chinese Medicine :: Diagnostic Theory
Diagnostic Techniques
- Palpation of the patient’s radial artery pulse in six positions
- Observation of the appearance of the patient’s tongue
- Observation of the patient’s face
- Palpation of the patient’s body (especially the abdomen) for tenderness
- Observation of the sound of the patient’s voice
- Observation of the surface of the ear
- Observation of the vein on the index finger on small children
- Comparisons of the relative warmth or coolness of different parts of the body
- Anything else that can be observed without instruments and without harming the patient
- SEE Also: Traditional Chinese Medicine :: Diagnostic Theory
Treatment Techniques
- Historically, eight branches comprised Chinese medicine treatment:
- Tui na(推拿) Chinese Massage Therapy
- Acupuncture and Moxibustion(針灸)
- Chinese herbal medicine(ä药)
- Chinese food therapy食 疗
- Qigong(氣功) and related breathing and meditation exercise
- T’ai Chi Ch’uan (太極拳) and other Chinese martial arts.
- Feng shui风水
- Chinese astrology
Today, all methods except Feng shui and Chinese astrology are routinely used as part of TCM treatments.
Within each treatment branch, specific treatment methods exist. Cupping and Gua sha(刮痧) come under the heading of Tui Na. Auriculotherapy(耳燭療法) comes under the heading of Acupuncture and Moxibustion. Die-da or Tieh Ta (跌打): practitioners who specialize in healing trauma injury such as bone fractures, sprains, bruises etc. Some of these specialists may also use or recommend other disciplines of Chinese medical therapies (or Western medicine in modern times) if serious injury is involved. Such practice of bone-setting is not common in the West.
Modern TCM treatments consist of herbal medicine or acupuncture as the primary method, with other methods such as massage, qi gong, food therapy playing a secondary role. Illness in TCM is seen as a lack of harmony, and the goal of all TCM treatment is to assist the body to regain balance and achieve homeostasis.
The modern practice of traditional Chinese medicine is increasingly incorporating techniques and theories of Western medicine in its praxis.
SEE Also:
- * Health :: Acupuncture
- * Traditional Chinese Medicine :: Moxibustion
- * Traditional Chinese Medicine :: Qigong
- * Traditional Chinese Medicine :: Herbology
- * Traditional Chinese Medicine :: Food Therapy
Traditional Chinese Medicine and Science, The Question of Efficacy – Most scientific research about TCM has focused on acupuncture. Two views have emerged characterized by evidence based medicine on the one hand which has not found convincing evidence for acupuncture and the United States National Institutes of Health on the other, which believed evidence could be uncovered. The 1997 NIH Consensus Statement on Acupuncture summarizes research on the efficacy of acupuncture as follows:
„…promising results have emerged, for example, efficacy of acupuncture in adult post-operative and chemotherapy nausea and vomiting and in postoperative dental pain. There are other situations such as addiction, stroke rehabilitation, headache, menstrual cramps, tennis elbow, fibromyalgia, myofascial pain, osteoarthritis, low back pain, carpal tunnel syndrome, and asthma for which acupuncture may be useful as an adjunct treatment or an acceptable alternative or be included in a comprehensive management program. Further research is likely to uncover additional areas where acupuncture interventions will be useful.“
Much less work in the West has been done on Chinese herbal medicines, which comprise much of TCM. It is clear, however, that some of these medicines have powerful biochemical effects. An example is the herb ephedra which was introduced into the West as a stimulant, and later banned (although this ban was ordered lifted in 2005 by a federal court judge) in the United States after deaths were attributed to its use. A less controversial example is artemisinin, derived from a herb long-used used in TCM, and now used worldwide to treat multi-drug resistant strains of falciparum malaria. In the West, many Chinese medicines have been marketed as herbal supplements and there has been considerable controversy over the regulatory status of these substances.
TCM practitioners usually have no philosophical objections to scientific studies on the effectiveness of treatments. A barrier to the adoption of Chinese herbal medicines into Western practice is finance. It requires a large amount of expertise and money to conduct, for example, a double-blind drug trial, making it a large venture to test even one of the thousands of compounds used by TCM. Because these compounds cannot be patented and owned exclusively, there is a disincentive to sponsor such expensive tests. Some important western medical drugs such as Ephedrine have come from Chinese herbs.
There are also a priori doubts about the efficacy of many TCM treatments that appear to have their basis in magical thinking, e.g. plants with heart-shaped leaves will help the heart, ground bones of tiger give a person energy because tigers are energetic animals and so on.
Purported Mechanism of Action – The basic mechanism of TCM is akin to treating the body as a black box, recording and classifying changes and observations of the patient using a traditional philosophy. In contrast to many alternative and complementary medicines such as homeopathy, practically all techniques of TCM have explanations for why they may be more effective than a placebo, which Western medicine can find plausible. Most doctors of Western medicine would not find implausible claims that qigong preserves health by encouraging relaxation and movement, that acupuncture relieves pain by stimulating the production of neurotransmitters, or that Chinese herbal medicines may contain powerful biochemical agents. However, the largest barriers to describing the mechanisms of TCM in scientific terms are the difference of language and lack of research. TCM concepts such as qi yin and yang are used to describe specific biological processes but are difficult to translate into scientific terms. Some research is now beginning to emerge explaining possible scientific mechanisms behind these TCM concepts.
Safety of Chinese Medicines – Acupressure and acupuncture are largely accepted to be safe from results gained through medical studies. Several cases of pneumothorax, nerve damage and infection have been reported as resulting from acupuncture treatments. These adverse events are extremely rare and were found to be due to practitioner negligence. Dizziness and bruising will sometimes result from acupuncture treatment.
Chinese herbal medicines, in certain cases, involve risk of poisoning or allergic reactions. Cases of acute and chronic poisoning due to treatment through ingested Chinese medicines are relatively common in China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan, with numerous deaths occurring each year. Many of these deaths do occur however, when patients self prescribe herbs or take unprocessed versions of toxic herbs. For example, the Chinese herb má huáng — known commonly in the west by its Latin name Ephedra — was banned in 2004 by the FDA, although, the FDA’s final ruling exempted traditional Asian preparations of Ephedra from the ban. The Ephedra ban was meant to combat the use of this herb in western weight loss products, a usage that directly conflicts with traditional Asian uses of the herb. There were no cases of Ephedra based fatalities with patients using traditional Asian preparations of the herb for its traditionally intended uses. This ban was ordered lifted in April 2005 by a Utah federal court judge.
Furthermore, potentially toxic and carcinogenic compounds such as arsenic and cinnabar are sometimes prescribed as part of a medicinal mixture or used on the basis of „using poison to cure poison“. Unprocessed herbals are sometimes adulterated with chemicals that may alter the intended effect of a herbal preparation or prescription. Much of these are being prevented with more empirical studies of Chinese herbals and tighter regulation regarding the growing, processing, and prescription of various herbals.
Traditional Chinese Medicine and Western Medicine – Within China, there has been a great deal of cooperation between TCM practitioners and Western medicine, especially in the field of ethnomedicine. Chinese herbal medicine includes many compounds which are unused by Western medicine, and there is great interest in those compounds as well as the theories which TCM practitioners use to determine which compound to prescribe. For their part, advanced TCM practitioners in China are interested in statistical and experimental techniques which can better distinguish medicines that work from those that do not. One result of this collaboration has been the creation of peer reviewed scientific journals and medical databases on traditional Chinese medicine.
The relationship between TCM and Western medicine in the West is more contentious. While more and more medical schools are including classes on alternative medicine in their curricula, older Western doctors and scientists are far more likely than their Chinese counterparts to skeptically view TCM as archaic pseudoscience and superstition. This skepticism can come from a number of sources. For one, TCM in the West tends to be advocated either by Chinese immigrants or by those that have lost faith in conventional medicine. Many people in the West have a stereotype of the East as mystical and unscientific, which attracts those in the West who have lost hope in science and repels those who believe in scientific explanations. There have also been experiences in the West with unscrupulous or well-meaning but improperly-trained „TCM practitioners“ who have done people more harm than good in many instances.
As an example of the different roles of TCM in China and the West, a person with a broken bone in the West (i.e. a routine, „straightforward“ condition) would almost never see a Chinese medicine practitioner or visit a martial arts school to get the bone set, whereas this is routine in China. As another example, most TCM hospitals in China have electron microscopes and many TCM practitioners know how to use one.
This is not to say that TCM techniques are considered worthless in the West. In fact, Western pharmaceutical companies have recognized the value of traditional medicines and are employing teams of scientists in many parts of the world to gather knowledge from traditional healers and medical practitioners. After all, the active ingredients of most modern medicines were discovered in plants or animals. The particular contribution of Western medicine is that it strictly applies the scientific method to promising traditional treatments, separating those that work from those that do not. As another example, most Western hospitals and increasing numbers of other clinics now offer T’ai Chi Ch’uan or qigong classes as part of their inpatient and community health programs.
Most Chinese in China do not see traditional Chinese medicine and Western medicine as being in conflict. In cases of emergency and crisis situations, there is generally no reluctance in using conventional Western medicine. At the same time, belief in Chinese medicine remains strong in the area of maintaining health. To put it simply, you see a Western doctor if you have acute appendicitis, but you do exercises or take Chinese herbs to keep your body healthy enough to prevent appendicitis, or to recover more quickly from the surgery. Very few practitioners of Western medicine in China reject traditional Chinese medicine, and most doctors in China will use some elements of Chinese medicine in their own practice.
A degree of integration between Chinese and Western medicine also exists in China. For instance, at the Shanghai cancer hospital, a patient may be seen by a multidisciplinary team and be treated concurrently with radiation surgery, Western drugs and a traditional herbal formula.
It is worth noting that the practice of Western medicine in China is somewhat different from that in the West. In contrast to the West, there are relatively few allied health professionals to perform routine medical procedures or to undertake procedures such as massage or physical therapy.
In addition, Chinese practitioners of Western medicine have been less impacted by trends in the West that encourage patient empowerment, to see the patient as an individual rather than a collection of parts, and to do nothing when medically appropriate. Chinese practitioners of Western medicine have been widely criticized for overprescribing drugs such as corticosteroids or antibiotics for common viral infections. It is likely that these medicines, which are generally known to be useless against viral infections, would provide less relief to the patient than traditional Chinese herbal remedies.
Traditional Chinese Medicine and Animals – As animal products are used in Chinese formulas, vegans and vegetarians should inform their practitioner, if their beliefs forbid the ingestion of animals. Often alternative substances can be used.
The use of endangered species is controversial within TCM. In particular, the belief that tiger penis and rhinoceros horn are aphrodisiacs has been blamed for depleting these species in the wild. Medicinal use is also having a major impact on the populations of sea horses.
The animal rights movement notes that a few traditional Chinese medicinal solutions use bear bile. To extract maximum amounts of the bile, the bears are often fitted with a sort of permanent catheter. The treatment itself and especially the extraction of the bile is very painful, causes damage to the intestines of the bear, and often even kills the bears. However, due to international attention on the issues surrounding its harvesting, bile is now rarely used by practitioners outside of China.
- Sources
- * Chang, Stephen T. The Great Tao; Tao Longevity; ISBN 0942196015 Stephen T. Chang
- * Kaptchuck, Ted J., The Web That Has No Weaver; Congdon & Weed; ISBN 0809229331Z
- * Maciocia, Giovanni, The Foundations of Chinese Medicine: A Comprehensive Text for Acupuncturists and Herbalists; Churchill Livingstone; ISBN 0443-039801
- * Ni, Mao-Shing, The Yellow Emperor’s Classic of Medicine : A New Translation of the Neijing Suwen with Commentary; Shambhala, 1995; ISBN 1570620806
- * Holland, Alex Voices of Qi: An Introductory Guide to Traditional Chinese Medicine; North Atlantic Books, 2000; ISBN 1556433263
- * Unschuld, Paul U., Medicine in China: A History of Ideas; University of California Press, 1985; ISBN 0520050231
- * Qu, Jiecheng, When Chinese Medicine Meets Western Medicine – History and Ideas (in Chinese); Joint Publishing (H.K.), 2004; ISBN 9620423364
- * Chan, T.Y. (2002). Incidence of herb-induced aconitine poisoning in Hong Kong: impact of publicity measures to promote awareness among the herbalists and the public. Drug Saf. 25:823–828.
- * Benowitz, Neal L. (2000) Review of adverse reaction reports involving ephedrine-containing herbal products. Submitted to U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Jan. 17.
- * Porkert, Manfred The Theoretical Foundations of Chinese Medicine MIT Press, 1974 ISBN 0262160587
- * Hongyi, L., Hua, T., Jiming, H., Lianxin, C., Nai, L., Weiya, X., Wentao, M. (2003) Perivascular Space: Possible anatomical substrate for the meridian. Journal of Complimentary and Alternative Medicine. 9:6 (2003) pp851-859
Links
- State Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine for the People’s Republic of China, (English)
- Journal of Chinese Medicine
- Classics of Traditional Chinese Medicine, by the National Library of Medicine (NLM)
- Merging Chinese Traditional Medicine into the American Health System
- The Chinese Medicine Sampler- Historical Roots of Traditional Chinese Medicine
- An essay on translation of Chinese concepts into English
- Traditional Chinese Medicine news, information, education, research and discussion – A regularly updated TCM website based in Australia
- ChineseMedicine.com.hk 香港ä醫網
- National Certification Commission for Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine (USA)
- University Minnesota – What is TCM ?
- AHC – Center for Spirituality and Healing
- QI GONG im Kloster St. Clemens, July 2010
- Guang’anmen HOSPITAL, CHINA ACADEMY of Chinese Medical Sciences
- Meet QI-GONG Groups and Friends at facebook <
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