yin yang

The earliest reference to Yin and Yang is in the I Ching (Book of Changes) in approximately in 700 BC. In this work, all phenomena are said to be reduced to Yin-Yang.

 

Yin & Yang are one of the most fundamental concepts in Traditional Chinese Medicine, as it is the foundation of diagnosis & treatment.

Yin

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Translations: 1. female, passive, negative principle in nature 2. the moon 3. shaded orientation 4. north or shady side of a hill 5. south of a river.

Yang

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Translations: 1. positive, active, the male principle in nature 2. south or sunny side of a hill 3. north of a river.

Four Main Aspects of Yin and Yang Relationship

1. Yin-Yang are opposites

They are either on the opposite ends of a cycle, like the seasons of the year, or, opposites on a continuum of energy or matter. This opposition is relative, and can only be spoken of in relationships. For example Water is Yin relative to steam but Yang relative to ice. Yin and Yang are never static but in a constantly changing balance.

2. Interdependent: Can not exist without each other
The Tai Ji (Supreme Ultimate) diagram shows the relationship of Yin & Yang and illustrates interdependence on Yin & Yang. Nothing is totally Yin or totally Yang. Just as a state of total Yin is reached, Yang begins to grow. Yin contains the seed of Yang and vise versa. They constantly transform into each other. For Example no energy without matter, no day without night.
The classics state: "Yin creates Yang and Yang activates Yin".

3. Mutual consumption of Yin and Yang
Relative levels of Yin-Yang are continuously changing. Normally this is a harmonious change, but when Yin or Yang are out of balance they affect each other, and too much of one can eventually weaken (consume) the other.

Four (4) possible states of imbalance:

Preponderance (Excess) of Yin
Preponderance (Excess) of Yang
Weakness (Deficiency) of Yin
Weakness (Deficiency) of Yang

4. Inter-transformation of Yin and Yang.

One can change into the other, but it is not a random event, happening only when the time is right. For example Spring only comes when winter is finished.

Yin and Yang Theory and History
Yin Yang is the fundamental principle, and the most important theory in TCM, underlying all physiology, pathology & treatment.

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Combining the two, we have the four stages of Yin and Yang
With the addition of an extra line, the Eight Trigrams (Ba Gua) were formed, illustrating all the directions.

The Eight Trigrams were combined to form 64 hexagrams, symbolising all possible phenomena of the Universe.

Yin Yang had been understood for many centuries but was systematically elaborated and written down by Tsou Yen of the Yin Yang (Naturalist) School in the Warring States Period (476-221 BC).

5 Element Theory was developed at the same time.

The Naturalist school promoted the idea of living in harmony with natural laws. Scholars of this school interpreted natural phenomena and observed how these are reflected in the human body in health and disease. Yin and Yang and the Five Elements became an integral part of Chinese philosophy.

The ancients observed 2 phases of constant cyclical change. Yin constantly changes into Yang & back into Yin again. This can be seen in the changes of four seasons, and the changes throughout a single day (24 Hour Cycle), as seen below.

24 Hour Yin Yang Cycle

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(12 pm corresponds to Utmost Yang, while 12 am corresponds to Utmost Yin)

General Qualities of Yin and Yang

Yin

Yang

Darkness

Light

Moon

Sun

Feminine

Masculine

Shade

Brightness

Rest

Activity

West (Sunset = Yin)

East (Sunrise = beginning of Yang)

North

South

Earth

Heaven

Right

Left

Flat (like Earth)

Round (like Heaven)

Matter

Energy

More material/dense

Non-material, rarefied

 

 

These transform into one another.

They are 2 states of a continuum. For Example: Liquid water (Yin) heat - vapour (Yang) - cools - liquid (Yin).

Yin

Yang

Produces form

Produces energy

Grows

Generates

Substantial

Non-substantial

Matter

Energy

Contraction

Expansion

Descending

Rising

Below

Above

Water

Fir

Yin and Yang in Medicine

All physiological processes, signs and symptoms can be reduced to Yin-Yang.

In general, every treatment modality aims to:

  • Tonify Yang
  • Tonify Yin
  • Disperse excess Yang
  • Disperse excess Yin

(In practice, depending on the condition, strategies may be combined, for example: disperse excess Yin & tonify Yang)

Yin and Yang and the Six Pathogenic Factors

Yin

Yang

 

Wind

Cold

Heat

Dampness

Dryness

 

Summer heat

Yin and Yang and the Human Body

Yin

Yang

Front (chest-abdomen)

Back

Body

Head

Interior (organs)

Exterior (skin, muscles)

Below waist

Above waist

Anterior-medial

Posterior-lateral

ventral surface of the trunk and limbs

back and dorsal surface of the limbs

Structure

Function

Blood/Body Fluids

Qi

Conservation/storage

Transformation/change

Yin Organs: Heart, Lung,

Small Intestine, Lg. Intestine

Liver, Spleen, Kidney,

Gall Bladder, Stomach, Bladder

Pericardium

San Jiao

Solid Organs"

Hollow Organs

Front and Back
Front is more soft and vulnerable (Yin). Back contains spine that holds ribs: protection. When human depicted as crouching, back receives sun (Yang) and front faces the earth (Yin), is in shade and is protected.

All Yang channels (except the Stomach channel) flow on the dorsal or dorsolateral surface of the trunk and limbs. They carry Yang energy and protect the body from pathogenic factors. Yin channels flow on the anterior or anteromedial surface of the trunk and limbs.

Body and Head
Yang channels either end or begin on the head. Acupuncture points on the head can be used to raise Yang energy. When Yang energy is not cooled by Yin, it may rise to the head, causing signs such as red face and eyes. The head is easily affected by Yang pathogens such as heat and wind. The chest and abdomen (Yin) areas are more easily affected by Yin pathogens such as Cold and Dampness.

Interior and Exterior
The exterior of the body such as the skin and muscles is more Yang. The exterior protects the body from attack by external pathogenic influences such as Cold, Wind, etc. The classics state: "Yang is on the outside and protects Yin".

Below the Waist and Above the Waist

Below waist - closer to earth (Yin). Above, closer to Heaven (Yang).
Upper part more affected by Yang pathogens, i.e. wind.
Lower part more affected by Yin pathogens, i.e. cold damp.

Anterior/Medial and Posterior/Lateral Surface of the Limbs

Yin channels flow on the anterior-medial aspect of trunk/limbs
Yang channels flow on the posterior-lateral aspect of trunk/limbs

Structure and Function

Structure = something substantial, i.e. Matter (Yin)
Function = something insubstantial, action, energy (Yang)
All parts of the body have a structure (a physical form), and a function (their activity)
However, all is relative. Even within the Yang category of function, there are Yin functions (i.e. storage, conservation) and Yang functions, i.e. transformation, transportation, digestion, excretion.
Within the Yin category of form, there are Yin forms ("solid") and Yang forms ("hollow")

Blood, Body Fluids, and Qi
Qi is Energy, more Yang.
Blood = denser and more material (therefore Yin).
But note that "Xue" (blood) not exactly like our concept of Blood. More like "thicker" form of Qi.

Note: there are several types of Qi. Each is relatively more Yin or Yang.
Ancestral QI (more Yin, more slow moving. Moves in long slow cycles).
Ying Qi (more Yang than Ancestral Qi, moves with Blood with which it is closely related). Ying is more Yin than Wei Qi.
Wei Qi the most Yang form of Qi. Circulates in the exterior in the daytime to protect us from pathogenic influences, and regulates opening/closing of pores.

Conservation/Store (Yin) and Transformation/Change (Yang)
Yin Organs store Blood, Body Fluids, Essence, etc.
Yang Organs constantly transform, transport and excrete the products of digestion.

Solid and Hollow Organs (Zang Fu)
Yin Organs are "Solid": constantly active, involved in production and storage of the body's vital Substances (Qi Blood, Body Fluids, Essence)

Yang Organs are "Hollow": receive and circulate but do not store, involved in digestion, transformation, excretion.

Yin and Yang in Pathology

Clinical signs and symptoms can be interpreted via Yin-Yang theory. When Yin Yang are in dynamic balance and relating harmoniously, there are no symptoms to observe. When Yin and Yang are out of balance, they become separated.

For example a.) Yin does not cool and nourishes Yang so Yang rises (headaches, red face, sore eyes, sore throats, nosebleeds, irritability, manic behavior. b.) Yang does not warm and activate Yin (cold limbs, hypo-activity, poor circulation of blood, pale face, low energy. Actual symptoms depend on specific pathologies, which Organ involved, etc.

Yin

Yang

 

Deficiency

Excess

Hypo-activity

Hyperactivity

Chronic disease/gradual onset

Acute disease/rapid onset

Slowly changing symptoms

Rapid pathological changes

Quiet, lethargy, sleepiness

Restlessness, insomnia

Wants to be covered

Throws off bedclothes

Lies curled up

Lies stretched out

Cold limbs and body

Hot limbs and body

Pale face

Red face

Weak voice, no desire to talk

Loud voice, talkative

Shallow, weak breathing

Coarse breathing

No thirst/wants warm drinks

Thirst esp. for cold drinks

Copious, clear urine

Scanty, dark urine

Loose stools (fluids not transformed)

Constipation (damage to fluids by heat)

Clear, copious secretions

Thick, sticky white/yellow secretions

Excessive moisture

Excessive dryness (throat, skin, eyes etc.)

Degenerative disease

Inflammatory disease

Pale tongue, white coat

Red tongue, yellow coat

Empty pulse

Full pulse

In Practice:
Although Yin-Yang essential foundation for understanding symptoms and signs, the above list of signs is too general. We need to distinguish further to get an exact diagnosis. i.e., which Organ is involved, which pathogen involved, which channel involved.

Structure and Function
Without structure, the function could not occur. Without function, the structure would be meaningless.

Mutual Consumption of Yin and Yang
A balance of Yin & Yang is constantly changing. Yin & Yang mutually consume each other.

Four different situations:
1) Excess of Yin
2) Excess of Yang
3) Deficiency of Yin
4) Deficiency of Yang

Excess of Yin: i.e., when excess Cold in the body consumes the Yang (heat). This is an Excess Cold (Full Cold) condition.

Excess of Yang: i.e., when excess Heat (from Exterior or Interior of the body) consumes Body Fluids, leading to Dryness or even Heat. This is an Excess Heat (Full Heat) condition.

Deficiency of Yin (Consumption of Yin)

When the body's Yin energy is depleted, an apparent excess of Yang results, leading to feelings of "empty heat" (mild but very specific heat symptoms, i.e., flushed cheeks, afternoon fever, sweating at night, heat in extremities. This is Deficiency Heat (Empty Heat) condition (i.e., a condition of deficiency and heat), also called "False Fire".

Deficiency of Yang (Consumption of Yang)

When the body's Yang energy is spontaneously deficient - an apparent excess of Yin results, leading to various symptoms involving cold and hypo-activity. Deficiency of Yang can also occur after an Excess Cold condition has damaged Yang. This is a Deficiency Cold (Empty Cold) condition (i.e., a condition of deficiency and cold).

  • Excess of Yin (Full Cold) / Excess of Yang (Full Heat)
  • Excess of Yin is primary aspect / Excess of Yang is the primary aspect
    Yin is in true excess
  • Can eventually cause a deficiency of Yin /Can eventually cause a deficiency of Yang 
  • Deficiency of Yang (Consumption of Yang)/  Deficiency of Yin (Consumption of Yin)
  • (Empty Cold) (Empty Heat of "False Fire")
  • The decrease of Yang energy is primary aspect / Deficiency of Yin is the primary aspect
  • Yin only apparently in excess / Yang only apparently in excess

Inter-transformation of Yin and Yang in Medicine
In medicine also, Yin and Yang transform into one another, but only when conditions are right. The right moment determined by the internal qualities of the given situation or phenomenon.
In clinical practice, the above principle is important.

Disease is prevented by achievement of BALANCE in lifestyle i.e., excessive work (Yang) without rest leads to deficiency (Yin) of energy i.e., excessive consumption of cold food (Yin) leads to deficiency of body's Yang energy i.e., smoking (= putting heat (Yang) into Lungs) leads to deficiency of Yin of Lungs (and eventually Kidneys)

The principle is observable in pathological changes seen in disease i.e., Exterior cold (cold weather) can invade the body and can change to heat (a sore throat). i.e., Deficiency of Yang of i.e., Spleen. Because Spleen Yang is used to transform fluids, these can build up to cause Excess Interior Dampness (Yin).

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