Looking down at the Earth from a celestial perspective,
the waters of the Earth's rivers may be seen flowing through geographical
channels, while a close inspection of the human body reveals the blood circulating
through the body's blood vessels. It is not surprising to find that the
two views are so similar.
The Chinese ancestors, more than any other ancient culture, drew a close comparison
between Nature and Humanity. Through their observations of Heaven and Earth,
they attained a deep and comprehensive understanding of Humanity, while
also increasing their understanding of the universe through their study
of human beings. Observing the systematic correspondence between natural
phenomena and the functions of the human body, they came to believe that
the body is a microcosm of the universe, similarly constituted and governed
by the same laws. This gave rise to the central concept of Chinese holistic
philosophy, "the Unity of Humanity and Heaven," which serves as
the basis of the unique system of traditional Chinese medicine. The ancient
practitioners of traditional Chinese medicine studied not only the human
body, but astronomy and geography as well.
Acupuncture is a unique healing way that originated in ancient China and has
spread throughout the modern world. The author of this article believes
that this unique therapeutic system is an outgrowth of the ancient Chinese
people's experience in dealing with the floods of the Yellow River. This
enlightening and original concept, as expounded in this article, further
confirms the value of Chinese holistic principles.
The Yellow River and Acupuncture:
The Yellow: The world's muddiest river One of the world's most flood-prone
waterways Source of the earliest legend
of flood control Acupuncture:A uniquely Chinese invention Fundamentally unchanged for over two thousand
years Demonstrated to be effective by modern science The quality of a plant
will vary when it is planted in different soils and climates. Similarly,
the diverse outlooks and cultures of humanity are direct outgrowths of different
geographical conditions. In contrast to today's global perspective, ancient
peoples around the world developed a wide variety of traditional cultures
due to the restraints of geography.
Since ancient times, the Yellow River has been a mixed blessing for the Chinese
people. Like a golden dragon winding across China, the Yellow River nourishes
thousands of square miles of fertile soil and is extolled as the cradle
of Chinese civilization. In exchange for its benefits, however, the world's
muddiest river extracts a heavy price. One of the most flood-prone rivers
in the world, its severe and recurrent flooding has earned it the name of
China's Sorrow. In response, the Chinese people have had no alternative
but to develop ways to stop the river from overflowing its banks.
Actually, this necessity may have been a blessing in disguise. In their untiring
fight against the flood, the Chinese ancestors became convinced that dredging
or diverting water to flow naturally downward is superior to diking or other
attempts to obstruct the water's passage. The success of the ancient Chinese
people in the field of flood control heightened their confidence in their
dealings with Nature. Most importantly, the lessons learned from the great
rivers were extrapolated to social administration and the treatment of human
disease.
Acupuncture, a uniquely Chinese system of healing based on clearing obstructions
rather than erecting barriers, is a prime example of the application of
the central principle of effective flood control to the problems of human
beings.
Acupuncture treats diseases by the insertion of fine needles into the body.
In July of 1971, Dr. Henry A. Kissinger made a secret trip to China to prepare
for President Nixon's historical visit. Among his entourage was James Reston,
a journalist from the New York Times. While in China, Reston suffered an
attack of acute appendicitis and underwent an appendectomy at the Beijing
Union Medical College, established by the Rockefeller Foundation of New
York in 1916. During the second night after the operation, Reston started
to experience considerable discomfort in his abdomen. With his approval,
an acupuncturist at the hospital inserted and manipulated three long thin
needles, one into the outer part of his right elbow and one below each knee.
There was noticeable relaxation of the abdominal pressure and distension
within an hour, with no recurrence of the problem thereafter. James Reston
included a detailed description of his experiences with acupuncture in his
dispatches from Beijing. This was the first such report to reach the English-speaking
citizens of the United States, at least the vast majority who had no daily
contact with Asians.
By contrast, acupuncture has been known and practiced in China for over 2300
years. Qin Yueren, the earliest recorded Chinese practitioner, is considered
to be the founder of acupuncture. A biography of Qin Yueren is included
in the Records of the Grand Historian (Shi Ji), the masterwork of the eminent
Chinese historian Sima Qian (135 - ? BC). It is known that Qin Yueren lived
around 407-310 BC, and was a contemporary of Hippocrates (c. 460-377 BC),
the father of Western medicine.
Qin Yueren traveled widely throughout the feudal states that compromised China
during his time, treating men and women, old and young alike. As a result,
he was given the auspicious appellation Bian Que, which means Wayfaring
Magpie - a bird that flies here and there dispensing good fortune. Several
carved stones, unearthed from a tomb dating back to the Eastern Han Dynasty
(25-220 AD), portray him with a human head and a bird's body.
On one occasion, while passing through the State of Guo (present-day Shan
County in Henan Province), Bian Que learned that the Prince of Guo had died
and his subjects were preparing to inter him. After careful examination,
Bian Que believed that the prince had merely experienced a type of deep
coma known as deathlike reversal. He successfully resuscitated the patient
by needling an acupoint on the vertex of his head, and become known for
bringing the dead back to life. This was the first recorded use of acupuncture
in China.
Acupuncture is extraordinary. Needles have historically been among the most
common tools of daily life, used for constructing garments all over the
world. Just as needles are used to sew clothes, they are also utilized medically
to suture incisions. While hollow syringes are used to inject fluids into
the body or to draw them out, pricking the body with a solid acupuncture
needle to treat illness seems quite incomprehensible. Most people prefer
not to be punctured with needles, and associate needling with pain and injury.
No wonder, to "needle" a person means to displease or to irritate
in English. By trial and error, healers throughout the world have independently
discovered similar treatments for pain and disease, including herbs, roots,
wraps, rubs, blood-letting, massage, meditation, or surgery. But the invention
of acupuncture is unique to China.
Why did the ancient Chinese begin to treat disease by puncturing the body
with bare needles? A generally accepted answer to this question is that
acupuncture evolved as a natural outgrowth of daily life in the Neolithic
Age (c. 8000-3500 BC), through a process of fortuitous accident and repeated
empirical experience. According to this theory, people noticed cases in
which physical problems were relieved following an unrelated injury. This
led to the discovery of the principle that injury to a certain part of the
body can alleviate or even cure a pre-existing disease or disorder in a
different part of the body. It is thought that with this discovery, Neolithic
Chinese people eventually started to use stones, animal bones, or pieces
of bamboo to deliberately induce injury to relieve physical problems. The
traumatic nature of acupuncture, which seems quite crude by modern standards,
as well as its long history in China, seem to lend credence to the theory
of its prehistoric origins. However, if acupuncture did indeed arise from
repeated empirical experience of accidental injury, it should have developed
all over the world, rather than solely in China.