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PROPRIETY - THE VIRTUE OF THE HEART
How can a person know the Dao? By the heart.
How can the heart know? By emptiness, the pure attention
that unifies being and quietude.
The heart is never without treasure, yet it is called empty.
The heart is never completely filled, yet it is called
unified.
The heart is never without movement, yet it is called quiet.
The heart is alive, and possesses knowledge; it knows, and
from knowing makes distinctions.
To make distinctions is to know all parts of the whole at
once.
Xunzi,
Confuscian philosopher from 3rd century B.C.
The Heart is the organ of the fire element in Chinese
medicine, and summer is its time. This relationship,
referred to as systematic correspondence, is itself a
function of the Heart – specifically, its virtue of
propriety. Propriety means appropriateness. In the context
of Chinese medicine, the terms synchronicity, resonance,
accordance, correspondence, and entrainment all have related
meaning. This concept was taught to me through the
explanation of a well known Chinese medicine, Tian Wang Bu
Xin Dan, or Heavenly Empeor’s Special Formula to Tonify the
Heart.
The teaching I received was brief, and goes like this: When
the emperor sits on his throne, facing south, wearing his
red robe, at noon on the summer solstice, all is correct in
the universe. This is the enactment of ritual and ceremony,
and the recognition of systematic correspondence.
Virtue - The Chinese system of medicine begins with
health, not disease. In health, each organ imparts a virtue,
or positive quality of being, into a person. This quality is
universal, and finds its expression in human beings through
the associated organ system. The Chinese word for virtue is
“de”. In infants, this term implies original nature. That
is, true nature, unobscured by the mundane conditioning of
the world. As adults in the world, we are destined to forget
this part of ourselves. Hence, for adults, virtue implies
the capacity to contact and express this true nature.
Propriety, the virtue of the Heart, has to do with right
order. This is order that occurs spontaneously, of its own
accord, through alignment and communication of ones’ Heart
with the Heart of the universe. Like the emperor, the Heart
is the ruler of the kingdom of the body. When it functions
well, you do not know it is doing its job. Its minister, the
Small intestine, is in charge of sorting and communicating
essential information between the inner and outer worlds.
This allows the Heart to have spontaneous, appropriate
response to life. Its rhythmic beating creates inner order
that results in outer order. Synchronicity – alignment of
time and place - results.
If order is the expressed virtue of the Heart, chaos and
control are the extremes to which the Heart is susceptible.
That is, lack of order and too much order. Both reflect
being out of synch with the rhythm of life.
The irony of the Heart, and the life lesson learned through
the fire element, is that simply “being” is what is needed
to create order. The Heavenly Emperor rules well because of
his capacity to align himself, through openness, with the
moment.
Systematic Correspondence – Alignment creates order
because of systematic correspondence. Systematic
correspondence means that there is resonance in the universe
between similar things. This has been described by one
Chinese author as “the process by which a thing, when
stimulated, responds according to the natural guidelines of
the particular phases of vital energy engendered in itself
and active in the situation.”
Because of this principle, we are able to group things that
have similarity. In the case of the Heavenly Emperor, red,
south, noon, and summer are all grouped under the heading of
Fire.
Emotion - In health, propriety expresses itself as
synchronicity in a person’s life. The larger meaning is that
one’s channels of perception and communication are open.
Thus, one is able to perceive accurately the events and
surroundings of daily life. As a result, one gains the
ability to listen and communicate clearly, both functions of
the Small Intestine. The emergent emotion the Chinese
describe is joy, the emotion of the Heart.
The Heart in this state is able to function well, unburdened
by non-essential information and internal experiences that
need to be filtered. In disease, the Heart is forced to
overwork. Thrown from its state of effortless beating, the
overwork creates pathogenic heat. Chaos and over-controlling
begin to express themselves. Life moves from effortless to
burdensome, communication is cut off, inner knowing and
awareness diminish, and lack of joy becomes the primary
theme of life.
Heat - Heat is the disease mechanism that results
from fire imbalances. It can take various forms, such as
vacuous heat, depressive heat, and damp heat. It can also
manifest in any organ, such as in Liver fire rising or
Stomach heat. But it always involves some aspect of the
Heart, because the Heart governs fire. The overwork of any
organ system, which is ultimately a sign of a fire
imbalance, produces heat.
Heat can also be an external pathogen, one of the six
external causes of disease. On a symptomatic level, the
experience of externally induced heat symptoms is dependent
solely upon the climate, and has nothing to do with a
person’s history or physiology. On a deeper level, though,
this is not the case. We are susceptible to the climate to
the extent that we imbalanced with the same factor
internally. Thus, people with internal fire imbalances are
more susceptible to externally induced heat disturbances.
This is an example of the 5th principle of resonance (this
is my own classification system, not officially part of
Chinese medicine): That which we encounter elicits that
which is already inherent within us.
The vessels used to treat externally contracted illness are
the “luo” vessels. They also treat the delusion of the
related organ system. Thus, when we are ill, not only are we
susceptible to both internal and external disharmonies, we
do not even know it. We become habituated, which is
ultimately the definition of disease in Chinese medicine. We
each become habituated in a particular organ system,
according to our nature. But the habituation always involves
loss of propriety, and thus the Heart. It is for this reason
that the Heart is viewed as the ruler of the body – if it is
not working, nothing else works.
The experience of heat as an imbalance always leads to a
physical sensation which can be called desire. Heat produces
irritation, and as human beings we seek to quell our
irritations. Heat in the Stomach, for example, produces
hunger and a desire to eat. If we observe our cravings and
desires, we can see where we have heat, and thus where we
are out of contact of some aspect of our nature. This
process of losing contact is inevitable, and finally is a
function of fire in the body. In Chinese medicine life is
defined by fire. Life ceases when the last drop of Yang (an
aspect of fire) leaves the body. In life, water and fire
interpenetrate. On only in life does this occur. If you
throw a bucket of water on a fire, the fire goes out. Water
and fire tend towards separation, as all processes tend
naturally towards disarray (chaos). This is the second law
of thermodynamics, and describes the process of entropy.
Continual re-integration of water and fire requires an input
of energy, and this energy is also an aspect of fire. At a
cellular level, sodium-potassium pumps are necessary to pump
sodium out of the cells and potassium in, as they naturally
travel across a concentration gradient in the opposite
direction – seeking balance. Static balance is death – it is
only through imbalance that life exists. The order which the
Heart creates is what maintains the state of dynamic
equilibrium, and thus life, in the universe and in the body.
With each beat of the Heart, Yin and Yang interpenetrate,
water and fire mix, order emerges out of chaos, and life is
created. This is the virtue of propriety and the meaning of
fire in Chinese medicine.
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Copyright 2006 Robert Keller. All rights reserved.
The information in this website is for informational
purposes only, and is not intended to diagnose or treat
any illness.
Robert Keller, C.A. 1949 Route 70 East,
Suite 8 Cherry Hill, NJ 08003
856-751-3444
rk@robertkellerca.com |
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