manakei |
16-12-2008 09:17 PM |
Muscular actions physically move the individual’s body relative to the outside world. They consist of combinations of the three yang divisions: - tai yang (greater yang) – moving forward and outward, releasing and/or expelling through passage of fluids (sweat or urine);
- yang ming (yang brightness) – stopping, grasping, internalizing and reacting – the source of heat, holding and forming, polarity switch to release and/or expel solid waste; and
- shao yang (lesser yang) – rotation, choice of direction (decision/indecision, which suspends whatever isn’t resolved), clumping to prevent further penetration when unable to expel, and the interface between internalization and externalization.
Internal movements convey the individual’s experience of phenomena. Individuals internalize physical and experiential material to process it. The results of that process are either expelled or accumulated within the being. The three yin divisions are: - tai yin (greater yin) – contact with internalized influences through the medium of (jin-type) fluids and absorption;
- shao yin (lesser yin) – activation of internal process, pulsation and internal rhythm; and
- jue yin (absolute yin) – binding flow into stasis or imprinting of processed (digested) experience onto physicality.
Forse è per questo che quell'integratore è yin...
Cmq il link è: The Dynamics of Yin/Yang | acupuncturetoday.com
Non spiega nello specifico la denominazione dei prodotti di Charles ma spiega come classificarli!
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