Master Sha on traditional Chinese medicine and how it will balance your soul, mind, and body
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traditional Chinese medicine and how it will balance your soul, mind, and body

Master Sha - Chinese medicine

traditional Chinese medicine and how it will balance your soul, mind, and body

Master Sha is a spiritual healer, transformative leader, teacher, bestselling author, and Master of Eastern arts, trained in both Western and Chinese traditional medicine and acupuncture

You probably know someone who swears by acupuncture, or perhaps you’ve seen evidence of celebrities undergoing cupping. These are just some of the methods used in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), which has been practiced in China for thousands of years.

But what exactly is it? And why is it so beneficial for millions of people looking for a holistic way to stay well?

Why traditional Chinese medicine balances your qi

TCM is not just a treatment for illness. It can help you stay well and prevent you from getting sick in the first place. Think of it as a holistic vision of balance, energy, and harmony.

While Western medicine treats each body part separately, as if human beings are machines, TCM treats you as a whole, complete being. In Chinese medicine, everything works together to make sure our life force continues to flow.

This life force is also known as “qi.” It is the oneness and life energy that connects all living things. Focus your mind, and you can feel it run through your body, connecting you to the universe. It is in a constant state of ebb and flow. Chinese medicine is about improving and maintaining the ideal flow of qi.

Yin and yang is another universal principle of traditional Chinese medicine, with yin representing the female and dark and yang the male and light. To balance yin and yang is to heal. Everything can be divided into yin and yang. They are both independent but united. Yin is never absolute yin; yang is never absolute yang.

As everything in life is a balance of opposites, you need your qi to flow, thanks to balanced levels of yin and yang. Then you feel well, healthy, whole, and positive.

Practical but traditional Chinese medicine


So that is the theory, but what about the practice? In my years of practicing Chinese medicine, I’ve learned so much. And while my healing practices often mix Western medicine and other arts such as Chinese calligraphy, other healers use them separately.

To achieve balance, according to traditional Chinese medicine, you must seek it between your internal organs and the Five Elements of wood, fire. earth, metal, and water by undergoing treatments, such as:

  • Cupping (heated glass jars used to create suction on specific points of the body)
  • Meditation in various forms
  • Acupuncture
  • Tai Chi and other concentration and movement exercises
  • Moxibustion (burning dried herbs close to the skin)
  • Herbs and plants in the form of capsules, teas, and powders
  • Massage

Acupuncture is one of the most commonly used parts of TCM in Western medicine. It has also been through the most clinical trials and study of any other alternative healing therapy.

Is traditional Chinese medicine safe?


As a TCM practitioner and Master in several Chinese Arts
, I believe in the safety of Chinese medicine, and many other experts agree. Of course, you need to research your choice of healer, as you would when trying any other form of healing, treatment, or medicine.

The most important area of TCM in terms of possible side effects is with its herbal and plant medicines. These can interact with medications, and it is very  important to know exactly what you’re taking. Scientific research and studies of traditional Chinese medicine show that:

  • Acupuncture is a useful treatment for a range of conditions, including chronic pain and side effects from chemotherapy.
  • You’ll find traditional Chinese medicine on offer in many Western wellness clinics to treat all kinds of conditions, from arthritis to insomnia and menopause symptoms.
  • Tai Chi can help people suffering from Parkinson’s disease to improve their balance.
  • Cupping helps with pain from skin conditions, including shingles.

Patients turn to TCM for all kinds of conditions, including mental health and stress levels. Often people use it alongside conventional Western medicine, and I think it is particularly beneficial for people who are suffering from a range of symptoms but can’t find the underlying cause. I would also recommend traditional Chinese medicine to anyone struggling with chemo, people who have tried Western medicine but don’t feel better, and anyone who wants to stave off illness by staying well and balanced.

Try traditional Chinese medicine in 2021


TCM is suitable for just about everyone, but I would always urge you to check with your doctor first if you are taking any prescription drugs or are unsure. This is very important if you have a serious chronic condition, such as liver disease or cancer. So many aspects of traditional Chinese medicine can help people suffering from these illnesses, but herbs should be used very carefully and only if you are confident that your practitioner is of the highest standard.

Chinese medicine is a complex and wide-ranging practice and needs fully trained healers to understand how to use it to promote well-being. Everything in our universe is about balance, and it has never been more important to understand the link between our soul, mind, and body.

If you’re starting 2021 with a health problem or want to find ways to feel more in control of your physical and mental wellness, consider taking up a form of meditation, trying Tai Chi, or taking the plunge with acupuncture. There’s nothing to lose and everything to gain.