Category Archives: Wood Element

The Next Chapter of Your Life

Zhangmen – Chapter Gate – Liver 13

As we move into spring in the antipodes, the energy of the Wood Element is all around us. Time once again to roll out Wood points to smooth our passage through this sometimes jerky season.

New chapterI struggled a bit with getting this blog out. You may have noticed that it’s a week overdue. So it was with some amusement that I discovered that the Wood point I wanted to write about, Liver 13, is good for writer’s block!

One of the point’s many names, Chapter Gate, suggests support for the start of a new chapter, whether it be a piece of writing, or metaphorically a new chapter of your life. Zhangmen helps us to move to new beginnings.

The point is a meeting point, a place where the Liver, Gall Bladder and Spleen meridians converge. It is therefore a great harmoniser of the relationship between Wood (Liver) and Earth (Spleen). It smooths away the frustration and irritation that can be caused by stagnation in the Liver Qi; and it supports Spleen’s capacity for clear, productive thinking. Altogether, this makes for the ability to see the road ahead, think clearly, make plans for the future, and move forward with purpose. When you’re at a crossroads, Zhangmen helps you to navigate the next stage in your life.

From Chapter Gate the Qi moves upwards to Gate of Hope, Liver 14, which we looked at two springs ago. These two Gates are often treated together, mutually supporting the freeing of stuck energy and moving smoothly through transitions. This combination can be a powerful support for depression that is caused by stagnant Liver Qi.

At the physical level, the point treats abdominal pain and distension, gurgling tummy, loss of appetite and diarrhoea which may alternate with constipation. It supports the Spleen in its function of transforming food into Qi and transporting its energy around the body. Good for those times when overindulgence in food leaves you overfull and nauseated.

Another name for the point is Camphorwood Gate. Zhang denotes the camphor laurel tree and by extension any valuable wood. This point is where Wood receives Earth and The Book of History teaches, “When Wood receives the virtue of Earth it becomes a thousand pieces of valuable lumber.” Wood’s ability to see the way forward is united with Earth’s capacity to transform plans into manifestation. A valuable product is the result.

When you’re having trouble turning the page to reveal the next chapter of your life story, try holding Zhangmen.

Location of Liver 13

LV 13Located at the tip of the 11th rib. Another of the point’s names is Elbow Tip: if you let your arms hang at your sides and press your elbows in, the tip of the elbow locates the point. Another method is to palpate downwards along the fixed ribs. As you get towards the side of the body, the fixed ribs give way to a gap. Keep going and you’ll touch the tip of the 11th rib.

Gifts of the Wood Element

We take a break from the acupoints this time with a look at some of the Gifts of the Wood Element. When we are in harmony with an Element and the Element is in balance within us, then we have access to the positive qualities of that Element in our lives. There are many such qualities and here we examine three of them. As you read about these qualities, consider how easy it is for you to access them in your own life. Your answers will tell you much about the relative strength or deficiency of the Wood Element within you.

Vision

BinocularsThe ability to see the world in all its colours and shapes is indeed one of the greatest gifts of a human life. Of all the senses it is the one that most people say they would find hardest to lose.

But Wood’s gift of vision goes far beyond the ability to take in visual information through the eyes. It is also about the capacity to envisage, to see a future possibility with the mind’s eye.

People who have this gift most strongly are called visionaries. Their imagination and foresight help them to make creative leaps that see future possibilities projecting out from current circumstances.

In the modern era, Steve Jobs was repeatedly described as a visionary for his ability to see technological possibilities and pursue their production. Martin Luther King’s I have a dream speech is particularly illustrative of this quality of Wood. He had a vision of a world of racial equality which is slowly being realised.

• How is your vision for your own future?
• How clearly do you see the path before you in your own life?

Planning

26 PlanningOnce we have a vision for our future, we need to find a way to get there. We need a map, a plan, a flowchart, a series of connected steps that will allow us to follow a path. This quality of Wood is the province of the Liver Official who is sometimes personified as the General.

Imagine this General’s headquarters where the room is strewn with maps, plans, lists of troop units, transport, all the information that is needed to form the big picture. From this place, removed from the battles themselves, the General can formulate an overarching strategy, a grand plan.

In our individual lives, planning is incredibly important. Each day we need to plan what we are doing that day and what order we are going to do things. We need to prioritise, organise and strategise. Without these steps of pre-planning, our day can become chaotic, we might waste time and energy backtracking, and the day just doesn’t run smoothly.

We need to plan each day, but we also need to have a sense of where we are going in a longer time frame. What are our plans for the next month, the next year, the next stage of our life? At various points in our lives we pause and take stock, reassess our direction, make a new plan, draw a new map.

When the Wood is not strongly available to us, we might have difficulty making plans. We might have difficulty even knowing what it is that we want, so we can’t even begin to plan. Some of us get lost in details and have problems seeing the big picture. We can’t see the wood for the trees!

• How do you feel about the direction your life is taking?
• What are your plans for the next year, 5 years, 10 years?
• How flexible are you in changing plans when circumstances change?

Decision Making

Koala-SignpostOnce we have our plan and a map of where we are going, we set out on our journey. The journey begins with a first step and proceeds through a series of steps until we reach our destination. While the planning itself is the province of the Liver Official, the actual implementation of the plan on the ground is the function of the Gall Bladder Official, sometimes personified as the General’s Chief of Staff.

While the General holds the overall plan, the Chief of Staff makes the step by step decisions about how that plan is put into operation. The capacity to decide is a fundamental one for Wood. When the Wood is healthy, decisions are made easily and quickly because things are clear. The plan is clearly understood and the best way to carry out the plan is obvious. All the information is taken in and organised, and the way of action naturally arises.

Some of us are good planners but not so good at carrying out the plans. Others are good at managing details but not so good at seeing the big picture. When our Wood is in balance, we have access to both of these aspects.

• How bold are you at taking the first step?
• What stops you from making a decision?

This is an extract from my second book ‘Seasons of Life’ to be published in 2016. Meanwhile, the days tick down to the publication of ‘The Way of the Five Elements’  by Singing Dragon Press. Publication date November 21st, 2015. You can now pre-order this book at Fishpond, Book Depository and other online booksellers. (60 days to go!)