Category Archives: Heart

WINTER FOOD

Oat porridge with warm berries and activated walnuts

“These days, people have changed their way of life. They drink wine as though it were water, indulge excessively in destructive activities, drain their jing – the body’s essence that is stored in the kidneys – and deplete their Qi. They do not know the secret of conserving their energy and vitality. Seeking emotional excitement and momentary pleasures, people disregard the natural rhythm and order of the universe. They fail to regulate their lifestyle and diet, and sleep improperly. So it is not surprising that they look old at fifty and die soon after.”

This is not a lament by a modern doctor or lifestyle coach but was written about 2,300 years ago in ancient China in the classic medical text Nei Jing Su Wen. That document is full of recommendations for living in harmony with the rhythms of nature. Not least of these concern appropriate diet and food choices.

In southern Australia we are currently deep in an Antarctic winter cold snap, a good time to look into the Nei Jing for foods that support the Water Element and its yin organ, the Kidney.

Winter is a time for resting and restoring. It is a good season to spend more time indoors cooking nourishing and warming foods. It is not a time for a raw food diet as this can lead to cold in the Stomach and Spleen. In this blog we will explore the flavour of the Water Element, its colour, and the kinds of foods that warm and nourish the body.

The Flavour of Water is Salty

The Nei Jing tells us that salty foods benefit the kidneys. These organs store the jing or essence which is the fuel for our life, so it is important to support them as much as we can. Moderate amounts of shellfish, soy sauce, tamari, miso and seaweed will provide this. However, the classic warns that “too much of the salty taste can weaken the bones and cause contracture and atrophy of the muscles, as well as stagnate the heart qi.” (Su wen 3)

Excess salt weakens the Water Element and the kidneys as well as the tissue of the grandson Element of Fire, namely the blood vessels, and coagulates the blood. This happens because the excess salt allows cold to invade the body, creating stagnation, deficiency in the organs and problems like infertility, chronic fatigue, cold extremities, loose stool, sexual dysfunction, pale complexion, stiffness, menstrual cramps, bloating, diarrhoea and bloating.

In the modern diet, an excess of salt is common because of the large amounts of sodium added to most processed foods. A craving for salt indicates an imbalance in the Kidney. If you consume too much salt in a meal, follow it with a sweet food or fruit herbal tea. This is an example of the flavour of the grandmother Element (Earth) controlling the flavour of the grandson Element (Water). See previous blog for more on this.

The Colour of Water is Blue/black

Another of the resonances of the Five Elements is that of colour. The colour of Water is blue or black. Choosing foods that are blue or black in colour is another way to nourish the Water Element through diet. This includes such foods as eggplant, olives, black beans, blackberries, blueberries, raisins and black plums. Adding even a small amount of this colour to a dish brings more balance to the colour palette on your plate.

Eat Warming Foods in Winter

Warming, sweet, hot and aromatic foods dispel cold. If a person is showing signs of cold invasion, as described above, foods that are designated as “hot” foods are called for. The hottest of these are the spices of chili, turmeric, cinnamon, curry, black pepper, ginger and garlic. Meats are also warming, especially lamb and beef.

The method of cooking also imparts warmth to food. The strongest of these are grilling, barbecuing, frying, cooking with alcohol and spices. Baking, roasting, sauteing, simmering and stewing are also warming.

Vegetarians and vegans may have some difficulty consuming enough warming foods, since meat is a primary source of yang and heating. Most vegetables and grains are cooling so it’s important to find those few that are warming. Here is a list of warming foods compiled from Zoey Xinyi Gong’s The Five Elements Cookbook:

Grains: Oats are slightly warming; quinoa and spelt are warming.

Beans: Kidney beans, tempeh (fermented soy curd) and miso.

Nuts: Chestnut, pumpkin seed, pine nut and walnut.

Vegetables: Mustard greens, chives, coriander, garlic, ginger, leek, onion, shallot, bell pepper and pumpkin.

Fruit: Blackberry, cherry, date, lychee, peach, quince, raspberry and umeboshi plum.

Dairy: Cow’s milk is slightly warming; goat’s milk, all butter and ghee are warming.

Fish: Anchovy, eel, mussel, perch, prawn and salmon.

Meat: Almost all meats are warming, especially lamb and beef.

Condiments: Molasses, rice syrup, brown sugar and vinegar.

Ageing and cold. As we age, our Kidney Qi declines, the more so if there is ill-health. This makes us more susceptible to cold invasion. Therefore, the consumption of warming foods, especially in the winter, is particularly important for the elderly.

Next week I will share my recipe for Five Flavour Soup which draws upon these principles to warm the body and nourish the kidneys. See you then.

HEAT

Recently I planted out some flower seedlings in the front garden. I waited until 4pm when I thought it would be cool enough to work. But as I sweated away in oppressive heat for 45 minutes, I realised I’d been mistaken. Back in the house, I felt dizzy, head throbbing and slightly disoriented. It took time, cool drinks and splashing with cold water to come back to equilibrium. Such is the power of the climatic factor of heat. As our climate heats up, we need to be even more careful to protect ourselves from this pathogenic factor.

The Chinese character for this kind of summer heat is re. The three radicals comprising the character represent hand, ball and fire. It can combine with other characters to create meanings that are all resonances of the Fire Element:

Reqing enthusiastic, passionate

Renao: lively

Reai: to adore

Qinre: intimate, warm-hearted

The height of summer, which is where we in the southern hemisphere now find ourselves, is a season of extreme heat. The days are at their longest, giving the sun more hours to heat the atmosphere. This provides the final burst of sunlight to bring summer plants and crops to their fullness and maturity. It is a time for summer holidays when many people take their ease on beaches. ‘Sun worshippers’ are to be found packed onto strips of sand all along our coastlines. The great Aussie holiday at the beach is testament to many people’s love of the summer heat.

A particular craving for summer heat can be diagnostic of an imbalance in the Fire Element of a person. So too can a particular aversion to this climatic factor. Extremes of preference for any of the resonances of an Element can signal that the Element is wobbling and needs support. In this case, craving for or aversion to a hot climate can be a call for the Fire Element to be addressed.

Danger to health arises when the external pathogenic factor of heat enters the body, producing a rise in the body’s temperature, often mimicking symptoms of fever. There can be reddening in the face, hot skin, great thirst and profuse sweating which depletes the fluids of the body. Other symptoms can include a rapid pulse, dizziness, confusion, mental restlessness and fatigue. This is a yang condition which affects the upper body, especially the head, and diminishes yin.

Some are more prone to this exogenous pathogen than others. Older people are more prone as the fluids of an older body tend to be diminished. This is an expression of the Water Element failing to control the Fire Element across the ke or controlling cycle.

While this condition is more prevalent in summer, it is not confined to that season. It can occur whenever there is a heatwave, or even indoors in highly heated, poorly ventilated rooms.

The invasion of summer heat is similar to the condition of heatstroke or sunstroke in western medicine, and the treatment is the same:

Lie down in a cool, shaded place; slowly sip plenty of water (drinking too much too quickly can overwhelm the body); cool down with splashed water on the head, neck and wrists, or shower or bathe in cool water. If severe symptoms don’t ease within an hour, call the emergency number.

Chinese medicine also recognises that heat invasion penetrates to the organs. In particular, the heart, yin organ of the Five Element is most affected, which explains the mental confusion, disorientation and delirium that can result. (All mental disorders are considered disorders of the heart.) But the heat can invade other organs also. Heat can combine with damp which together transform to phlegm and may manifest as nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, poor appetite, fatigue and tightness in the chest. Heat can also combine with wind. Wind-heat can affect the lungs and produce symptoms of the common cold: runny nose, sore throat, fever and joint pain

Ways to avoid the effects of the summer heat pathogen are to avoid the sun, seek shade, wear light, loose clothing and a hat, and drink plenty of water over time, sipping rather than gulping. Do not exercise in the heat. (I cringe when I see people jogging in the middle of a hot day.) Keep the house cool by closing blinds early in the day.

Acupressure Points can help rebalance

Large Intestine 11 is a classic point for clearing heat from the body. Located in a hollow at the end of the lateral elbow crease.

Heart Protector 6 is a calming and regulating point for the Fire Element. Located 2 cun above the inner wrist crease.

Triple Heater 5 regulates the body thermostat. Located 2 cun above the outer wrist crease.

Governor Vessel 14 treats excess yang, which is a characteristic of heat invasion. Located on the spine at the base of the neck, between vertebrae C7 and T1.

Other known points include Heart 7, 8; Heart Protector 3, 7, 8; Triple Heater 6;  Stomach 36, Spleen 6.

I’ll be back soon in the Late Summer for a look at the humid or damp climate. Enjoy the rest of the summer. Stay cool!

NOTE: I have been discussing summer heat as an external pathogen. Chinese medicine also recognises heat conditions that are internal and which are created primarily by inappropriate diet and emotional disturbances. TCM recognises a plethora of such heat and fire patterns that are beyond this discussion from the Five Element perspective, but which can be studied in Giovani Maciocia’s ‘The Foundations of Chinese Medicine”.