Out of the woods
We've been waiting for the rain and a change in the weather pattern. It seems to be happening. The added moisture is also bringing more growth and more pollen. People are experiencing heightened allergy symptoms. It's a good time to take a look at another model for an alternative way to deal with allergies. The Chinese would not have you avoiding this fabulous wet weather but rather looking for a more complete solution.
There may be multiple causes to allergic types of immune response. Most allergic people will admit that they are more sensitive when under stress. If this is so, then what are they allergic to -- the allergen or the stress? Indeed, which is the allergen? Most likely, the answer is that there are quite possibly numerous unidentified allergic factors. Helping the body to process many levels of information and allowing it to self-adjust in relation to allergies is what Oriental medical theory advocates.
The Western view of allergies is to identify the allergen, often a complex process, and then determine a strategy of avoidance. Where does this leave you? Out of the woods, not in shopping malls, and avoiding your pet-loving best friend. Avoidance may not always be easy to carry out. For example, a common allergen for sensitive people is formaldehyde. It is in plastics, drywall, perfumes, cleaning chemicals, etc. Avoiding it is virtually impossible.
Another possible approach is to work more directly with the body and its apparent imbalance. Why is the body responding to a relatively harmless external agent in such a severe way? The internal information system is confused. The body is getting messages that are inaccurate and as a result the response is out of proportion to the stimulus. This confusion must be addressed.
Intervention hits a figurative and literal wall when it is applied to systemic disease processes. Western medicine is having a good deal of trouble with the likes of allergic responses and autoimmune type maladies such as rheumatoid arthritis and lupus. They tend to fixate on the resulting symptom instead of the disease etiology, or path of causation, simply because they have no effective model to deal with causal relationships.
Oriental medicine has such models. The basic concept is to nourish the body's systems in such a way that this confused information is normalized once again. Chinese herbs in a balanced formula can provide this nourishment. As a result, the symptoms of the allergic response are ameliorated. The branch symptoms often disappear when the root is addressed. This is similar to the indicator light on the dashboard no longer being illuminated when the problem in the engine is fixed.
Nourishing the root and strengthening the chi can have profound effects on stress. Then you can be out of the woods even while you're in the woods.
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