Bejing
2008 Presentation Abstract
Evolution
of TCM Psychology in the Light of Chinese
Science
by Michael Guen, Ph.D., L.Ac.
Wasah Integrative Medicine
Santa Rosa, California USA
Abstract
Independent
of psychology’s development in the west, Chinese psychology
evolved on its own throughout the course of Chinese dynastic history.
If not in formal professional fields, it did so within orthodox traditions,
for example, in the temples where a great deal of research was done.
I will give historical evidence for this, presenting a traditional Chinese
science of human physiology and function based on eight trigrams (ba
gua) brought to Taiwan from China in 1949. Noteworthy is the claim that
the five element (wu xing) internal organs “speak to us.” In
as much as “organ intelligence” represents unification of
physiology, mind, emotions and behavior, it establishes Chinese science
as one of the world’s earliest holistic psychologies. The Chinese
holistic model (nei jing) of the human being in a state of normal function
lies in contradistinction to the western analytical model that limits
the view of wellness to the absence of disease symptoms. Promotion of
this distinction, I feel, is a central responsibility of TCM psychology.
To establish not only for TCM, but all holistic disciplines, the fact
that there originally existed two parallel complementary sciences: one
fostering diagnosis and treatment of disease, the other perpetuating
preventative self-care and actualization of human potential across the
life stages.
My hope is that this statement will be influential in guiding the integration
and synthesis of both the psychologies of east and west, and psychology
and medicine, which at this point are in their very early stages. In
clinical practice of TCM in the west, the gap between treatment of physical
disease and treatment of psychiatric disease is VERY wide. There is little
currently available to TCM practitioners in the west
that would formally qualify as “psychotherapy” to effectively
fill the gap. There is thus just cause for more research and development
of comprehensive traditional Chinese science-based methods of TCM psychotherapy.
A large percentage of TCM patients in the west seek treatment at least
in part for personal growth, to become more self-aware, to better handle
relationships, and get help for (non-psychiatric) functional neurotic
ailments. With modernization of Chinese society, TCM based forms of psychotherapy
may have indigenous appeal to its citizens. TCM psychotherapy as an adjunct
to acupuncture, herbs, tui na and qi gong, could greatly expand the scope
of the profession worldwide.
Whereas western psychotherapy has proven effectiveness (Cognitive Behavioral
Therapy for example), the potential contributions of TCM psychology must
be equally recognized. The strength of TCM is in the mind-body realms
of feelings, emotions, somatic-affect, and their direct association with
cognition, behavior, and relationships, offering powerful tools for TCM
therapists to guide patients in their psychological resolution while
simultaneously healing their medical conditions. The role feelings, emotions,
and affect play in dysfunction and disease is an arena where western
psychiatry, psychology, and psychotherapy are weak, and where much research
in the west is now being fervently directed. Traditional Chinese science
and TCM psychology may have much wisdom to share in this regard.
(Chinese Translation)
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