Author: Nature’s Chinese Medicine & Acupuncture Clinic
Lipomas: Why Fatty Lumps Keep Growing — and What’s Actually Feeding Them
Classical Chinese Medicine reads lipomas as local accumulations of stagnant fat caused by lower yin digestive blockage and local Yangming heat. Diet — particularly eggs,… Read more →
Vaginal Discharge: What Each Colour Tells You About Your Internal Environment
Classical Chinese Medicine reads vaginal discharge colour as a diagnostic window into pelvic fluid balance and lower burner temperature. White, yellow, green, and blood-tinged discharge… Read more →
Constipation and Sweating: Why Laxatives Make the Problem Worse
Classical Chinese Medicine identifies two distinct constipation patterns — fluid-depletion constipation from excess sweating and intestinal heat constipation. The wrong treatment for each can accelerate… Read more →
Anxiety and Panic Attacks: Why the Problem Is in Your Heart’s Pump, Not Your Mind
Classical Chinese Medicine reads anxiety and panic attacks as cardiac drive deficit and water pressure on the heart — not a psychological disorder. The engine… Read more →
PCOS: When the Ovaries Are Not the Problem — A Classical Chinese Medicine Reading
Classical Chinese Medicine reads PCOS as a cold uterine environment and fluid stagnation in the lower yin, not primarily a hormonal disorder. Cardiac drive strength… Read more →
Varicose Veins: A DVT Warning Sign That Classical Chinese Medicine Reads as a Cardiac Drive Problem
Classical Chinese Medicine reads varicose veins as a cardiac drive deficit and lower yin blockage — not a cosmetic issue. They are a precursor to… Read more →
Male ‘Kidney Deficiency’: Why Over 90% of Cases Are Mismanaged — and Exercise Makes It Worse
Classical Chinese Medicine finds that over 90% of men with ‘kidney deficiency’ have a deficiency pattern requiring rest and cardiac drive support — not exercise,… Read more →
Bone Spurs: The Internal Pressure Problem That Has Nothing to Do With Your Bones
Classical Chinese Medicine reads bone spurs as internal pressure abnormalities, not bone pathology. Cervical spurs point to cardiac drive deficits; lumbar spurs to abdominal gas… Read more →
Hernia: Why Classical Chinese Medicine Targets Abdominal Gas Pressure, Not Just the Bulge
Classical Chinese Medicine reads hernia as lower yin deficiency plus trapped abdominal gas — not primarily a blood stasis issue. Learn why 90% of cases… Read more →
Type 2 Diabetes: The Jingfang Reading of Xiaoke (消渴) as a Cardiac–Kidney Fluid Disorder
Classical Chinese Medicine reads type 2 diabetes as a cardiac drive and fluid pathway disorder, not a sugar problem. Learn the two body-types and why… Read more →
