How to maintain optimum
immunity?
Maintaining optimum immunity revolves around the following
primary factors:
Clean blood and lymph
Blood plays a front line defensive role by delivering
nutrients and immune factors to diseased and toxic tissues and carrying away
metabolic wastes, toxins and pathogens. Lymph in turn keeps the blood clean and
also purifies cellular fluids. The efficiency of their defense functions depends
entirely upon their degree of purity, including proper pH balance. Clean blood
also depends upon proper maintenance of the liver and kidneys, which filter the
blood.
Balanced endocrine function
In order to produce the hormones required for immunity, the
entire endocrine system must be maintained in proper balance, for glandular
secretions influence once another by biofeedback. Endocrine balance is achieved
and maintained by the parasympathetic branch of the autonomous nervous system
and excessive stimulation of the sympathetic branch throws the endocrine system
off balance.
Active elimination
In order to keep the body clean, the immune system needs a
place to dump all the garbage it dredges from the system. Therefore, all the
excretory organs, including colon, lungs, kidneys and skin MUST be maintained in
proper working order. Whenever excretory functions are impaired, the body dumps
its garbage into joints, body fat, lymph nodes, colonic sacculations and other
nooks and crannies seemingly isolated from the bloodstream.
Nutrition
Proper nutrition is absolutely essential for maintaining
immunity, for nutrients are the building blocks of human defense installations.
Nutrients are also required for antioxidant protection against free radical
damage, rebuilding injured tissues and metabolic conversion of essence into
energy.
Physiologically, the traditional Chinese view of the human
immune system is remarkably similar to the modern Western model. In the Chinese
system, the first line of defense is provided by the thymus, adrenals and spine,
followed in order of priority by the bone marrow, blood, brain (pituitary,
pineal and hypothalamus), liver and kidneys, spleen and pancreas.
The Chinese however, also attach great importance to the
immunological powers of energy and spirit, which are factors consistently
ignored and misunderstood by modern Western medicine, much to the peril of
patients.
Traditional Chinese doctors and Taoist healers frequently
prescribe chee-gung to boost immunological response and meditation to mobilize
the immunological powers of the mind, usually in conjunction with herbal and
dietary prescriptions that work synergistically with energy and spirit.
Without sufficient energy, neither drugs, herbs, nor nutrients
can be properly utilized in defense of health and negative mental attitudes such
as cynicism, doubt, fear, confusion and self-loathing can negate the therapeutic
benefits of even the most potent medications.
While modern Western medicine has a firm grasp of the
"essence" of immunity, it has much to learn from traditional Chinese medicine
about the "energy" and "spirit" of the human immune system and the sooner it
does so, the better the health of Western societies will become.
Traditional Chinese immunology attaches particular importance
to the role of the adrenal glands in guarding health and recent Western research
on the immunosuppressive effects of stress scientifically validated the Chinese
view. The Chinese refer to the adrenals as the "Root of Life" and cite them as
the primary source of pure primordial energy, sexual vitality and immunological
resilience. Since they are attached to the kidneys, the technical Chinese term
for the adrenals is "kidney glands" and their functions are directly influenced
by kidney organ energy.
Fear, for example, is an aberrant emotional energy associated
with the kidneys in the Chinese system and chronic fear is thus regarded as a
major suppressant of immune functions. This view is confirmed by Western medical
science, which cites fear as a form of stress that triggers adrenal secretions
of adrenaline and cortisone, two hormones known to suppress immunity severely.
When fear of any other source of stress becomes chronic, adrenal burnout soon
follows and the victim acquires a chronic immune deficiency that renders the
body easy prey to formerly harmless microbes in the environment.
Adrenal burnout and elevated levels of cortisone in the blood
are major contribution factors in chronic fatigue syndrome, AIDS, cancer, sexual
impotence and infertility, allergies, migraine and other debilitating
conditions.
According to the Chinese system, weak adrenals not only impair
immunity on the level of essence, they also weaken resistance by cutting the
main source of energy which maintains the radiant shell of protective wei-chee
round the body. And since kidney organ energy governs bone marrow and brain
tissue, deficient kidney/adrenal function also impairs production of white blood
cells, hormones and other immune factors in these vital tissue.
Therefore, the traditional Chinese view of the kidney/adrenal
complex as a primary regulator of immunity functions on all three levels of
essence, energy and spirit has been confirmed by modern medical science and
provides adepts of Taoist alchemy with a powerful protective mechanism that can
be cultivated with physical, energetic and spiritual practices.
Traditional Chinese medicine cites four major forms of immune
deficiency, or "immune emptiness": blood, energy, yin and yang. The term "empty"
refers to a condition of energy deficiency that impairs the vital functions of
the organ, gland or tissue which that particular energy governs. In Western
medicine, which does not recognize the roles of bio-energies, various forms of
immune burn out, bone marrow impairment, cerebral insufficiency and so
forth.
In order to gain a proper perspective on the rapidly growing
problem of immune deficiency, we will now discuss
some of the primary causes and most effective remedies in terms of essence,
energy and spirit.
Source: Daniel Reid, The Tao of Health, Sex and
Longevity.
Immunity and essence.
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