EMOTIONS ACCORDING TO THE HUANGDI NEIJING

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Emotions According to the Huangdi Neijing

By Elisabeth Rochat de la Vallée

Desires and passions are considered by the Chinese thinkers as the main obstacle to the true accomplishment of human life and the fulfilment of one’s destiny. They are considered in Chinese medicine as the main cause of illness and of the weakness leading to diseases.


Therefore, the emotions must be ruled by a self-contained strength which comes from the depths of the individual nature: an empty and quiet Heart, a clear awareness, allowing perfect behaviour and an authentic relation with Heaven. It produces regular movements of qi and good health.


The Heart is our emotional, intellectual, mental and spiritual life; it is everything that happens within us and through which we feel our existence. It is our ability to think, develop knowledge, awareness, and consciousness, and cultivate our inner reality in order to build our vital spirit (jing shen 精神). The Heart is what allows the human being to take responsibility for his life and destiny, to know how to nurture life according to the natural order.

Otherwise, there is disorder, disease and premature death. Therefore the Heart is responsible ultimately for the correct or incorrect order in the movements of qi within oneself.


From where do the emotions come? They are the reactions we have when we are in contact with something exterior (a being, an object, an event, etc.), or when we recall the memory of it.

By nature (xing 性), man possesses blood and qi (xue qi ⾎氣) and a Heart that allows knowledge (xin zhi ⼼知). Grief as well as joy, elation or anger do not exist permanently within him; they are reactive movements to the incitement of objects. It is then that the art of the Heart (xin shu ⼼術) operates.

(Liji, Yueji)

The emotions are therefore activated by an exterior object or event and the immediate reaction is induced, which modulate into multiple possibilities such as attraction or repulsion, love or fear, elation or anger, sadness or joy, arrogance, envy, etc…


The reaction to something depends on the natural disposition, on each individual’s own nature as well as on the way one is true to one’s nature in the moment of the reaction, and therefore on the natural order. The nature of the reaction tells whether the desire in the Heart is turned towards the development of life or towards what is in conflict with it.

Hence the variations of the meaning of the most commonly used character for emotions (qing 情): natural dispositions, tendencies, emotions, and passions.


If the desires are in accordance with the natural order, if the reactions are appropriate, then one governs oneself appropriately (Zhi 治) and there is no disorder (luan 亂). This is following the right order, following nature and one’s own nature, according to circumstances; this is fulfilling one’s destiny (ming 命) . 1

The art of the Heart (Xin shu ⼼術) ensures the appropriate reactions through the diminishing of the desires that lead one “beside oneself”.


The emotions are perceived as movements of qi, and each emotion increases exceedingly a particular quality and activity of the qi in a human being. During the classical era, all the movements of qi were analyzed, characterized and classified through the theory of Yin/Yang and the Five elements (or Phases).

Each of the Five organs (Zang) is therefore related to an emotion that is fundamentally the expression of the movement of the qi belonging to the same element (phase). Coming from the depth of the organ, this qi influences everything under its control within the human being, in physiology and the psychology, in the working of the body as well as in the working of the mind.


As such, the Liver provides a surge and sets off upward movements as Wood does; the qi movement called nu 怒 is first an impetuous surge, which promotes a rising movement. The excitement of this movement, of the Liver (or of Wood), turns it into anger, which is only the excess of it. Thus the Five wills (wu Zhi 五志), which are deep propensities and tensions of vitality in each of the Five Zang organs, become the Seven emotions (qi qing 七情), which are a disorder of the regular movement of qi which produces life.


Therefore the emotions originate in the five Zang organs, which are the receptacles of the Spirits under different modalities. All the mental faculties and psychological balance, even the way to react to anything, including what stirs emotions and releases passions, depends entirely on the state of the five Zang, united by and in the Heart. So, when a Zang organ is disturbed, it not only brings out physical and psychological symptoms related to the specific disturbance, but the person suffers an alteration in one’s faculty to perceive, know accurately, judge without passion, feel, to react appropriately.


If the Five organs rely on a Heart free of passion and attachment, working under a spiritual light (or spiritual intelligence, shen ming 神明) and keep this reliance, there is no excess. The Heart and the spirit (shen 神) inspire each of them to their core. These are the Five spirits (wu shen 五神), the fivefold expression of the spirits in a human being, enlighting the functioning of the mind.

When an organ loses its rooting in the spirits, its qi no longer flows correctly and it disrupts the psychological and physiological functioning.


Suwen chapter 39 describes these disruptions well:

When there is anger, the qi rises up.
When there is elation, the qi becomes loose.
When there is sadness, the qi disappears.
When there is fear, the qi descends.
When there is cold, the qi is gathered.
When there is heat, the qi flows outwards.
When there is startling with fright, the qi is in disorder.
When there is fatigue, the qi is damaged.
When there is obsessive thought, the qi is knotted.

Each of the five Zang is affected by its emotion, but one emotion may injure several organs by bringing disorder in their own movement of qi. Therefore, one organ may be injured by different emotions.

One organ is injured with or after another, the disturbance in the interaction of the qi changes and consequently one emotion can transform itself into another one.


That is the complexity of the interplay between the five movements of qi on the pattern of the five elements with all the effects on the functioning of the body and of the mind.


All levels of the being communicate: an emotional disruption will have physiological repercussions (in the areas ruled by the organ responsible for the emotion as well as in the areas ruled by other organs disturbed by this disorder). Conversely, a deviated movement of qi leads to physiological disruptions, but also to an emotional state. This state may only be short-lived, as a reflection of the condition of the qi and its movement during that period. Or it may derive from the disruption of an organ that reaches the most complete disorder and therefore is no longer able to control the movement of its qi, can no longer take part in the harmonious composition of the centre, nor in the balance of the psychological and mental aspects.



Footnotes:

1 Destiny means individual life as it unfolds according to its natural/heavenly origin. To fulfil one’s destiny is to live in harmony with the cosmos, to remain integrated with universal harmony. To act as such provides the deepest fulfilment of one’s natural gifts as well as the most perfect health possible.

(This paper was given at the 2013 Rothenburg Conference)



About the author

Senior sinologist Elisabeth Rochat de la Vallée holds a Licence and Master Degree in Classical Literature (Paris-Nanterre), Licence and Master Degree in Philosophy (Paris-Nanterre) and D.E.A. in Chinese (Paris-Jussieu).

She has been studying Chinese and collaborating with Fr Claude Larre and Dr Jean Schatz since the ’70. Elisabeth has published numerous translations, books, booklets, transcripts of lectures, and articles. She is currently Dean of Study in the European School of Acupuncture (Ecole Européenne d’Acupuncture, Paris.

 

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