| Literature DB >> 30788755 |
Geoffrey Samuel1,2.
Abstract
Much of what Western medicine classifies as psychiatric illness is understood by Tibetan thought as associated with imbalance of rlung (wind, breath). Rlung has a dual origin in Indian thought, combining elements from Ayurvedic medicine and Tantric Buddhism. Tibetan theories of rlung seem to correspond in significant ways with Western concepts of the autonomic nervous system (ANS), and Western medicine too has associated psychiatric issues with ANS problems. But what is involved in relating Tibetan ideas of rlung to Western ideas of the emotions and the ANS? The article presents elements of the two systems and then explores similarities and differences between them. It asks whether the similarities could be the basis for a productive encounter between Tibetan and Western modes of understanding and treating psychiatric illness. What could Western psychiatry learn from Tibetan approaches in this area?Entities:
Keywords: Autonomic nervous system; Buddhism; Psychiatric illness; Subtle body; Tantra; Tibet
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30788755 PMCID: PMC6522444 DOI: 10.1007/s10943-019-00774-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Relig Health ISSN: 0022-4197
The five principal forms of rlung
| Name | Sanskrit equivalent | Location and movement | Function |
|---|---|---|---|
| Life-sustaining ( |
| Located in the crown of the head and travels through the throat and the breastbone | Swallows food and drink, inhales, spits, sneezes, belches, endows the mind and sense organs with clarity and holds the mind [and body together] |
| Ascending ( |
| Located in the chest and runs through the nose, tongue and throat | Projects the speech, provides (physical) strength, complexion, ‘color,’ energy and effort, and clears the memory |
| Pervading ( |
| Located in the heart and moves throughout the whole body | Raises, presses downwards, moves (the body), stretches, contracts (limbs and digits), opens and closes (the orifices) and is relied upon in the majority of functions |
| Fire-like equalising ( |
| Located in the stomach and runs throughout the internal (vessel) organs | Digests food, separates nutriment and waste products, and nourishes the objects of harm (bodily constituents, excretions etc.) |
| Downwards voiding ( |
| Located in the anal area and operates in the large intestine, urinary bladder, genitals and thighs | Discharges and retains the semen, (menstrual) blood, stool, urine and foetus |
Specific syndromes with psychiatric symptoms
|
| Disorder of life-sustaining ( | ‘One may lose consciousness and balance, manifest vertigo, lose control of the body/mind, have wrong perceptions, confusion, hear sounds in the head and ears, experience feelings of head emptiness, and have hallucinations. It may cause shortness of breath; difficulty of inhalation, problems in swallowing food and drink, and could even become the cause of madness.’ (Arya |
|
| Disorder of pervading ( | ‘Manifests in loss of balance, hypertension, chest tension, fear, panic attacks…, fainting, loss of speech, general cardiac disorders, talkativeness, the desire to roam, pains in the joints, shoulders and back, blood circulation disorders, heart palpitations and rhythm disturbances, and in complaining and unfriendly speech which worsens the situation, etc.’ (Arya |
|
| Involves excess of both | Symptoms of either |
Early discussions of srog rlung, snying rlung, and khrag rlung
| Author | Work | Chapter or section |
|---|---|---|
| Zur mkhar Mnyam nyid rdo je (1439–1475) |
| Two texts on |
| dKon mchog phan dar (1511–1577) |
| Short texts on healing |
| Ngag dbang dkon mchog bstan rgyal (1594–1630) |
|
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| Sde srid Sangs rgyas rgya mtsho |
| Sections on |
Three principal channels
| Sanskrit names (Hindu) | Sanskrit names (Buddhist) | Tibetan names | Associations | More associations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
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| red, solar | Means, Compassion |
|
|
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| white, lunar | Wisdom, Insight |
|
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| beyond duality | Buddhahood |