During a visit to Duke Huan of Qi, Bian Que—a household Chinese physician living during the Warring States period (around 407 to 310 B.C.)—examined him and warned, “You have an illness in your skin.” The duke dismissed the concern, scoffing, “I’m not sick—this charlatan just wants my money.”
Five days later, Bian Que returned and said: “The illness has entered your blood vessels. If left untreated, the consequences will be serious.” The annoyed duke ignored him again.
Another five days passed. Bian Que warned, “The illness has now reached your intestines. The situation is critical.” Still, the duke paid no attention.
Five days later, upon seeing the duke again, Bian Que turned and walked away. When asked why, he replied, “The illness has entered your bone marrow—it cannot be cured.”
Five days after that, Duke Huan fell gravely ill. By then, Bian Que had already left the state of Qi. The duke soon died.
As documented in the “Records of the Grand Historian,” Bian Que possessed the extraordinary ability to see through the body, detecting issues in the organs before symptoms manifested.
While later practitioners may not share such supernatural insight, traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) has developed sophisticated diagnostic methods—such as observation, listening, questioning, and pulse-taking—to identify a patient’s constitution and early signs of disease.
Predicting Disease With the 5 Elements
What makes the most exceptional physician? Is it the ability to cure severe diseases or to save a patient teetering on the brink of death?In TCM, the body is viewed as a microcosm, intricately linked with nature, where organs interact dynamically. The five elements—wood, fire, earth, metal, and water—correspond to the liver, heart, spleen, lungs, and kidneys, respectively, guiding practitioners in diagnosing and preventing imbalances across these interconnected systems.

The Emotions and Their Organs
Each of the five principal organs governs a specific emotion. The liver corresponds to anger, the heart to joy, the spleen to overthinking or worry, the lungs to grief, and the kidneys to fear. Excessive emotions directly impact their corresponding organs.Harmony Through Generation and Control
The five elements have a relationship of mutual generation and mutual restraint. “Mutual generation” refers to the cyclical process where each of the five elements nourishes or promotes the growth of the next in a specific sequence. Wood fuels fire, fire enriches earth, earth produces metal, metal yields water, and water nourishes wood, creating a continuous loop.Conversely, the “control” cycle ensures balance through restraint: wood stabilizes earth, earth contains water, water douses fire, fire melts metal, and metal cuts wood, maintaining equilibrium.
Healing Grief With Laughter
A striking example of emotional “control” comes from Zhu Danxi, one of the most celebrated physicians of the Yuan Dynasty.He once treated a young man devastated by the sudden death of his wife. The grief overwhelmed him, and his health began to decline. In TCM, excessive sorrow harms the lungs, making the body more vulnerable to illness.
Instead of prescribing herbs, Zhu Danxi employed wit. He leaned in seriously and said: “Ah, I see the problem—you’re pregnant. In a few days, you’ll give birth!”
Startled, the man blinked and then broke into laughter. “The great Zhu Danxi thinks a man can be pregnant?” he exclaimed. For the first time in days, laughter filled the room. The absurdity of the diagnosis lifted the young man’s gloom. Over the next several days, he continued to laugh heartily at the joke, and as his spirits rose, his strength returned. In time, his melancholy dissolved entirely.
The Unhealed: Victims of Their Excess
No physician, however skilled, can help those who live recklessly, driven by unbridled desires and devoid of self-discipline.The wisest physicians prioritize guidance over medicine, teaching patients to cultivate virtuous habits. In his “Essential Prescriptions Worth a Thousand Gold for Emergencies,” Tang Dynasty physician Sun Simiao wrote, “If virtue and conduct are not cultivated, even miraculous elixirs cannot extend life.” Conversely, he noted, “By perfecting virtue daily, blessings arrive unbidden, and longevity follows naturally—this is the essence of nurturing health.”
Yet, for those consumed by desires, in turn rendering their bodies unhealthy and lacking self-reflection, Sun observed: “The sages crafted medicines to aid those who stray in their conduct. Yet, fools cling to illness for years, never adopting a single virtuous practice, remaining entangled in disease until death without a trace of regret.”







