How Five Phases Practitioners Use Diet Therapy
from The Chinese Way to Healing: Many Paths to Wholeness
Five Phases practitioners put an emphasis on the flavors associated with the
phases. When the diet becomes unbalanced, the flavors may become excess or
deficient. That can trigger disharmony in associated Organ Systems. To remedy
the imbalance, Five Phases diet therapy advocates the addition of
counterbalancing flavors, and each has special powers to restore balance.
1. Wood is associated with sour. Sour is astringent and gathering. A
diet that has an excess of sour is associated with weakening of the Spleen,
overproduction or saliva by the Liver and injury to the muscles. It can be
counteracted by the addition of metal-pungent foods.
2. Fire is associated with bitter. Bitter is drying and
strengthening. A diet that has an excess of bitter is associated with Spleen
energy dryness, congestion of Stomach energy and a withering of the skin. It
can be counteracted by the addition of salty foods.
3. Earth is associated with sweet. Sweet is harmonizing and
retarding. A diet that has an excess of sweet is associated with achy bones,
unbalanced Kidneys, full Heart energy and hair loss. It can be counteracted by
the addition of sour foods.
4. Metal is associated with hot, pungent, aromatic. Metal is
dispersing. A diet that has an excess of pungent is associated with muscle
knots, slack pulse, a damaged Shen, and unhealthy fingernails and toenails. It
can be counteracted by the addition of bitter foods.
5. Water is associated with salty. Salty is softening. A diet that
has an excess of salty is associated with deficient muscles and flesh, lack of
strength in the large bones and depression. It can be counteracted by the
addition of sweet foods.