Showing 48 of 88 videos
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1:16

Professor Fan discusses grief and the lungs as well as how immense fear affects our ability to control the kidneys.

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1:21

Professor Fan discusses how extreme changes in emotion can damage the "Qi" in the five viscera.

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1:29

Professor Fan explains why you must anger someone to the point of tears during an argument.

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1:00

Professor Fan emphasizes the importance of rules and having a good grasp of such rules in everything we do.

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1:11

Professor Fan uses the process of birth and life to explain why there is never a need to fear pain.

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1:19

Professor Fan tells us how we can all be content with nothingness.

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0:49

Professor Fan discusses the idea of "Ren" and its importance in maintaining healthy relationships.

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1:28

Professor Fan tells us how we can nurture a healthy mind and how it will improve our lives.

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1:57

This video is a demonstration of acupoint selection.

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2:08

The host has some fun with acupuncture and the guest's needles are eventually removed.

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2:15

Acupuncturist Mr. He only needs to insert a needle into one spot to treat a case of knee joint pain. Where will it be?

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1:35

This video explains the origin of the term, "Windy Mansion."

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1:25

This video demonstrates acupuncture insertion into the "Windy Mansion" acupoint.

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1:23

Just like many things, acupuncture is about quality, not quantity.

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1:24

This video introduces another acupoint, the "Chungwan," further supporting the principle that "All it takes is one needle."

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1:19

Mastering the use of the acupoints takes decades of practice.

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0:54

Placing the health standards of younger people on the elderly is not only unnecessary. It's unrealistic and unhealthy.

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1:10

Chinese medicine revolves around the idea that disease is caused by internal and external factors, with the external as far-reaching as the generational.

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0:41

Should we get more used to getting sick than being healthy?

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0:43

Chinese medicine stresses prevention of disease rather than treating that which has already happened.

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1:04

Chinese medicine is about observing the effect of an illness and the patient's personal experience, rather than the medical probing of pathogens.

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0:43

Chinese medicine is helpful in detecting ailments not found in Western techniques.

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