Curing Infertility with Ancient Chinese Medicine by Yaron Seidman

Curing Infertility with Ancient Chinese Medicine by Yaron Seidman

Author:Yaron Seidman
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Skyhorse
Published: 2012-12-31T16:00:00+00:00


THE ESSENCE OF SPIRITUALITY

The sun, as far as we know, is a great ball of fire. Yet it is different than the fire in your kitchen, which must be cautiously fed in order to keep itself going. The sun, on the other hand, is eternal. Its flame runs on a different source: the internal essence of the sun.

The sun reflects in us as human beings and especially in men. It keeps us running with its eternal essence. In Judaism, Christianity, Buddhism, Daoism, and all other religions, this essence is virtue—the will power to do good deeds, charity, and other beneficial actions for others. It is what makes us want to love our child or help a friend.

This virtue is the spirituality source of life. Although women have virtue too, virtue is the male’s strongest quality. This is the same source that feeds down to the male brain and “thought,” down the spine, the kidneys, and out the penis into the female partner.

The moon receives the essence of the sun, becomes pregnant with it, and then reflects it to women on earth. This energy is about bravery. Because the moon predominantly impacts the woman, the woman’s strongest quality is courage and strength. When a woman becomes pregnant and delivers a baby, her courage is beyond anything a man can imagine.

When a man deposits his virtue through his white drop (semen and sperm), the woman possesses the courage to harbor it, and becomes pregnant with it. The courage continues by the internal source of the moon. Every month the moon disappears, but then has the courage to come back for another cycle. The woman will find the courage in her to become pregnant and deliver a baby, to raise the child through difficult times and hardship. Without the courage of the woman, there would be no life.

The virtue quality that men possess is also about “letting go.” He lets go of his sperm—and the necessary accompanying spirit—when he releases it into the woman. The courage of a woman is embodied in “holding on,” even clinging to things. This spirit is needed for holding on to the sperm and onto pregnancy. This energy is also needed for building a home for the family.

Both men and women need courage and virtue throughout their lives, but when a man has too much courage, or when a woman has too much virtue, problems may result. It is the same as relying on the moon to warm us, or the sun to reflect on us. The sun, although warming and lighting the way during the day, cannot dispel the darkness at night as the moon can. The sun is simply absent altogether at night. It does not have the brave quality that the moon exhibits.



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