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Stopping Painful PMS With Chinese Herbs


Painful PMS is the result of a body out of balance.  Traditional Chinese Medicine takes the holistic approach of treating the whole body to regain that balance needed to maintain a healthy lifestyle.

It seems today the slang word  PMS’ing has become so common for how people behave or are feeling,  it’s even used when referring to a man acting moody or depressed.   Is everybody so stressed that they just can’t deal with certain times of the month?  This used to be just a female issue.  In Traditional Chinese Medicine, PMS has been addressed with herbs and Acupuncture for centuries.  Chinese medicine, based on Taoism philosophy, believes health is achieved when the body is in balance.   If we’re PMS’ing, we’re not in balance. 

In Chinese Medical literature, PMS is characterized as a lack of the free flow of Qi (energy or our vital force).  This is because we are out of balance.  The balance I’m referring to is not a static object that one finds and has forever.  Balance is an ongoing quest throughout life.  Rarely do we all have it all the time. But, hopefully, we have some balance, some or most of the time.  Within all aspects of life we need a balance.  Our diets, not too much nor too little, neither overweight nor underweight.  

Sleep habits, as too much sleep can actually cause depression and we all probably know how we feel with too little sleep.  Our relationships need a balance in all areas, friends, family, and spouses.  Work, in today’s society, seems like the toughest part of our lives to balance.  Often there’s either too much work or not enough.  I rarely talk to someone who says I have the perfect job.  I make exactly what I need and don’t have to work more than I want to.   But wouldn’t it be nice if we could all say that everyday.  This would be balance. 

Back to that stuck Qi and the PMS’ing we are all doing, at least once in a while anyway.  At any particular moment when we are out of balance and we can’t quite figure out why, our Qi gets stuck.  This stuck Qi effects the menstrual cycle which in turn causes stagnation of blood and menstrual pain.  The stuck or stagnate “Qi” energy in TCM also causes moodiness and other typical menstrual symptoms such as headaches, crankiness, bloating and pain.  There can be various other symptoms as well.  TCM addresses the root cause and the body responds happily because our bodies want to be in balance.  The body functions optimally when in balance. 

I prefer the Eastern method of treatment because, as an Acupuncturist, I treat the whole person and the whole body.  This method contrasts sharply with the Western approach which, for example, treats only the menstrual irregularities (not the root of them) with either NSAIDs  or birth control pills.  I now know 14 year olds using birth control, not because they are sexually active but to control the symptoms of their menstrual cycle.  I would rather ask, what is going on with these kids that PMS symptoms are unbearable without a daily pill? 

Moodiness and depression are just symptoms of the body's lack of balance in certain areas of your life.  Resolve the internal issues, resolve the balancing act and you will find that your health issues, including the PMS’ing, resolve themselves as well.  Treating the whole person rather than just the symptoms is the right way to bring balance back into your life and stop the PMS’ing.

This article has been contributed by an Alternative Health Journal community member. It reflects the views of the author and only the author. The Alternative Health Journal makes no claims to the accuracy of the information contained within.

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