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5 Elements
Chinese five elements theory refers to the five element of wood, fire, earth, metal, and water.
This theory can be used to describe the movement and the relationship between different elements and phenomena in nature.
Basic five elements characteristics and classifications
Yin/Yang Organs
Colours                 
Flavours
Sense Organs
Emotions
Body Parts
Climate                 
Liver/GB
Green
Sour
Eyes
Anger
Tendons
Wind
Heart/SI
Red
Bitter
Tongue
Joy
Pulse
Heat
Spleen/Stomach
Yellow
Sweet
Mouth
Pensiveness
Muscles
Dampness
Lung/LI
White
Pungent
Nose
Sadness
Skin
Dryness
Kidney/UB
Black
Salty
Ears
Fear
Bones
Cold
Promoting Cycle
           This cycle is explained most easily by a simple metaphor. The relationship is the same as a mother and child relationship, where the child is dependent upon the mother for nourishment and therefore growth and well-being.
Controlling Cycle
           To understand the relationship of the controlling cycle, we must look more closely at the origin of the five element theory in China where the responsibility of disciplining the children rested with the grandparents The controlling cycle describes the relationship of a grandmother disclipling a grandchild.
Overcontrolling and Counteracting
Overcontrolling means that an element is too strong/hyperactive and is controlling the other element too much. A common condition in which the wood element controls earth too much (or overacts) will manifest itself with symptoms of hyper wood as well as hypo earth, sometimes making the deficient-earth element even more deficient. Counteracting is the reverse situation--a controlled element is rebelling against its controlling element.
Diagnosis According to Five Element Theory
           The colors, emotions, flavors, senses, climates, body parts, and organs are all related. Through viewing the human body in this way, we can determine internal disharmony. For example, if a patient has a green hue to his complexion, a sour taste in his mouth, and his eyes are bothersome to him in some way, we would look more closely at the Wood element (Liver and Gallbladder).
TheCycles
Promoting
Controlling
wood promotes fire
wood controls earth
fire promotes earth
earth controls water
earth promotes metal
water controls fire
metal promotes water
fire controls metal
water promotes wood
metal controls wood