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Differences in the organ structure from birth
Lee Jema explains that each person is born with one of the four organ
structures. These are the four organs: lungs, pancreas, liver, and kidneys.
He called those who are born with a structure of large lungs and small liver
taeyangin; those born with a large liver and small lung structure taeumin; those
born with a large pancreas and small kidney structure soyangin, and those born
with a large kidney and small pancreas structure soumin.
 Illustration 1. Organ sizes of
the four constitutions
Here
"large" and "small" mean not the size of the form, but the strength of function.
So, if the lungs are said to be large and the liver small, that doesn't mean
that the lungs are anatomically large and liver small, but that the lungs'
functioning is raised and the liver's functioning is lowered. That is the way
to interpret these expressions. There are, however, scientists who assert that
they should be interpreted to apply not only to function but also to the size of
the anatomical form.
Everyone is
born with an imbalance in the organs. Just as the earth's axis is inclined at an
angle of 23.5º, even a very healthy person is born according to his constitution
with an imbalance in his organs. If that is so, the question comes to mind,
which organs are the ones that show the imbalance? That is the key to why a
person has a given constitution.

Illustration
2. Organ imbalance
This organ
imbalance is regarded as being completely normal because it is from birth and
constitution. However, if a person somehow becomes ill, as shown in the
above illustration, the angle of the axis of imbalance is broken and becomes
more acute. The more serious the illness, the more acute the angle becomes. But
if adequate treatment is performed, the angle reverts to its original slope and
the illness is cured. That is the so-called pathological viewpoint of
constitution medicine.
Organ
theory of Lee Jema It is important to understand that the four
organs (lungs, pancreas, liver, and kidneys) named by Lee Jema represent
not only those four organs as defined by Western medicine, but also represent a
unique concept different from the traditional concept of Chinese medicine.
In order to
understand his definition of the organs, let's take a look at his unique organ
theory. In the chapter Organ Theory in Dongyi Soose Bowon he uses his special
terms for lung group, pancreas group, liver group, and kidney group, instead of
the words for lung, pancreas, liver, and kidney.
A group is more than
one, so the lung group is not only the lungs themselves, but includes all the
parts of the body that belong to the lungs. In other words, he explains that
not only lungs belong to the lung group, but also the gastric cavity (the pit of
the stomach), tongue, ears, brain, skin and esophagus; the pancreas, stomach,
breasts, eyes, spine and muscles belong to the pancreas group; the liver, small
intestine, navel, nose, waist and subcutaneous tissues belong to the liver
group; and finally, the kidneys, large intestine, genital organs, mouth, bladder
and bones belong to the kidney group.
Table 1.
Organ groups
|
|
Lung
group (upper jiao) |
pancreas
group (upper middle jiao) |
liver
group (lower middle jiao) |
kidney
group (lower jiao) |
|
representative
organs |
lung |
pancreas
|
liver |
kidney |
|
other organs
in the group |
esophagus, tongue,
ear, brain, skin |
stomach,
breast, eye, spine, muscle |
small
intestine, navel, nose, waist, subcutaneous tissue |
large
intestine, genitals, mouth, bladder, bones |
For example,
a taeyangin has the organ structure of large lungs and small liver. That doesn't
mean simply that the lungs are big and the liver small, but that the lungs,
esophagus, tongue, brain and skin are strong, and the liver, small intestine,
navel, nose and hypodermic tissues are weak.
The organ
theory of Lee Jema is quite different from the organ theories of
traditional Chinese medicine. For example, in Chinese medicine there is a theory
that lungs relate to the skin, but there isn't a theory that lungs relate also
to tongue, brain, and esophagus.
In Chinese
medicine the large intestine and lung, small intestine and heart are two sides
of the same coin, but Lee Jema has a completely different opinion, that the
large intestine relates to the kidneys and the small intestine to the liver. So
the organ theories of traditional Chinese medicine are different from those of
Lee Jema. That can easily lead to confusion among students of Oriental medicine.
However, we should consider that it is not a problem of one or the other being
correct, but is a result of different viewpoints.
Chinese
medicine looks at heart and small intestine as being two sides of the same coin
because both organs are connected by the same meridian. That is a meridian
viewpoint.
Chinese medicine explains from this viewpoint a pathological
interconnectedness. Let's take the heart and small intestine for example. If the
heart is full of fire and the heat is given off to the small intestine,
inflammation, ulcer and pain show up in the mouth and on the tongue, and also
the urine turns red and urination may be painful.
Four
jiaos The organ theory of Lee Jema begins with a completely
different viewpoint than that of Chinese medicine. He widely divided the human
trunk containing the organs into the upper jiao and the lower jiao with respect
to yin and yang, and then further divided the upper jiao into the upper jiao and
the upper middle jiao, and the lower jiao into lower middle jiao and lower jiao.
So he divided the trunk into four parts to which he assigned the four organs
lung, pancreas, liver and kidney according to yin and yang. 
Illustration
3. Human body and the four jiaos
As shown
this illustration 3, he called the part from the armpits to the nipples the
upper jiao, and assigned to it the lungs. The esophagus, tongue, ears, brain,
and skin also belong to the upper jiao. He called the part from the nipples to
the solar plexus the upper middle jiao, and assigned to it the pancreas. The
stomach, breasts, eyes, spine, and muscles, members of the pancreas group,
belong to the upper middle jiao.
He called
the part from the solar plexus to the navel the lower middle jiao, and assigned
to it the liver. The small intestine, navel, nose, waist, and subcutaneous
tissues, members of the liver group, belong to the lower middle jiao. Finally,
he called the part from the navel to the hipbone the lower jiao, and assigned to
it the kidneys. The large intestine, genital organs, mouth, bladder, and bones,
members of the kidney group, belong to the lower jiao.
It is also
possible to divide the whole body similarly to the division of the trunk into
four jiaos, and likewise the face. Dividing the whole body thusly into the four
jiaos, Lee Jema understood that the energy of each organ rules over the
concerned part.
It's
important to understand that the four organs are assigned to their respective
four jiaos not according to their anatomical location, but from the yin-yang
viewpoint. For example, the liver is anatomically above the pancreas, but Lee
Jema assigned the liver to the lower middle jiao, lower than the pancreas, and
the pancreas to the upper middle jiao, because according to his theory of the
four jiaos, pancreas belongs to yang and liver to yin.
It is
important to know that lungs, pancreas, liver and kidneys in Oriental medicine
are not only the respective organs in Western medicine, but include the whole
concept with the included function. For example, lungs in Oriental medicine
doesn't mean only the anatomical lungs, but also all of the breathing organs,
the nose and bronchus. Likewise, one should keep in mind that the concept
of the organs in the constitution medicine of Lee Jema include all the
organs that belong to the respective group according to his unique
interpretation. In other words, lung means not only the lung as a breathing
organ, but also all the organs that are ruled by the lungs in the upper jiao,
that is, the gastric cavity, tongue, ears, brain, and skin.
According to
the theory of acupuncture points, the Zhongfu point (LU 1), Yunmen
point (LU 2), Tianfu point (LU 3), and Chize point (LU 5) belong
to the lung meridian, and the Shanyang point (LI 1), Erijian point
(LI 2), Sanjian point (LI 3), Hegu point (LI 4), and Yangxi point
(LI 5) belong to the large intestine meridian. Likewise, Lee Jema found that
the stomach, breasts, eyes, and spine are grouped into the pancreas group, and
the large intestine, genital organs, mouth, bladder and bones fit into the
kidney group, and that they communicate among each other through energy. Just
as it came to him that each person is born with a different organ structure, he
saw also that each part of the human body is inter-linked by the four energy
groups. That is an amazing discovery.
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