After the New Year's Eve, Luo Xiaochuan and Li Shuci's relationship had heated up rapidly. Moreover, after the breakthrough on the Ferris wheel, Li Shuci was no longer so reserved. He would come to Luo Xiaochuan's house every three to five days to accompany him to relieve the pain of lovesickness. Of course, it was very difficult for something as crazy as the Ferris wheel to happen again.
After all, Li Shuci was still a traditional girl. Having premarital sex still made her break her bottom line. Moreover, she was afraid of getting pregnant before marriage and always took safety measures. Fortunately, she had not had any abnormal reactions for the past three months. Otherwise, she really did not know how to explain it to her family.
Luo Xiaochuan had always found it strange. Her first time with Li Shuci and Jane was without any safety measures. Why did neither of them react? If Grandpa Huang had not sworn on his honor that he was fine, Luo Xiaochuan would have suspected that there was something wrong with himself.
However, no matter how much Luo Xiaochuan asked Grandpa Huang, Grandpa Huang refused to tell him. Luo Xiaochuan had no choice but to find the answer himself. While he was sorting out Grandpa Huang's medical cases, he was also flipping through ancient books that were more obscure and difficult to understand. He wanted to figure out why he was so romantic that he did not even leave a single seed behind.
With such a strong thirst for knowledge, Luo Xiaochuan's medical skills improved at a rapid pace. He had already made some progress in the four paths of medicine. Of course, the subjects he tested on were his friends. With the omnipotent Thirteen sharing his experience with them, it was impossible for him not to improve by leaps and bounds.
However, looking, listening, asking, and feeling were only the basic skills in the medical path. These were skills for treating illnesses and diagnosis, not for treatment. Therefore, those who were proficient in looking, listening, asking, and feeling could only be considered as a doctor at most. They could not become a craftsman doctor who could prescribe the right medicine. Chinese medicine was not a joke. Medicine was 30% poisonous. Without a certain amount of experience, it was impossible to control the dosage. This was also why those who were highly skilled in Chinese medicine were old Chinese doctors. This was because young doctors lacked experience and experience. Without time and experience, they could not adjust the dosage of the prescription according to the patient's physical condition. This made it difficult for young Chinese doctors to be trusted.
However, it was much more difficult for Luo Xiaochuan to become a doctor compared to others. Although he had achieved some success in the four paths of sight, hearing, question, and pulse, he was still far from being proficient in them. If he wanted to become a doctor, he would need to work harder and accumulate a lot of practical experience.
Inspection was a purposeful observation of the patient's spirit, color, shape, posture, tongue, etc., in order to detect the changes in the internal organs. Through a large number of medical practices, Chinese medicine gradually realized that the external parts of the body, especially the face, tongue, tongue coating, and internal organs were closely related. If there were changes in the yin, yang, and blood of the internal organs, it would definitely be reflected on the surface of the body.
Listening included listening to sounds and smelling smells. The main thing was to listen to the patient's language and breath to distinguish the deficiency, excess, cold, and heat of the disease.
Interrogation was to understand the patient's condition by asking the patient or his accompanying doctor. The time, cause, course, past medical history, the patient's pain, as well as living habits, diet preferences, and other conditions related to the disease could only be understood through interrogation. Therefore, interrogation was one of the important methods to understand the patient's condition and medical history. It occupied an important position among the four diagnosis methods.
Feel the pulse with your fingers. Looking, listening, asking and feeling are called the four kinds of diagnosis. Palpation was a method of understanding the patient's condition by touching the patient's body with one's hands. Taking the pulse was also known as taking the pulse. It was a method for doctors to use their fingers to press the pulse of the artery behind the wrist to observe the changes of the pulse and distinguish the ups and downs of the function of the internal organs and the deficiency of qi, blood, and essence. The normal pulse condition is that there are pulses in the three parts of the body, Cunguan and Chizhi, neither floating nor sinking, neither slow nor rapid, calm and gentle, gentle and powerful, smooth and uniform, with the same rhythm. The pulse is four to five times in one breath, which is called flat pulse.
Looking, listening, asking, and feeling were the four main methods of diagnosis in traditional Chinese medicine. Through these four methods, one could almost discover most diseases. This was because according to the theory of traditional Chinese medicine, all diseases were from the inside out. Most diseases could be cured by regulating the internal organs and meridians, and the exact disease could be found through looking, listening, asking, and feeling.
For example, the common folk disease, internal heat, was also known as "hot air". It could be explained from the theory of traditional Chinese medicine and belonged to the category of traditional Chinese medicine fever. Chinese medicine believed that the human body's yin and yang were unbalanced, and the internal fire was exuberant, which would cause excessive internal heat. Therefore, the so-called " fire " was used to describe the symptoms of heat in the body. The symptoms of internal heat were caused by the imbalance of yin and yang in the human body. The specific symptoms were red and swollen eyes, erosion of the corner of the mouth, yellow urine, toothache, sore throat, etc. "Sudden internal heat" is more likely to occur in dry climates and continuous hot and humid weather. For this kind of illness caused by the imbalance of yin and yang, most Western doctors would prescribe some medicine or treat it with injections. However, Chinese medicine would suggest that the patient use diet therapy.
Of course, the treatment method of Chinese medicine was naturally more gentle and efficient. In fact, the treatment method of Western medicine for diseases such as cold and fever had always been ineffective because the treatment theory of Western medicine was completely different from that of Chinese medicine. Western medicine focused on specialized treatment. In layman's terms, they would treat whatever was uncomfortable. Western medicine could be said to be very effective in treating surgical diseases. Once it involved internal diseases, Western medicine's treatment methods were not necessarily effective. On the contrary, Chinese medicine, which focused on consolidating the foundation, was effective in treating such diseases.
If Luo Xiaochuan wanted to become a doctor, he would need to accumulate a large number of case studies. It was impossible for him to master the four paths of sight, hearing, question, and feeling just by studying Huang Mingtang's treatment records. What he needed more was actual combat experience. However, everyone in society now valued certificates more. Without a certificate or reputation, people who didn't know their roots wouldn't let you go to see a doctor. Luo Xiaochuan wasn't from a medical school, so no one would dare to let him treat them unless they were friends. Therefore, Luo Xiaochuan gave everyone a free consultation in the martial arts club.
Luo Xiaochuan might not have been confident if it were any other place, but in the martial arts society, his words carried weight. Even the president, Chen Chuyang, did not have as much authority as Luo Xiaochuan in the society. After the exchange group incident, Luo Xiaochuan had been promoted to vice president, and Chen Chuyang had become an indispensable person.
Chen Chuyang did not have any objections to Luo Xiaochuan teaching his students Taiji Fist. Besides, Luo Xiaochuan only taught them stance and the basic moves. He did not teach them the fighting style and the method of using strength. This was the fundamental difference between the physical and spiritual Taiji Fist. The lethality was simply incomparable. In addition, Taiji could only use softness to counter hardness, but Internal Taiji was extremely firm and fierce. In the Chinese martial arts world, it could even be compared to the fierce and tough Bajiquan.
Luo Xiaochuan was teaching everyone martial arts, and these people were treating Luo Xiaochuan for free, allowing Luo Xiaochuan to accumulate his own combat experience. This was a win-win situation. However, it was not easy to become a doctor. Luo Xiaochuan still needed time to accumulate the foundation to become a doctor.
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