Dr. Jingduan Yang explains the meridians and energy flow of the human body
“If we follow the rhythm of nature, we’ll become much more efficient than the people who run around trying to do more things.”
In an era defined by artificial light and the ceaseless hum of technology, silence and darkness have become rare commodities. We often perceive time as a linear resource to be conquered, stretched, and filled. Yet, according to Dr. Jingduan Yang—a fifth-generation practitioner of Chinese medicine and founder of the Yang Institute of Integrative Medicine—time is not a line, but a cycle. It is a breathing, living entity that demands synchronization, not subjugation.
Dr. Yang represents a lineage that views the human body not as a machine separate from the world, but as a microcosm mirroring the universe. In the ancient view, health is simply the elegance of alignment: when the internal orchestra of the organs plays in time with the movements of the sun and the seasons.
There is a profound humility in observing the celestial bodies. Dr. Yang posits a simple yet striking observation: the sun, for all its magnificence and vital power, is remarkably obedient. It never refuses to rise; it never decides to stay up late out of whim. It adheres strictly to the law of the universe.
Human beings, conversely, often mistake defiance for freedom. We use electricity to turn night into day, believing we have outsmarted nature. Dr. Yang suggests this is a dangerous illusion. “We think we’re smart, that we’re gaining some freedom,” he reflects. “But actually, we’re creating problems for ourselves.”
True freedom, in the eyes of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), is not the ability to ignore the clock, but the vitality that comes from obeying it. When we deviate from the circadian rhythm, we trade our health for temporary productivity, eventually losing our freedom to illness and the pursuit of medical repair. To work smarter is to surrender to the cosmic flow, allowing the current of nature to carry us rather than swimming exhaustively upstream.
The harmonization begins with the macrocosm—the year itself. In TCM, the calendar is not merely divided by temperature, but by elemental energy. This concept of the Five Elements offers a map for seasonal living, where each phase of the year nourishes a specific biological system.
To live aesthetically is to be sensitive to these shifts—to eat, move, and rest in accordance with the dominant energy of the season.
While the seasons guide our year, the 24-hour body clock governs our days. Dr. Yang emphasizes one window of time above all others: 11 p.m. to 3 a.m.
In the hierarchy of the body, the Liver and Gallbladder act as the “Commander-in-Chief.” They oversee the complex logistics of metabolism, detoxification, decision-making, and energy distribution. Like any great general, they require a period of absolute withdrawal to strategize and regroup.
“It absolutely needs to rest during those four hours at night,” Dr. Yang advises. If we are awake and active during this window, we force the Commander to stay on the battlefield, depleting the very reserves needed to lead the body through the following day. The result is a chaotic internal state, where the “army” of the body lacks direction and vitality.
By understanding the energetic peaks of each organ system, we can design a routine that feels less like a schedule and more like a symphony.
The Awakening (3 a.m. – 9 a.m.)
The Peak of Action (9 a.m. – 3 p.m.)
The Flow and Release (3 p.m. – 9 p.m.)
The Return to Silence (9 p.m. – 3 a.m.)
To follow this clock is not to restrict oneself, but to enter a state of grace. It is the realization that we are not separate from the turning of the earth, and that in yielding to its rhythm, we find our greatest strength.
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