I hope you passed a great Thanksgiving and had a wonderful break from school! On Thursday, we also celebrated Thanksgiving, even while in Dakar. I was able to share a meal with the students and directors of the program. It was fun to celebrate Thanksgiving in Senegal and then later talk to my family in the states about what they…
Category: Food and Drink
Sweet, Sweet Free Time
Midterm season is officially over–for my classes, anyway–and I have officially regained the rare, precious luxury known as “free time.” In honor of this momentous occasion, I have composed two lists: things I plan to do with my spare time for the rest of my pre-finals semester and things that I will actually do. Plan! Exercise more. That’s right. No…
Happy October!
Happy October! Since my last post, the weather has done a complete 180- we went from being consistently hot, sticky, and overall an unpleasant mess (can you tell I’m not from around here?) to a cool, cloudy, more fall-appropriate temperature. In other words, my sweaters are at the ready, mugs filled to the brim with alternating hot beverages (currently on…
Top 6 Things I’ve Missed at Wellesley
Hello! I’m Sarah, your friendly neighborhood admissions blogger. Some quick facts: I’m a senior, an English and Creative major and Psychology minor, and a resident of Severance Hall. I’m a member of the Wellesley News, Wellesley College TV, and Knit Happens, among a few other things. I’m in the weeds of my senior thesis, interning at the Admissions Office, and…
Twenty Two
I turned twenty two last Thursday. At first, I woke up and looked out the window and felt a little older. And then I immediately remembered that I had left my Western blots in the wrong buffer last night leaving the lab, and hoped they were okay (they were). Maybe that’s what being twenty two is. A combination of feeling…
Café Hoop
I become a Noopie (New Hoopie)last week. Café Hoop is a student-run café in the bottom of our student center the Lulu Chow Wang Campus Center. (Hoopies are people who work at the Hoop). In my opinion, it is one of the best places on campus. I fell in love with it the first time I went there during my first…
Rain is killing my buzz!
A month into classes and it seems like everyone is sick, midterms have somehow started already, and the weather plummeted fast. I caught a cold earlier this week and the combination of staying up way later than I should and not eating too well has kept me in a physical funk this time. (my friend’s dog, blu!) I just can’t believe we went…
Ruhlmanm 2016
Ruhlman Conference on Wednesday went well! There were TONS of yummy foods and snacks available all over campus, ALL DAY! The presenters also got really nice, glass water bottles. Wellesley is constantly looking to become more eco-friendly, which I find to be so exciting and inspiring.
I presented in the morning with my independent study partner on our self-created course “The Chinese Philosophy of Balance.” Our presentation was called “How to Live to Be 100: What Traditional Chinese Medicine Can Teach Us About Living a Happier, Healthier Life.” Basically, we shared our experience studying TCM and some of the many interesting things we learned over the course of our studies with our advisor, Professor Chen.
My portion of the presentation was all about how TCM theories relate to the foods you should eat.
In TCM, eating the correct foods for your body and the time of year is more important than taking medicine. This is because TCM is all about preventing disease and sickness before they occur, rather than treating them after. In the Huangdi Neijing (黄帝内经 or ‘The Inner Classis of the Yellow Emperor’), one of the oldest surviving TCM texts, there is a passage that states, A strong body need only rely on food. TCM stresses the importance of balance with the self and with nature. Food is gentle, energy-providing, and life-giving, while medicine tends towards an extreme (and thus has side effects).
Isabelle, my partner, introduced the theory of yin and yang–opposite yet complimentary forces. Each individual has a certain balance of yin and yang within their body. Furthermore, within all yang there is yin and within all yin there is yang (complicated, but really fun to delve into on a deeper level). In my portion of the presentation, I spoke about food and its relationship to the seasons through yin and yang theory.
Summer is a yang time of year. This means that yang is abundant and actively emanating from the body. A departure of yang from the body means a greater pattern of internal yin, so the internal environment becomes ‘cold’/’wet.’ To counteract this, one should eat warming (yang) foods, such as black tea, noodles, and ginger.
In contrast, winter is a yin time of year. This means that yang is introverted and reserved, remaining inside the body and creating an internal pattern of warmth. To maintain balance, one should eat nourishing, nutritiously dense (yin) foods, such as root vegetables (i.e. carrots, turnips, potatoes).
Yellow foods (such as millet, corn, and other whole grains) are always good for your energy and overall health/balance. This is because the color yellow is associated with the transitions between seasons. It is also associated with the spleen, the organ of the body believed to take the yin/yang energies of foods and create blood/energy for the body to use.
Sorry, that’s a lot of information! I’m just so excited about learning all of this. I find it fascinating and I’m planning to do more of my own research over the summer. I want to learn all I can about TCM. Even though I’m graduating, my professor has asked me to do some independent research and keep in contact with her so we can continue studying these topics and learning from one another. I am very excited to continue this process with her.