My acupuncture clinic is perhaps similar to a martial arts studio. Nobody punches or kicks in my clinic, at least not on purpose, but I support people as they fight through aches and pains from injuries both acute and chronic. After treating pain-related conditions with acupuncture, I often aid recovery by rubbing a liniment, or Die Da Jiu (跌打酒), into achy joints and tissues. The aromatic herbs and precious resins in this formula scent my treatment room like an ancient apothecary, while moving stuck traumas, helping tissues release their stored issues, and lending a golden glow to affected areas.
Liniments are plants infused in alcohol, for topical use. Die Da Jiu (跌打酒) is a classic and constantly changing liniment that literally translates as “Fall & Hit Wine,” and is ubiquitously sold in various forms throughout the USA and southeast Asia. Many East Asian martial arts practices make their own versions to facilitate recovery from contusions, sprains, and strains.
Author Tom Bisio popularized a version of this formula in his 2004 book, A Tooth from the Tiger’s Mouth. I lightly modified Bisio’s formula to facilitate procuring herbs for the western herbal practitioner by removing:
I replaced the above herbs with:
This liniment includes blood-moving botanicals that actively break blood stasis, with three roots, three resins, and two flowers. The roots, resins, and flowers harmonize well, balancing their energetically cooling and warming qualities. Turkey rhubarb, arnica, and Oregon grape root are energetically cool to swelling. Dong quai, safflower, and frankincense are energetically warming, promoting circulation, helping to release pain, and breaking up stagnation.
Ingredients
Directions
Pro Tips
Cautions
To Use
Liniment Poultice
The botanical actions of alcoholic preparations are quickly delivered to the local area, but also evaporate quickly. Increase contact time with the liniment by creating a basic poultice, and leaving it on overnight.
Directions
Make your own! Experiment with the ingredients to suit your unique body, lifestyle, and budget. Keep playing hard, and keep this topical preparation handy to meet the inevitable slings and arrows of an active life. Enjoy!
References
Bensky, Dan. Chinese Herbal Medicine: Formulas & Strategies. Seattle, WA: Eastland Press, 1990.
Bisio, Tom. A Tooth from the Tiger's Mouth: How to Treat Your Injuries with Powerful Healing Secrets of the Great Chinese Warrior. New York, NY: Atria Books, 2004.
Easley, Thomas, and Horne, Steven. The Modern Herbal Dispensatory. Berkeley, CA: North Atlantic Books, 2016.
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