structure and function

Shared Foundations Between Osteopathy and Ancient Chinese Medicine

Osteopathy and ancient Chinese medicine come from very different traditions, but they share a surprisingly similar view of the body. Both see health as something that depends on balance, movement, and connection between systems rather than on isolated symptoms alone. In osteopathy, the body is understood as a unit, with structure and function closely linked. In ancient Chinese medicine texts, similar ideas appear through concepts like qi, blood, harmony, and the smooth flow of life through the body. While the language is different, the overall philosophy is remarkably close. Ancient Chinese medical texts do not describe osteopathy directly, of course. But they do present a worldview that values wholeness over fragmentation. A disturbance in one part of the body can influence the whole system, which is also a central osteopathic idea. This is one reason the two traditions are often compared. Both suggest that pain or dysfunction is rarely just […]

“If It’s Blocked, It Will Hurt”: An Ancient Meme Meets Modern Osteopathy

There’s a popular saying in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM): “where there is blockage, there is pain; where there is no blockage, there is no pain.” In internet‑meme form this often becomes “if it’s blocked, it will hurt.” On the surface it sounds like folk wisdom, but it actually echoes a deep idea that still shows up—in a different language—in today’s osteopathic medicine. The meme in Chinese medicine In TCM, pain is not treated only as a symptom of local tissue damage. It’s seen as a signal that the flow of qi (functional energy) or blood along the body’s meridians has become stuck or “stagnant.” That stagnation can look like tight muscles, stiff joints, recurring headaches, or even emotional tension, and the core idea is: restore flow, reduce pain. Treatments like acupuncture, cupping, and herbal therapy aim to “move qi and blood,” unblock obstructions, and return the body to a smoother, more dynamic state. In […]

Structure, Function, and Flow in Osteopathy and Chinese Medicine

One of the central ideas in osteopathy is that structure and function are inseparable. Ancient Chinese medicine texts express a similar principle through the importance of flow, especially the movement of qi and blood throughout the body. When flow is interrupted, pain and dysfunction can appear. When flow is restored, healing becomes more possible. This is why both traditions pay close attention to restriction, stagnation, and imbalance. In osteopathy, this may involve looking at joints, muscles, fascia, posture, or breathing patterns. In Chinese medicine, the emphasis may be on blocked qi, stagnant blood, or disharmony within the body’s internal systems. The language differs, but the logic is similar. A well-known Chinese principle says that when there is free flow, there is no pain. That idea echoes osteopathic thinking in a very direct way. Both systems recognize that motion and circulation are essential to health. This does not mean the two […]