Five Element Medical Incense Set

$54.50

Introducing The Eastern Philosophy’s Five Element medical incense set! The herbal recipe of each is formulated according to key traditional Chinese medicine and philosophical principles. Each incense can be burned according to its properties and function, by time of day, or by its scent. Unlike most incense on the market, ours is made from pure herbs and contain no synthetic fragrances, additives, sawdust, or bamboo/charcoal core.

Contains 6-6.5g of each incense (approximately 31.5g total) and comes with a brass incense holder which can fit a variety of incense sizes. Package has a double magnetic closure and measures roughly 4.6” by 4.6”.

Note that organs referenced below are organ systems from the Chinese medical understanding.

Metal Incense
Sandalwood, Pinellia, Cyperus, Mint Leaves, Rosemary, Natural Borneol

  • Taste & Properties: Pungent taste, cool nature.
  • Meridian: Lung Meridian, Large Intestine Meridian.
  • Description: The Metal element in traditional Chinese medicine is associated with the lungs. Burning this incense is believed to support an environment conducive to relaxation and purification. It is recommended to be burned in the evening.
  • Features: The lungs are responsible for breathing, absorbing fresh air, and expelling waste gases. This process maintains the exchange of gases between the body and the external environment, supporting life activities. The blood, which passes through the lungs, is purified before being circulated to other parts of the body. This incense recipe is designed to help the body absorb fresh qi, separating clean qi from impure qi (also known as turbid qi), aiding the lungs in their purification process. It can also help eliminate harmful gases inhaled through the mouth and nose, transforming them into clean energy and stabilizing lung qi.

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Wood Incense
Thyme, Ophiopogon, Styrax, Indian AspenWhite Sandalwood, Lysimachia Foenum-graecum

  • Taste & Properties: Sour taste, warm nature.
  • Meridian: Liver Meridian, Gallbladder Meridian.
  • Description: The Wood element in traditional Chinese medicine is associated with the liver. This incense is traditionally used in the morning hours to help create a setting conducive to revitalization.
  • Features: The liver plays a role in detoxification and energy flow. In the early morning, when the sun rises and Yang energy is increasing, burning this incense to help support liver function. The incense recipe is designed to enhance the liver’s ability to produce blood and detoxify, improving its overall functionality and promoting normal blood production and detox processes.

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Water Incense

Hainan Agarwood, Frankincense, Plum Blossom, Damar Resin, Ox-head Sandalwood, Flower God

  • Taste & Properties: Salty taste, cold nature.
  • Meridian: Kidney Meridian, Bladder Meridian.
  • Description: The Water element is associated with the kidneys in traditional Chinese medicine. This incense is traditionally used at midnight to create a calming and purifying atmosphere.
  • Features: The kidneys filter impurities in the blood, and the waste is expelled through urine. As Yin energy, the kidneys help refine and store vital essence. This incense recipe is designed to help improve the filtration process and enhance the kidney essence, enriching the bones and preventing dryness, thereby nourishing the body’s marrow.

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Fire Incense
Polygala, Stir-fried Ziziphus Jujuba Seed, Cypress Seed, Hainan Agarwood, White Sandalwood, Frankincense, Lavender, Watermelon, Sophora Flower Honey

  • Taste & Properties: Bitter taste, hot nature.
  • Meridian: Heart Meridian, Small Intestine Meridian.
  • Description: The Fire element is linked with the heart in traditional Chinese medicine. This incense is traditionally burned during midday to help balance energy levels.
  • Features: Midday is when the heart is at its peak activity--an ancient Chinese medicine theory that has now been substantiated with modern research. During intense physical activity, the heart may struggle to pump blood effectively to the extremities. This Fire incense recipe is designed to boost circulation, helping clear blockages and easing the heart’s workload.

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Earth Incense
Vietnamese Agarwood, Clove, Damar Resin, Onycha, Hundred Flowers Honey

  • Taste & Properties: Sweet taste, neutral nature.
  • Meridian: Spleen Meridian, Stomach Meridian.
  • Description: The Earth element is associated with the spleen and stomach. This incense is typically burned in the late afternoon to create a nurturing environment.
  • Features: The spleen works to break down and transform food before it is distributed throughout the body. When the spleen is weak, it may have difficulty processing nutrients. This Earth incense recipe strengthens the spleen’s energy, improving digestion and helping the body absorb and distribute nutrients more effectively.

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The use of incense in Chinese medicine and culture is an ancient and long-standing practice. Chinese archaeologists have found remains of incense-burning pottery in excavations of the northeastern Chinese Hongshan culture dating back to 5,000 BC. The Book of Rites, which describes the social forms and ceremonial rites of the Zhou Dynasty (1046-256 BCE), observed that the “Zhou people held incense in high regard”. During the Shang (1,600-1046 BCE) and Zhou dynasties, incense was mainly used as a form of communication with ancestors and spiritsthe ancient Chinese believed that the smoke from the incense would float up into the heavens, creating a bridge between the mundane and celestial realms. When paying tribute to the Gods, these ancient cultures would often use an aromatic plant called sweet wormwood (香蒿), while dried millet was burnt when supplicating the God’s for good harvests.

During the rule of the Chu Kingdom in southern China (700-200), a kingdom infamous for its shamanic beliefs and rituals, incense took on a new role as a powerful force wielded by shamanic priests to combat pestilence (what we might now think of as disease-causing pathogens) and evil spirits. During this early period, the Chinese did not yet have access to classic aromatics like frankincense, agarwood and sandalwood that arrived later from India and Persia; Chu shamans mainly used creeping fig (薜荔), cinnamon, rosemallow (芙蓉) and chinesemugwort to clear temples for the arrival of spirits and help bring themselves into communication with those spirits. Angelica dahurica (白芷) and magnolia flower (辛夷) were hung around doorways for similar purposes. The Chu also wore fragrant “incense sachets” to ward off evil spirits, pestilence and insects. The preferred herbs were angelica dahurica and Chinese joe-pye weed (佩蘭). The fragrant aroma of the Joe-pye weed was also thought to be able to cure skin diseases.

During the Han dynasty (200BCE-200CE) exploration and conquest westward led to the establishment of the silk roadthrough which several new aromatics were introduced to China from Persia and India, including dammar resin (龍腦香), pepper, agarwood, cloves, and storax balsam (蘇合香). This period marked the real birth of China’s burgeoning incense culture. At the Mawangdui excavation site which dates to the Han, incense sachets, incense pillows and incense burning pottery were discovered among the remains of unearthed corpses containing cinnamon, magnolia flower, sweet grass, Sichuan pepper and joe-pye weed. It is speculated that these aromatics were used to prevent disease and ward off evil. Perhaps even more significantly, the late Han story collection Stories of Emperor Han Wudi, contains a description of the Han emperor burning incense to suppress a pandemic that raged throughout his kingdom.

From the Wei to Tang dynasties (300-900~ CE), we start to see advanced application of incenses and herbal medicaments in the treatment of a wide variety of diseases. The fourth century Handbook of Prescriptions for Emergency, for instance, details inhaling the vapors of pokeweed root to alleviate mental illness, fermented black bean powder incense to alleviate cataracts and inhaling burning pepper to treat headaches. (Interestingly notesthat for left-side headaches, the smoke should be inhaled from the left nostril and likewise for right-side). During this period, the Chinese also began developing a theory of the healing mechanism of incense. They had already recognized that pathogens entered through the nose and mouth, thenceforth spreading to the head cavities, lungs and abdomen. They thus reasoned that the aromatics, which had a “penetrating and mobile” nature (走竄) could penetrate into these areas and neutralize the pathogen. Additionally, incense, due to its ethereal nature, was seen as a “purely yang substance” (純陽之物), this meant that it could serve as an antidote to “yin substances” like cold, dampness and evil spirits which settled and lodged in the interstices of the body.

From the Tang and Song dynasties onward, the use of aromatics in the treatment of respiratory diseases also became widely popular. The Tang dynasty physician Cui Zhi-ti, for instance, detailed using Honey-treated coltsfoot incense to cure a “30 year chronic cough”. Sun Simiao described using smoked ephedra inhaled through a bamboo pole to treat pain and swelling in the throat. Examples such as these abound throughout the post-Tang record. Indeed, in the Song dynasty, the use of inhaled aromatics was even put to use in the treatment of tuberculosis. The Effective Remedies notes that smoked valerian and figwort powder mixture was a powerful cure for tuberculosis. Treatments for mental illnesses using incense also became more elaborate and powerful. The exhaustive Ming Dynasty formula compendium Formulas for Universal Relief details an incense used to treat severe mental illness.

There are also various accounts of the medical use of incense in Chinese courts—one, in which a foreign envoy from Ruoshui presents the emperor with pellets of incense, which, at first glance, fail to impress due to their ordinariness. However, when the entire palace
falls seriously ill for several days, the foreign envoy pleads for the incense to be burned: it successfully expelled the disease, curing everyone in the palace within the same day, and its aroma was so far-reaching that everyone inside the city could smell it for three months.