Here is a copy of an article that was published in
Acupuncture Today talking about Colored Light
Therapies. Darren Starwynn, OMD, LAc has been a
Certified Colorpuncturist since the 90's and has
integrated this fantastic modality into his
practice. In this article, Darren talks about some
of the basic fundamentals within
Colorpuncture therapy.
Acupuncture Today
January, 2011, Vol. 12, Issue 01
Original Article:
http://www.acupuncturetoday.com/mpacms/at/article.php?id=32338 |
Complementary Color Therapy for Organ Dysfunctions
By Darren Starwynn, OMD, LAc
Have you been intrigued by the use of color for healing
purposes?
Most of us have been fascinated by colors since early
childhood, and color has provided a great deal of the
backdrop, substance and texture of our lives ever since.
Each time we choose clothes to wear, decorate our living
space, select foods to eat, enjoy the beauty of nature and
enjoy any form of visual art we are intimately interacting
with color wavelengths of light.
Chinese medicine has shown
for thousands of years that each of our organs express and
is nurtured by specific colors, and the vibratory frequency
of each
chakra can be visualized as a color or mixture of
colors. Research has shown that color selection of walls,
lighting and decorations make huge differences in behavior
of psychiatric hospital patients.
Color has been used by some innovative researchers and
practitioners to expand the effectiveness of
acupuncture
therapies.
Peter Mandel, a German
naturopath, originated the
system called
Colorpuncture, which
consists of applying various
colors of light through special
light pens onto patterns of
acupuncture points. This system
has many far-reaching mind-body effects. Manaka of Japan
taught his students how to apply dots of color to
five-element points to balance the
Meridian system. I have
personally investigated many applications of color light
therapy through the acupuncture system and also found many
powerful effects.
After many years of such practice and research, I now
commonly perform color light acupuncture by applying two
complementary colors per session, applying them to two
related dysfunctional organs or chakras to bring them into
balance. Before describing how to do this therapy, I will
first explain a bit about what complementary colors are.
What are complementary colors?
It
is important to first differentiate between the color
properties of light and physical pigments (inks and paints).
When pigments are mixed, the amount of color that is seen is
subtractive. That means, that the more colors you mix
together the darker and less colorful of a look you will
get. When we played with colors as kids we quickly learned
that mixing many colors together ends up producing a
not-so-fun brown or gray glop. In contrast, mixing colors of
light together is additive. That means that adding many
wavelengths of light together will eventually produce white
light, one of the brightest forms of light. In this
discussion, we are focusing on colors of light and their
additive properties.
The three colors of light considered primary are blue, red
and green:
As you can see in this diagram, when all three primary
colors are mixed together they produce white light, which
contains all the colors (as does sunlight). When any two
primary colors are mixed together they produce a mixed, or
secondary color as follows:

There are also hues in between each of these, including
orange, lemon, and magenta.
In this "light", complementary color sets consist of any
primary color of light and the mixture of the other two
remaining primary colors. The following chart illustrates
this:
|
Primary Color |
Remaining Primary Colors |
Which Produces |
|
Red |
Green and Blue |
Cyan |
|
Green |
Red and Blue |
Purple |
|
Blue |
Red and Green |
Yellow |
Mixing any color in the first column with the color in the
third column on the same row will produce white light.
In actual practice the complementary colors used in art and
for color acupuncture are more based on subtractive color
mixing, which uses red, blue and yellow as primary colors:
|
Primary Color |
Remaining Primary Colors |
Which Produces |
Complementary Color Sets |
|
Red |
Blue and yellow |
Green |
Red and Green |
|
Yellow |
Red and Blue |
Violet |
Yellow and Viole |
|
Blue |
Red and Yellow |
Orange |
Blue and Orange |
One way to see complementary colors for yourself is to stare
at a bright sample of any primary color (red, yellow or
blue) for 30 seconds, then quickly look at a white surface.
You will probably see an afterimage of the complement to the
color you were staring at, as listed in this chart. This is
due to fatiguing of the rods and cones in the retina of the
eye that processes the color you were staring at. Until
those nerves refresh you see the remaining (complementary)
color.
Here is a more complete list of complementary colors as used
in color light therapy:
|
Color |
Complementary Color |
|
Red |
Green or Blue |
|
Green |
Red |
|
Blue or Indigo |
Orange |
|
Yellow |
Violet |
|
Lemon |
Turquoise |
|
Scarlet |
Purple |
|
Magenta |
Green |
Mixing the two colors in each row will not always produce
white light as in pure color theory, but these combinations
have been found to have powerful and reproducible
therapeutic balancing effects.
How to use complementary color therapy
There are many ways to use this. The application I use the
most often is for balancing the organ and autonomic nervous
system. Here is a step by step procedure for doing this:
-
Use acupuncture/energetic diagnosis to evaluate the
excess and deficient organs. My favorite method is alarm
point kinesiology. This method of testing and selecting
appropriate treatment colors for each imbalanced organ
is described in detail in a previous article in this
publication entitled "Microcurrent
Color Light Mu-Shu Method."
-
Based on your diagnostic intake and the complaints of
the patients, determine which organ is most important to
treat – the key imbalance. For examples, that could be
kidneys, spleen, liver, etc. Use color challenge muscle
testing, as described in the above referenced article,
to determine which color has the strongest ability to
balance that organ.
-
Treat that organ using polarized microcurrent probes
with color therapy. This is done by placing the positive
probe on the front-Mu (alarm) point for that organ, and
the negative probe on each Back-shu point in turn for
the same organ. If you have equipment that can deliver
microcurrent and color light simultaneously (microlight
therapy) that is the most effective method. If not, you
can apply microcurrent first and then follow that with
color light applications.
For Mu points that are in the midline of the body place
the + probe on that and then treat the associated Back-shu
points, left first then right. For bilateral Mu points,
treat the left sided point with left sided Shu, then
repeat with the right sided Mu and Shu for that organ.
This is easiest done with patient lying on their side so
you can access front and back of the body. Treat about
30 - 60 seconds or more per set of points and ask the
patient to relax and breathe deeply into their abdomen
as you apply the therapy. It can be combined with
consciousness raising activities such as speaking
affirmations, toning, chanting and guided imagery.
For the heart and pericardium use color light only
without microcurrent. All the other organs are best
treated with polarized microcurrent and color light.
-
Select a secondary organ that shows imbalanced readings
and is related to the first one.
-
Based on your color selection for treating the Key
imbalance, select a complementary color from the last
table above and use it to treat the secondary organ in
the same way as you treated the first one.
-
When you are complete with these treatments go back and
re-test the test points of the two imbalanced organs. If
your color selection was good, you should find that they
are strong and balanced immediately. You can also use
other diagnostic indicators, such as pulse or abdominal
diagnosis, for confirmation.
You can also use this method for treating imbalanced chakras
for psycho-emotional treatments.
Benefits of complementary color therapy
The autonomic nervous system regulates most body functions.
Most modern people have imbalances of the ANS ranging from
subtle to profound due to high stress lifestyles and getting
out of step with the natural cycles of the Earth.
Complementary color therapy through Mu-Shu points as
described above is a powerful balancing root treatment that
can be added to increase effectiveness and carry-over
benefits of many other therapies. These include:
-
Pain relief and management
-
Pediatric treatments
-
Esthetic facial rejuvenation
-
Emotional healing
-
Addiction release
-
Internal medicine
-
Preventive medicine
Case history
Here is an example from my practice of using complementary
color therapy:
Patient is woman, age 63 with main complaint of neck pain
after multiple traumas from accidents. She had her gall
bladder removed recently. She was also seeking overall
energetic balancing for fatigue that had set in after the
surgery.
Pulse showed weakness in left middle position (Wood
element). Alarm point kinesiology showed weak muscle tests
in liver, gall bladder and right kidney. Color challenge
testing (see reference above for method) revealed that
magenta light strengthened her kidney, and that lemon color
balanced her gall bladder test point. Electronic meridian
testing showed several left-right imbalances (splits).
Microcurrent and color Mu-Shu therapy was applied to her
kidneys and gall bladder, magenta for kidney and lemon for
gall bladder. These two colors are not precisely
complementary from the chart above, but very close because
magenta and green are considered complementary colors and
Lemon is a mixture of Green and Yellow.
Extraordinary vessel confluent points were also treated for
the Yin Wei and Yang Chaio vessels: Pc 6 (-) to Liv 3 (+) on
right side, TW 5 (-) to GB 41 (+) left side using needles
and polarized microcurrent. The patient felt more energized
and balanced after the treatment, and did not want direct
treatment to her neck. She sensed that the body balance
treatment would help her neck, and she was averse to being
stimulated there directly due to some past negative
experiences with electrotherapy.
This example shows how some flexibility is OK with
complementary color therapy. In most case the muscle tests
will show two colors that are exactly complementary, but as
long as the two colors you select have opposite Yin-Yang
qualities the treatment can be very effective. Consider
adding complementary color root therapies to any kind of
treatment to enhance results and longer carry over.