
The Oldest Truth Medicine Ever Knew
You’re about to discover the oldest truth in the 2,000 year old internal medicine classic from China.
There’s a vast difference between Eastern and Western thought when it comes to healing in our body. Eastern thought focuses on our interior world as manifesting our external world. For most of Western history, we’ve been trained to fix the outside in hopes it’ll fix the inside.
Got problems? Get a promotion. Feeling lost? Change cities. Burnt out? Buy an exercise machine. And, hey, no shade. Some of that works … for a while.
But in Eastern thought, it flips the mirror. Instead of chasing peace out there, it said, wait—what if the whole world is just an echo of what’s in here? You can Feng Shui your living room all day, but if your mind is a mess, good luck finding your keys.
And this is why Eastern healing practices go deep. Not because they’re mysterious, but because they’re honest. They start with emotions, attitudes and responses—the invisible stuff we often skip right past on the way to chasing goals.
And when you harmonize those inner aspects, the body follows, like biologically. Hormones shift, cells behave, life softens, the body lightens. You’re not just imagining that.
A Yale cancer surgeon, Bernie Siegel, said psychological and spiritual development can literally reverse disease. And 2,000 years ago, Chinese medicine essentially said the same thing.
And so here comes that oldest truth from that ancient manuscript:
“If one maintains an undisturbed spirit within, no disease will occur.”
And here’s where it gets wild. The first Westerner to open up the inner path, a Carpenter’s son named Yeshua, didn’t preach behaviour management. He taught heart transformation. He didn’t say, look outside for your answers. He said, the Kingdom of God is within you.
This is why sometimes people are shocked to go over to my club, where I teach Eastern healing practices, to find that we also have meditations on the Sacred Heart of Yeshua. So if your healing space includes qigong and the Sacred Heart, you’re not mixing metaphors—you’re remembering something the world forgot.
That truth has many accents, but only one direction inward.
To learn more about how we’re blending the best of East and West, check out the link here.