Where’s the punch bowl?

The Chong Chakra is one of the meridians in the human body, and constitutes one of the eight odd meridians in the human body, together with the Vertical Chakra, Belt Chakra and Ren Chakra. The circulation of the Chong Chak in the human body starts from the abdomen, goes down from the perineum to the chest, and then goes up to the throat around the lips. The upper part of the Chong Vein goes out of the throat, the upper part of the nasopharynx, and penetrates into the yang meridian, infusing the essence. The downward-moving one injects into the complex of the Foot Shao-Yin Kidney meridian, exits the qi street of the Foot Yang-Ming Stomach meridian, descends obliquely along the inner thigh to the popliteal fossa, then along the inner side of the tibia of the calf to the upper edge of the heel bone behind the inner ankle of the foot, and divides into two branches. One branch runs parallel to the Foot Shaoyin Kidney meridian and infuses Qi and Blood to the Three Yin meridians, while the other branch floats downward and outward from the upper edge of the heel bone behind the inner ankle, moving forward along the dorsum of the foot and into the foot between the big toes, where it infuses into the lateral branches of the foot to warm and nourish the muscles. Qi Reversal of the Chong Chakra may manifest as Qi rushing upward from the abdomen, vomiting, nausea, coughing and spitting, vomiting blood, distension and pain in the chest and epigastric region, or malignant obstruction of pregnancy (in the early stages of pregnancy, there is heavy nausea and vomiting, dizziness and anorexia, or even vomiting when food is ingested), and so on. Qi stagnation in the Chong Wei may manifest as irregular menstruation, breast distension and pain, and low milk production. Patients should go to the hospital in time if the above symptoms occur, and should not blindly use acupuncture or medication to avoid adverse consequences.