Rebirth 1977 Great Era

Chapter 302: A book on Chinese medicine bone setting written by Xiao Rizi in 1808

Chapter 302: A book on Chinese medicine bone setting written by Xiao Rizi in 1808 (subscription plus additional chapters)

In the past few years, the old lady in Shuangqiao opened so many training courses and taught a lot of students.

There are many people from home and abroad.

However, everyone in every training class learned the basic techniques of Luo's bone setting method.

Some advanced techniques are difficult and time-consuming, so they cannot be taught at all.

In addition, there are foreigners among the students, so of course it is impossible to teach them all.

Therefore, if you want to improve your dialect, the best way is to ask yourself.

Ask whatever you don’t understand.

With his comprehension and memory, he was able to remember and understand something just by watching the old lady practice it herself.

Mr. Cheng had no doubt about the ability to learn dialects and to do this.

Moreover, Capital University of Chinese Medicine is the best university of TCM in the country. The old lady must know what kind of students are here. Those who can study here have been reviewed by the organization, so there are not as many concerns when teaching them as outside.

As long as I take this opportunity to get to know the old lady, it would be much more reasonable even if I need to go to her house for advice later.

Compared to going to the 252 hospital to find the old lady with Fangyan's method, the main feature of Mr. Cheng's method is smoothness.

There are actually many options for finding a good orthopedic doctor in China today.

But there are very few people who specialize in bone setting.

Most of the orthopedic experts are proficient in treating bone injuries and diseases.

All the recipes used are recipes.

Bone setting, a technique that relies purely on experience, is too difficult to learn.

This skill is said to be a medical skill, but in the dialect it feels more like a martial art.

For example, there is a branch of martial arts: the art of breaking tendons and dislocating bones.

If you use it upside down, it's just bone-setting massage.

A little later, Mr. Cheng somehow got hold of a handwritten teaching manuscript by Mrs. Luo Youming from the 1960s.

The above systematically sorts out her teaching process at the time, and also includes illustrations of the techniques.

This is what was recorded by the people at the research institute at that time.

Mr. Cheng got the original copy for Fangyan and asked him to read it himself first to understand the old lady's teaching logic at that time.

After reading the dialect, in addition to the teaching logic, I also found some content that has never been seen on the market. Compared with the national promotion version of 1975, the old lady teaches more things here and the difficulty is slightly higher.

After Fangyan quickly read it and understood it silently, the system gave the blessing with a [ding] sound.

It can be seen that the old lady is always doing subtraction when teaching.

At the beginning, I probably really wanted to teach one or two people who could stand on their own feet. Later on, when I was teaching, I took more common usage scenarios into consideration and emphasized practicality and popularity.

At the end of the day, Fangyan returned the original to Mr. Cheng, saying that he had gained something and asked if there were any earlier teaching files of the old lady.

Mr. Cheng said that there must be evidence, but it would require the orthopedic research laboratory to look through old archives, which would take some time.

……

When he returned home that night, Fang Yan thought that since his master had left behind so many ancient books, he might be able to find some books on bone setting among them.

After all, Master's family is a family tradition of medicine and martial arts, so there is no reason not to collect some books like this.

I have always wanted to learn from the old lady in Shuangqiao.

I also forgot that there is a treasure in my study room at home that I have not found yet.

He did what he said. After dinner, Fang Yan called his wife and asked her to help him look through the books on bone setting in the study.

The search method is also very simple and crude, just take out any file with the word "bone" in it.

Or if there is no word "bone" in the title, but there are still some bone-setting actions, then bring them out.

In the end, the couple worked for more than an hour and only searched half of the book collection area, and they really found a few books. Fangyan found a book called "Lu's Bone Setting First Aid" written by Lu's father. It contains some first aid methods for bone injuries encountered during competitions, including bone setting methods.

In this book, Mr. Lu's father, who is also his own master's master, lists all the bone injuries that are likely to occur in various martial arts duels.

He wrote down almost all the boxing styles available on the market, as well as weapons that can easily cause bone injuries.

Fangyan felt that even his master probably didn’t know this.

Because it looks like it has hardly been read.

It's like I wrote it and put it in a book and forgot about it.

This is the trouble with having too many books.

Then Fangyan found another book called "The Secret Bone-setting Method Inherited by the Liu Family in Foshan Village, Nanle".

This should be a family heirloom in Puyang City, but it is all text and no illustrations.

The other one has illustrations and is titled "Liu's Eight Methods of Acupuncture and Bone Correction".

The time of writing written above is actually the Tongzhi period of the Qing Dynasty.

The writer of the book is Liu Wei, a martial artist.

He said that "hard pinching and pulling bone-setting techniques" could cause people to suffer from lifelong disabilities, so he combined medicine and martial arts to create these eight methods of bone-setting.

The methods used are bounce, tap, pull, spin, pull, support and lift.

Fangyan noticed that some of the techniques here were improved in "Lu's Emergency Bone Setting". Fangyan guessed that it was probably because this senior surnamed Liu had a past relationship with the Lu family, so the techniques were passed down to the Lu family.

Just like the home of second senior brother Ding Jian.

Fangyan quietly put the book aside, preparing to study it carefully later.

In addition to the book found by Fangyan, Her Majesty the Queen also found one.

There was no writing on the cover of this book. Only after opening it did I see the words "Illustrated Book of Chinese Bone Setting".

As soon as I opened the first page, the dialect felt wrong.

Although it is in Chinese, the name written is obviously not a Chinese name.

After reading it carefully, Fangyan confirmed that the author was a Japanese Chinese medicine practitioner in 1808.

His name is Ninomiya Hikoko.

It was compiled based on Jiyuan Xingmeng's bone-setting techniques and combined with his own experience.

Others who helped him write the book included Jun Sano, Matsuobashi, Bide Yamamoto, Hisahisa Hisa, and Nobuyuki Yoshida.

Among them was a person named Inoue Yumi who assisted him in the review.

The full text is in Chinese and is divided into two volumes.

The first volume includes the general theory of bone setting, pulse and symptom treatment methods, medication methods, clamping and fixation methods, etc.

The second volume contains bone-setting techniques, with 15 mother methods and 36 child methods discussed in detail, and 66 medical prescriptions included. The prescriptions and discussions are well-organized, with both text and pictures.

This book on Chinese bone-setting written by a foreigner makes my scalp tingle when I read dialects.

Such a tradition was actually written by a foreigner.

The pictures inside are also very strange. They are not the hairstyles of ordinary days, but the hairstyles and clothes of ancient China. Fangyan feels that this book is more like something he copied from somewhere rather than being written by him.

I don’t know how it fell into the hands of the Lu family.

But it is obvious that this book has not been read for a long time.

Fortunately, my wife was very capable and managed to find it.

That night, Fang Yan locked himself in the room and finished reading the two volumes of "Illustrated Chinese Bone Setting Book", and then used the system to bless them.

PS: Sao Rui will update this chapter later, and I still owe you 13,000.

(End of this chapter)

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