Increasing Shen – How to Enhance Learning, Beat Depression, and Chill Out

Within Traditional Chinese Medicine lies a fundamental and unique concept, that of the Three Treasures. The Three Treasures lay at the foundation of how TCM works – build up your Jing energy for a long life and strong resilience; improve your Qi so as to have plenty of day to day energy; and enhance and build up your Shen energy, that faculty of mind that leads to wisdom, peace and tranquility.

We already discussed one of them, Jing, in some detail, but what I want to focus on today is Shen, that faculty of your higher mind. Shen can be defined in many ways, but is commonly described as being the seat of the higher mind, your spirit, consciousness, and the domain of thought, memory and emotion. To have strong Shen is to be mentally quick, happy, joyful, and content, and to not be forgetful, lethargic, depressed, angry or anxious.

What I find really interesting about things like Traditional Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda, the equivalent Indian system of healthcare, is how they are able to understand all the effects a substance is having on the body, without ever being able to isolate certain compounds or measure acute changes within a person’s biochemistry.

Luckily for us today, we are able to accomplish this and measure all the minutia within a substance and the subsequent changes occurring in our body. This is where the rubber meets the road, so to speak.

Reishi Mushroom

Red Reishi Mushroom (Ganoderma Lucidum)
Red Reishi Mushroom (Ganoderma Lucidum)

Reishi is the star of the show when it comes to Shen substances, and in fact is the number 1 ranked herb out of 365 medicinal substances within TCM. First described over 2,400 years ago, it was said of Reishi that “if eaten customarily, it makes your body light and young, lengthens your life and turns you into one like the immortal who never dies.”

Of red Reishi, it was said that “it is good for the Qi (functional activities) of the heart including mental activities, it tonifies the Spleen, increases wisdom, improves memory so that you won’t forget, long-term consumption will lighten your body, you will never become old, it lengthens years, it has spiritual power, and it develops Shen so that you become a ‘spirit-being’ like the immortals.”

That’s some lofty descriptions of a mushroom, I’d say.

So I dug deeper. On PubMed alone, there are 1,195 studies on Ganoderma Lucidum, and that’s just one strain of reishi mushroom. And while it has proven benefits on everything from the liver, to the immune system to allergies, we’re here to focus on its possible Shen-enhancing effects.

Reishi mushroom has BDNF- and NGF-like effects within the brain. Both BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor) and NGF (nerve-growth factor) promote the growth of new brain cells, enhance synaptic connections between existing neurons, and serve to protect neurons from damage. Both BDNF and NGF enhance learning and memory. Further, many studies show a link between low levels of BDNF and depression.

So from Reishi’s BDNF- and NGF-like effects alone, it’s able to help with depression, memory, and learning, as well as help prevent damage to the brain from stress, drugs or alcohol, and help ward off cognitive decline as we age. Not bad.

A simple hot-water extract of reishi exhibited anti-depressant effects in mice, as well as helped to prevent freezing up in the face of fear, and pretreatment of a hot water extract proved to be neuroprotective.

All in all, I’d say reishi mushroom fits the bill of a Shen-enhancing substance, and remember, this is all in addition to proven anti-cancer, anti-allergy, liver-protective and immune-enhancing benefits. I’ve used plenty of reishi products over the years – I suggest getting a liquid dual-extracted tincture, so that you get both the water- and the alcohol-soluble components, as they all have different functions in the body. You can also get a powdered extract that contains reishi mushroom spores – these spores have the same effects as the alcohol-soluble constituents, but are hundreds of times more potent.

When it comes to Reishi supplements, you really get what you pay for. Dragon Herbs carries some really interesting Reishi products, all of which are also concentrated to be even more potent –

  • they have a dual-extracted Purple Reishi, as the purple variety is said to have the most Shen energy;
  • a dual liquid extract of 22 different varieties of reishi, which I promise you can not find anywhere else;
  • a Wild Reishi dual-extracted tincture – this is cool because wild herbs are almost always more potent than those grown by humans, but are much more difficult to collect;
  • as well as an extremely potent bottle of Reishi Spore Oil – if anyone really likes my website, feel free to buy me some of this, as it is not cheap.
Count the Reishis
A Chinese painting honoring Reishi mushroom

Polygala

Polygala is another premier Shen-enhancing herb. It has sometimes traditionally been called the “Will Strengthener“, helping both spiritual practitioners and common folk alike increase their will power. What biological effects this herb would have to have upon the body to increase will power, alas, I do not know.

It’s also traditionally been said to be able to connect the sexual energy of the reproductive system with that of loving, altruistic energy of the heart. As such, polygala has been used as one of the premier Shen-enhancing herbs used throughout the ages. Does it hold up to Western scientific scrutiny?

One 2009 study concluded that treatment with polygala led to improved memory and learning, and even ameliorated some of the deleterious effects of the amnesia-producing drug scopolamine. The authors noted that “the expression of BDNF was also greatly enhanced in the hippocampus.”

A 2014 study found strong anti-depressant effects, noting that the main constituent studied, Yuanzhi-1, had a stronger affinity to dopamine, serotonin and norepinephrine receptors in the brain than a commonly prescribed pharmaceutical anti-depressant. This means it improves depression through 3 distinct pathways more effectively than a drug approved by the FDA, without side effects.

Do you often have trouble finding motivation to get things done, even if they are activities that should excite you? Another 2014 study found that polygala administration not only had “rapid-onset anti-depressant” effects, but also that it helped reverse anhedonia, the scientific term for having a lack of motivation for, and lack of pleasure in, common every day activities.

Polygala is neuroprotective; enhances memory; attenuates beta-amyloid plaque build up (one of the main factors in Alzheimer’s disease) and promotes neurite growth; and also improves synaptic transmission, or the ability of cells within the brain to communicate effectively.

Polygala is a bit harder to find than reishi mushroom, but don’t despair – Dragon Herbs offers a very nice product I’ve used in the past called Will Power. Polygala is the main herb used, but the product also has a number of other Shen-enhancing herbs.

If you’re looking for straight polygala, you can buy 100 grams of a 5:1 extract here, which is the product I’m currently using. I gotta say, things have been looking bright since I started taking it.

In conclusion, it seems those ancient Chinese sages were on to something when it comes to “Shen” substances that improve emotions and enhance the intellect. There are plenty of other Shen herbs out there as well – pearl and dragon bone, which have Shen-grounding effects, albizzia flower, which is one of the most uplifting herbs I’ve ever used, spirit poria, and more – I’ll try to have more info up soon about some of these herbs.

For now, get your hands on some reishi and polygala, and let me know what you think in the comments below. And don’t forget to contact me if you’re interested in learning how to take a multi-targeted approach to beating depression and anxiety, or how to enhance learning, memory and mental acuity.

Shilajit – The Most Powerful Substance You’ve Never Heard Of

ShilajitPitch2

(photo cred : Super Man Herbs)

Looks delicious right? That right there is shilajit, a mineral pitch that oozes out of rocks in the Himalayas in the heat of summer. What actually is it? It’s thought to be an ancient ecosystem, a once-pristine forest that has been highly compressed and thoroughly decomposed during the formation of the Himalayan mountains.

Shilajit is one of the coolest substances in my eyes. As the story goes, thousands of years back in India, people noticed that monkeys would climb up to the rocks of the Himalayas in the summer time to consume a black, sticky tar that oozed out between the cracks. After consuming this gooey substance, the monkeys would be filled with energy, bouncing around like maniacs and making sweet, sweet monkey love.

Naturally, as is so apt to happen back in those days, the humans who saw this immediately became curious and decided to collect some and consume it themselves. Indeed, they too noticed an increase in energy, longer lifespans and the ever-sought after increase in libido. They named this strange new substance shilajit, literally “rock-invincible”, translated as “Conqueror of Mountains and Destroyer of Weakness”.

Within Ayurveda, India’s traditional system of health and medicine, shilajit is one of the most powerful known rasayanas, a substance which increases strength and is highly rejuvenating. It is said that there is no disease which shilajit cannot cure, and that it possesses a rare property known as yogavahi, meaning it helps make any other substance taken with it multitudes more effective.

“Yeah, yeah, yeah, that’s all just old wives’ tales,” I hear you thinking. Let’s delve into some facts about shilajit…

Let’s start with it’s claims of being a rasayana. According to Segen’s Medical Dictionary, a rasayana is “Any of a number of health-promoting regimens that a person uses regularly to maintain health and harmony, activate tissue repair and arrest or reverse the effects of aging.” Does shilajit fit the bill?

According to this study, “Shilajit is an important, known component of the ayurvedic medicine given its characteristics as a rasayana. In this context, health benefits such as an increase in longevity, rejuvenating, and arresting aging roles have been attributed to it.”

“The Sherpas [people who carry luggage for Westerners up Mt. Everest] claim to have shilajit as part of their diet; they constitute a population of strong men with very high levels of a healthy longevity. Our laboratory has found evidence on the high activity of the Andean form of shilajit in improving cognitive disorders and as a stimulant of cognitive activity in humans.”

So far so good. Shilajit has been found to be roughly 60% humic substances, a main component of which is fulvic acid. Humic substances are by-products of microorganisms’ decomposition of plant material and have profound health benefits. Unfortunately, ever since we humans switched from eating wild plants fresh from nature to growing our own crops, and especially with the widespread use of poor agricultural practices and over-sanitization of foodstuffs, modern humans are getting very little to no humic and fulvic acids.

Why are humic and fulvic acids so critical to health? Because “fulvic acid derived from humate usually contains 60 or more minerals and trace elements that are nutritionally essential for cell health and balance (including cell growth and replication)” They also help “transport minerals to living cells, catalyzing vitamins within cells, and metabolizing proteins, RNA, and DNA”. Fulvic acid also acts as a powerful organic electrolyte, antioxidant, and is a natural chelator, binding to and removing toxins from the body.

As this study states, “It is likely that the curative properties attributable to shilajit are provided by the significant levels of fulvic acids that shilajit contains, considering that fulvic acid is known by its strong antioxidant actions and likely has systemic effects.” Further, “considering the actions of fulvic acid in preventing tau self-aggregation into pathological filaments, this compound appears to be of interest for prevention of Alzheimer’s disease.

I think it’s safe to say shilajit definitely fits the bill of a rasayana.

Because of fulvic acid’s ability to increase the bioavailability of nutrients consumed with it, it makes perfect sense that it would possess the quality of yogavahi, the quality attributed to shilajit that increases the potency of medicines consumed with it. Amazingly the ancient yogis and Ayurvedic practitioners recognized this ability long before fulvic acids were discovered.

How does shilajit hold up as an “energizer”? Turns out that one of the substances within shilajit, dibenzo-a-pyrones (DBP) boosts energy production at the cellular level. Fulvic acids whisk away DBP right into your mitochondria, those hard working little power plants in your cells, increasing the availability of electrons to be used for energy. Further, fulvic acids themselves speed and facilitate the flow of electrons into your mitochondria. The result? More ATP, the “currency of life” your mitochondria use to fuel your every action. (sources)

BONUS BIO-HACK – The combination of Shilajit with CoQ-10 resulted in a 144% ATP production with the muscle cells of mice, and a full 56% increase in ATP (energy) within the brain.. Yowza. A two month supply of highly absorbable CoQ-10 + Shilajit is available from Amazon.

And libido? Researchers at the J. B. Roy State Ayurvedic Medical College and Hospital in India gave shilajit to infertile men. After 3 months at 200 mg a day, total sperm count increased by a whopping 61.4% and testosterone rose 23.5%. While this was with infertile men and not healthy specimens, I’d say it was a pretty effective treatment.

Shilajit is rich in a variety of other healing compounds, including “eldagic acid, some fatty acids, resins, latex, gums, albumins, triterpenes, sterols, aromatic carboxylic acids, 3,4-benzocoumarins, amino acids, polyphenols, and phenolic lipids”. To the layman, a cocktail of healing and energy-promoting substances. It’s also chockfull of trace minerals, all in ionic form and bound to fulvic acids, which means they’ll actually be absorbed, unlike some common mineral supplements.

Finally, shilajit has been found to have/be a, “antiulcerogenic properties; antioxidant properties; cognitive and memory enhancer; antidiabetic properties; anxiolytic [stress reducing]; antiallergic properties and immunomodulator; anti-inflammatory; analgesic [pain relieving]; antifungal properties; ability to interact positively with other drugs; protective properties in high altitudes; neuroprotective agent against cognitive disorders”.

How’s that sound to you? Pretty extensive list of benefits going on there, and all from one ancient and natural substance.

As with so many other things in life, you get what you pay for. Good deals can be found, but there are a ton of poor quality and even fake shilajits out there. The highest quality I’ve found so far is Lotus Blooming Herbs’ Shilajit – it’s $60 for just ten grams, but you only need a pea sized amount dissolved in water 1-3 times a day. Super Man Herbs carries a very nice shilajit as well, in both powder and pill forms, and I’ve also used Dragon Herbs’ Shilajit, which is reasonably priced and comes in pill form.