TCM · Wu Xing · Five Phases · Organs · Emotions

Five Elements in the Body

Wood, Fire, Earth, Metal, Water — the five dynamic phases through which Qi moves and transforms in the body. A complete diagnostic and therapeutic framework connecting organs, emotions, seasons, tastes, tissues and the patterns of disease into one coherent whole.

Five phases, not five substances: The Wu Xing (五行) are better translated as "five movements" or "five phases" than "five elements." They are not static substances — they are dynamic qualities of transformation. Wood is the quality of upward growth and expansion; Fire is the quality of peak activity and illumination; Earth is the quality of nourishment and transformation; Metal is the quality of contraction and refinement; Water is the quality of depth, storage and rest.

Wood —

🌳
Wood — 木
Mù · Spring · East · Rising · Expanding
The pioneer — the force of new growth that pushes through resistance

Wood is the energy of spring — the irresistible upward push of new growth, the quality of the shoot breaking through soil, the tree bending in the wind without breaking. In the body, Wood governs all the processes of growth, movement and the smooth flow of Qi throughout the system. When Wood energy is healthy, there is flexibility, vision, the capacity for planning and the ability to move through obstacles without becoming blocked or brittle.

The Liver is the primary Wood organ — it ensures the smooth flow of Qi in all directions, stores Blood during rest and releases it during activity, and governs the tendons and sinews. The Gallbladder is its Yang partner — it stores and secretes bile, governs decision-making and is associated with courage and the capacity to act on the Liver's plans. The Liver-Gallbladder partnership is the body's strategic command: the Liver plans, the Gallbladder decides.

Liver Qi stagnation — the failure of Wood to flow freely — is almost certainly the most common pattern in contemporary urban populations. Stress, suppressed frustration, irregular eating, sedentary lifestyle and insufficient sleep all cause Wood to stagnate. The result is the characteristic constellation: hypochondriac distension, bloating, irregular bowels, PMS, irritability, sighing, depression with frustration, and a wiry pulse.

Organs
Liver (Yin) · Gallbladder (Yang)
Season
Spring
Emotion
Anger / Frustration → Kindness
Taste
Sour
Tissue
Tendons & Sinews
Sense organ
Eyes
Colour
Green
Sound
Shouting
Wood in Balance vs. Imbalance
Healthy Wood
Clear vision and planning · Flexible under pressure · Decisive without aggression · Creative · Able to express anger appropriately · Good sleep · Regular menstrual cycle
Wood Imbalance
Irritability · Suppressed anger → depression · PMS · Migraines · Muscle tension · Digestive bloating · Eye problems · Tendon injuries · Difficulty with authority

Fire — Huǒ

🔥
Fire — 火
Huǒ · Summer · South · Peak Activity · Illumination
The emperor — consciousness, warmth, connection and the light that makes things visible

Fire is the energy of summer — the peak of Yang, the fullness of heat and light, the quality of maximum outward expression. In the body, Fire governs the Heart and its role as the Emperor: housing the Shen (spirit/consciousness), governing the blood vessels and circulation, and presiding over all relationships and emotional exchange. Fire also governs three other organ systems: the Small Intestine (sorting pure from impure), the Pericardium (protecting the Heart in its relationships) and the Triple Burner (coordinating metabolic activity across the three body cavities).

The Heart's most important function in TCM is not mechanical pumping (though it governs that too) but the housing of consciousness. The Shen resides in the Heart — all mental clarity, emotional stability, the quality of sleep, the brightness of the eyes and the coherence of thought depend on the Heart's health. When Heart Blood or Heart Yin is deficient, the Shen has no home — and the result is anxiety, insomnia, palpitations and the characteristic feeling of a mind that cannot settle.

Fire in excess — Heart Fire blazing — produces the opposite: mania, agitation, insomnia with vivid dreams, mouth ulcers, excessive talking, and a face that is chronically red. The treatment is to clear the Fire and nourish the Yin that should be cooling it.

Organs
Heart · Small Intestine · Pericardium · Triple Burner
Season
Summer
Emotion
Joy (excess → mania) → Love
Taste
Bitter
Tissue
Blood Vessels
Sense organ
Tongue (speech)
Colour
Red
Sound
Laughing
Fire in Balance vs. Imbalance
Healthy Fire
Warm, open presence · Clear articulation · Appropriate joy · Good sleep · Bright eyes · Loving relationships · Strong circulation · Mental clarity
Fire Imbalance
Anxiety · Insomnia · Palpitations · Excessive talking · Mouth ulcers · Mania (excess) · Joylessness (deficiency) · Inability to connect · Cold hands and feet

Earth —

🏔️
Earth — 土
Tǔ · Late Summer · Centre · Nourishment · Stability
The mother — the centre that nourishes all, transforms all, holds all

Earth is the element of late summer — the harvest season, when the year's growth is transformed into nourishment. It occupies the centre of the five-element model, not one of the four seasonal extremes, because Earth is the pivot between all transitions — the stomach of the year, digesting change. In the body, Earth governs the entire process of digestion, transformation and transportation: taking raw material and converting it into what the body can use.

The Spleen is the primary Earth organ and one of the most important in TCM clinical practice. The Spleen transforms food and drink into Qi and Blood (the process of "rottening and ripening," completed by the Stomach), transports these substances throughout the body, and keeps Blood within the blood vessels. The Spleen also governs thought and the capacity for clear, linear thinking — overthinking, worry and mental overwork all damage the Spleen, which is why chronic intellectual stress so often produces digestive symptoms.

Spleen Qi deficiency is the diagnosis underpinning most of what Western medicine calls "functional digestive disorders," chronic fatigue, irritable bowel syndrome, and the modern epidemic of bloating. It is produced by irregular eating, excess cold and raw food, overthinking, sedentary lifestyle and the chronic use of antibiotics (which devastate the gut microbiome that the Spleen's function in TCM partially maps to).

Organs
Spleen (Yin) · Stomach (Yang)
Season
Late Summer / Transition
Emotion
Worry / Overthinking → Trust
Taste
Sweet
Tissue
Muscles & Flesh
Sense organ
Mouth / Lips
Colour
Yellow
Sound
Singing
Earth in Balance vs. Imbalance
Healthy Earth
Good appetite and digestion · Stable energy after eating · Clear, grounded thinking · Nurturing without losing self · Trust in the process · Strong muscles · Solid sleep
Earth Imbalance
Bloating · Loose stools or IBS · Fatigue after eating · Brain fog · Excessive worry · Sweet cravings · Fluid retention · Difficulty setting boundaries · Feeling ungrounded

Metal — Jīn

⚔️
Metal — 金
Jīn · Autumn · West · Contraction · Refinement
The alchemist — refining what is essential, releasing what is finished

Metal is the energy of autumn — the harvest is in, the leaves are falling, the year is contracting toward its rest. Metal governs the processes of contraction, refinement and letting go. It is the element of precision, structure and the capacity to discern what is essential from what is dross. In Chinese culture, metal is associated with the sharp edge that separates, clarifies and refines — the sword, the scalpel, the critical faculty.

The Lung is the primary Metal organ — it governs respiration and the taking in and releasing of Qi with each breath, the dispersal of defensive Qi to the body's surface, and the regulation of the skin and body hair. The Large Intestine is its Yang partner — governing elimination, the physical letting go of what is no longer needed. The Metal element's emotional theme is grief and loss — the ability to grieve fully and then release, rather than holding on to what has passed.

Metal constitutional types are often gifted with great precision, organisational capacity and aesthetic sensibility — they have a keen sense of what belongs and what doesn't. When Metal is imbalanced, this precision becomes rigidity; the inability to let go becomes grief that never resolves; the refined sense of quality becomes perfectionism and self-criticism. Physical symptoms cluster around the Lung (respiratory conditions, skin problems, low immunity) and the Large Intestine (constipation, bowel irregularity).

Organs
Lung (Yin) · Large Intestine (Yang)
Season
Autumn
Emotion
Grief / Sadness → Courage
Taste
Pungent / Spicy
Tissue
Skin & Body Hair
Sense organ
Nose
Colour
White
Sound
Weeping
Metal in Balance vs. Imbalance
Healthy Metal
Precise and organised · Able to grieve and release · Strong immunity · Clear boundaries · Aesthetic sensitivity · Regular elimination · Clear skin · Disciplined without being rigid
Metal Imbalance
Unresolved grief · Respiratory conditions · Skin problems · Low immunity · Constipation · Rigidity · Perfectionism · Difficulty receiving · Feeling cut off from meaning

Water — Shuǐ

🌊
Water — 水
Shuǐ · Winter · North · Depth · Storage · Potential
The philosopher — the deep stillness from which all things emerge and to which all things return

Water is the energy of winter — the season of maximum Yin, of withdrawal into depth, of rest and the conservation of resources for the next cycle of growth. Water governs the deepest, most fundamental aspects of the body: the constitutional inheritance (Jing), the bones and marrow, the reproductive system, the brain, the ears and the hair on the head. It is the element most associated with ageing — when Kidney Water declines, the body ages.

The Kidneys are the root organs of the entire body in TCM — the foundation of Yin and Yang for every other organ system. Kidney Yang is the warmth that drives all physiological processes; Kidney Yin is the cooling, nourishing moisture that prevents overheating. The Bladder is the Kidney's Yang partner, governing fluid metabolism and the excretion of turbid fluids.

Water's emotion is fear — the healthy Water person has a deep, still courage that comes from genuine self-knowledge and the willingness to face the unknown. Water imbalance produces either chronic fear and anxiety (insufficient Water to ground the mind) or a reckless fearlessness (insufficient Water wisdom). The Kidney is the organ most severely damaged by chronic fear, sustained overwork, insufficient sleep and excess sexual activity — the pattern that characterises modern life perhaps more than any other.

Organs
Kidney (Yin) · Bladder (Yang)
Season
Winter
Emotion
Fear / Anxiety → Wisdom
Taste
Salty
Tissue
Bones & Marrow
Sense organ
Ears
Colour
Black / Dark Blue
Sound
Groaning
Water in Balance vs. Imbalance
Healthy Water
Deep reserves of energy · Fearless from wisdom · Strong bones and teeth · Good hearing · Healthy hair · Reproductive vitality · Philosophical depth · Ability to rest fully
Water Imbalance
Chronic fear and anxiety · Low back pain · Weak knees · Premature ageing · Hair loss · Hearing problems · Infertility · Inability to rest · Night sweats · Excessive thirst

The Generating & Controlling Cycles

The five elements are not static categories — they exist in dynamic relationship through two primary cycles. These cycles are the diagnostic and therapeutic heart of five-element TCM: understanding where a cycle has broken down identifies the root of the pattern; working with the cycle determines the treatment strategy.

Generating Cycle — 相生 (Shēng)
Wood→ feeds →Fire
Fire→ creates →Earth
Earth→ bears →Metal
Metal→ holds →Water
Water→ nourishes →Wood

The mother-child cycle — each element generates and nourishes the next. When an element is deficient, the practitioner can tonify the "mother" element. Liver (Wood) deficiency → tonify Kidney (Water) which generates Wood.

Controlling Cycle — 相克 (Kè)
Wood→ parts →Earth
Fire→ melts →Metal
Earth→ dams →Water
Metal→ cuts →Wood
Water→ quenches →Fire

The grandmother-grandchild cycle — each element controls and checks the element two steps ahead. Maintains balance throughout the system. When one element is in excess, it over-controls its "grandchild." Liver (Wood) excess → over-controls Spleen (Earth) → digestive symptoms from emotional stress.

Five Elements — Complete Correspondences

CategoryWood 木Fire 火Earth 土Metal 金Water 水
Yin OrganLiverHeart / PericardiumSpleenLungKidney
Yang OrganGallbladderSmall Intestine / Triple BurnerStomachLarge IntestineBladder
SeasonSpringSummerLate SummerAutumnWinter
EmotionAngerJoy (excess)WorryGriefFear
VirtueKindnessLoveTrustCourageWisdom
TasteSourBitterSweetPungentSalty
TissueTendonsBlood vesselsMusclesSkinBones
Sense organEyesTongueMouthNoseEars
ColourGreenRedYellowWhiteBlack / Blue
SoundShoutingLaughingSingingWeepingGroaning
DirectionEastSouthCentreWestNorth
Modern parallelLiver / Nervous systemCardiovascular / CNSDigestive / MicrobiomeRespiratory / ImmuneEndocrine / Reproductive
Connections