The Pericardium and Triple Burner are an unusual pair. The Pericardium is not an organ you can see in daily life but a protective sac around the Heart. In Chinese medicine, its role is expanded to mean emotional as well as physical protection. It is sometimes called the “Heart Protector,” guarding your inner core so that you can connect with others without being harmed by overwhelm. The Triple Burner, or San Jiao, is even harder to define. It is not a single structure but a functional system that regulates the balance of fluids, warmth, and energy between the upper, middle, and lower parts of the body. Together, this pair is about safe connection and whole-body harmony.
When balanced
When the Pericardium and Triple Burner work smoothly, the body feels both open and contained. The Heart is able to connect with others warmly, but without becoming overexposed. There is a sense of safe intimacy, where you can engage with people or situations without losing yourself. The Triple Burner ensures that communication between the three areas of the body is fluid and balanced. The upper burner includes the lungs and heart, the middle burner the stomach and spleen, and the lower burner the kidneys, bladder, and intestines. When balance flows between them, digestion feels steady, circulation is smooth, and energy is regulated across the day.
Emotionally, this balance appears as comfort with boundaries. You can open to others without fear, and you can also step back when needed. Energy feels evenly distributed. You are not overheating in one area while feeling cold or empty in another. It is a state of evenness and safe openness.
When blocked or weak
When this pair struggles, the effects can swing between extremes. If the Pericardium is too closed, the Heart feels walled off. This may show up as emotional distance, inability to connect, or a sense of being cut off from others. If it is too open, the Heart feels exposed. Emotional overwhelm, hypersensitivity, or exhaustion from social interaction often result. The Triple Burner’s imbalances often appear as irregular temperature regulation, fluid retention, bloating, or dryness. Because it coordinates so many systems, a disturbance in the Triple Burner can feel like the whole body is out of rhythm.
Emotionally, this imbalance shows as difficulty with boundaries. Either you give too much and feel drained, or you close down and feel isolated. Neither extreme allows for healthy connection. Physically, hot flushes, night sweats, oedema, or digestive irregularity may appear. Energy may feel scattered, with bursts of heat or fatigue that do not make sense.
Modern challenges
Modern living makes balance between openness and protection difficult. Many people are expected to give constantly at work, at home, and in relationships. The result is often emotional burnout, where the Pericardium can no longer shield the Heart effectively. Social expectations and technology add another layer. Being always available, always responsive, and always visible can leave the Heart feeling overexposed.
On the other side, prolonged stress or trauma can cause the Pericardium to close too tightly. This leaves people feeling safe but disconnected, unable to share warmth with others. The Triple Burner is equally challenged by modern life. Sedentary habits disrupt fluid balance, processed foods create digestive irregularities, and chronic stress throws off temperature regulation. The result is a body that feels scattered, swinging between extremes rather than settling into steady rhythm.
How Shibashi supports this pair
Shibashi creates a space to practise safe openness. Circular arm movements, where the arms open out to the sides and then return gently to the centre, mirror the work of the Pericardium. They allow you to explore expansion while reminding the body to gather and protect. Chest-opening sequences give the Heart space to breathe, while the gathering phase brings reassurance. Over time, this re-trains the system to open with safety rather than fear.
For the Triple Burner, Shibashi’s whole-body movements are particularly powerful. Because the practice integrates breath, movement, and posture, the communication between upper, middle, and lower body improves. Movements that connect arms, torso, and legs encourage energy to distribute more evenly. The gentle rhythm also supports temperature and fluid regulation, easing extremes and restoring balance.
What makes Shibashi effective for this pair is the lack of force. You are not pushing the Heart to open or trying to control the body’s regulation. Instead, you are creating conditions for safe expansion and even distribution. With regular practice, people often notice they can connect with others without feeling drained, or that their energy feels steadier across the day.
Reflection
The Pericardium and Triple Burner remind us that boundaries are not barriers. They are the conditions that allow warmth and connection to thrive without becoming overwhelming. Protection does not mean isolation. Balance does not mean perfection. It means being able to open and close appropriately, and to let energy flow evenly where it is needed.
Notice in your own life where you swing between giving too much and closing off completely. What would it feel like to practise safe openness, to let warmth move while still protecting your centre? Each time you open your arms and return them to the body in Shibashi, you are rehearsing this lesson. Over time, the body learns that connection and balance can co-exist.
Day 6 – Liver & Gallbladder: Flow and Direction
The Liver and Gallbladder are one of the most important pairs when it comes to movement, both physically and emotionally. The Liver’s main role in Chinese medicine is to ensure that qi, the body’s vital energy, flows smoothly. It stores and regulates blood, supports the tendons, and keeps emotions moving. The Gallbladder provides decisiveness and the courage to act. It takes the plans and vision of the Liver and translates them into practical choices. Together they create flow and direction. Without flow, energy stagnates. Without direction, energy disperses.
When balanced
When this pair is healthy, life feels fluid and purposeful. The body moves freely, the joints are flexible, and the muscles feel springy rather than tense. The eyes, which are linked with the Liver, feel clear and focused. Emotionally, you experience patience, adaptability, and a sense of vision. The Gallbladder adds decisiveness, making it easier to take the next step with confidence. This is not about impulsive action, but about clarity. The Liver sees the bigger picture, and the Gallbladder makes choices that move you towards it.
A balanced Liver and Gallbladder also support resilience. Challenges arise, but instead of feeling blocked, you adapt. There is space to plan, to act, and to recover. Energy moves where it is needed.
When blocked or weak
When the Liver’s energy is blocked, frustration and irritability often appear. The body may feel tight, especially along the sides of the ribs or in the jaw. Headaches, eye strain, and digestive discomfort are also common, since the Liver’s flow influences many systems. Emotionally, people often describe a feeling of being stuck, as though energy is building up with no outlet.
If the Gallbladder is weak, decision-making becomes difficult. Indecision, hesitation, or constant second-guessing may show. Courage to act feels low, and even small choices can feel overwhelming. Together, an imbalanced Liver and Gallbladder can create a cycle of frustration and stagnation. You feel blocked, so you hesitate. You hesitate, so the blockage builds.
Physically, issues like tendon stiffness, menstrual irregularities, or side body pain can appear. Emotionally, there may be outbursts of anger or long periods of suppressed irritation. The connection between body and mood is very clear with this pair.
Modern challenges
Modern life creates many conditions for Liver stagnation. Long hours of sitting and poor posture restrict the body’s natural flow. A culture of deadlines and pressure forces the body into bracing, which disrupts energy movement. Emotional suppression, where frustration is swallowed instead of expressed, further strains the Liver. Over time, this leads to irritability, fatigue, and physical tightness.
The Gallbladder also struggles in a world of endless choice. Constant decision-making, from small daily choices to larger life demands, can drain decisiveness. The more options you face, the harder it becomes to act clearly. Add in a fast pace of living and little time for reflection, and hesitation grows. Instead of clarity, there is confusion. Instead of action, there is avoidance.
How Shibashi supports this pair
Shibashi provides direct support for the Liver and Gallbladder through its flowing, spiral movements. Turning from side to side, stretching through the waist, and lengthening the arms release tension along the Liver and Gallbladder pathways. These movements free the flow of qi, which reduces physical tightness and emotional frustration.
Weight-shifting patterns also support this pair by building confidence in movement. As you shift from one leg to another, the body learns to make decisions in a calm and balanced way. The Gallbladder’s decisiveness is gently trained, not through mental effort, but through the body’s experience of choosing and moving.
The rhythm of Shibashi also softens the emotional edge of Liver imbalance. Instead of forcing calm, the practice creates a state where the nervous system can relax, and qi can flow again. Over time, this helps reduce irritability and restore patience. People often notice that they feel less tense in the chest and shoulders after practice, and that decisions feel simpler.
Reflection
The Liver and Gallbladder teach that flow and direction are partners. Flow without direction drifts. Direction without flow is blocked. Together, they create purposeful movement.
Notice where in your life you feel stuck. Is it a physical tightness, an emotional frustration, or a hesitation to act? These are signs that this pair may need attention. Each time you turn, stretch, or shift in Shibashi, you are supporting the natural rhythm of these meridians.
When the river is allowed to move, the path becomes visible. Action follows naturally, not forced, but chosen with clarity.