Chinese Face
Reading for the Western World
BY CHARLES
YARBOROUGH, L.AC.
REPRINTED FROM
"ACUPUNCTURE TODAY" APRIL, 2007
From the Facial
Acupuncture column of M. E. Wakefield, LAc.,
MSOM
One of the great things about America is its
eagerness to absorb and adapt elements of other cultures, accepting
them as its own. And it is testimony to the vastness and
originality of Chinese culture that many of its inventions have made
their way west, helping to define modern life. While not as
well-known as gunpowder, pasta or the magnetic compass, Chinese face
reading is an idiosyncratic, but adaptable export that generates
ever-increasing interest. Employed not only by licensed
acupuncturists as a method of understanding the complexities of
health and character, Chinese face reading now is being used by
corporate personnel directors in the hiring and training of
staff. A less likely application of this ancient, but ever
useful art occurred recently in a Los Angeles courtroom.
COURTROOM
DRAMA
After spending three hours sifting through
potential jurors for a multimillion-dollar lawsuit, two beleaguered
attorneys turned to a friend of mine, an enthusiastic amateur face
reader, and asked her to introduce herself.
She stood up and did so, adding this
comment: "Your Honor, if chosen for jury duty, I have already
decided whom I will vote for and whom I will vote against. I won't
need three weeks of testimony."
"What?" said the judge.
My friend boldly continued, "I've performed
an evaluation of everybody in this courtroom, including counsel for
the defense. It's obvious from the shape of his face and
exaggerated jaw line that counsel plans to bully the jurors just as
he bullies his hot-headed client. Bullies tend to trample the
truth in order to get their way, which brings up a credibility
issue. The attorney for the plaintiff isn't very likeable
either, but his wedge-shaped face and small mouth tell me he values
the truth and cuts to the chase. He won't try to confuse the
issues by pandering to the jury. That would be cynical and usually
backfires anyway."
"What on earth are you talking about?" said
the judge.
"And lastly, I've evaluated the defendant
who is an obviously impulsive character. Would I trust him to
conduct his affairs responsibly? Goodness no! His low
forehead, pointed ears and red eyes tell me he's unstable.
People like him may generate excitement, but then comes the conflict
and hurt feelings."
"Madame, that will be enough," said the
judge. "Would you please sit down and..."
"Your Honor, I'm sure this isn't the first
or last time the defendant has been involved in a breach of trust.
You can spare me the details of this case; I'm ready to cast my
vote. Guilty as charged. Where's the cafeteria?"
There was mumbling and laughter among the
jury candidates as the judge banged his gavel. "Quiet!" he
warned. "Quiet!"
The plaintiff's attorney stood up, buttoned
his jacket and squinted. Solemnly, he stepped toward my friend and
leaned over the rail. "Madame," he frowned, "would you mind
coming with me the next time I go speed-dating?"
METHODS AND
MYSTERY
What made my friend so sure of her ability
to predict human behavior, and to pull back the curtain of hidden
motives? As she'd gladly explain, it was her application of
the principles of Chinese face reading. Having categorized each
person according to his Five Element behavioral archetype, she
looked for telltale facial markings, wrinkles and bony prominences,
creating an energetic analog in her mind. It's a method that
reaches deep into history.
References to physiognomy in China reach
back to 600 B.C., during which the imperial scholar Shu-Fu was noted
as an accomplished practitioner of divination. In the early
Zhou Dynasty (1122 BC-256 BC), affluent homes retained their own
esoteric advisors with whom they consulted before making important
decisions. These hereditary advisors practiced six forms of
divination, of which face-reading was one. As the feudal Zhou
Dynasty crumbled, these sages and their descendents found themselves
practicing their art among the populace, disseminating their
individual methods. Through the centuries, physiognomy became
a popular means of foretelling one's social, financial and
health-related destiny and of improving one's fate.
Not surprisingly, dozens of face-reading
techniques evolved. These include the Three Forces, in which
the forehead represents the sky (honor), the nose represents man
(longevity), and the chin represents the earth (abundance). An
extension of this technique is the study of the Three Zones. These
zones are defined by the hairline to eyebrows; the eyebrows to tip
of nose; and the chin area. According to the Song Dynasty
text, Shen Xiang Chuan Bian, or "Complete Work on
Physiognomy," the most harmonious faces were ones in which the Three
Zones were equal. Proportional variations might augur
favorable circumstances such as wealth and longevity, or suggest
poverty in old age, bankruptcy in middle age, and failure to find
favor with the king. The cultivation of a moustache and long
beard on a man could help to turn his bad luck to good, although a
beard without a moustache would do the opposite. The placement
of facial moles was also significant, and moles were mapped
according to the bearer's gender. Women's moles held the
promise of high drama: they might foretell great wealth in the
raising of silkworms, or warn against the probability of killing
one's husband or of dying in a foreign land.
Techniques for examining the face also
included evaluation of 13 horizontal bands (each of them containing
as many as 11 descriptive subsections), as well as the facial Five
Planets, the facial Six Stars, Five Sacred Mountains and Four Great
Rivers (all of them actual celestial and geographic landmarks).
Evaluation according to the Five Elements (water, wood, fire, earth
and metal) also was important and continues to be employed by
Chinese medical practitioners as an amazingly accurate method of
assessing health and character. Nevertheless, as with any art, there
is variation within these methods of interpretation.
THINKING IN
PICTURES
The concept of emblematic landmarks (the
Yellow River represents the eyes, the hallowed Hengshan Mountain
represents the forehead, etc.) residing on the face is one of the
features that sets Chinese physiognomy apart from the entire Western
notion of cosmology. This difference in cognition may have
been fostered by the Chinese language.
In his article, "Cognitive Power of Chinese
Characters and Their Influence on Ancient Chinese Science and
Technology,"1 Ding Xinghua stated:
"To write and think with characters that
preserve a very close analogy with what is in the physical world is
to suggest continually that the user and nature inhabit the same
close system; by contrast, alphabetic systems continually emphasize
isolation of knower and known. As a consequence, emphasis on
oneness of man and nature, or man's harmony with nature is a very
important consideration in the Chinese approach to nature."
It isn't surprising that while the Chinese
were finding actual images on the face, Westerners were spelling out
words across that same terrain. I n Dante's The Inferno,
the letters OMO DEI (man is of God) become visible in the
architecture of facial bone and cartilage as the musculature of
condemned sinners wastes away.
While the Chinese concept of man's oneness
with the universe may be incompatible with Western sensibility,
there is one element that face-reading traditions share with the
West – the accessibility of self-determination. Within the
framework of unalterable destiny, humans are free to influence their
own fate. The possibility for self-determination and redemption was
manifested in the grand sense by the ancient "Mandate of Heaven," in
which divinely appointed rulers and clans retained power only as
long as they conducted themselves honorably. In the microcosm
of individual self-determination, the possibility was, and is,
manifested in the interplay of opposites. Markings may portend a
favorable or unfavorable destiny, but they can be modulated by
contrasting ones. In fact, this pairing of opposites is what
breathes life into the art of Chinese face-reading.
The compatibility of opposites is explained
by historian Jacques Gernet in the book An Introduction to
Chinese Culture Through the Family:
"At every level, meaning stems from the way
terms are combined. No doubt this is what accounts for the
predominant role played by complementary pairs of opposites and
correspondences in Chinese thought and above all for its fundamental
relativism. Nothing has meaning except through opposition to
its contrary."2
How, then, does this meaning come to life in
actual practice? Imagine a person whose facial markings show
childhood trauma and victimization. Look more closely and notice if
this person has markings that connote a sense of irony, an
appreciation of extraordinary or exquisite concepts, or a desire to
bring justice into the world. These ennobling qualities would
contrast with the theme of victimization and may have sprung from
it. The polarized themes of victimization and transformation
would live side by side on a person's face and would provide insight
into the person's character. Of course, childhood misery
doesn't ennoble everyone. In some cases, the opposing themes of
helplessness and overcompensation might appear.
FACING THE
FUTURE
If Westerners are increasingly fascinated by
Chinese face reading, it might be because our identities as
individuals and as a nation are morphing at an alarming rate.
The Dec. 16, 2006 cover of Time magazine
inadvertently said it all. Instead of proclaiming its customary
"Person of the Year," the magazine awarded the honor to the entire
Internet-savvy American public. The cover featured what was
supposed to be a computer screen, but was actually a framed scrap of
foil, providing us with a blurry, distorted self-image, emblazoned
with the word You. What could be more succinct?
The uncertainty of a nation in conflict, the fluctuating economy,
and the decreasing accessibility of education and medical services
all conspire to increase our communal sense of discomfort and
anxiety. Which of us wouldn't appreciate additional insight
into our durability? It isn't asking too much. As enthusiastic
adapters of native traditions, we might find that Chinese
face-reading brings us insight and revelations that we had
overlooked and that, in our own small way, our choices really do
change our fate.
Return to Chinese Face
Reading.net