Dr Christine Shen — Philosophy
"Trust Your Body. It Knows How to Heal."
Your body arrived in this world with an extraordinary capacity for self-restoration. Every wound closes, every infection is fought, every broken bone knits. Disease, in the TCM framework, is not a failure of the body — it is a disruption to the conditions that allow the body to do what it already knows how to do. Dr Christine Shen's clinical practice is guided by one fundamental principle: restore those conditions, and the body heals itself.
The Foundation
The medical concept of innate healing is ancient — expressed in Hippocrates' vis medicatrix naturae (the healing power of nature) and elaborated in traditional medicine systems across cultures and centuries. In Traditional Chinese Medicine, this healing intelligence is understood as Zheng Qi (正氣) — the body's righteous, self-regenerating vital force that maintains health, resists pathogenic influences and restores balance when disruption occurs.
What disrupts Zheng Qi? The Chinese medical framework identifies several categories: external pathogenic factors (wind, cold, heat, dampness), internal damage from emotional excess or suppression, irregular diet and lifestyle, constitutional weakness, and the accumulated toll of unaddressed chronic stress. Treatment, in this framework, is not about overriding the body's systems — it is about removing what blocks them and nourishing what depletes them.
This is a fundamentally different orientation from symptom management. Where symptom management asks "how do we stop this?" — innate healing asks "what is preventing the body from restoring itself?" The answer changes everything about how treatment is designed and experienced.
Daoist Principles
Dr Shen's clinical philosophy is informed by Daoist principles that permeate traditional Chinese medicine — particularly the understanding that health, like all natural systems, tends toward balance when the conditions for balance are present. Disruption, imbalance and disease arise when natural flows are blocked, depleted or overwhelmed.
Daoist philosophy also teaches that the most effective intervention is often the smallest — the subtle shift that allows a blocked river to find its natural course, rather than the dramatic intervention that dams or diverts it. In clinical terms, this means that effective acupuncture and herbal medicine work with the body's existing tendency toward homeostasis, amplifying and supporting processes that are already underway, rather than imposing an external programme onto a passive subject.
The patient is never passive in Dr Shen's model. Understanding what your body is communicating — and making informed decisions about lifestyle, diet and stress — is as important as any clinical treatment. Innate healing is a collaborative process, not a thing that is done to you.
The Daoist principle of acting in alignment with nature's flow rather than against it. In clinical practice: treatment that works with the body's own intelligence, not against its grain. The minimum effective intervention that unlocks the body's maximum self-restoration.
The body's self-regenerating vital force — responsible for immunity, regeneration, emotional stability and physical resilience. When Zheng Qi is abundant, health is natural. When it is depleted or blocked, disease finds purchase. Dr Shen's treatments are designed, above all, to nourish and restore Zheng Qi.
Health is not a static state — it is a dynamic equilibrium between opposing forces. Treatment aims not at a fixed destination but at restoring the body's capacity to move fluidly between states: between activity and rest, heat and cold, expansion and contraction.
How TCM Supports Innate Healing
Acupuncture points are understood as locations where Qi and Blood can be accessed to clear stagnation, tonify deficiency and redirect flow. Each treatment is a conversation with the body's circulatory and nervous system — releasing where blocked, warming where cold, calming where agitated.
Chinese herbal formulas address both the branch (presenting symptoms) and the root (underlying pattern). They provide the body with the botanical building blocks to replenish depleted reserves, clear accumulated pathology and restore systemic function from the inside out.
Diet, sleep rhythm, movement, emotional expression and seasonal adaptation are all addressed in Dr Shen's consultations. Lifestyle recommendations are not prescriptive rules — they are invitations to align more closely with the body's natural rhythms and the seasonal cycles that TCM has always respected.
You as Partner
Dr Shen does not heal you. She creates the conditions in which you can heal yourself. This distinction matters — because it makes you an active participant in your own restoration, not a passive recipient of treatment. Your role in the innate healing process involves four dimensions:
Bringing genuine curiosity to the question of what your body is trying to communicate — rather than fighting or suppressing its signals
Sharing the full picture of your health — physical, emotional, dietary and lifestyle — without editing for what you think the practitioner wants to hear
Following through on the treatment plan — showing up for appointments, taking prescribed herbs, making agreed lifestyle adjustments with genuine commitment
Understanding that innate healing — particularly for long-standing conditions — takes time. The body heals in layers; the same patience that built chronic illness is required to unwind it
Across All Life Stages
Children have the most abundant Zheng Qi of any life stage — and the most rapid innate healing capacity. Dr Shen's paediatric approach is gentle, minimal and precisely targeted to support rather than override the body's natural developmental intelligence.
The working adult years — high productivity, high stress, often poor lifestyle balance — create the conditions for chronic Zheng Qi depletion that manifests as fatigue, pain, hormonal disruption and mental health challenges. Restoring innate healing capacity often involves addressing what is being chronically depleted.
TCM views ageing not as decline but as transition — the gradual transformation of Yang vitality into the quiet depth of Yin wisdom. Supporting older adults means nourishing Kidney Essence, maintaining joint mobility and circulatory health, and supporting the emotional and cognitive dimensions of ageing with care and dignity.
What This Means in Practice
Every consultation with Dr Shen begins with the question of why you feel the way you feel — not just what you feel. The pattern behind the symptom is always more important than the symptom itself.
Effective treatment relieves the presenting symptom (the branch) while simultaneously addressing the underlying pattern (the root). Without root treatment, branch symptoms return. Most patients notice both immediate relief and a slow, deepening improvement over time.
Dr Shen does not position innate healing as an alternative to conventional medicine. The two approaches address different aspects of health and work most powerfully together. She actively communicates with GPs where patients consent, and she never recommends discontinuing prescribed medications without medical consultation.
Once acute or chronic concerns are addressed, Dr Shen encourages patients toward a maintenance model — seasonal check-ins, preventive herbal prescriptions, lifestyle recalibration. The goal is not merely the absence of illness but the presence of genuine vitality.
A consultation with Dr Shen begins the work of understanding what your body is asking for — and creating the conditions for genuine, lasting restoration. Available at Lane Cove and the Northern Beaches. Monday–Sunday, 9am–9pm.
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