Earth, Trust, and the Quiet Power of Intent (Yi)

Devon Hornby LMT, ABT

If Wood is the living tree that grows toward light,
and Fire is the dignity that takes its seat in the heart of reality,
then Earth is what allows life to stay.

Earth is the element of nourishment, gravity, digestion, and belonging. It is the great receiver. It does not reach upward like Wood or radiate outward like Fire. It gathers. It holds. It integrates.

In the five-element view, Earth governs the center of the body: the belly, the organs of digestion, the connective field that distributes nourishment, and the felt sense of being supported by life itself.

But more subtly, Earth governs trust.

Not trust as belief.
Not trust as optimism.
Trust as a somatic state.

It is the feeling that we are allowed to take in what life offers.
That we can rest in process.
That we do not have to rush ahead or brace against what is coming.

When Earth is healthy, the system knows how to receive.


Earth as the Integrator of Wood and Fire

Earth does not initiate movement.
It completes it.

Wood begins the journey: growth, vision, direction, emergence.
Fire takes the throne: dignity, presence, sacred world, authority.
Earth says: this can be lived.

This is where intent (Yi) is born.

Yi is not willpower.
It is not mental effort.
It is not forcing reality to comply with our plans.

Yi is the quiet intelligence that arises when:

  • direction is clear (Wood)
  • presence is embodied (Fire)
  • and trust is established (Earth)

Yi is what allows a process to unfold without micromanagement.

It is the inner knowing that something is moving in the right direction, even when we cannot yet see the outcome.


Trust as a Physiological Capacity

In the Earth element, trust is not philosophical.
It lives in tissue tone, digestion, and breath.

When Earth is healthy:

  • the belly is soft and warm
  • the breath naturally drops downward
  • hunger and fullness signals are accurate
  • the body can rest after effort
  • thought slows down without collapsing

This is the body saying:
I can take in. I can metabolize. I can be here.

When Earth is weak or burdened:

  • worry replaces trust
  • rumination replaces presence
  • control replaces receptivity
  • the belly hardens or collapses
  • the system stays in preparation mode

This is not pathology.
It is a survival strategy.

But it keeps Yi from forming.


Intent as the Natural Outcome of Trust

In a healthy Earth system, intent does not feel dramatic.

It feels simple.

It feels like:

  • knowing when to act and when to wait
  • sensing when something is complete
  • recognizing when a process is ripening
  • staying with uncertainty without spinning

Yi is what allows healing to continue when we stop trying to manage it.

It is the intelligence of allowing.

This is why Earth is the mother of all elements.

It receives the movement of Wood.
It stabilizes the radiance of Fire.
It distributes nourishment to the entire system.


The Virtue of Earth: Integrity and Honesty

In Wang Fengyi’s lineage, the virtue of Earth is often translated as integrity or honesty.

Not moral honesty.

Somatic honesty.

It is the willingness to feel what is actually here.

To digest experience as it is, not as we wish it were.

When Earth is honest:

  • denial softens
  • self-deception relaxes
  • the system stops splitting experience into “acceptable” and “unacceptable”

This honesty creates trust.

And trust creates Yi.


Practices for Nourishing Earth and Cultivating Yi

1. The Receiving Breath

Place one hand on the belly and one on the chest.
Let the inhale arrive without pulling it in.
Let the exhale fall without pushing it out.
Feel how little effort is actually required.

This trains receptivity.


2. The Digestion of Experience

Once a day, reflect gently:

What happened today that I have not yet digested?

Let the body respond, not the mind.
Often the answer appears as a sensation in the belly.


3. The Intent Without Forcing Practice

Bring to mind a situation that matters to you.
Instead of planning or fixing, ask:

What wants to unfold here?

Feel for the subtle directionality in the body.
That is Yi.


Earth as the Ground of the Sacred World

Wood gives us direction.
Fire gives us dignity.
Earth gives us belonging.

It is Earth that allows the sacred world to become livable.

Without Earth, vision floats and radiance burns out.

With Earth, life becomes inhabitable.

And healing becomes something we can trust.

When the Inner Tree Bends: Trauma, Somatic Unwinding, and the Wood Element

Devon Hornby LMT, ABT

Trauma is often spoken of as an event, but its residue does not live in the past. It lives in the body—in the subtle tensions that shape our breath, posture, and perception. Trauma is the pattern the body adopts to survive what was overwhelming. It is the bracing, the collapse, the vigilance, the freeze. It is the way the tissues reorganize when they cannot complete an impulse or express a need.

From the perspective of the five elements, trauma can be understood as a disruption of natural movement. Each element loses some of its rhythm. But none reveals this disruption more clearly than the Wood element, the living force of growth, direction, and emergence. The Wood element is the inner tree—rooted, flexible, responsive, reaching toward life. Trauma bends this tree in ways that seem protective in the moment but become constricting over time.

How Trauma Affects the Wood Element

The Wood element is designed to move upward and outward. It governs assertion, vision, planning, healthy boundary-setting, and the courage to step into the world. It animates the muscles, tendons, and fascia; its home is the liver and its rhythms, the suppleness of the ribs, the ease of rising qi.

Trauma disrupts this movement in several ways:

1. Contraction Instead of Extension
The body retracts. The ribs narrow. The breath becomes shallow or held. The diaphragm tightens. The system no longer extends outward toward opportunity or relationship. Instead, energy turns inward, looping around fear, anger, or self-protection.

2. Hypervigilance Instead of Vision
Healthy Wood looks ahead with clarity. Traumatized Wood scans the horizon for threat. Vision becomes vigilance. Possibility is replaced with anticipation of danger. The inner tree stops growing upward and instead twists toward what feels unsafe.

3. Stagnation Instead of Direction
When the Wood element cannot move, its qi stagnates. We feel stuck, indecisive, irritable, flooded, or numb. There is an inner sense of “not being able to get there,” even when we don’t know where “there” is.

These are not psychological abstractions. They are lived somatic experiences. They show up in the tissues, the breath wave, the tone of the muscles and fascia, the relationship between the head and pelvis, the readiness of the body to step forward or shy away.

Unwinding: Letting the Tree Remember Its Shape

Trauma healing is often described as “letting go,” but a more accurate description might be unbending. The living tree inside us remembers what healthy movement feels like. It remembers how to rise, how to open, how to direct itself through the world.

In hands-on work, movement practice, meditation, and body-centered therapy, unwinding occurs when the system is given enough safety and spaciousness to complete impulses that were never allowed to resolve. This may appear as subtle micro-movements, tremors, shifts in breath, changes in temperature, or waves of emotion. These are not symptoms—they are intelligence.

As Wood unwinds:

  • breath rises freely again
  • the ribs expand like branches reaching to light
  • the diaphragm softens
  • the liver eases its grip
  • the pelvis finds forward orientation
  • the eyes widen with curiosity rather than threat

Unwinding restores the directionality of life force.

Virtue as the Guide Back to Growth

In Wang Fengyi’s lineage, the virtue associated with the Wood element is benevolence—a gentle, steady goodwill toward oneself and others. Benevolence is not sweetness. It is the strength of a tree that can withstand storms because it is both rooted and yielding.

As Wood heals through benevolence:

  • anger transforms into clarity
  • resentment dissolves into understanding
  • self-protection shifts into healthy boundaries
  • contraction becomes curiosity
  • the sense of “I can’t” becomes “I can”

Benevolence creates the conditions for the inner tree to grow again.

Trauma and the Awakened Warrior

For the awakened warrior, healing is not self-improvement—it is reclaiming the ability to meet life directly. Warriors do not bypass their wounds, nor do they harden around them. They learn to feel everything without being taken hostage by it.

Healthy Wood is essential for this. A warrior needs direction, honesty, and the capacity to take a step forward. When trauma constrains Wood, courage collapses into defensiveness. As Wood unwinds, courage returns—not as bravado, but as grounded presence.

Practices for Healing Wood and Releasing Trauma

1. The Rising Breath
Lie down or sit comfortably.
Let your inhale gently travel up the inner line of the body—from the pelvic floor to the crown—without force.
Feel the subtle sense of upward movement, like sap ascending.
Let the exhale drop you back into your roots.
Repeat until the breath begins to move more freely.

2. The Direction Inquiry
Ask the body—not the mind—two questions:
Where do you want to go?
What direction feels nourishing?
Let the answer emerge as sensation, posture, or imagery.

3. The Gesture of Soft Offering
Extend your hand slightly forward as if offering something small but meaningful.
Feel what happens in the ribs, diaphragm, and belly.
Most systems soften.
Generosity becomes a doorway into movement.

4. The Step Forward
Take one mindful step forward.
Sense what rises in the body—hesitation, readiness, fear, hope.
Let the step be a practice of reclaiming forward-motion.

The Tree Rises Again

Trauma does not destroy the Wood element—it compresses it. But Wood is resilient. A tree bent by wind grows in new directions. With attuned support, somatic unwinding, and the cultivation of benevolence, the inner tree remembers how to rise.

Healing is not a return to who we were before the wound.
It is the emergence of who we become after life has touched us deeply.
It is the living Wood element returning to its natural intelligence—rooted, flexible, growing, alive.

Classical Chinese Medicine: The Original Functional Medicine

By Devon Hornby, LMT, ABT

In today’s wellness world, functional medicine has gained traction as a patient-centered, systems-based approach to health that focuses on identifying and addressing root causes rather than suppressing symptoms. While this framework may seem cutting-edge, it mirrors a holistic paradigm that has existed for thousands of years: Classical Chinese Medicine (CCM).

Classical Chinese Medicine is arguably the original form of functional medicine. Long before lab tests and diagnostic imaging, ancient Chinese physicians developed a sophisticated understanding of the body as a dynamic, self-regulating system. They viewed health not as the absence of disease, but as the harmonious function of all systems—physical, emotional, and spiritual. When imbalance arises, the aim is not to treat the symptom in isolation, but to restore systemic coherence (Kaptchuk, 2000; Porkert, 1974).

This is precisely the lens I bring to my online health consultations and embodied life coaching sessions. Drawing on decades of experience in Chinese medicine, body-centered therapy, and movement-based healing, I help clients uncover the hidden patterns and fixations behind their physical symptoms and emotional challenges—whether that’s fatigue, digestive issues, chronic pain, or anxiety.

A Timeless Systems-Based Approach

Like functional medicine, CCM is inherently individualized. Every person is seen as a unique constellation of elemental forces, constitutional tendencies, and life experiences. Symptoms are not the problem—they are the body’s intelligent response to stress, depletion, or dysfunction. This philosophy lies at the heart of my virtual coaching practice: We don’t pathologize what’s happening; we get curious about what your system is trying to say.

Using principles rooted in Classical Chinese thought—such as the Five Elements, organ systems as dynamic functions, and the influence of climate, emotion, and lifestyle—we uncover the “why” beneath your symptoms (Maciocia, 2005). Whether you’re seeking to balance hormones, regulate your nervous system, support your digestion, or navigate a life transition, the wisdom of CCM offers practical, grounded tools to reconnect with your body’s inner guidance.

Embodiment as a Healing Path

Healing is not just about herbs or acupuncture points. It’s also about reconnecting with sensation, listening to your body’s rhythms, and retraining your nervous system to respond with flexibility and resilience. In our online sessions, we integrate breath, gentle movement, guided somatic inquiry, and practical lifestyle interventions. These embodied practices allow clients to engage with their health on a felt level—not just conceptually, but experientially (Rossi, 1993).

This combination of Classical Chinese insight and body-centered coaching is a powerful catalyst for transformation. You don’t need to be in crisis to benefit. In fact, many clients begin these sessions seeking clarity, wanting to optimize their health, or realign with their purpose.

Why Work Online?

Online health consultations and embodied life coaching offer profound support from the comfort of your home. No commute. No clinic. Just a direct, personal connection where we tune into your system, explore its deeper messages, and co-create a path forward.

This work is not about fixing you—it’s about helping you listen, respond, and align.


If you’re ready to explore the root causes of your health patterns and step into a more embodied way of being, I invite you to schedule an online consultation. Let’s uncover what your body already knows.

#ChineseMedicine #FunctionalMedicine #EmbodiedHealing #OnlineHealthConsultations #DevonHornbyLMT #LifeCoaching #SomaticTherapy

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  • Kaptchuk, T. J. (2000). The web that has no weaver: Understanding Chinese medicine. McGraw-Hill.
  • Maciocia, G. (2005). The foundations of Chinese medicine: A comprehensive text for acupuncturists and herbalists(2nd ed.). Elsevier.
  • Porkert, M. (1974). The theoretical foundations of Chinese medicine: Systems of correspondence. MIT Press.
  • Rossi, E. L. (1993). The psychobiology of mind-body healing: New concepts of therapeutic hypnosis. W. W. Norton & Company.