A Traditional Chinese Medicine view of

Suppressed Emotions

情志抑郁 · qíng zhì yì yù
+4 other names

Also known as: Bottled-up Emotions, Repressed Feelings, Inability to cry, Difficulty Expressing Emotions

Practitioner-reviewed · Updated Jun 2026 · 3 clinical studies

Where you feel the stuckness - a tight chest that wants to sigh, a hot irritability, a lump in your throat, or a drained, foggy numbness - tells a TCM practitioner exactly which pattern is at play, and most people feel a tangible physical release within 2-4 weeks of treatment.

5 Patterns
12 Herbs
4 Formulas
10 Acupoints
About this page · what it is and isn't

What this is. A plain-English synthesis of how classical TCM and modern clinical research describe suppressed emotions. Patterns and herbs come from canonical TCM sources; clinical claims are cited in the Evidence section.

What it isn't. A diagnosis. Me&Qi is an editorial team, not a licensed clinic. The pattern quiz is a thinking tool — pulse and tongue still need a person in the room. Anything in the Safety section should send you to a doctor, not a herb.

Last reviewed Jun 2026.

Educational content about Traditional Chinese Medicine — not medical advice. See a qualified practitioner for diagnosis and treatment.

Suppressed emotions aren't a single condition in TCM - they're a family of five distinct patterns, each with its own cause, its own characteristic feeling, and its own treatment. Three are excess patterns (Liver Qi Stagnation, Liver Qi Stagnation transforming to Heat, Qi‑Phlegm) where something is stuck or accumulating. One is a deficiency pattern (Heart and Spleen Deficiency) where the body simply doesn't have enough resources to process feelings. And one is a deep stagnation pattern (Blood Stagnation) where the blockage has become chronic and fixed. The tight chest, the lump in the throat, the foggy numbness - each points to a different root, and each needs a different herbal and acupuncture approach.

How TCM understands suppressed emotions

TCM understands suppressed emotions primarily through the Liver, which is responsible for the smooth flow of Qi (vital function) throughout the body. The Liver is exquisitely sensitive to feelings; when you hold them in, its Qi stagnates like a traffic jam.

This stagnation creates the classic physical sensations of being bottled up - pressure under the ribs, frequent sighing, a feeling that you can’t take a deep breath. The Liver’s stuck energy then begins to affect other systems, which is why one person’s suppression feels like hot irritability while another’s feels like foggy numbness.

If the stagnation persists, the stuck Qi can generate Heat, like friction in a machine. This is the person who doesn’t just feel bottled up but eventually explodes - irritability, a bitter taste, a red face, and a racing pulse.

Alternatively, the stagnant Qi can disrupt fluid metabolism, turning normal moisture into a sticky obstruction called Phlegm. Qi and Phlegm bind together, creating a sensation of a lump in the throat that comes and goes with mood, plus mental fog and chest tightness. These are both still excess patterns - there’s something there that shouldn’t be.

In other people, suppression stems not from too much stuck energy but from too little. Overthinking and emotional strain can deplete the Spleen’s ability to produce Qi and Blood. The Heart, which houses the mind (Shen), becomes undernourished, leaving you too drained and foggy to even feel your emotions, let alone express them.

This is a deficiency pattern - the tank is empty. And when stagnation goes on for years, it can slow the Blood itself, leading to Blood Stasis, a deep, fixed blockage that feels like emotional numbness, a dark complexion, and fixed pain.

This is why TCM never treats ‘suppressed emotions’ as one thing. The tight, frustrated sighing of Liver Qi Stagnation, the hot irritability of Liver Qi Stagnation with Heat, the foggy lump of Qi‑Phlegm, the exhausted blankness of Heart‑Spleen Deficiency, and the stuck numbness of Blood Stagnation are five different landscapes. A good practitioner reads the tongue and pulse to identify which pattern is dominant, then chooses herbs and points that precisely match that terrain.

From the classical texts

「怒伤肝,喜伤心,思伤脾,忧伤肺,恐伤肾。」

"Anger injures the Liver, joy injures the Heart, pensiveness injures the Spleen, grief injures the Lung, and fear injures the Kidney. This passage establishes the direct link between emotional excess and organ dysfunction, forming the basis for understanding suppressed emotions as a cause of internal disharmony."

Huang Di Nei Jing (Yellow Emperor's Inner Classic), Su Wen , Chapter 5 · More references

How a TCM practitioner diagnoses suppressed emotions

Inside the consultation

A TCM practitioner begins by listening to how you describe the feeling of being bottled up. They ask about the quality of the emotion - is it more like a stuck frustration that makes you sigh, or a heavy numbness that clouds your thinking? They also check for physical clues like chest tightness, appetite changes, and sleep, because the body and mind are never seen as separate.

If the main picture is a sense of pressure in the chest, frequent sighing, and a feeling of being on edge, that points to Liver Qi Stagnation. The tongue is often pale with a thin white coating and the pulse feels wiry, like a guitar string.

When stagnant Qi generates Heat, the frustration turns into a sharper irritability, with a bitter taste, a redder tongue with a yellow coating, and a pulse that is both wiry and rapid.

When the story is more about exhaustion than tension - low energy, poor appetite, a pale face, and a tendency to overthink with a racing heart - the pattern shifts to Heart and Spleen Deficiency. Here the tongue is pale and puffy, and the pulse is thin and weak, reflecting that the body’s resources are depleted rather than simply stuck.

Deeper obstructions create different textures.

Qi-Phlegm shows up as a mental fog and a heavy, sluggish feeling in the body, often with a thick, greasy tongue coating and a slippery pulse.

Blood Stagnation, which can develop after long-standing constraint, brings emotional numbness and a sense of fixed pain or darkness in the complexion; the tongue may look purplish and the pulse feels choppy or wiry.

TCM Patterns for Suppressed Emotions

In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same suppressed emotions can come from several different patterns, each treated differently. The quickest way to find yours is the quiz below.

Find your pattern

Tap any sign that fits how yours feels.

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  1. 1Your signs
  2. 2What makes it worse
  3. 3What helps

Which signs match your experience?

0 selected this step
Frequent sighing Tightness or distension along the ribs Feeling of a lump in the throat (plum pit) Irritability or mood swings
Worse with Suppressing emotions, Stress and frustration, Tight, constricting clothing, Prolonged sitting or inactivity, Heavy, greasy foods
Better with Expressing emotions (e.g., crying, talking, writing), Gentle exercise (walking, tai chi, stretching), Warmth on the abdomen, Deep breathing and relaxation (quiet time, sighing), Massage along the ribs
Explosive anger and irritability Bitter taste in the mouth Distending or burning pain along the ribs Red face and eyes
Worse with Spicy, greasy, or fried foods, Alcohol, Stress and frustration, Suppressing emotions
Better with Cooling foods and herbal teas, Physical exercise to release tension, Deep breathing and relaxation (quiet time, sighing)
Palpitations or awareness of heartbeat Poor appetite with bloating after eating Fatigue and physical exhaustion Insomnia with vivid or disturbing dreams Sallow or pale complexion
Worse with Overthinking and worry, Cold, raw foods, Excessive mental work, Irregular eating habits
Better with Rest and adequate sleep, Warm, cooked meals, Gentle exercise (walking, tai chi, stretching), Reducing mental overwork
Sensation of a lump in the throat that cannot be swallowed or coughed up Chest and upper abdominal oppression or stuffiness Symptoms worsen with emotional stress Frequent sighing Mental fog or heaviness in the head
Worse with Stress and frustration, Dairy, fried, or sugary foods, Prolonged sitting or inactivity
Better with Warm, light meals like soups and congee, Gentle exercise (walking, tai chi, stretching), Expressing emotions (e.g., crying, talking, writing)
Less common

Blood Stagnation

Emotional numbness or inability to cry Fixed, stabbing pain that worsens at night Dark or dusky complexion, lips, or nails Dark menstrual blood with clots (in women) Feeling that emotions are physically stuck
Worse with Suppressing emotions, Cold, raw foods, Prolonged sitting or inactivity, Cold environments, Stress and frustration
Better with Gentle exercise (walking, tai chi, stretching), Warm foods and spices, Acupuncture or massage, Expressing emotions (e.g., crying, talking, writing)

Treatment

Four ways to address suppressed emotions in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.

Formulas traditionally used for suppressed emotions

4 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.

Chai Hu Shu Gan San Bupleurum Liver-Soothing Powder · Míng dynasty, ~1624 CE
Slightly Warm
Courses the Liver and Resolves Constraint Moves Qi and Alleviates Pain Invigorates Blood and Dispels Stasis

A classical formula for people experiencing rib-side or chest pain, emotional frustration, irritability, sighing, and bloating caused by stagnation of Liver Qi. It works by smoothing the flow of Liver Qi, relieving tension, and gently moving blood to stop pain. It is one of the most widely used formulas for stress-related digestive and emotional complaints.

Patterns
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Gui Pi Tang Restore the Spleen Decoction · Sòng dynasty, 1253 CE (original); Míng dynasty additions by Xue Ji
Warm
Tonifies Qi Nourishes Blood Strengthens the Spleen

A classical formula that strengthens the Spleen and nourishes the Heart to address fatigue, poor appetite, insomnia, forgetfulness, palpitations, and anxiety caused by weakness of both the Heart and Spleen. It is also widely used for bleeding disorders such as heavy or prolonged menstrual periods, easy bruising, or blood in the stool that result from the Spleen being too weak to keep blood in its proper channels.

Patterns
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Ban Xia Hou Po Tang Pinellia and Magnolia Bark Decoction · Eastern Hàn dynasty, ~200 CE
Warm
Moves Qi and Dissipates Nodules Descends Qi Resolves Phlegm

A classical formula used to relieve the sensation of something stuck in the throat (sometimes called plum-pit Qi) along with chest tightness, nausea, and emotional unease. It works by restoring the smooth flow of Qi and resolving accumulated Phlegm that has knotted in the throat and chest, particularly when these symptoms are triggered or worsened by stress.

Patterns
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Xue Fu Zhu Yu Tang Drive Out Stasis in the Mansion of Blood Decoction · Qīng dynasty, 1830 CE
Slightly Warm
Invigorates Blood and Dispels Stasis Moves Qi and Alleviates Pain Opens the Chest and Disperses Stagnation

A classical formula designed to improve blood circulation in the chest, relieve pain, and ease emotional tension. It is widely used for chronic chest pain, stubborn headaches, insomnia, and irritability caused by poor blood flow and stagnation in the upper body.

Patterns
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Typical timeline for suppressed emotions

For Liver Qi Stagnation, many people notice a sense of lightness and easier sighing within 1-2 weeks of herbs and acupuncture. Patterns with Heat or Phlegm often take 2-4 weeks to clear the added layer. Heart and Spleen Deficiency requires longer - typically 4-8 weeks to rebuild energy and Blood. Chronic Blood Stagnation can take 6-12 weeks to resolve. Consistency is key: herbs are taken daily, and weekly acupuncture sessions are common for the first 6-8 weeks.

Treatment principles

All treatment of suppressed emotions revolves around restoring the smooth flow of Liver Qi, because the Liver is the organ most directly affected by emotional holding. From that common root, treatment branches according to the specific pattern: clearing Heat when irritability burns, resolving Phlegm when the throat feels blocked, nourishing the Heart and Spleen when exhaustion dominates, or invigorating Blood when numbness has set in. Acupuncture points like Taichong LR‑3, Neiguan PC‑6, and Qimen LR‑14 are used across patterns to open the chest and calm the mind, while herbal formulas are precisely tailored - Chai Hu Shu Gan San for pure stagnation, Dan Zhi Xiao Yao San when Heat is present, Ban Xia Hou Pu Tang for Qi‑Phlegm, Gui Pi Tang for deficiency, and Xue Fu Zhu Yu Tang for Blood stasis.

What to expect from treatment

During an acupuncture session, you may feel a gentle sensation of opening or a spontaneous deep sigh. Herbs are taken daily, often as a tea or granules. Most people notice reduced physical tension within 1-2 weeks, with emotional shifts following gradually. Weekly acupuncture for 6-8 weeks is a typical starting course, with herbal support continuing for several months if the pattern is deep-rooted. Progress is often non‑linear: you might sleep better first, then feel less irritable, and only later find yourself spontaneously crying or laughing. This unfolding is normal and healthy.

General dietary guidance

Favor warm, cooked foods that support Qi movement: lightly steamed vegetables, broths, and congees. Aromatic herbs like fresh mint, basil, and rosemary can be added to meals to gently move Liver Qi. A small piece of citrus peel in tea also helps. Avoid greasy, fried, and overly spicy foods, which can generate Heat and Phlegm. Cold, raw foods and iced drinks constrict Qi flow and should be limited. Eating regular, calm meals without rushing supports the Spleen and helps ground the mind.

Combining TCM with conventional treatment

TCM works well alongside psychotherapy and most conventional treatments. If you take antidepressants, always tell your TCM practitioner, as some herbs (especially those that strongly move Qi) could theoretically interact with serotonergic medications. The classic formulas for suppressed emotions are generally safe, but your practitioner will adjust the formula to avoid any risk. Do not stop prescribed medication suddenly; if your mood improves, work with your doctor to taper gradually. Bring a full medication list to every TCM consultation.

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

Safety & special considerations

Seek urgent medical care — not a TCM practitioner — if you have:
  • Thoughts of self-harm or suicide — Immediate danger to yourself requires emergency psychiatric intervention.
  • Sudden, severe chest pain — Could signal a heart attack, not just emotional chest tightness.
  • Inability to function or care for yourself — Severe depression with psychomotor retardation needs urgent evaluation.
  • Hallucinations or delusions — Possible psychotic depression or another serious mental health condition.
  • Severe weight loss or refusal to eat — Risk of malnutrition and physical decline.
  • Uncontrollable crying or panic that doesn't subside — May require immediate crisis support.

Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you

Evidence & references

Acupuncture for depression has moderate evidence, with a 2018 Cochrane review concluding that it may reduce depression severity compared to usual care or sham acupuncture. However, the quality of evidence is limited by small sample sizes and risk of bias. Chinese herbal formulas such as Xiao Yao San and Chai Hu Shu Gan San have shown promise in animal studies and some clinical trials for emotional disorders, but high-quality RCTs are still relatively few.

Overall, TCM approaches for suppressed emotions appear safe and potentially effective, especially when tailored to the individual pattern. More rigorous, large-scale studies are needed to confirm these benefits and integrate them into mainstream mental health care.

Key clinical studies

Bottom line for you

This Cochrane systematic review assessed the effectiveness of acupuncture for treating depression. It found that acupuncture may be moderately effective in reducing the severity of depression compared to usual care or sham acupuncture, with a favorable safety profile.

Acupuncture for depression

Smith CA, Armour M, Lee MS, Wang LQ, Hay PJ. Acupuncture for depression. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2018, Issue 3. Art. No.: CD004046.

10.1002/14651858.CD004046.pub4
Bottom line for you

This animal study demonstrated that Chaihu-Shugan-San, a classic formula for Liver Qi stagnation, significantly reduced anxiety- and depression-like behaviors in a rat model of perimenopause. The findings support its traditional use for emotional distress related to Qi stagnation.

Chaihu-Shugan-San administration ameliorates perimenopausal anxiety and depression in rats

Chen S, et al. Chaihu-Shugan-San administration ameliorates perimenopausal anxiety and depression in rats. PLOS One 2013; 8(8): e72428.

10.1371/journal.pone.0072428
Bottom line for you

This meta-analysis pooled data from multiple RCTs and found that Xiao Yao San (Free and Easy Wanderer) significantly improved depressive symptoms compared to antidepressants, with fewer side effects. The formula's multi-target action on Liver Qi stagnation and Spleen deficiency was highlighted.

Xiao Yao San for depressive disorders: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials

Zhang Y, et al. Xiao Yao San for depressive disorders: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. Journal of Ethnopharmacology 2019; 243: 112083.

Classical text references

One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.

「妇人脏躁,喜悲伤欲哭,象如神灵所作,数欠伸,甘麦大枣汤主之。」

"In women with visceral agitation, there is a tendency to sadness and weeping as if possessed, with frequent yawning and stretching. Gan Mai Da Zao Tang governs. This describes a classic picture of emotional suppression and sudden release, treated by nourishing the Heart and calming the spirit."

Jin Gui Yao Lue (Essential Prescriptions from the Golden Cabinet)
Chapter 22: Women's Miscellaneous Diseases

Frequently asked questions

Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for suppressed emotions.

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