There’s a reason autumn is the season of letting go. Trees shed their leaves, the air turns crisp and thin, and something in us feels the pull to withdraw, reflect, and process what the year has brought. In Chinese medicine, this is the season of the Lungs — and the Lungs are paired with the emotion of grief. The connection between the two is not poetic metaphor. It’s one of the most directly observable links in the entire system.
Why the Lungs Own Autumn
In the Five Elements framework, the Lungs belong to Metal. Metal is the energy of refinement, of stripping away what’s no longer needed — exactly what nature does in autumn. Leaves dry and fall, fruit withers, and the world contracts toward its essential structure. Your body mirrors this contraction. Lung energy peaks in autumn, and the Lungs are responsible for taking in the new (through breath) and releasing the old (through exhalation and, paired with the Large Intestine, through elimination).
This is the deep insight of the Lung–Large Intestine pair: both organs are about exchange — what comes in and what goes out. When this rhythm is healthy, you breathe freely, let go of what no longer serves you, and move forward cleanly. When it’s stuck — from unprocessed grief, shallow breathing, or holding on too tightly — the signs appear.

The Grief–Lung Connection
Each organ in Chinese medicine holds a primary emotion, and the Lungs hold grief. The relationship runs both ways:
- Lungs out of balance → grief surfaces. When Lung energy is weak or blocked, you may feel inexplicably sad, weepy, or heavy in the chest.
- Unprocessed grief → weakens the Lungs. Holding onto old losses, refusing to mourn, or staying stuck in sadness can actually deplete Lung energy over time.
This is why autumn so often brings up old losses. The season itself resonates with the Lung frequency, and anything unprocessed rises to the surface. The Chinese medical view isn’t to suppress this — it’s to let it move through. Crying, deep breathing, time in crisp air, and honest reflection are all Lung medicine in autumn.
In Chinese medicine, grief isn’t a problem to fix. It’s a process to complete. The Lungs are where that completion happens.
Signs Your Lung Energy Needs Support
- Frequent colds, coughs, or respiratory issues, especially in autumn and winter
- Shallow breathing or a feeling you can’t get a full breath
- Skin that’s dry, flaky, or easily irritated (the Lungs govern the skin)
- A tendency to catch every bug going around the office
- Chronic sadness, weepiness, or a heavy feeling in the chest
- Constipation or difficulty “letting go” in life, not just digestion
- Fatigue that worsens in the afternoon (3–5 PM is the Lung’s low tide on the body clock — wait, correction: that’s its peak)
A note on that last point: 3 AM to 5 AM is the Lung’s peak time on the Chinese medicine body clock. Waking during this window — especially with sadness, a heavy chest, or restless thoughts — is a classic sign of Lung imbalance, often tied to unprocessed grief.
How to Support Your Lungs in Autumn
1. Breathe Deeply and Often
The most direct Lung practice is also the simplest: breathe. Most of us breathe shallowly from the chest all day. A few minutes of slow, deep abdominal breathing — in through the nose, out through the mouth, letting the belly rise and fall — directly strengthens Lung energy. This is why qigong, tai chi, and yoga all emphasize the breath. It’s not mysticism; it’s the Lungs doing their job properly.
2. Eat Pungent and White Foods
The Lungs’ taste is pungent, and their color is white. Traditional autumn foods include ginger, garlic, onion, mustard, radish, pear, white fungus, lotus root, and almonds. Pungent flavors gently disperse and support Lung function, while white, moist foods protect the Lung’s delicate mucous membranes from autumn dryness. A classic autumn remedy is steamed pear with rock sugar — soothing for a dry throat or lingering cough.
3. Let Grief Move
If grief is present, don’t push it down. Crying is one of the Lungs’ natural release mechanisms — physically, it deepens the breath and moves stuck energy. Journaling, walking in nature, talking with someone you trust, or simply sitting quietly with what you feel are all Lung-supportive. The goal isn’t to “get over it” but to let it pass through completely.
4. Protect Against Wind and Cold
The classical Chinese view is that “wind” carries illness into the body through the back of the neck, and the Lungs are the first internal organ it reaches. This is why a scarf matters in autumn even when the day feels mild. Protecting the neck and upper back from wind and sudden chill is one of the oldest, simplest cold-prevention practices in Chinese medicine.
5. Practice Letting Go
Autumn is the season to release what no longer serves you — physically, mentally, and emotionally. Declutter a room. End a commitment that’s run its course. Forgive an old grievance. Have the difficult conversation. The Lung’s deepest function is release, and aligning your life with that rhythm in autumn makes the letting go easier.
A Simple Autumn Lung Practice
| Practice | Why It Supports the Lungs |
|---|---|
| 5 minutes of deep abdominal breathing each morning | Directly strengthens Lung energy and function |
| Steamed pear with rock sugar for a dry throat | Classic remedy to moisten the Lungs |
| Warm scarf around the neck outdoors | Protects the Lung’s entry point from wind |
| Pungent foods: ginger, radish, garlic | Supports the Lung’s dispersing function |
| Time to process grief honestly | Completes the Lung’s emotional work |
Common Questions
Why do I always get sick in autumn?
Autumn is the season when Lung energy is most active but also most exposed. The transition from warm to cold, the dry air, and the wind all stress the Lungs. Combine that with back-to-school and back-to-work intensity, and the Lungs — your first line of defense — get overwhelmed. Warming food, a scarf, and enough sleep make a real difference.
Why do I wake at 3–5 AM in autumn?
That’s the Lung’s peak time on the Chinese medicine body clock. Waking then — especially with sadness, chest tightness, or circling thoughts — often points to Lung imbalance, frequently tied to unprocessed grief. Deep breathing, honest emotional processing, and consistent sleep routines usually ease it.
Is the Lung–grief link scientific?
Not in the literal organ sense, but the observable pattern is real. Grief visibly affects breathing — people hold their breath, sigh, or breathe shallowly when sad. Chronic grief also correlates with weaker immune function and more respiratory illness. Chinese medicine described this relationship thousands of years before we had the vocabulary for “the physiology of emotion.”
The bottom line: Autumn is the Lungs’ season, and the Lungs are the organ most tied to grief, release, and the rhythm of letting go. Breathe deeply, eat pungent and moist foods, protect yourself from wind, and — most importantly — let grief move through you rather than getting stuck. The trees know how to do this. So, when allowed, does your body.
This article reflects traditional Chinese wellness perspectives and is for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

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