Qi Node 5: 清明 Qīngmíng (Clear and Bright)
Clarity, Renewal, and the Brightness of Spring
From the equality of Yin and Yang during the previous Spring Equinox qi node, now Yang qi emerges as a pure and glowing pristine version of itself, fully reborn into all its active and moving glory. The lengthening days are very obvious now and there is more energy and motivation to spur new growth and the coming abundance of Summer. Yang is fully leading the calendar now. From this node until Summer Solstice, Yin will continue to fade into the background, which should remind us to be mindful of our Yin resources as they are not as abundant through the warm and energetic months of late Spring and Summer.
Classical painting of Chinese people participating in a QingMing ancestor ritual
Qīngmíng, the fifth of Spring's six Qi Nodes, arrives in early April. The name translates as "clear and bright," and it marks the point at which Spring becomes fully itself. The variable weather of March settles into more reliable warmth. The frost dates pass in most temperate regions. Trees that had been budding through Chūnfēn now have visible leaves. Grasses green out across fields and lawns. The air carries fewer particulates than at any other point in the year, which is part of where the "clear" in the node's name comes from: this is genuinely the clearest time in the atmospheric calendar, the result of spring rains washing the air and the absence of summer heat to lift dust and pollen into the lower atmosphere.
In the body, the shift is registered as more sustained energy, longer effective working hours in daylight, and the disappearance of the seasonal-affective heaviness that lingers through the early Spring nodes. Liver qì, which has been the dominant clinical concern through Lìchūn, Yǔshuǐ, and Jīngzhé, is now flowing with less resistance for most patients. The people who still struggle with Liver qì constraint at this point in the year tend to have deeper underlying patterns that warrant clinical attention rather than seasonal adjustment alone.
The festival and its meaning
Qīngmíng is one of the few solar terms that doubles as a major cultural festival in China and across the Chinese diaspora. The festival shares the name of the node and falls within its window, typically on April 4th or 5th. It is one of two major festivals organized around the relationship between the living and the dead, and the rites are specific: families visit ancestral graves, sweep them clean of winter debris, lay fresh flowers, burn incense, and tell stories of the people buried there.
The cosmological logic of the festival is worth understanding because it clarifies something about the season as a whole. The dead belong to Yīn. The living belong to Yáng. The Qīngmíng festival is structured as a formal expression of gratitude from the Yáng (living) to the Yīn (dead) for having carried them through Winter, when Yīn was dominant and the living depended on the slow accumulated wisdom and resource that the dead represent. The same families that sweep graves in the morning typically spend the afternoon flying kites, planting seeds, and gathering outside with the living. The festival's structure carries both orientations at once: thanking what has passed, and turning toward what is starting.
This dual orientation is the conceptual core of the node. Qīngmíng asks for both backward and forward attention. The reflection that was done in deep winter is honored. The projects that have been forming through early Spring are now actually started. Neither orientation crowds out the other.
Time to actually begin
If the previous Qi Nodes have been the season of planning, Qīngmíng is the node where the planning meets execution. Frost dates have passed in most regions, the soil is warm enough for direct planting, the days are long enough to support sustained work, and Yáng qì is mature enough to drive activity without quickly depleting. This is the window for actually putting plants in the ground that you have been preparing for since February, breaking ground on the renovation, starting the training program for the summer race, launching the first version of the new product, or making the first real moves on the project that has been waiting all winter.
The clinical observation worth holding alongside this enthusiasm is that the warm seasons reward steady escalation rather than abrupt onset. Patients who go from sedentary winter into full-intensity training in April tend to produce injuries that take weeks to recover from. The same is true for projects: starting too many things at once, or starting a single thing at full intensity, tends to produce burnout by late May. The work of this node is to begin in earnest while leaving room for the gradual increase that the next three months are going to ask for.
Living with Qīngmíng
Eat with the season
The dietary shift toward lighter foods that began at Yǔshuǐ has now largely completed. Heavy winter foods are out of rotation. Fresh seasonal vegetables are widely available again, and a substantial portion of the plate can be the greens, herbs, and early spring vegetables that the season produces: spinach, kale, chard, dandelion greens, watercress, arugula, asparagus, peas, scallions, fresh herbs.
Bitter and slightly sour flavors support Liver function in a real and specific way. Bitter greens have measurable effects on bile production and digestion. A small amount of vinegar or lemon in salad dressings, or a few thin slices of citrus added to water, gently supports the same function. Light herbal teas like mint, chrysanthemum, or chen pí 陳皮 (aged citrus peel) suit the season and the body's adjustments to it.
Cold and raw foods can enter the rotation more freely than at previous nodes, though iced drinks and very large salads should still be modest in frequency. Lìxià in early May is when the body is fully ready for cooler foods.
Move with the season
This is the node where the body is genuinely ready for dynamic movement. Running, cycling, hiking, swimming, and resistance training all suit this moment. The lengthening daylight supports longer sessions, and the warmer weather makes outdoor exercise comfortable.
The pacing advice is to build gradually. The first three to four weeks of more vigorous activity should be moderate in intensity, with attention to sleep, hydration, and recovery. By the time Lìxià arrives in early May, the body should be ready for the full summer intensity, but Qīngmíng itself is the ramp, not the destination.
Time outdoors is the seasonal practice. A daily walk or run in fresh air, gardening, hiking on weekends, sitting outside during meals when the weather allows. The body responds to natural light and outdoor air in ways that indoor exercise cannot fully replicate, and this is the window of the year where outdoor time is most easily available.
Rest with the season
Sleep continues to shorten naturally with the lengthening days, and most people will find themselves comfortable with seven to eight hours rather than the eight to nine that suited Winter. The transitions into and out of sleep matter more than total duration. A consistent bedtime within a thirty-minute window, and a consistent wake time within a similar window, supports the steady Yáng activity that the season is calling for.
Wind protection is no longer the daily concern it was through Yǔshuǐ and Jīngzhé. The neck and lower back can come uncovered for most of the day. Evenings can still cool quickly, so a light layer for outdoor activities after sunset is still worth having available.
Tend your Liver
This is the cultivation practice specific to Spring, and Qīngmíng is the node where it takes on its mature form. The Liver governs the smooth flow of qì and the capacity to plan and direct. With Yáng now fully established, the cultivation work is to give the Liver clear direction and steady use without overloading it.
The discipline at this node is modulation. The instinct after a long Winter and an uncertain early Spring is to grab everything that has been waiting and pursue it all at once. The seasonal reality is that healthy activity moves in gradual increases and decreases across the year, peaking at the Summer solstice in June and tapering toward Autumn. Patients who treat April as the year's full-throttle moment tend to be depleted by July. Patients who treat April as the early portion of a long crescendo arrive at the solstice with capacity intact and finish summer well.
This applies practically to everything from exercise intensity to work hours to social commitments. Start the projects. Begin the training. Plant the garden. And let the next three months of escalation happen at the pace the seasons are actually moving, rather than trying to compress them all into April.
Qīngmíng sits late in Spring's six Qi Nodes. Gǔyǔ, the final node of Spring, arrives in mid-to-late April and brings the year's most reliable rain. The pace and direction established now is what carries the body into early Summer with the energy and clarity that the warmer seasons are going to require.