point locator

LR3 Taichong: Great Rushing Foot Point, Stress Context, and Safety

Understand LR3 Taichong before comparing stress, menstrual comfort, foot bedtime, or printable-card pages.

Content checked 2026-01-08Point-specific diagramEducation only

Quick Answer

LR3 Taichong, often translated as Great Rushing, is a Liver meridian point on the top of the foot. It appears in stress and menstrual-adjacent traditions, but tenderness between foot bones is not proof of correct location. Sharp pain, injury, swelling, numbness, wounds, pregnancy context, or unusual symptoms should stop the routine.

Safety Decision

Stop before pressure if the body area is injured, the symptom is severe or unusual, or qualified care should come first.

Continue only as a short, comfortable, education-only routine after reading the locator and stop signs.

Front-view human musculature medical illustration used as a licensed anatomy base.LR3 Taichong
foot locatorLR3 Taichong
top of footOn the top of the foot between the first and second metatarsal bones, away from sharp bone edges.Medical base: Musculature homme face by Servier Medical Art, licensed under CC BY 4.0.Human anatomy base: Servier Medical Art under CC BY 4.0, with attribution. Point marker and regional locator are educational, not clinical location guidance.

Before You Try This

This LR3 page is educational and not medical advice. It cannot assess stress, anxiety, menstrual symptoms, pregnancy, foot injury, numbness, wounds, or whether pressure is suitable.

Ask qualified care for intense distress, unsafe feelings, severe or unusual menstrual symptoms, pregnancy questions, foot wounds, numbness, swelling, injury, infection signs, medication questions, children, or chronic illness.

reader path

Is This the Right Page to Read Now?

Use this page when

Use this acupoint page, LR3 Taichong: Great Rushing Foot Point, Stress Context, and Safety, when the reader wants this exact point task: Understand LR3 Taichong before comparing stress, menstrual comfort, foot bedtime, or printable-card pages.

Skip this page when

This acupoint page fails if the Great Rushing on the top of foot in the Liver family locator becomes a treatment shortcut, a stronger-pressure target, or a replacement for the named safety stop signs.

Next step

Check foot comfort and the real scenario, then choose stress, menstrual comfort, foot bedtime, SP6, KD1, or Safety. Then choose read-only, one brief comfortable contact, a printable card, or a safety stop.

Diagram Notes

The marker highlights LR3 Taichong, Great Rushing, on a top of foot locator view; its landmark cue is "On the top of the foot between the first and second metatarsal bones, away from sharp bone edges." Use it with the safety cues rather than treating the marker as clinical precision.

Locator overlay for LR3 Taichong, Great Rushing, placed on CC BY 4.0 Servier Medical Art human anatomy base images and paired with a regional landmark view.

How to read the LR3 locator

  • Start with the broad area: top of foot.
  • Compare the written landmark: On the top of the foot between the first and second metatarsal bones, away from sharp bone edges.
  • Use the marker as orientation, then let comfort and the avoid painful pressure between foot bones caution decide whether to stop.

The Great Rushing locator uses a licensed educational anatomy base for the top of foot; it is not a clinical locator or personal safety clearance.

Why This Page Gets Extra Attention

Reader Scenario

A reader arrives at LR3 after seeing a short chart and needs to verify the Great Rushing landmark on the top of foot before doing anything physical.

Common Misread

Do not use LR3 as a stress and foot-based relaxation routines shortcut; the locator and caution still decide whether this stays reading-only.

Editorial Call

Great Rushing earns its length only when it separates top of foot touch, landmark confidence, stress and foot-based relaxation routines context, and the reason to stop.

Best Next Choice

Choose whether Great Rushing should stay read-only, allow one brief comfortable top of foot contact, move to the printable card, or open a safety page.

Use the Great Rushing locator as a neighborhood check for the top of foot; the written landmark still outranks the marker.

LR3 Taichong in plain English

LR3 Taichong, translated here as Great Rushing, is a named Liver point on the top of foot. LR3 needs a full page because short charts often make Great Rushing look like a button. A better article first asks what the name is, where the broad body cue belongs, why stress and foot-based relaxation routines appears in traditional reading, and what would make the page read-only. The point can help a reader orient themselves, but it cannot decide whether a personal symptom is safe to press.

Real visit before LR3

For Great Rushing, A reader opens LR3 from stress or menstrual comfort language and needs to avoid digging between foot bones. For LR3, the first useful answer in that situation is not a stronger routine. The first useful answer is whether the reader is trying to learn a point, compare a related point, save a card, or solve a health concern that this site should not answer. LR3 should slow the visit down: name the body area, read the caution, then choose whether the next click is a safety page, a related guide, or no pressure at all.

Broad location cue for the top of foot

For Great Rushing, Use the top-of-foot cue with comfort and skin checks; tenderness is not proof of correct location. A public locator is an orientation aid, not a clinical placement tool. The marker can help the reader find the neighborhood, but the written landmark, comfort check, skin check, and uncertainty rule stay in charge. If the reader is not confident about the top of foot cue, the page still has value as education. It should not become a reason to press harder, press longer, or search for tenderness as confirmation.

What Great Rushing can mean in traditional context

Great Rushing is useful as a name and memory cue because it connects LR3 to stress and foot-based relaxation routines in traditional acupoint language. That context should be read carefully. Traditional use explains why a point appears in a chart or guide; it does not prove that Great Rushing will create a result for a reader today. The safest public wording for LR3 keeps culture, naming, and practical reading separate from treatment claims.

Many readers reach LR3 because they have seen it near stress and foot-based relaxation routines. The page can help when the situation is mild, familiar, non-urgent, and not being used to delay care. It should refuse the job when symptoms are severe, sudden, persistent, worsening, unusual, or medically complicated. In those cases, the Great Rushing article should make leaving the point path feel like the correct next step, not like a failure to complete a routine.

common mistake: forcing LR3

For Great Rushing, Pressing between bones until the spot feels dramatic is the common mistake. A second misuse is assuming that a point feels more accurate when pressure produces a strong sensation. That is backwards for this site. Strong sensation, spreading pain, numbness, bruising, dizziness, irritated skin, or anxiety about the location are stop signs. The page should reward caution: release, reread, switch to safety, or stay with the name and culture context only.

Do not read LR3 as a pressure button

For Great Rushing, LR3 should not be read as a pressure button for stress and foot-based relaxation routines. It is a named point with a body cue, a traditional context, and a safety boundary. A button suggests that the reader can push and expect an answer. This article works differently: it asks whether the point name is understood, whether the top of foot is appropriate to touch, and whether the reader should leave the page for Safety instead.

How LR3 relates to other points

For Great Rushing, Compare LR3 with SP6, SP10, and KD1 as foot or lower-body neighbors rather than a stacked result plan. The related point codes in this reading path include LR3. For LR3, those relationships are not a ranked list and not a treatment protocol. They help the reader compare body areas, safety boundaries, and traditional contexts one page at a time. If a guide mentions LR3 with several points together, each point still needs its own locator and caution read before the reader treats the set as useful.

Acupressure boundary for LR3

For Great Rushing, Use light, comfortable contact between foot landmarks and stop if pain feels sharp or spreading. Gentle acupressure in this atlas means comfortable, short, easy-to-stop, non-invasive contact. It does not mean pressing through pain, making the point more intense, or using pressure to decide what a symptom means. If avoid painful pressure between foot bones applies, the page should move toward reading-only or qualified care. The best self-care sentence is often the one that gives the reader permission to stop.

Acupuncture, moxa, and cupping are separate questions

For Great Rushing, LR3 may appear in acupuncture, moxibustion, cupping, or other professional contexts, but this article does not teach those techniques. Acupuncture involves needles and qualified practice. Moxibustion involves heat, smoke, burn risk, and pregnancy caution. Cupping involves suction, skin, bruising, blood thinner, and injury caution. A public point page can explain that these contexts exist while still refusing home instructions or claims about what a professional session will do.

Sources and evidence limits for LR3

For Great Rushing, The sources behind this page support standardized names, code vocabulary, cautious location language, and general safety boundaries. They do not inspect the reader's body, confirm the exact spot online, or decide whether LR3 fits a private situation. A source note should make the sentence narrower, not bolder. If evidence is limited, the page should say less with more clarity rather than filling the gap with confident traditional phrasing.

What sources support beside the evidence note for LR3

Reader use: for LR3 Taichong, the recalled sources support the exact article identity at /acupoints/lr3-taichong/, the displayed point name, and the broad locator language used on this page rather than a generic chart. Reader use: for LR3 Taichong, the named sources support the page-specific boundary "This LR3 page is educational and not medical advice. It cannot assess stress, anxiety, menstrual symptoms, pregnancy,..." and the article value "A top-of-foot point article that explains why LR3 is a comparison point, not a pressure-harder target." without promising a result. Read these notes as traceability for this one point page; they cannot inspect the reader's skin, medication, pregnancy status, chronic illness, pain pattern, urgency, or whether pressure belongs today.

Name confusion to avoid with Great Rushing

Great Rushing can sound memorable, but the name is not the action. A reader should not use the English title, pinyin, or meridian label as if it explained a symptom. The name helps the reader recognize the right page and avoid mixing LR3 with a neighboring point. After recognition, the practical work returns to the same questions: is the top of foot cue clear, is the tissue healthy enough to touch, and is the reader using the page for learning rather than for personal clearance?

Neighboring-area check for top of foot

For Great Rushing, The top of foot can contain several landmarks, tendons, joints, vessels, sensitive skin areas, or nearby point names. The page should not train the reader to hunt for the most painful spot. Instead, it should make uncertainty visible. If a reader can only find LR3 by pressing around until something feels strong, the safer interpretation is that the locator is not settled. Staying with the article, opening the body map, or asking qualified context is better than turning the search into pressure.

Combination example without turning it into a formula

A common reader question is whether LR3 can be used together with other points. The useful answer is relational: maybe Great Rushing appears near Menstrual Comfort Guide, Foot Acupressure Before Bed, maybe it shares a meridian family, or maybe it sits in the same body region as another page. That does not make a formula. The LR3 article should explain why a pair is being compared, which point is the first page to read, and why a second point is optional rather than automatic.

If LR3 appears inside a wellness guide

When LR3 appears inside a wellness guide, the guide should send the reader back here for details instead of compressing the point into one line. The full Great Rushing page carries the location, avoid painful pressure between foot bones caution, common mistake, and professional-technique boundary. A short guide cannot safely carry all of that for LR3. This is why internal links matter: they slow the reader down at the exact moment a list of points might otherwise feel like instructions.

If the locator still feels uncertain

Locator uncertainty is not a minor inconvenience. For this atlas, uncertainty is a decision. If the reader cannot explain where LR3 sits on the top of foot without guessing, the point remains reading-only. The next useful move for Great Rushing may be comparing the culture page, body map, or meridian family, but it should not be pressing harder. The LR3 article should normalize that uncertainty because online diagrams can make body knowledge look more exact than it is.

If pressure hurts at LR3

Pain changes the LR3 page. Sharp pain, spreading discomfort, numbness, bruising, dizziness, skin irritation, swelling, or worry about the sensation should stop the visit. Do not move around Great Rushing and try again just to test whether the point was missed. Pain is not a calibration tool. The safer path is to release, read the pain safety page, and consider qualified care when discomfort is strong, lasting, unusual, or connected with a medical concern.

How the printable card should be used

The printable card for LR3 is a memory aid after the article, not a replacement for the article. It can carry the name, broad top of foot cue, gentle-pressure reminder, stop signs, and full-page link. The Great Rushing card should not be shared as a standalone tip, especially when the context has changed. If the reader is away from the full article and cannot remember the caution, the card should send them back to the page rather than forward into pressure.

How to read the Liver meridian label

LR3 belongs to the Liver meridian context on this site, but that label is map language. The Liver meridian label can help organize Great Rushing with nearby point names and show why those pages are grouped. It cannot say that a symptom belongs to the meridian or that another point in the same family should be substituted. For LR3, the meridian label should make browsing clearer, not more confident. When the reader wants action, the full point page and safety boundary must take over.

How to compare acupressure with professional modalities

A reader may see LR3 in acupuncture charts, moxibustion discussions, cupping descriptions, or clinic pages. That outside context does not change the boundary of the Great Rushing article. The public page can explain that professional contexts exist and that sources use the same point code, but it should not teach a method. Needles, heat, suction, strong stimulation, or treatment planning require qualified context. The self-acupressure reading here stays gentle, optional, and easy to stop.

Routine boundary for everyday use

Everyday use of LR3 should be small. The reader should know the point name, understand the broad top of foot cue, read the stop signs, choose one next page, and stop if the context changes. The Great Rushing article should not invite long routines or repeated attempts. A careful reader may decide that LR3 is useful only as vocabulary today. That is still a successful visit because it keeps the page aligned with education rather than overconfident self-care.

When to leave LR3 for qualified care

For Great Rushing, Leave the point path when symptoms are severe, sudden, persistent, worsening, unusual, frightening, pregnancy-related, medication-related, injury-related, or hard to interpret. Also leave when the body area has broken skin, infection, swelling, numbness, bruising, clot concern, or pain that does not feel ordinary. A qualified professional can consider personal context; this page cannot. The point article should make that boundary easy to accept before the reader tries to continue.

Final reader check for LR3

For Great Rushing, Before leaving this page, the reader should be able to answer four questions. What is LR3 called? Where is the broad top of foot cue? What is the specific caution: avoid painful pressure between foot bones? Which next page makes sense: a related guide, a safety answer, a culture note, a printable card, or no further action? If any answer feels vague, the right next step is not stronger pressure. It is slower reading or outside help.

How LR3 should answer "what is it for"

For Great Rushing, The honest answer is narrower than most short charts. LR3 is for learning how this named point is described, where the broad top of foot cue sits, and why it appears near stress and foot-based relaxation routines. It is not for deciding what a symptom means. If a reader asks what the point is "for," the page should answer with context, relationships, and limits. That gives the article substance without pretending to offer personal care.

How LR3 should answer "what can I do now"

For Great Rushing, The safest next action is a decision, not pressure. The reader can open a related guide, compare the Liver meridian context, save the card after reading the full article, or leave for Safety. Physical contact is only one possible outcome and only when the context is mild, the body area is healthy, and the reader can stop easily. If the reader is trying to solve a worrying symptom, the page should redirect instead of becoming more detailed.

How LR3 should handle stronger technique claims

Some sources and clinics may discuss LR3 in professional settings. This Great Rushing page should not translate that into public instructions. Stronger stimulation, needles, heat, suction, scraping, or treatment planning are not upgraded versions of the LR3 article; they are different contexts. The public page can say that professional use exists, but it should keep the reader with conservative education, comfort checks, and qualified-care boundaries.

How LR3 should keep relationships useful

Relationships around LR3 are useful when they make a reader more careful. A related point can show a different body area, a different caution, or a different traditional phrase. A related guide can explain why Great Rushing appears in a mild scenario. A safety page can stop the path. If the relationship only makes the reader want a bigger routine, the link is doing the wrong job. The LR3 article should make each related page earn a specific reason.

How LR3 should end the visit

The end of the LR3 article should feel calm and finite. The reader should not need to keep collecting pages after Great Rushing. They either understand the name, open one next page, save a card with full context, or stop because the situation belongs elsewhere. This is how a long point page avoids becoming filler: every extra paragraph helps the reader reduce uncertainty, not increase the number of things to try. The avoid painful pressure between foot bones boundary should stay visible even after the reader understands the point.

What this page cannot tell you

This page cannot tell whether LR3 is appropriate for a reader's current symptoms, medication, pregnancy status, chronic condition, injury, skin condition, or emergency concern. It cannot replace care, choose a clinical conclusion, or promise relief. For Great Rushing, it also cannot turn a diagram into exact placement. The page can still be valuable when it helps the reader understand what the point is, why it appears in related pages, and when not to continue.

Best next step after reading LR3

For Great Rushing, If the reader came for a name, open the culture note. If the reader came for a mild scenario, open only one related guide and keep the stop signs visible. If the reader wants an offline reminder, use the printable card only after this full page. If risk, pain, pregnancy, medication, severe symptoms, or uncertainty is present, open Safety instead. A good LR3 visit ends with one clear next page or a decision to stay reading-only.

Questions Readers Usually Ask

Is LR3 for stress?

LR3 appears in stress traditions, but this site treats it as a foot-based reading point. Intense distress, panic, unsafe feelings, chest symptoms, or breathing trouble belong outside point routines.

Should LR3 feel sore when I find it?

No. Soreness is not proof. Sharp pain, swelling, numbness, injury, wounds, or spreading sensation should stop pressure.

Can LR3 be paired with SP6?

They can be compared in menstrual-adjacent reading paths, but pregnancy, severe pain, unusual bleeding, pelvic symptoms, or uncertainty override the pair.

Sources Used

For LR3 Taichong: Great Rushing Foot Point, Stress Context, and Safety, these notes are tied to this page asset: A top-of-foot point article that explains why LR3 is a comparison point, not a pressure-harder target. They show which references support names, location terms, safety boundaries, cultural context, visual attribution, or content-check wording. They do not assess your symptoms, medication, pregnancy status, skin, or personal health situation for this page.

World Health OrganizationWHO Standard Acupuncture NomenclatureReader note: Used to keep point codes, pinyin naming, and meridian labels consistent. Not used as evidence that a point works for a health condition.Reader use: Used to keep point codes, pinyin naming, and meridian labels consistent. Not used as evidence that a point works for a health condition.World Health Organization Western Pacific RegionWHO Standard Acupuncture Point Locations in the Western Pacific RegionReader note: Used for broad location discipline and to avoid inventing locator certainty. Not used to make a public body-map marker clinically exact.Reader use: Used for broad location discipline and to avoid inventing locator certainty. Not used to make a public body-map marker clinically exact.NIH MedlinePlusFoot Injuries and DisordersReader note: Used for foot-skin and foot-sensation cautions on sole and top-of-foot point pages. Not used to assess a foot injury, neuropathy, wound, diabetes foot issue, or infection.Reader use: Used for foot-skin and foot-sensation cautions on sole and top-of-foot point pages. Not used to assess a foot injury, neuropathy, wound, diabetes foot issue, or infection.National Institute of Mental HealthI'm So Stressed Out! Fact SheetReader note: Used for conservative stress language, escalation boundaries, and the difference between ordinary stress and distress that needs support. Not used to claim acupressure treats anxiety, panic, trauma, depression, or unsafe thoughts.Reader use: Used for conservative stress language, escalation boundaries, and the difference between ordinary stress and distress that needs support. Not used to claim acupressure treats anxiety, panic, trauma, depression, or unsafe thoughts.NCCIHTraditional Chinese Medicine: What You Need To KnowReader note: Used for broad traditional-context language and safety-first limits around TCM concepts. Not used to validate a cultural phrase as a personal health effect.Reader use: Used for broad traditional-context language and safety-first limits around TCM concepts. Not used to validate a cultural phrase as a personal health effect.Standardization Administration of ChinaGB/T 12346-2021 Nomenclature and Location of Meridian PointsReader note: this source supports standardized point names, codes, and location vocabulary.Reader use: check standardized point codes, Chinese names, and location vocabulary for LR3 Taichong; do not treat naming precision as personal clearance.World Health OrganizationWHO Standard Acupuncture NomenclatureReader note: this source helps keep acupoint codes and English naming consistent across pages.Reader use: compare LR3 Taichong with international acupoint code and naming conventions, not with symptom advice.NCCIHAcupuncture: Effectiveness and SafetyReader note: this source supports cautious evidence wording and the education-only boundary.Reader use: understand cautious evidence, safety limits, and the education-only boundary around Liver naming, top of foot location cues, and stress and foot-based relaxation routines.Servier Medical ArtServier Medical Art human anatomy imagesReader note: this source provides the licensed human-body base images under CC BY 4.0 attribution.Reader use: recognize LR3 Taichong's licensed human-body base as a visual orientation aid, not clinical point placement.