printable
TE5 Waiguan Printable Card | Outer Pass Safety Cue
Use a printable TE5 card as a memory aid after reading the full Waiguan point page and safety boundary.
Quick Answer
The TE5 Waiguan (Outer Pass) printable card is not a standalone instruction. It keeps the code, name, outer forearm cue, and stop signs visible, then sends the reader back to the full article.
Before You Try This
This printable page is educational and not medical advice. It cannot assess hand, wrist, forearm, numbness, bruising, or injury, skin, medication, pregnancy, injury, or whether pressure is suitable.
Ask qualified care for personal symptoms, pregnancy, medication questions, children, chronic illness, severe or persistent symptoms, injury, or uncertainty.
Is This the Right Page to Read Now?
Use TE5 Waiguan Printable Card | Outer Pass Safety Cue as a compact memory card only after the full page task is clear for Outer Pass on the outer forearm in the San Jiao family: Use a printable TE5 card as a memory aid after reading the full Waiguan point page and safety boundary.
TE5 Waiguan Printable Card | Outer Pass Safety Cue fails if the outer forearm card becomes a standalone pressure instruction separated from the complete point and safety pages.
Print or save the card only after the full TE5 page remains appropriate; use Safety when the context is personal, risky, or unclear. Keep the Outer Pass card only as a reminder, not as permission to press.
Memory card
TE5 Waiguan (Outer Pass)
TE5
Carry this TE5 card only as a reminder for Outer Pass after the full Waiguan page has been read.
- Point
- TE5
- Location Cue
- Use this only as a memory cue for TE5 Waiguan, Outer Pass, on the outer forearm; read the full page before relying on body landmarks.
- Pressure Cue
- For Outer Pass on the outer forearm, use comfortable thumb or fingertip pressure for 30 to 60 seconds, then release and reassess.
Stop Signs
- use mild pressure between forearm bones
- For Outer Pass, stop for broken, irritated, swollen, numb, bruised, infected, or unusually painful skin around the outer forearm.
- For Outer Pass at the outer forearm, stop and seek qualified care for severe, sudden, persistent, worsening, or unusual symptoms before using this TE5 card.
TE5 printable card visual check
- Reconnect the card to the outer forearm locator on the full TE5 Waiguan page before saving it.
- Compare the San Jiao point cue with the written landmark, pressure limit, and stop signs from the full page.
- Use the card for wrist, travel, and channel-pairing traditions memory only; if the arm body cue raises doubt, return to the full page or a safety page.
TE5 Waiguan (Outer Pass) Printable Acupressure Card is a portable reminder, not a standalone clinical locator or permission to press.
Why This Page Gets Extra Attention
Reader Scenario
A reader saves the TE5 Outer Pass card on a phone and later needs the outer forearm stop signs to travel with the short cue.
Common Misread
Do not share the TE5 card as a quick tip without the full-page link and stop signs.
Editorial Call
The TE5 Outer Pass card has value only if the outer forearm cue for wrist, travel, and channel-pairing traditions behaves like a portable checklist, not like a compressed instruction page.
Best Next Choice
Choose whether the Outer Pass card is safe to save today or whether the full TE5 page needs to stay open.
Use the TE5 card layout to keep Outer Pass location, pressure, stop signs, and the full page link visible together.
TE5 Waiguan pocket cue for outer forearm
The card gives the reader a small reference for TE5 Waiguan, Outer Pass, and the broad outer forearm cue. It exists because a reader may want a quick reminder after reading the long point article. It does not replace the article, the diagram explanation, or the safety page.
Read the Waiguan article before carrying the card
The card should be treated like a bookmark. Before it is printed or saved, the reader should understand the full TE5 location, the comfort rule, the warning to use mild pressure between forearm bones, and the reason related pages appear. A short card cannot hold that judgment.
Use the Waiguan card for Outer Pass comparison
For Outer Pass on the outer forearm, it can sit beside Travel Acupressure Routine as a memory card only after that guide stays mild and low-risk. The best use is a desk, travel, study, or personal note setting where the reader wants to remember a name and a stop sign. It is not a recipe, dose, point-combination plan, or safety shortcut.
Keep TE5 read-only for forearm pain
Do not use the Outer Pass card to work around wrist, travel, and channel-pairing traditions, outer forearm discomfort, pain, numbness, bruising, swelling, wounds, pregnancy, medication questions, severe symptoms, children, chronic illness, or uncertainty. In those cases the successful outcome is to leave the card alone and use Safety or qualified care.
Return from the card to TE5 Waiguan
Return to the full TE5 article for Outer Pass location and limits, the Waiguan name page for language context, safe pressure for comfort rules, or the relevant Safety page when the outer forearm situation is no longer ordinary.
Why this TE5 Waiguan Printable Card | Outer Pass Safety Cue deserves its own page
TE5 Waiguan Printable Card | Outer Pass Safety Cue deserves its own page because TE5 Waiguan pocket cue for outer forearm may be saved, printed, or seen later without the full article nearby. For this card, the different job is narrow: keep TE5 Waiguan, one broad cue, the pressure limit, stop signs, and a return path to Safety Boundary together so a reader does not treat a short card as a standalone routine.
Questions Readers Usually Ask
Can I use the Outer Pass card without the TE5 article?
No. The Outer Pass card is a memory aid after the full TE5 page; it cannot carry the full outer forearm locator, caution, and source limits alone.
What stop signs belong on the Outer Pass card?
For Outer Pass, keep outer-forearm pain, numbness, travel symptom severity, dizziness, pregnancy, wrist skin issues, and uncertainty visible.
Should I combine the Outer Pass card with other cards?
Do not pair the Outer Pass card with PC6 or travel cards just because both are forearm pages. Reopen TE5 and the other full article, then stop for dizziness, pregnancy, or numbness.
Sources Used
For TE5 Waiguan Printable Card | Outer Pass Safety Cue, these notes are tied to this page asset: A Outer Pass printable card article for the outer forearm cue that explains why this specific card is useful, what it cannot do alone, and which full page or safety page controls the decision. 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.

