This website concerns a genuine, integrative type of medicine whose benefits you can enjoy. These forms of treatments, Traditional Chinese Medicine or TCM as it is known, have comprised mainstream medicine in China for five thousand years. It is important to note that these ancient healing arts that have served up to one-fourth of the world's population for millennia, are now available in the west where, in fact, they have proved an astounding "match" for many of our "modern" ailments and stresses.
Let me explain these treatments in more detail and illustrate what I can offer. Acupuncture and moxibustion, two of the oldest therapeutic medical methods commonly used in China, Japan, Korea, and other Asian countries, are ancient therapeutic arts backed up by 5,000 years of history.
Having originated in China, they began to become better known in the United States in 1971, when New York Times columnist James Reston reported in some detail about how doctors in China had used needles to ease his abdominal pain during and after emergency surgery.
Let me explain these treatments in more detail and illustrate what I can offer. Acupuncture and moxibustion, two of the oldest therapeutic medical methods commonly used in China, Japan, Korea, and other Asian countries, are ancient therapeutic arts backed up by 5,000 years of history.
Having originated in China, they began to become better known in the United States in 1971, when New York Times columnist James Reston reported in some detail about how doctors in China had used needles to ease his abdominal pain during and after emergency surgery.
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Qi in Chinese is literally "air" or "gas"; in the broad sense it means life force, as in life energy.
The "way", or "Dao", the form, of it is such that one can definitely feel but not see it.
An image applicable here is that indeed you see the leaves of trees being moved by the breeze, and you can also feel the breeze, yet you can not directly perceive the breeze with your eyes, with your sense of sight.
The wind energy is there to make the leaves move, and your life energy is there to enliven you and to make your body function as needed.
The "way", or "Dao", the form, of it is such that one can definitely feel but not see it.
An image applicable here is that indeed you see the leaves of trees being moved by the breeze, and you can also feel the breeze, yet you can not directly perceive the breeze with your eyes, with your sense of sight.
The wind energy is there to make the leaves move, and your life energy is there to enliven you and to make your body function as needed.
Japanese Style: Light, skin-layer shallow needle insertion, specializing in methods of "five-element diagnosis" and abdominal and channel palpation.
Chinese Style: Both light and deep muscle-layer insertion, using TCM (pulse tongue and pattern) diagnosis, and body, skull, and micro-system acupuncture (of the ear, skull, face, hands and feet).
Electro-Acupuncture: In this modality mild electrical pulses are sent through the needles, with the electronic stimulating machine providing different rhythms and degrees of intensity to respond to different conditions.
Chinese Style: Both light and deep muscle-layer insertion, using TCM (pulse tongue and pattern) diagnosis, and body, skull, and micro-system acupuncture (of the ear, skull, face, hands and feet).
Electro-Acupuncture: In this modality mild electrical pulses are sent through the needles, with the electronic stimulating machine providing different rhythms and degrees of intensity to respond to different conditions.
A mother is a garden.
When we garden with flowers, plants and vegetables, the richness and Ph of the soil, the right climate for the specific species, the wind and bees transporting the pollen, the plants and the water they need to grow, the enrichment by fertilization, and the removal of weeds that can steal nourishment - all these processes have their correspondences in the processes of human reproduction (the gardening of mothers) - correspondences, namely, in the mothers' abundance of qi, blood and other body fluids, balanced hormones, functioning nervous systems, optimal ranges of Ph and temperature, and finally, pure, clean, detoxified bodies.
When we garden with flowers, plants and vegetables, the richness and Ph of the soil, the right climate for the specific species, the wind and bees transporting the pollen, the plants and the water they need to grow, the enrichment by fertilization, and the removal of weeds that can steal nourishment - all these processes have their correspondences in the processes of human reproduction (the gardening of mothers) - correspondences, namely, in the mothers' abundance of qi, blood and other body fluids, balanced hormones, functioning nervous systems, optimal ranges of Ph and temperature, and finally, pure, clean, detoxified bodies.
According to recent statistics, more than one-third of Americans suffer from some kind of chronic pain - pain which can prevent the body from healing and from effectively fighting disease and which may thereby diminish the overall quality of life.
At the same time, medication often prescribed for pain may be extremely costly and involve severe side effects.
Yet in fact pain can be effectively treated and managed: acupuncture, recognized by the World Health Organization for its ability to treat chronic illness and manage pain, is very effective in dealing with musculo-skeletal and neurologic pain such as: arthritis, neuralgia, sciatica, back pain, stiff neck, tendonitis, headache and migraine, as well as, gastrointestinal and gynecological pain.
At the same time, medication often prescribed for pain may be extremely costly and involve severe side effects.
Yet in fact pain can be effectively treated and managed: acupuncture, recognized by the World Health Organization for its ability to treat chronic illness and manage pain, is very effective in dealing with musculo-skeletal and neurologic pain such as: arthritis, neuralgia, sciatica, back pain, stiff neck, tendonitis, headache and migraine, as well as, gastrointestinal and gynecological pain.
In 1971, when New York Times columnist James Reston reported in some detail about how doctors in China had used needles to ease his abdominal pain during and after emergency surgery.
As a health care professional, who has attended an accredited university or college, and has earned a Master's Degree in TCM.
Has completed at least 3000 hours of classroom studies, including intensive courses in the theory and practice of both (Western) biomedicine and Oriental medicine, and at least 250 to 300 clinical applications during an extended internship.
As a health care professional, who has attended an accredited university or college, and has earned a Master's Degree in TCM.
Has completed at least 3000 hours of classroom studies, including intensive courses in the theory and practice of both (Western) biomedicine and Oriental medicine, and at least 250 to 300 clinical applications during an extended internship.
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