Archive for the ‘Portland Acupuncture’ Category

Summer – Chinese Medicine is Cool

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

In Chinese Medicine, the summertime is a time for maximum activity and symbolizes the greatest yang energy.

It is a time of heat, being outgoing and getting out into nature and enjoying the feeling of the Sun on our bodies.  As a season, it is time to nourish and pacify the spirit while finding joy in our movement outdoors on those hot summer days and warm summer nights.

Cool Down with Chinese Medicine

Cool Down with Chinese Medicine


Fire is the element that is engaged with Summertime.  This element of fire corresponds to the heart and small intestine organs and affects them directly.  The South is the direction, the color red, feeling happiness and joy, the sound of laughter, bitterness as its taste and the smell of burning things.  Fire, as an element controls the blood vessels and we see its influence on the body in the face and complexion.


Signs that the fire element is in balance include a strong and healthy heart, a calm mind and the ability to sleep soundly. When the fire element is imbalanced, we may either lack joy (depression) or have an excess of joy (mania). Indicators of an imbalance in the fire element also include agitation, nervousness, heartburn, and insomnia.

To have this element in balance we must have a healthy heart, a calm mind and we sleep soundly without excessive dreaming.  When this balance is not maintained, we may lack joy, thus having depression or have an excess of joy which results in a manic state of being.  Being fire, signs of burning are also an indicator of imbalance such as heartburn, agitation and nervousness.

For those of you who like to get treatment quarterly to maintain balance in your life, now is the time to get your summer treatment.  Give a call today!

You are Beautiful: Body Image and Yoga

Friday, June 11th, 2010

Here’s a great short essay on how yoga helps change perceptions of body image.

You are beautiful!

http://www.elephantjournal.com/2010/06/yoga-feminism-melanie-klein/

Gazing up at my legs, glistening with sweat in shoulder-stand, I realized that I wasn’t searching for signs of “imperfection” or scrutinizing my body with the negative self-talk that too many of us have with ourselves on a daily basis—the abusive dialogue I had with myself most of my life.

For the first time I could remember since early childhood, I wasn’t critical of myself.

I wasn’t looking for parts of my body to control and change.

Thanks Melanie!

Acupuncture on the Today Show

Monday, May 24th, 2010

Check out this great bit on the Today show about acupuncture:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/37166304#37166304

Help your Body Adjust to SPRING!

Monday, March 29th, 2010

The wood element rules spring and is related to the Liver which is our organ corresponding to regeneration and new life.

This organ filters the blood at over a liter every minute.  In Chinese Medicine, the Liver corresponds with the abilities of detoxifying, revitalizing and nourishing the blood.  Blood is also stored in the Liver.  Western Medicine has the Liver doing essential tasks such as assisting in the release of stored sugar and creating proteins to help our body grow and repair tissues.

Seasonal Health: Spring!
Seasonal Health: Spring!

Liver Qi Stagnation

In Chinese medicine the smooth flow of Qi in the liver is what allows us to have smooth emotions.  Feelings such as anger, irritability and frustration are all signs of dysfunction of Liver Qi.  We call this, Liver Qi Stagnation and in our fast paced, high stress world of today, it is one of the most common problems we see in the acupuncture office.

Points that help the Liver function better

One of the most popular treatments for stress, anger, frustration and other binding emotions is known as the Four Gates.  These four points connect us through our hands with the heavens and through our feet with the earth.  It is a very moving, yet grounding treatment.  They consist of four points, done on both the right and left side of the body,  acupuncture points Liver 3 (Taichong) and Large Intestine 4 (Hegu).

Large Intestine 4 is located on the padded area of your hand between the thumb and index finger, between the first and second metacarpal bones. Massage this point with your thumb on both hands for approximately 30 seconds.

Acupressure massage on Hegu
Acupressure massage on Hegu

Liver 3 is located in a hollow on the top of your foot below the gap between your big toe and the next toe, between the 1st and 2nd metatarsal bones. To stimulate this point, place your right heel in the juncture between the bones that attach to the large and second toes and gently knead the point for approximately thirty seconds. Then switch sides to stimulate Lv 3 on your other foot.

Liver Qi Stagnation Signs and Symptoms

Here are some of the symptoms commonly associated with Liver Qi stagnation:

  • Pain or discomfort anywhere along the sides of the body
  • Depression and mood swings
  • Sighing or hiccups
  • Inappropriate anger and frustration
  • Sensation of a lump in throat and having a hard time swallowing
  • Stomachache that worsens with anger
  • PMS with irritability or swollen breasts
  • Irregular or painful periods
  • Poor appetite
  • Churning sensation in stomach

Foods Used For Liver Qi Stagnation

These are just some of the foods that are believed to help Liver Qi stagnation:

  • Milk Thistle Tea
  • Garlic
  • Turmeric
  • Cherries
  • Chicken
  • Tofu
  • Mustard seed
  • Squash
  • Sweet potato
  • Red and black dates
  • Caraway seed
  • Spearmint
  • Oregano
  • Red bean
  • Sweet basil
  • Saffron

Acupuncturists treating pain and PTSD in Haiti!

Friday, February 12th, 2010

The United States group, Acupuncturists without Borders shipped out to Haiti to help out with the relief effort there, what an amazing video it is!

YouTube Preview Image

From their website:

Acupuncturists Without Borders (AWB) provides immediate disaster relief and recovery to communities that are in crisis resulting from disaster or human conflict. AWB is committed to creating alliances with local community based organizations and treating all who have been affected – survivors, first responders, emergency personnel and other care providers.

AWB uses community-style acupuncture to provide caring, compassionate treatment in a group setting. This model of treatment allows everyone treated to experience relief from stress and trauma together. When the entire group feels calm and quiet, hope, determination and resiliency rises powerfully within it.

I have made a donation to their great work, if you like acupuncture and support the work of these great folks, please consider making a donation to them today, you can do so here.

Happy Chinese New Year!

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

February 14th is the first day of the lunar year in the Chinese Calendar. We move from celebrating the year of the Earth Ox to celebrating the year of the Metal Tiger.

Metal Tiger for Chinese New Year

Metal Tiger for Chinese New Year

The Metal element gives the Tiger its sharpness in action and speed of thought. Tigers born in the Metal year like to stand out in a crowd. With an inspiring assertiveness and competitive demeanor, they determine their goals and then do anything necessary to achieve them. This good-looking character sometimes suffers from mood swings and temper tantrums. The Tiger can be known to jump to conclusions or to act too quickly without weighing the options or understanding the consequences. This is a flaw Tigers must learn to curb.

They can be stubborn, narrow-minded, materialistic, rigid and demanding.

People born in this sign will show these traits, but they also describe the influences we will live under for the next year.

Tradition

It is traditional that the New Year be celebrated with a lot of the color red. Lamps, costumes and other items will be flashed red today. The deities of the Heaven and the Earth will be welcomed, after cleaning the house and it is traditional to exchange gifts in the form of a red envelope containing money, generally in amounts of even numbers and giving the amount of 8 is considered particularly auspicious because the word for eight is a homophone for “wealth”.

Red Lanterns to celebrate Chinese New Year

Red Lanterns to celebrate Chinese New Year

Fireworks and flowers are also tradition at the celebrations which involve dancing, singing and parades.

The first fourteen days of the New Year are celebrated with various festivities and duties, and many households observe these.

For many of you, Traditional Chinese Medicine is mainly a way to stay healthy by using natural means. It does however, have a deep history of numerology, astrology and philosophy behind it. I’m hoping that you will join me in honoring the tradition I’ve chosen to study and enjoy seeing those around you celebrate the beginning of what I hope will be a highly productive and prosperous year for all of us!

Do you seek health or avoid sickness?

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010
[New to acupuncture?  Get to know its benefits by reading 10 Things about Acupuncture that work.]

To be, or not to be…. Well.

What are your days like this winter?  Do you get up each day, tired and wondering if today you are going to get the office plague, have you spent the entire (albeit beautiful) Portland rainy winter hoping you don’t get H1N1?  Do you spend a good portion of your time working out various ways to avoid being ill and tired, avoiding digestive problems and other maladies?  How many of these problems do you have on a regular basis?

Here’s the real question:

How many of these health problems give you that niggly, squicky feeling in your head that there’s really something more serious going on?

Do you move toward health or away from illness?

Avoiding sickness holds a certain mindset.  It means expecting the illness and seeking only to move away from the pain and suffering it causes you. We continually worry that we may become sick and this worry undermines our immune systems.  We have to take time off of work to make emergency trips to our physician so that they can provide us with medications to alleviate our pain and problems, which again, undermine our purposes and goals.  Lost time at work and not being at our best, not to mention over use of antibiotics can really keep us from fully succeeding and living our lives to the fullest!

Your ideal health

What would it be like to seek health?  To continually look to the future and obtain a healthy body? A body that, in its natural state seeks homeostasis and ease?  What if you could lose the swings of good/bad and simply be amazing? What if the glass wasn’t half full or empty, but filled from a constant source of renewed health?

Glass half full, empty or a constant source of renewal?
Glass half full, empty or a constant source of renewal?

How would you think differently?  How would you act differently?  How would your life’s plans and goals change?

A winter full of health with no colds.  A life without the seasonal blah-blahs, no missed work, missed deadlines or missed goals.  A life where you are out of pain and have time to achieve your goals and still have time  for intimacy in your relationships.  What would happen then?

Your plans will change, your relationships will change, your life will change.  You’ll do something new, you will move toward and engage in, health.

All alternative medicine is based on seeking health, rather than running way from illness.  There is no glass half full or half empty, it is always being filled by a renewable source of life force and energy.  Chinese Medicine embraces and treats the  the whole body.  It succeeds in motivating you toward a whole new state of health.

Acupuncture and Chinese Medicine, Tuinacupping and nutritional counseling can all help you to start to look for and move toward ways to make your life better.  Acupuncture has been shown to boost immunityrelieve depressionrelieve chronic pain, help you lose weight and give you an over all sense of well being.

To seek or to avoid?  One is open, full of possibility and future, one is reactive, constricting and full of fear.  Which are you?  Which will you choose for yourself this year?

Not sure about acupuncture just yet?  Read 5 Myths about Acupuncture

Picture is Marc Forrest’s via flickr

Trouble swallowing when you are stressed?

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

Being a Chinese Medical Student is a process that requires serious diligence and work.  Students studying to become acupuncturists are expected to spend 8 hours per day in class and many hours each night memorizing lists of points, their actions, diseases and TCM philosophy.

There is an incredible difference in culture between the east and west and while studying we often find random bits of information that don’t appear to fit into our cultural norm.  Plum pit sensation is one of these things.  The first time I heard my teacher, Li Li Zheng, talk about plum pit qi, I laughed and thought it was yet another one of those “weird” symptoms in TCM that didn’t really apply “round these parts”, somewhat like the symptom of “Screaming like a pig or sheep” or “Standing on top of your house and taking off your clothes”.  Admittedly, some of the symptoms are odd, but usually have a modern day equivalent to them.

After learning the pathology and disease manifestations behind plum pit sensation, and being in practice for a while, I am convinced that it is a fairly common problem in the west, many folks just don’t have the words to describe it.  ”My throat feels stuck”.  ”I have a hard time swallowing, its worse when I am stressed”. “My boss was yelling at me yesterday and I felt like I couldn’t breathe or swallow, like a huge marshmallow was stuck in my throat”.

Less anxiety, better function

Less anxiety, better function

Plum pit qi sensation is diagnosed in our Western medicine as globus hystericus.  This diagnosis refers to a sensation as if there is something stuck in the back of the throat, and can cause some very uncomfortable sensations as it can neither be swallowed down nor coughed up.  Typically, the problem is worse with anxiety and stress and may go away in between episodes.  This diagnosis in Western Medicine is a psychiatric diagnosis, and associated the feelings with anxiety, depression and stress.  Generally chronic laryngitis, postnasal drip and polyps on the vocal cords are ruled out and the patient is told that there isn’t much to be done about it, that its a mental issue.  In other words, “Its all in your head”.

Chinese medicine however, has a specific diagnosis for this sensation and offers a full range of treatments for it.   An acupuncturist can take your history, look at your tongue and pulse and use this information to determine the right way to treat this problem for you.  Typically, with Chinese Herbs and acupuncture, along with nutritional suggestions and lifestyle changes, the problem can be relieved and you returned to a healthy state of mind, calm and without the stress and anxiety.

Happy Holidays!

Monday, December 21st, 2009

Yin, loving and heavy at its height now begins to slowly give way to the return of the Yang. May your Yin foundation be strong that it may secure the return of the Brightest Yang!

Roots and Branches - Yin and Yang

Roots and Branches - Yin and Yang

Best and Brightest wishes to you and your family this Holiday Season

In the best of health,

Kim Knight, MAcOM, LAc


The many uses of just one acupuncture point

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

Did you know that acupuncture is SO versatile that just ONE point can treat many problems?

Treating just one point on a meridian can treat various problems along that meridian.  By inserting just one point, we can affect different parts of the body.

Treating the roots can affect the branches!

Treating the roots can affect the branches!

Bladder 67 as an acupuncture point does just this.

It treats

  • Stuffy nose
  • Nosebleeds
  • Eye Pain
  • And headache that is at the top or back of the head.

Each point on the body can do this, by using them in combination, we can achieve an even greater effect!