Posts Tagged ‘Natural Methods’

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

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!

Can Acupuncture Treat Fear?

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

Phobias? Fears? Anxieties?  Many people do what they can to live with these every day.

As a child I suffered from a great fear of being left alone and as an adult I would compensate for this by always being overly social, to the point of never allowing myself to be alone.  Learning new behaviors was helpful, but the base, bodily need I had to alleviate this fear never went away until I focused on treating the imbalance in my water element through Chinese Medicine.

Here’s a great article on acupuncture and fear:

Anxiety, Fears and Phobias

How has acupuncture helped your fear?

Treating Anxiety: Gan Mai Da Zao Tang

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

Introduction:

Gan Mai Da Zao Tang (甘麦大枣汤 – Licorice, Wheat and Jujube Decoction) is first mentioned in the Jin Gui Yao Lue (Essentials from the Golden Cabinet) by Zhang Zhong Jing (220 AD). It is in chapter 22 “Pulses and Patterns of Complicated Women’s Diseases”.

Zhang Zhong Jing says “Women suffering from anxiety are affected by sadness and crying, they are like lost souls and yawn frequently: use Gan Mai Da Zao Tang.”

I use this formula for depression and anxiety when the patient has a constitutional weakness or deficiency.  It is one of the most effective formulas in Chinese Medicine, often transforming anxiety almost immediately.  It is a powerful herb, yet its simplicity is profound.

甘麦大枣汤 Licorice, Wheat and Jujube Decoction
甘麦大枣汤 Licorice, Wheat and Jujube Decoction

Ingredients:

This formula only has three ingredients and herein lies its beauty. They are: Gan Cao, Fu Xiao Mai and Da Zao, in their own right are powerful herbs, but all are very mild and are even considered as food supplements. Gan Cao is the herblicorice, which is mild and harmonious, tonifying the spleen and stomach, regulating digestive disorders and alleviating pain.  Gan Cao is most used for its harmonizing properties, and many, if not most herbalists use it to harmonize and bring together the qualities of all of the herbs in a formula.

The next ingredient, Fu Xiao Mai, helps to stop any excessive sweating in patterns of deficiency, nourishing the heart, calming anxiety, resolving insomnia and relieving irritability.  It is literally unripe wheat grain, a food, with great nourishing and healing properties.

The last ingredient, Da Zao, is a Chinese Date.  Sweet in flavor, it is nourishing and tonifies the spleen, nourishes the blood and helps to relax restlessness and resolve emotional disturbances.

Individually, they constitute what many herbalists would call “Mild” herbs, with few if any side effects, and little strong reaction.  When put together, they become an incredibly powerful formula to resolve uncontrolled anxiety and depression.

Can it help you?

The best patient for this formula is one who has regular bouts of anxiety, depression with other symptoms such as frequent crying or feelings of always needing to cry, restless sleep, possibly night sweats, frequent yawning and possibly stomach problems.

Traditionally this formula is discussed under the heading of women’s disorders, for “restless organ syndrome”.  This organ was considered to be the womb by You Zai Jing, however another Chinese Master, Wu Qian, believed this organ to be the Heart.  This explains why this formula is good at treating emotional problems when presented on a background of menopause, PMS or Post-Partum issues, as well as why it is very helpful to men having anxiety problems presented on a background of possible deficiencies.

With the appropriate diagnosis and set of symptoms, this simple and powerful formula is able to treat such problems as:

  • Anxiety
  • Depression
  • Premenstrual syndromes
  • Postpartum depression
  • Palpitations
  • Hysteria
  • Neurosis
  • Emotional issues during menopause
  • Bed wetting
  • And many others!

How do you handle anxiety and stress?  Is anxiety and the subsequent constant fatigue that accompany it a problem for you?

Make an appointment today to see if this formula, or another, equally powerful formula would be useful for you.

Read more about Kim Knight, MAcOM, LAc and her Chinese Herbal and Acupuncture practice

Weight Loss and Obesity: A TCM Perspective

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

As a practitioner, weight loss is a topic that I get a lot of questions about.  ”Can you help me lose weight?”, “Can you make me not want to eat anything?”, “Is there a secret Chinese Herb that makes fat melt?”.  The answer, of course, is complicated. YES, I can help you lose weight, BUT, and this is the thing that no one likes to hear, you still have to do your part.  Eat well, move your body, get it working properly.

To do that, let’s look at how your body works from a Traditional Chinese Medicine point of view:

The body is a furnace

The body is a furnace

In the early Han dynasty, physicians of the time made notes regarding what the symptoms, theory and mechanisms of obesity.  They knew even at that time what the risk factors were.

If obesity occurs in the nobleman and rich people, they must be over consuming heavy and greasy foods.”  - The Suwen (The Book of Plain Questions, Chapter 28)

Even then, the Chinese understood that obesity and excess weight was caused by over-consumption and undesirable eating habits. Now, as TCM Practitioners, when approaching patients with excess weight, we look at the underlying body condition and constitution as well as the mental state that may have led to the imbalance and excess weight in the first place.  These issues will then be addressed.  Once we can restore the body’s balance, the metabolism will begin to process the food properly and if the patient is eating the correct foods and moving regularly, the issue will be resolved.

Theory

Chinese Medicine views fat or adipose tissue as dampness having invaded the body, and the spleen is to be the organ to care for dampness and phlegm.  The spleen handles all of the transportation and transformation of body fluids and food in the body, and if damaged, it will fail in this.  Damaging to the spleen are things such as sweet foods and not enough exercise.  The fluids then become in excess, which congeal into phlegm which becomes fatty tissues.

Nutritional Support

This mechanism makes it clear why it is important for the patient to eat foods that support the spleen’s transportation and transformation functions.  Chinese nutritional advice can also help, with the practitioner suggesting foods that can bolster the spleen’s ability to do this work. Many people simply think that eating less and or/just eating vegetables and a raw food diet is the answer.  From a TCM perspective, the spleen and digestive system is more like a wood burning furnace and placing cold, wet materials into it, simply will put it out, causing more dampness.  If you have poor digestion, raw food can be damaging to your metabolism and your digestion.  It causes your furnace to work harder and harder, never able to really process the food properly.  Simply warming foods up, lightly steaming or eating them with warmer herbs such as pepper and ginger can help the body handle cold foods properly.

Of course, people of a hotter constitution WILL benefit from a raw food diet.  If your digestive system is very strong and you are warm and have a lot of energy, raw food may be the way to go because your body is able to handle the cold and damp.

Body Image

However,  a word about body image.  Our society today has so many ways of defining what proper weight and size are.  We’ve gone from seeing rail thin, bony and improperly nourished as the ideal, to even seeing unhealthy and obese as OK and acceptable. Few people these days are able to see themselves for what they really are, and if they can, they are unlikely to be able to be OK with that even if it IS healthy.  A healthy body should be able to jump, run, climb, swivel, laugh, wrestle and be active through a full day without being exhausted, tired or wiped out.  A healthy body should be able to function and move within its environment easily and with finesse.   If you are too thin to have any energy, or too large to tie your shoes, its time to look at your digestion and see if you can’t help your spleen function properly and get your body into a state of health.

As you can see, the issues facing obesity from a Chinese Medical perspective can be complicated, but TCM can help!  Regular acupuncture, nutritional counseling,  assessing and treating the base constitution of the individual can all help to get your body into the ideal state it should be in to lose the extra weight.

Research and Articles:

Make an appointment today to talk to your practitioner about your weight and how you can bring it into a healthy balance.

Photo by justthismoment on flickr.

Acupuncture in the News

Friday, September 18th, 2009

Friday news!  I am off to the great city of Chicago this weekend for some formalized training to become a Clean Needle Technique Instructor to be available to teach the class at the Oregon College of Oriental Medicine next year, but here’s some news to keep you busy while I am on the plane.

Have you used acupuncture to treat smoking addiction or for your low back pain?  Does acupuncture help you with seasonal affective disorder or depression?  Tell let us know in the comments!

Acupuncture as Alternative Treatment for Headaches

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

Natural Relief for Migraines and Headaches

Migraines and headaches are debilitating to nearly 28 million people in the United States aged 12 and older - nearly 13 percent of the population.  (National Headache Foundation)  Those who suffer will generally try just about anything they can to relieve the pain. Very few of the Western methods work for any length of time and being a person who suffers from Headaches, it can be very frustrating.

Alternative treatment for Headaches Photo by Paul J Everett

Alternative treatment for Headaches Photo by Paul J Everett

Pain relief of headaches, using Acupuncture and Chinese Medicine can come in many forms depending on the Chinese Medical diagnosis of the headaches.  Chinese Medicine diagnoses in a much different way than Western Medicine, and therefore is more equipped to find the root of the pain rather than simply attempt to alleviate the pain.  This is a more healthy way of addressing the problem because it gets patients off of drugs and pain relievers and able to live a healthy lifestyle without the added burden these drugs can put on the liver and kidneys which can lead to further health concerns.

Common Medical Treatments for Headaches:

  • Pain relievers
  • Suggestion of stress reduction
  • Occasionally doctors will suggest dietary changes
  • Anti-Depressants for migraines
  • Occipital Nerve Stimulation

Diagnosis and Treatment with Chinese Medicine and Acupuncture:

Traditional Chinese Medicine does not recognize migraines and recurring headaches as one particular syndrome.  Each individual is looked at in terms of their constitution, diet, exercise levels and other lifestyle choices.  TCM works to treat the specific symptoms that are unique to each individual using techniques determined to help that individual, such as acupuncture, Chinese Herbs, tui na massage and nutrition.  The way that you are diagnosed will depend on many variables and your acupuncturist will ask you questions such as: Is the headache behind your eyes and temples, or is it located more on the top of your head? When do your headaches occur (i.e. night, morning, after eating)? Do you find that a cold compress or a dark room can alleviate some of the pain? Do you describe the pain as dull and throbbing, or sharp and piercing?

The answer to these questions can help your acupuncturist to determine the best course of treatment for you. You will likely receive acupuncture treatment at various points in the body corresponding to the actions and locations of your headaches and many patients report having immediate relief of the pain!

Acupuncture is highly effective for migraine headaches, but also works to alleviate tension headaches, cluster headaches, headaches caused by trauma and headaches that are related to disease such as sinus problems, high blood pressure and sleeping disorders.

Traditional Chinese Medicine can bring relief without the side effects of other methods, is effective and without side effects.

Research and Articles:

Make an appointment today and get the relief you need.  Don’t suffer anymore.

Acupuncture in the News

Friday, September 11th, 2009

Friday news!  What is the world saying about Acupuncture and Traditional Chinese Medicine?

H1N1 virus.  Everyone this week is talking about it as Flu season hits across the globe.

Traditional Chinese Medicine can be helpful in keeping the immune system strong and fighting off of the flu if you have it.

Read on:

The Chinese have a long history of working with epidemic diseases and learning the best natural ways to combat them.  Those of us in the West have access to this information via our education, community of acupuncturists and our contacts with those in China. If you are concerned about the H1N1 virus, talk to your acupuncturist today.

Natural Way to Induce Labor: Let Acupuncture do the Work!

Monday, September 7th, 2009

Labor Induction:

All of us who have had children know the fear of the threat of being induced into labor.  When labor induction happens, it usually starts out as having your water break too early, there are no signs of labor and the pressure from family, friends and the medical team begins to rise almost immediately.  In the past a mother was given only about 24 hours to start labor before the hospital began talking about having a cesarean section, these days with IV antibiotics and close monitoring, some hospitals are allowing more time.

What’s the problem?

The reason that everyone gets worried when the water breaks is because the amniotic sack that hold the baby is also its protection from the outside world.  The second that barrier breaks, the baby is vulnerable to infections.  Having the mother stay hydrated and active can help keep the amniotic fluid washing over the baby, but the real answer is to simply get things moving and have the young one out and nursing and grasping life with both hands!

Pregnancy and Labor (Photo by Mujitra)

Pregnancy and Labor (Photo by Mujitra)

A nervous couple can get many suggestions from all over, castor oil, enemas, stair walking and the like are all indicated to start labor.  Sometimes these work, and sometimes they do not. Acupuncture has shown to be effective to soften the body and get things ready for labor to begin.  During a treatment, the mother will feel more contractions, an active baby and begin to feel her cervix dilate.

Common Medical Treatments:

Common ways for the hospital and medical team to address this problem might be:

  • IV fluids to keep mom hydrated.
  • Antibiotic IV to make sure infections do not set in.
  • Pitocin, a drug to incude contractions.
  • Prostaglandin gels to dilate the cervix.

These treatments can interfere with what is usually a very healthy process, and having labor induced with pitocin by most accounts is much more painful, resulting in the far too usual cascade of:

Pitocin –> Pain medications —> C-Section

Diagnosis and Treatment with Chinese Medicine and Acupuncture:

Chinese Medicine and Acupuncture can help couples get labor moving along through the use of herbs and acupuncture.  Herbal formulas can help the body get the cascade of hormones going and bring on regular contractions and dilation.  Acupuncture can help the body get regular contractions coming on.

Common points used:

These points will respond best with acupuncture, but can be done with rubbing / acupressure.

Large Intestine 4 - This point can be found on the top of your hand in the webbing between your thumb and index finger. Press on an angle underneath the bone that connects with the index finger. To stimulate contractions, rub the point. This point can be used for  pain relief with steady pressure during contractions.

Spleen 6 – On the inside of the ankle, trace up four of mother’s finger widths above the ankle bone. Rub for about 1 minute. This point can help to bring contractions, assist in pain relif and help to dilate the cervix.

Bladder 32 – This point is halfway between the dimple in the buttocks and the spine. You can find it by tracing up one of the mother’s finger width’s above the top of the buttocks crease. You should feel a small depression where the point lies.  This point is good for bringing on contractions as well as helping with pain relief.

Duyin – On the plantar side of the 2nd toe, at the midpoint of the stria of distal toe knuckle. This point can help with difficult labor.

Research – Articles – More information:

This article is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any illness and any methods described should be used under the care of a licensed practitioner.