2008/06/10

Acupuncture Points

Over the last 4 thousand years acupuncture has gone through many stages of development and schools of thought. Classical 5 Element is an ancient form of acupuncture. It was formed around 200BC (Han Dynasty) when the Chinese were going through a period when they observed nature, natural laws and noticed the correlations in people.

Through the Chinese Cultural Revolution in the 1950s Mao Tse Tung wanted to modernise Chinese thought and society. Through this period the Chinese started to concentrate on physical symptoms and what is known as external causes of disease.

Through pulse and tongue diagnosis a modern Chinese Medicine practitioner will find external cause of disease such as Damp, Cold and Heat. Treatment will be planned to heal these external causes, sometimes incorporating the use of herbs.

5 Element Acupuncture looks for emotional or spirit level causes for a person distress and believes by healing at this level the whole person moves forward not just their presenting symptoms.

The Five Elements are connected and interconnected, each one depending on the others to fulfil their part.By finding out which one of the Five Elements first went out of balance and primarily treating that element it is believed that the whole person will heal and move forward.

This style of acupuncture was brought back from the east in the 1950s by an Englishman, Professor J.R. Worsley. Professor Worsley died in 2003 and is survived by his wife, son and daughter who continue to teach this wonderful form of acupuncture

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Acupuncture is a system of healing which has been practised in China and other Eastern countries for thousands of years. Although often described as a means of pain relief, it is in fact used to treat people with a wide range of illnesses. Its focus is on improving the overall well being of the patient, rather than the isolated treatment of specific symptoms. According to traditional Chinese philosophy, our health is dependent on the body's motivating energy - known as Qi - moving in a smooth and balanced way through a series of meridians (channels) beneath the skin