General Info, Uncategorized

What is Gua Sha?

At the end of your acupuncture treatment and after the needles have been removed, your acupuncturist may incorporate gua sha into one of your treatments. Gua Sha is a technique wherein we literally scrape the exterior body to bring blood flow up to the skin. In it, we use tools such as shaped stones, spoons, jar lids, and, yes, even bones.  In Chinese medicine we call this scraping “breaking up stagnation” and/or “releasing heat” and it results in relieving tension in the affected area.  

When we are performing gua sha, we are working on the skin, but the scraping goes all the way down to the muscle layer, breaking up knots and areas of tension Sometimes, however, pain and “stagnation” are not caused by the tearing of our muscles and tendons; often, our fascial network becomes sticky and stagnant as well. The goal of gua sha is to affect both the external body and internal body, breaking up some of this stickiness. 

Similar to cupping, after a gua sha treatment you will notice red marks in the areas where we worked. This is normal and will fade over the following days. 

Uncategorized

What to do when you’re lying on the table

“What the bodily form depends on is breath-Qi- and what the breath relies on is form. When the breath is perfect, the form is perfect.” Chinese Proverb, 700 A.D.

 

Do you ever wonder what you should be doing while you’re lying on the table with a bunch of needles stuck in you? Or are you already occupied by the thoughts and lists running through your mind?  If you are, try drowning out the thoughts and focusing in on your breath instead.

2000 years ago, Chinese doctors recommended taking only 13,500 breaths per day, which works out to nine and a half breaths a minute. The slower and more deliberate the breath you take, the more relaxing and beneficial its effects. This is because slowing down our breath regulates our autonomic nervous system, which (as you’ve read here) is a network we are trying to regulate through acupuncture needles.  

 

“Needle retention time” is a great opportunity to practice simple meditative breathing techniques, that will calm the nervous system and help quell some of the stimulating thoughts and concerns that may be running through your head. If you need guidance, here’s a simple way to start:

 

Practice by slowing down your inhales and exhales, pausing to hold the breath in between each one. Try to extend the inhale/exhale to at least 5 counts each with the hold also being the same count. When you feel comfortable with that amount, then try to extend the exhale to twice the length of the inhale (5 count inhale, 5 count hold, 10 count exhale). Do at least 10 rounds of the breath cycle or continue for at least 5 minutes for each session. Once you begin to gain strength in your lungs, you can increase the counts to as long as you’re comfortable.

 

The best part about this practice is that you don’t need to be sitting on a meditation cushion or in a yoga studio to do it. You can practice in the car, on the train, or when you’re feeling anxious or trying to fall asleep. The key is the focus on the breath: the slow deliberate expansion and decompression of the lungs and dismissing any distracting thoughts in the process.

General Info, Science of Acupuncture, Wellness Advice

What we talk about when we talk about Qi: Wei Qi and Immunity

If we think of qi as the difference between life and ordinary matter, we can then begin to think about how qi can be subcategorized into different types according to what role they play in maintaining that life. Movement, growth, transformation, defense: these are aspects of living creatures that the Chinese have come to identify as different elements of qi. In terms of the body’s defense qi, the Chinese call this Wei qi and it can be understood in terms of a virtual body armor, or as its referred to in Western, more common terms, immunity.

Each of our bodies contain some amount of this Wei Qi, and it’s what protects us from outside pathogens that can attack our internal resources. In Chinese medicine, the Wei qi is known to be primarily located in what’s called the Cou Li space, the space between the skin and the muscles, curiously the location of fascia, that still enigmatic element of the human body that we know plays a major role in physiology. Here, the Wei qi resides, waiting, like an army to fight foreign invaders. But, the size of this “army” is not a fixed thing, nor something that is guaranteed. We all, at different times, have different levels of it or its strength is sometimes low, or high depending on how we are moving about the world and what is happening on the inside of our body. Think about what happens when you’re working a lot, dealing with a lot of stress, or not getting enough sleep. Do you find yourself getting sick more often? More aches and pains? This is happening because we are failing to nourish the primal qi (Yuan qi) that helps to create and feed our Wei qi. The result is that our body armor, our army is depleted, and those outside invaders—viruses or bacteria for example—are able to break the barriers of the Cou Li space to access our internal organs and negatively affect our health. But it’s not just daily lifestyle that can deplete it. Simply having a chronic disease—hypertension, diabetes, or cancer—can also deplete this resource, because the Wei qi is  distracted by its immediate role of trying to mitigate the negative effects of those conditions that enough of it is not available to attend to its daily job of being our protector. The overall result is that we become sick more often and are physically run down.

Tending to our Wei qi is a primary element of maintaining optimal health. Acupuncture can help our bodies organize our Wei qi to work more effectively, helping to push out and cleanse our bodies of unwanted pathologies. There exist also herbal formulas that will provide us with nutrients to build resources to nourish our Wei qi. But, even more simply, we can help protect and restore this qi by simple lifestyle habits at home. The first is getting the right amount and quality of sleep. Our sleep is when our body reorganizes and replenishes its own resources. Similarly, eating a balanced, nutrient dense diet will also strengthen the body’s Wei qi, because nourishing food gives our internal bodies more tools, more armor if you will, to bolster the strength of the Wei qi and help it move along its necessary path to guarding those physical bodies. Finally, regular exercise is so important because, even as engaging in it depletes some qi, it ultimately helps what remains work more effectively. It smooths out the edges and allows to flow more freely, more efficiently.

All of these practices help to keep ourselves healthy and free from unwanted pathologies that would otherwise take over and make us sick. They are positive ways that at Autonomic Acupuncture we like to say to optimize your physiology.

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Acupuncture for Facial Rejuvenation: the natural alternative to Botox

Many of us are interested in looking our best. But, as we age and our lifestyle habits begin to catch up to us, we find our skin, especially in the face, begins to lose some of its lustre, elasticity, and firmness. While some of us may turn to chemical procedures to tackle this issue in an attempt to slow the aging process, you should know that there is a less invasive and more holistic approach to impede this process: Acupuncture for Facial Rejuvenation.

Acupuncture for Facial Rejuvenation has been around since the beginning of Chinese Medicine. While they started with herbal formulas, poultices and masks for the face, they soon developed and discovered acupuncture points and techniques to address issues related to aging skin.

When you receive a facial rejuvenation treatment from Autonomic Acupuncture, we begin by first needling the body. This is to help ground you during the treatment, as well as tell your nervous system to relax and get ready for the healing and renewal process that is about to take place. We then insert many tiny needles as well as use microneedling techniques, masks, gua sha, and facial massage to encourage the turnover of new cells and stimulate your lymphatic system. The placement of these needles also stimulate the production of collagen, which is a protein responsible for maintaining the plumpness of the skin. As we age, our bodies produces less and lower-quality collagen, and the result is that our skin becomes less firm and supple. But, the tiny microtraumas caused by the acupuncture needles encourage the body to produce more of it in those areas, resulting in more youthful, healthier-looking skin and a minimization of fine lines and wrinkles.

            In addition to its anti-aging effects, acupuncture for facial rejuvenation can also be used to help clear and heal acne, rosacea, and chronically congested skin. The above mentioned processes of needling and gua sha invigorate circulation and movement in your face and to the underlying tissue in order to regenerate your skin’s healthy function.

            At Autonomic Acupuncture, we will also work with you to develop nutritional and lifestyle habits to help improve your visage so that your skin will continue to improve well after leaving our office.