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Acupuncture has been a major part of primary healthcare in China for the last 5,000 years. It is used extensively for a variety of medical purposes ranging from the prevention and treatment of disease, to relieving pain and anesthetizing patients for surgery. As in many oriental medicine practices, the emphasis of acupuncture is on prevention. In traditional Chinese medicine, the highest form of acupuncture was given to enable you to live a long, healthy life. Acupuncture literally means 'needle piercing," the practice of inserting very fine needles into the skin to stimulate specific anatomic points in the body (called acupoints or acupuncture points) for therapeutic purposes. Along with the usual method of puncturing the skin with the fine needles, the practitioners of acupuncture also use heat, pressure, friction, suction, or impulses of electromagnetic energy to stimulate the points. The acupoints (acupuncture points) are stimulated to balance the movement of energy (qi) in the body to restore health.

Acupuncture can potentially treat many different ailments. Oriental Medicine is used to
effectively treat a wide range of ailments including but not limited to the following:

  • Pain syndromes (back, neck, headache, etc.)
  • Stress,
  • anxiety, and other emotional disorders
  • Women's health issues (PMS, irregular menstruation, etc.)
  • Allergies Hepatitis A, B, and C HIV care
  • Fatigue
  • Gastro-intestinal problems (indigestion, constipation, etc.)
  • Insomnia
  • Sexual dysfunction
  • Colds and flu
  • Hypertension

Acupuncture involves stimulating. In the past 40 years acupuncture has become a well-known, reasonably available treatment in developed and developing countries. Acupuncture is used to regulate or correct the flow of qi to restore health.

Traditionally, yin is dark, passive, feminine, cold and negative; yang is light, active, male, warm and positive. Another simpler way of looking at yin and yang is that there are two sides to everything - happy and sad, tired and energetic, cold and hot. Yin and yang are the opposites that make the whole. They cannot exist without each other and nothing is ever completely one or the other. There are varying degrees of each within everything and everybody. The tai chi symbol, shown above, illustrates how they flow into each other with a little yin always within yang and a little yang always within yin. In the world, sun and fire are yang, while earth and water are yin. Life is possible only because of the interplay between these forces. All of these forces are required for the life to exist. See the table below to understand the relationship between yin and yang.

Yin Forces/Aspects      
Dark                                
Moon                              
Water                              
Passive                            
Descending                    
Female                          
Contracting        
Cold          
Winter          
Interior            
Heavy            
Bone                          
Front    
Interior of Body

Yang Forces/Aspects
Light
Sun
Fire
Active
Ascending
Male
Expanding
Hot
Summer
Exterior
Light
Skin
Back
Exterior of Body

Chinese philosophy recognizes five distinct elements of cyclical change called water, wood, fire, earth, and metal. These five elements can be related to our four seasons (with a fifth late summer season) as shown in the table below. The elements can also be related to different colors, emotion, taste, voice and various organs. These can also be related to the selection of food and herbs. Notice the correspondence between the Chinese philosophy and the underlying Indian philosophy, which also classifies everything in the universe under earth, water, fire, air, and ether.

 
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