Monday 13 September 2010

Japanese Acupuncture, Phoenix, Arizona, 日本鍼灸アリゾナ

Japanese Acupuncture Newsletter, Arizona
Volume 2, No. 10:  September, 2010

Japanese Acupuncture (480) 246-0624
600 N. 4th Street, Unit 147, Phoenix, AZ 85004

Oriental Medicine & On Human Conditions
  
Chapter Two
Heart: Joy, Arrogance, and Transcendence #10

I would like to end the Heart Element with the following simple poem by Wang Wei.

独坐幽篁裏                        sitting alone in quiet bamboo forest
弾琴復長嘯                        playing an instrument, breathing deeply 
                                            (Qi Gong)
深林人不知                        in the forest, nobody knows my presence
明月来相照                        only the luminescent moon light shines upon
      at the Bamboo Lodge (竹里館)          王維 (Wang Wei)

Unlike Du Fu (杜甫) I wrote about in my last newsletter, Wang Wei was talented in being a bureaucrat.  Common to the both is that they were once arrested in the turbulent time and almost died.  Wang Wei loved the quietude of nature and he left many master poems praising mountains and waters (山水).

I like this poem because of its simplicity and the realization:  deeply in meditation, reflecting on his life, accepting AS-IS-ness.  It tells us that the transcendence is an acceptance:  very simple. 

Through out this chapter, I mentioned about the nature of emotions and how to overcome and transcend beyond.  However, when come down to the core, we understand that it is the simple lifetime wisdom of acceptance with a pure heart.  Trick here is how do we achieve the pure heart? We need to let go everything we hold dear and be content in the instance of this realization.  Namaste.

Epilogue:  What is the sound of one-hand clapping?  Zen Koan
My answer:  the sound of the wind
What is yours?

© 2010 Dr. Y. Frank Aoi (NM State)/Japanese Acupuncture, LLC

Sunday 12 September 2010

Japanese Acupuncture, Phoenix, Arizona 日本鍼灸アリゾナ

Japanese Acupuncture Newsletter, Arizona
Volume 2, No. 9:  September, 2010

Japanese Acupuncture (480) 246-0624
600 N. 4th Street, Unit 147, Phoenix, AZ 85004

This newsletter is dedicated to my good client and friend, Andrey Polischuk who really, really, and really knows how to live AS-IS with full happiness every single day.  I admire you greatly.

Oriental Medicine & On Human Conditions

Chapter Two
Heart: Joy, Arrogance, and Transcendence #9

鼓角緑辺群            川原欲夜時            秋聴殷地発            風散入雲悲
抱葉寒蝉静            帰山独鳥遅            万方声一概            吾道竟何之
                                                                                   杜甫

All of us once in a while loose who we are and what we are.  Shall I say, a middle age crisis is one of them?  Like the Chinese master poet above (Du Fu) who quitted a bureaucratic job (he was about 48 year-old) he never liked, an uncertain mind created a distant drum beat reverberating with the time, echoing his pessimism:  no longer sure about His Way (Du Fu went on producing master pieces from this time on).

It is a terrible feeling not knowing what to do to be happy again.  Self-criticism turns negative and the deep pessimism sets in.  However, a difference between a person who hits the bottom and able to rise up and a person who cannot is, the Japanese calls it, paper-thin:  flip a paper, one survives and an other does not.  It is a mental constitution, either you have it or you don’t (although, definitely, you can train to possess it).  How do we get out from all negative thoughts?  I met quite a few people who could give me a dozen negative answers to each suggestion I gave:  always can’t do this and don’t have that with certain disdain and anger.  It is too bad that we are not taught in school how to unlearn all the mores and rules we were taught from childhood.  Their negative thoughts were constructed with what other people said in the past, therefore, they thought they supposed to (behave negatively).  Most of the time, we do not know how to differentiate the free will and what we are taught to behave and desire.  When we filter out all the what-other-people-said syndrome, in a deep meditation, when the mind is clear, we can come close to the answer.  In real life, it actually happens all the time:  a painter who concentrates in painting can have a glimpse of so-called a zen-moment; musicians create the mysterious unison that is pure music (beyond descriptive words).  Once you see the other side, we see the infinite possibilities and abundance (Dr. Michael Bernard Beckwith calls it the abundance consciousness).   This is because we discover once again our excellence and creativity.  When we are depressed, not certain about the future, it is the best time to concentrate on creativities.  However, one thing we must accept is that everything is AS-IS at the moment.  Our life energy force is meant to be what it Is at this very moment, never meant to be otherwise, and that there is nothing wrong with us being depressed.  We live in the moment (not in the past and not in the future), and only thing to do is to accept it as AS-IS and move on.  Spend money on a wonderful meal or a chocolate paffe, feel the joy in being alive.  There are many things available right now which give you the joy of life, find it out! (you might go back to your early childhood and rethink what really made you happy:  an ice cream cone?  riding bicycle?

Since Joy relates to the Heart Element, the opposite emotion will affect the heart functions.  How do we change pessimism to joy and lead to creativity with acupuncture?  My style calls for treating the Du-line.  Du-9/12 are powerful points for creativity. Treat the liver with UB-19s.  Since the Heart Element is affected, you need to palpate T-4 and 5 to see if there is any pain.  If pain, needle UB-14 or UB-15. (remember UB-14 and DU-8 and UB-18 are related).  If T-5 is tender, you need to treat the heart itself:  left SI-11, left HT-7 and SJ-6 would be effective.  Ren-12 is essential for neurosis. 


© 2010 Dr. Y. Frank Aoi (NM State)/Japanese Acupuncture, LLC

I Am The

Japanese Acupuncture, LLC:  480-246-0624
Y. Frank Aoi, L.Acu (AZ)

What I Am
I am the bringer of health, happiness, and hope.

The Foundation of Oriental Medicine
Qi (in Chinese)/Ki (in Japanese) is a relationship.  It is the relationship of polar opposites, creating the Universal Harmony of the Yin and the Yang (positive vs negative, male vs female, matter vs anti-matter, etc.).  All diseases are caused by the imbalance and the stagnation of the two energies.*1

The Yin and Yang concept has never changed over millennia, therefore Oriental Medicine has the strong foundation to base its medicine (whereas Western Medicine, because of a modern scientific approach, appears to have a strong background but it is always changing as a new discovery unfolds). 

Essence of Acupuncture
Ancient Chinese observed the body and the natural and cosmic phenomena and applied and incorporate them in treatments.  They started out by following the natural cycle of seasons and the human life growth and life span.  They knew that the menstrual cycle and the moon cycle were not merely coincidence.  To observe the cosmos was to observe the micro cosmos of the body.  They cannot be separated.*2  They also knew that our emotions greatly influence our health and wellbeing.  An attachment to a certain emotion would manifest in the body physiology:  for example, worry gives you queasiness in the stomach; sorrow makes the lungs weaker, excessive fear makes you neurotic, etc.  Since acupuncture deals with energy and its field by incorporating emotional components, as in yoga, the ultimate goal is to awaken the body and mind to spirituality.*

*1:  Scientifically, we are made of vibrating atoms with certain frequencies.  Sickness is the state of    desynchronization of the energy.
*2:  Nuclear physicist would agree.
*3:  Acupuncture is not a religion.  It makes you aware and attune to the bliss and the happiness of being alive by realigning body functions.

Treatment Prices
Adult:  $95/first session  $70/second time on
Senior Age 75 or Over:  $65/first session  $50/second time on
Child Age Between 16 and 10:  $65/first session  $50/second time on
Child Under 10: 
  Parent must experience my acupuncture first.  First session is free, $40/session
Short sessions are available on the third or fourth Sunday:  $55/first session, $40/second time on
Occasionally, I give a special discounted offer:  please inquire