Saturday 23 June 2012

Japanese Acupuncture, Phoenix, AZ (日本鍼灸、アリゾナ)
 
Japanese Acupuncture (480) 246-0624
600 N. 4th Street, Unit 147, Phoenix, AZ 85004

More Testimonials
Frank has worked wonders on my lower back. He helped to relieve the compression that none of the chiropractors I had been seeing were able to. I continue to see him for energetic/mental balancing and general wellness and always leave his space feeling a significant shift.             Nikki A/Yoga Instructor

Frank is an amazing practitioner.  I had seen another acupuncturists for some hormone issues and after 6-months I experienced very little change.  I found Frank when I moved to Arizona five years ago and within two visits I saw major improvements and was feeling much better.  I now see him once/month for “maintenance” to keep my hormones balanced and body healthy.  I’ve referred Frank to family and friends who have complained of a variety of ailments from back pain to migraines to anxiety – they are all amazed at how quickly they feel better after seeing him.  As experienced and intuitive as he is, he continues to invest in and improve his technique.  Acupuncture is an art form and it can be difficult to find the right practitioner – Frank is the right one and I’m so grateful to have found him.                         Julie H/Holistic Health Counselor


Japanese Acupuncture Newsletter, Phoenix, Arizona
Volume 3, No. 10, June, 2012

Oriental Medicine & On Human Conditions
Chapter Three
Spleen:  Worry, Harmony, and Illumination  #10

淡粧濃抹総相宜

All Is Well
Among Chinese words, I like the simple word, “hao ().”  It means well, good, and much.  I personally think it is a fit word for the Spleen Element.  Because when the Spleen is in balance, everything is “hao.”  I have decided to end this chapter by quoting a poem by Su Shi.

When the Spleen Element is functioning properly and when we are in harmony, acceptance and generosity take over us, and we are in balance. 

A famous Chinese poet, Su Shi (蘇軾, aka, 蘇東坡, Su Dong Po) went to the West Lake (西湖), known for its beauty (and still a famous tourist destination).  He experienced a fine day at the lake, but when rain came, he did not negate it as unpleasant.  For him, it really did not matter if it were a fine day or a rainy day.  Of course, a beautiful sunny day at the lake is wonderful, but a rainy day is exquisite.  He also compares the lake to one of the most beautiful women in Chinese history (her name is similar to the name of the lake, 西葹) and says a woman with light makeup or with heavy makeup, all is well (if it is perfectly suitable and right for her). 

Being in the center and without judgment:
What is the meaning of life?  Hao ()!
What is the sound of one-hand-clapping?  Hao ()!
All whats, hao!
All whys, hao!
All hows, hao!

No matter what happens, everyday is a good day.  Hao ()!
All is well......…hao ().

水光歛艶晴方好
[the light reflecting from the (lake) water is shimmering, it is sunny and is truly a fine day]
山色空濛雨亦奇
[(the color of) mountain is fuzzy, and rain is also exquisite.]
欲把西湖比西子
[if I were to compare the West Lake to Xi Zi (a famous beauty)]
淡粧濃抹総相宜
[light (almost none, natural) makeup or heavy makeup (perfection), all is well]
                             蘇軾(Su Shi): 『飲湖上、初晴後雨』
Namaste

Love is anterior to life,
Posterior to death,
Initial of creation, and
The exponent of breath.
                      Emily Dickinson

(all my newsletters are found at my website:  www.japanacupuncture.com)

© 2012 Dr. Y. Frank Aoi (NM State)/Japanese Acupuncture, LLC


Friday 15 June 2012


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

Clientele Demography
90%:  referral base

Testimonial:
“I don’t have to see three doctors anymore and am saving $130 for medications.”
                                                                        Jim C.                         FedEx Executive   

“Came in for a post surgery pain of the cervical spine.  An option was to redo the surgery.  Since I started coming here, results were whole lot better than the surgery, and I don't need a surgery.  Pains are almost gone.”
                                                                        Gary S                        Retired Microbiologist

“Frank is a very caring healer.  He takes time to listen to your words and your body before he begins any treatment.  A visit to Japanese Acupuncture will not only heal your body, it will heal your soul.  His office provides a very healing environment of music, art and peace.”
                                                                        Sheila H.            Private City Planner

“As a fellow acupuncture practitioner, I can say there are only two people in the state I would let work on me.  I choose to see Frank at least once a month.”
                                                                        Adam B.            Chiropractor


Japanese Acupuncture Newsletter, Phoenix, Arizona
Volume 3, No. 9, June, 2012

Oriental Medicine & On Human Conditions
Chapter Three
Spleen:  Worry, Harmony, and Illumination  #9

Thinking does not end suffering (newsletter #40:  Feb. 2011, Chapter Three #2).  Sometimes, we are in an endless loop of thinking pattern and we agonize over it.  For example, we incessantly think how to resolve matters with loved ones or with anyone who give us a grief.  When we have fallout with a friend, we think why a relationship has gone wrong.  We feel disappointment, injustice, and confusion.  If we are wise and spiritual, we realize, what we really seek is the end of thinking itself; a way out of the loop.  When we become an observer, we realize none of the thinking we have just placed in our head matters.  Let us connect with our true heart desires.  When we truly love someone, having fallout does not matter.  All we need to say to a person is:  “I truly love you (like you) and wherever you are I think of our friendship, and whenever we can, I still love to meet with you.”  When our friends do not call as often as they used to, what does it matter?  When we think we don’t have enough money, what does it matter?  As long as we are connected with and act on heart desires, we are “just”*1 ok.  Nothing really matters.  Let thinking go.

Obsessive worrying which belongs to the Spleen Element of this chapter is a thinking loop.  Depression and/or anxiety would follow if we were incapable of breaking the loop.  Since the Spleen controls the digestive system, a symptom such as bulimia may result.  A chromic digestive problem is common.  Since worrying results in a weak digestion, the nutrient absorption rate decreases, and the immune system weakens.  When we are in the state, we cannot loose weight no matter what diet we are on*2.  Intelligence belongs to the Spleen Element (along with the Kidney Element, they create the Will.), and the weakened Element creates a foggy head/memory or a weak mental state:  depriving us a strong mind, and we are easily swayed by something or someone.  Weak Spleen function also gives craving for sweet.  Excessive sugar intake further worsens the symptoms just mentioned. 

When we are in the loop, we need to increase functions of the liver.  Strong liver helps the digestive system, decomposes toxins effectively, and stabilizes our emotional state*3.  De-stress, learn how to breathe, eat more green leafy vegetables, increase intake of vitamin B complex, and change the blood to alkaline.  Take digestive enzymes and probiotics.  Drink lots of water and watch for dehydration.  There are many good Chinese herb formulas for digestion with all natural herbs and they are far better than any chemical drug this country makes.

When the Spleen and the Liver (horizontal connection of the body) are in harmony, the Kidney and the Heart (vertical connection) will start the chakra energy flows spirally from the perineum toward the top of the head.  It is regrettable that western medicine has not incorporated the energy system into their studies.

Be more spiritual.  Seek advise from spiritual counselors.  Learn how to perform self-hypnosis or seek sessions from professional hypnotherapists.  Seek healing therapies such as yoga (attainment of moksa), massage*4, craneotherapy, acupuncture, reiki, etc.  Remember, if we know our true heart desires, nothing else really matters.

Back to thinking.  Words and meanings are illusions, for they are concepts*5.  One of the last lectures Buddha gave was to simply raise a flower.  No words spoken.  The point of the lecture is to illuminate people that “it has come thus.”  The flower is a flower, nothing more.  It has no meaning.  The flower is the one we are looking at now.  The essence is in “This” moment of (seeing) “Being.”  It is like a zen moment.  If we are ready, we click, and we are There.  If we seek meanings, we do not attain.  All forms will perish.  Awareness does not.  When we experience that the Awareness is always shining upon us no matter where we are, what we are looking, at any given moment, then we are There.

Namaste.

*1:                  Just:  a zen word.
*2:                  My own observation
*3:                  Liver relates to anger, depression, anxiety, irritability, courage, leadership.
*4:                  Have you ever had an out-of-the-body experience?  If not, you have not had a good massage yet.
*5:                  So are time and space.
(all my newsletters are found at my website:  www.japanacupuncture.com)

© 2012 Dr. Y. Frank Aoi (NM State)/Japanese Acupuncture, LLC