auricular acupuncture

Acupuncture Detoxification Treatment

✍️Wendy Brown, Lic. Ac.

 

ACUPUNCTURE DETOX

Approach to Breaking Chemical Addiction

Abstinence-Oriented

Chemical-Free

No-Nonsense

Image© W.Brown/ECOMA, 2008

Treatment begins with the patient lying down, as during a regular acupuncture session. Alternately, a group gathers, where individuals are seated in chairs to undergo acu-detox treatment in the presence of one another. Groups are offered at a significantly reduced cost. A peaceful treatment atmosphere can be expected in both individual and group settings. The Acu-Detox treatment is based on the insertion of fine gauge, sterile acupuncture needles into the 5 detox points of each ear, for up to 40 minutes. The 5 detox points have been shown to effectively address the major organs of the body and brain chemistry that are negatively impacted by the effects of substance usage. The points relate to the lungs, kidneys, liver, sympathetic nervous system, and ‘Spirit’s Gate’, an acupuncture point that stimulates the harmonizing of Heart-Spirit, reducing mental-emotional and physical pain, and reducing effects of craving. The treatment affects the organs and bodily functions that cleanse and balance the body and support overall well-being. Chinese herbs are additionally offered to promote supportive results between Acu-Detox sessions.

Asheville Citizen-Times, January 1995, Acupuncture-Detox article featuring Wendy Brown, Lic. Ac. performing treatment

Start your new, healthy flow. This is a program that works! The nature of addiction is insidious and people need to know there is a successful path available. Please share & contact for an appointment: (828)281-4330

 
Posted by Wendy in analytical
The Humility of Mr. Bai Fang Li

The Humility of Mr. Bai Fang Li

Using the money he earned from peddling rickshaw, MrBái Fāng lǐ contributed what is estimated to be 350,000 yuan ($57,000. usd) to financing more than 300 students’ school tuition and living expenses, helping them to advance by way of their studies. Mr. Bai’s daughter recalls, “He suffered and curtailed his own needs throughout his life, cutting down on food, stitching his torn pants over and over. When I would throw his worn out pants away and buy new ones, it would irritate him and he would not want to wear them.”

The old man rickshaw peddler resembled in his appearance someone who was indigent. “I have never bought any clothing,” Li had said. “The clothes that I wear are all picked from what people have thrown away. Look at my shoes, even the socks inside are unmatching! I collected them from a junkpile. The same for my hat.” His family who disparaged such habits would advise him, but never to any avail. In response to such admonishment, Mr. Li once picked up some bread and simply said to his children, “What is so hard about this? This bread is the product of the farmers’ hard work. People throw it away; I pick it up and eat it. Isn’t this a way to reduce wastefulness? In 2001, at nearly 90 years old, Mr. Bai Fang Li determined he was no longer able to peddle rickshaw any longer. At that time he donated his last substantial sum of money. From then onward he tended peoples’ cars at a gas station and saved his final sum of 500 yuan ($82.00 usd), which he saved and donated, but stated that he could no longer work and would no longer be able to contribute to others.” This was the first time his daughter, Bai Jin Feng, said that she had ever heard her father say anything like that.

Rickshaw Effigy to Mr. Li 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bai_Fang_Li

 Mr. Bai passed away on September 23, 2005, in a hospital. Hundreds attended his funeral to honor him.

  

Posted by Wendy in analytical