Acupuncture is an ancient system of
healing, developed over thousands of years as part of the traditional Chinese
medicine. Acupuncture is a word of Latin origin wherein ‘acus’ means, needle,
and ‘pungere’ refers to prick. Acupuncture by definition is the insertion,
manipulation, and removal of needles from the body, and the use of other
modalities and procedures at specific locations on the body, for the
prevention, cure, or correction of a malady, illness, injury, pain, or other
condition or disorder by controlling and regulating the flow and balance of
energy and functioning of the patient to restore and maintain health.
Acupuncture shall not be considered surgery.
Special needles are inserted into the
acupuncture points, which are located just beneath the epidermis. In theory,
inserting these needles helps correct the flow of energy within the body and
thus restores health.
Acupuncture is based on the belief
that health is determined by a balanced flow of Qi, also referred to as
"Chi". Qi is circulated through the blood stream via fourteen energy
ducts called meridians. Each one of these pathways or channels through which Qi
flows is linked to an internal organ system. There are over 1,000 acupuncture
points within the meridian system that can be stimulated to enhance the flow of
Qi. Acupuncture diagnoses illness by seeking blockages in the body's meridians.
By correcting the flow of Qi at a specific meridian, the illness or disease is
cured. Acupuncture is also one of the few medical practices that do not involve
side effects. The whole fundament of acupuncture is to make whatever is
abnormal or sub-normal, normal.
The use of needles is inevitable in
Acupuncture. A range of different types of needles is used for specific effect.
There are the Filiform Needles, the Embedding Needles, the Plum Blossom
Needles, the Three-edged Needles (prismatic) and the Hot Needles. The Embedding
needles are also called the Press needles. The thin, usually disposable,
needles rarely draw blood, and any discomfort is mild. The practitioners of
acupuncture also use heat, pressure, friction, suction, or impulses of
electromagnetic energy to stimulate the points. In addition to the classic
needles and practice used in Acupuncture, new research and experiments have
made some more specialized forms of the medicine popular in recent times.
Homeo-puncture is a practice that combines Acupuncture and Homeopathy. In this
form of Acupuncture the needle is either dipped in the homeopathy medicine
before treating the patient, or the Acupuncture points are sedated by using a
syringe with the Homeopathy medicine in it. Another super specialty in
Acupuncture is Aqua-puncture. In this form of treatment the acupuncture points
are either sedated or stimulated by using a syringe with sterile water. This
form of treatment is gaining much popularity and is as effective as the
traditional form of acupuncture. The more recent developments in the field of
acupuncture have made it less time consuming and much more effective.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has listed over 100 disorders that may be amenable to acupuncture treatment, including respiratory, eye, mouth gastrointestinal, neurological, orthopedic, broncho-pulmonary, reproductive, hypertension, insomnia, skin, arthritic, allergic, and addictive disorders. Traditional medicines no longer sit on the sidelines of the world but walk hand in hand with modern science. Acupuncture is thus a Complementary medicine.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has listed over 100 disorders that may be amenable to acupuncture treatment, including respiratory, eye, mouth gastrointestinal, neurological, orthopedic, broncho-pulmonary, reproductive, hypertension, insomnia, skin, arthritic, allergic, and addictive disorders. Traditional medicines no longer sit on the sidelines of the world but walk hand in hand with modern science. Acupuncture is thus a Complementary medicine.
The WHO, the National Center for
Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) of the National Institutes of
Health (NIH), the American Medical Association (AMA) and various government
reports have all studied and commented on the efficacy of acupuncture. There is
general agreement that acupuncture is safe when administered by well-trained practitioners
using sterile needles.
Meridians are imaginary pathways
through which the Qi energy of the body is believed to travel. There are in all
fourteen meridians. Each meridian travels a specific path under the skin.
Traditionally, the internal Organs have never been regarded as independent
anatomical entities. Rather, attention has centered upon the functional and
pathological interrelationships between the channel network and the Organs. So
close is this identification that each of the twelve traditional Primary
channels bears the name of one or another of the vital Organs. The Qi travel in
a specific direction along the path of the meridians and each meridian is
connected to the following one. These meridians are also called Channels. The
fourteen meridians are Lung Channel, Large Intestine Channel, Stomach Channel,
Spleen Channel, Heart Channel, Small Intestine Channel, Urinary Bladder
Channel, Kidney Channel, Pericardium Channel, San Jiao Channel, Gall Bladder
Channel, Liver Channel, Du Channel and Ren Channel. For Example: The Lung
Meridian is connected to the Large Intestine Meridian and that is connected to
the stomach meridian and so on. Every meridian has a number of points along its
way. Even though every point on a meridian has its indications and use, there
are a few points on every Channel that are more important and commonly used.
The twelve primary pathways run vertically, bilaterally, and symmetrically and
every channel corresponds to and connects internally with one of the twelve
ZangFu("organs"). This means that there are six yin and six yang
channels. There are three yin and three yang channels on each arm, and three
yin and three yang channels on each leg.
The three yin channels of the hand
(Lung, Pericardium, and Heart) begin on the chest and travel along the inner
surface (mostly the anterior portion) of the arm to the hand.
The three yang channels of the hand
(Large intestine, San Jiao, and Small intestine) begin on the hand and travel
along the outer surface (mostly the posterior portion) of the arm to the head.
The three yin channels of the foot
(Spleen, Liver, and Kidney) begin on the foot and travel along the inner
surface (mostly posterior and medial portion) of the leg to the chest.
The three yang channels of the foot
(Stomach, Gallbladder, and Urinary Bladder) begin on the face, in the region of
the eye, and travel down the body and along the outer surface (mostly the
anterior and lateral portion) of the leg to the foot.
Acupressure Point CV 6 for Sexual
Problems, Constipation, Gas, Irritable Bowel & How to Develop your Healing
Energy Reserves
by MICHAEL · 121 COMMENTS
in ACUPRESSURE POINTS,CHRONIC
FATIGUE/FIBROMYALGIA,WELLNESS & LONG LIFE
CV 6 is the Sea of Energy Point
One of the most empowering
acupressure points on the body is CV 6, known as the Sea of Energy. You can do
great healing on yourself and others – if you know the point location of CV 6,
its functions, how to tap the point’s healing energy, and know the applications
in this article. CV 6 strengthens the
body’s internal condition especially the colon, immune system, sexual urinary
reproductive system, and heightens your ability to heal yourself.
Point Location: CV 6 is located two
finger widths below the center of your belly button. The finger pressure should
always be applied gradually. Go even slower and more carefully into the abdomen
for the elderly and sick. During pregnancy be very gentle, and use the palm of
your hand instead of fingertips.
Point Function: CV 6 revives the
body’s healing processes; develops vitality; strengthens the immune system,
urinary system, sexual reproductive system, and benefits the kidneys.
Good for Relieving: stomachache,
abdominal cramping, constipation, gas, irritable bowel syndrome, menstrual
cramps, insomnia, urinary incontinence, impotence, infertility, chronic
fatigue, fibromyalgia, digestive headaches, body aches, anal or rectal pains,
and general weaknesses.
For Constipation: Press CV 6 two or
three times a day to relieve and prevent constipation and irritable bowel.
Pressing this point activates and strengthens the large intestine, encourages
peristalsis, and relaxes the abdomen. Along with this point, I’ve used Chi Gong
breathing exercises effectively for constipation and irritable bowel since the
colon’s partner is the lungs in traditional Chinese health care.
Emotional & Spiritual Benefits:
CV 6 is good for developing emotional stability and for deepening spiritual
awareness; strengthens your sense of self; used for self-abuse, addictive
behavior, and codependency issues.
Sexuality: The Sea of Qi (CV 6) is
good for all kinds of sexual problems for men and women. The abdominal muscles
often tighten during lovemaking, which can block the flow of sexual energy.
Pressing CV 6 and acupressure points around it, can relieve the abdominal
tension, strengthen the urinary and reproductive systems, and increase sexual
intimacy and pleasure.
CV 6 is a longevity point, which can
improve your overall health and enable you to live longer. Two to three minutes
of firm to deep pressure on this point while breathing slowly and deeply into
your belly, strengthens all of your internal organs, and develops your healing
energy reserves. For this reason, I have made a covenant, a vow to myself, that
I will try to press this point and breathe deeply into it every night before
going to sleep. I believe that working on this point in bed with super slow,
deep breathing, opens the flow of healing energy while I’m asleep, and thus
provides extraordinary healing benefits.
Any worries or regrets in your life
will fade away and you’ll get more focused and feel more vital, if you continue
to practice breathing deeply into this life giving acupressure point. Share
this with your friends and enjoy life; there’s nothing more important!
Beauty tharaphy & sex
Every person who has the minutest
interest in the way they look has at some point in time visited a Beauty Salon.
A Beauty Salon is the primary source of any beauty therapy. Beauty Salons were
not very popular in the olden times. Housewives hardly had money or inclination
to pay someone and get treatments done, nor were women that bothered about the
way their skin or face looked. A housewife’s main source of self-worth came
from how well she kept house and how well she cooked, not how beautiful she
looked. But as women started stepping out of the houses to earn money and walk
side by side with men, they started having the money to look better and also
the inclination to spend money to feel better about themselves by looking
desirable. Beauty Therapy or Beauty Treatments can be defined as procedures
that enhance someone's personal outer beauty. These treatments include a long
list of facials, manicures, pedicures and deep cleaning, etc. Beauty industry
now commands a handsome share in every national economy. The fashion and beauty
businesses are one of the few that haven’t been hit by the on-going recession.
Millions of dollars are spent each year on research to bring out new and
improved products for women of all ages. Beauty Salons also make a fair share
of profit by selling products to the clients. New services are constantly added
to the long list of beauty regimes suggested in these salons. And even though
one may feel that all this is taken advantage of only by women, they are wrong.
Men have regular salon days too. Men having facials, manicures and pedicures,
massages, clean-ups, trims or spa treatments are a norm now. Women look down
upon men who do not take good care of themselves in terms of looks.
Even though these Beauty Salon or Spa
treatments have an immediate affect on the way a person may look, they are
still temporary.
Cosmetic acupuncture is a gentle yet
highly effective alternative to cosmetic surgery, botox, collagen injections,
dermabrasion etc. Although the roots of Cosmetic acupuncture lie in Traditional
Chinese Medicine (TCM) and the techniques have been used for thousands of
years, an acupuncturist may not be very aware of the use of beauty therapies
alongside acupuncture to enhance the beauty and radiance of the patient.
Traditionally a Doctor practices his respective field and leaves it at that.
Not many Alternative Medicine practitioners do courses involving different
fields. A Beauty Salon on the other hand, can only work on a superficial level
and is not concerned about the underlying problem, if any. As a result, both
the therapies as individual are insufficient in providing the desired effect
for the client.
Prof. Dr. Verekar is perhaps the only
practitioner who has successfully bridged a gap between these two different
fields. He has researched enough and found an effective module of treatment
that can be taken advantage of by the common people at economical rates and
permanent effects. He has also researched the ancient scriptures of the Vedas
and discovered may uses of Ayurvedic herbs that can be used to enhance looks
and beautify skin. During his long founded research on beauty, Dr. Verekar
realized that he should be professionally qualified even in the field of beauty
therapies to understand and treat problems and clients better, and decided to
study for CIDESCO. CIDESCO, is one of the most respected examinations held for
the field of beauty and cosmetology in the world. It is also the most respected
and is recognized all over the world. Dr. Verekar presented a thesis on
nose-beautification at the practical examination followed by a demonstration,
which was very well received. He passed this exam in 2009.
Now being professionally well
qualified in both fields and having tremendous experience of over 30 years with
different patients, Dr. Verekar is the best person for the job.
With origins in Taoist philosophy,
acupuncture evolved from observing that a disorder was associated with an
increased sensitivity in specific areas of skin. These were consistently linked
to a specific organ and followed a defined topographical pattern. These
patterns or meridians serve as pathways for life-force energy called Qi
(pronounced chee). The body is endowed at birth with a fixed amount of Qi,
which is then depleted through activities of daily living and supplemented by
energy obtained from food or air. Energy imbalance, whether excessive or
lacking, is the cause of all illness; the absence of Qi is death. Qi circulates
throughout the body in a well-defined cycle, moving from meridian to meridian
and from organ to organ. Qi is characterized by the dynamic interaction of two
antagonistic, yet complimentary energy forces called yin and yang, each of
which includes a portion of the other.
Yin, the feminine, is associated with cold,
dark, passive, and that which is deep or hidden. In contrast, yang, the
masculine, represents heat, light, active, and that which is on the surface.
Yin and Yang are constantly interacting and changing, and one never exists in
isolation from the other. According to Chinese tradition, all substances are
formed from fire, water, earth, metal, and wood. Fire contains the most yang
and water the most yin. The elements are created or destroyed by specific
cyclical interactions. For example, fire melts metal, metal cuts down wood,
wood covers earth, earth absorbs water, and water puts out fire. To each
element is assigned one yin and one yang organ. Under this model, a bad heart
(a fire organ) will adversely affect the lungs (a metal organ), which will in
turn affect the liver (wood). Each organ has a meridian associated with it
containing a series of acupuncture points. Stimulating these points regulates
energy flow in the meridians. Overall, it is a closed system in which the
excess of energy in one area reduces the energy in another area. Eastern
medicine is interactive and holistic - everything affects everything. In
contrast, western medicine emphasizes component parts (e.g., kidney) without
seeing a relationship to the whole. The focus is on the symptoms, which according
to Eastern medicine are merely the "footprints" left by energy
imbalances.
Cosmetic Acupuncture is basically
Acupuncture treatments performed to enhance or beautify a face or body.
Cosmetic Acupuncture is not a popular genre in Alternative Medicines. Only a
handful of excellent Acupuncturist can take credit for successfully practicing
this form of Acupuncture. Prof. Dr. Verekar is the very best practitioner of
this genre. He is also responsible for a lot of research in this field. He is
by far the only doctor to give non-surgical nose jobs. Whilst most people
wouldn’t mind looking a few years younger, the notion of allowing a surgeon to
take a knife to your face is more than a little off-putting. As a non-surgical
alternative, cosmetic acupuncture can deliver a fresh-faced radiance while
diminishing the signature signs of aging. More importantly, the treatment
addresses the underlying causes of ageing, which can be preferable to masking
the symptoms with invasive procedures.
Cosmetic Acupuncture basically is the
acupuncture treatment offered to improve muscle tone, decrease puffiness around
the eyes, firm sagging skin, eliminate or reduce fine wrinkles, even out skin
tone and improve luster of complexion.
The purpose of Cosmetic Acupuncture
is to create a younger and more vibrant appearance. The weakness of most
conventional cosmetic therapies is that they do little or nothing to enhance
the client’s underlying health condition. It’s primarily because cosmetic
acupuncture fully embraces the principle of ‘inner health/outer beauty’, that
it works so well - and that the results last longer. Cosmetic Acupuncture
treatment is like a gardener tending to the soil of a plant to produce a
healthy flower, rather than superficially trying to polish a petal.
While the initial desire to look
younger may be a simple case of vanity, the effects can prove far more profound
than merely improving one’s appearance. As Acupuncture works from the inside out,
the effects are also felt. The client is left feeling refreshed and rejuvenated
from inside.
The Wellness Clinic is the only
Clinic of its kind. Dr.Prakash Verekar is a highly qualified and renowned
Acupuncturist who has acquired complete knowledge of all the above-mentioned
therapies to treat a wide variety of skin ailments and problems.
Dr.Verekar's procedures are holistic,
natural and comprehensive. The results of cosmetic acupuncture anti-aging
treatments reflect not only a change in the external appearance, but also an
improvement in total body wellness. Specifically,
* More radiant, beautiful skin.
* Disappearance of fine lines.
* Smoothing of deep lines.
* Fading of age spots.
* More toned muscles.
* Enhanced overall appearance and good health.
Additionally, there are positive side
effects to
the facial skin rejuvenation that
include
* Clearing of acne and rosacea.
* Reduced depression and less anxiety.
Improve Your Sex Life With Acupuncture
Acupuncturists treat the mind, body,
and spirit. It’s a critical distinction between acupuncturists and Western
doctors, who generally focus exclusively on specific parts of the body. The
mainstream approach to healthcare, separating body from mind, can result in
patients failing to mention problems that affect them on multiple levels.
Issues around sex—not having it,
having it but not wanting to have it, being unable to have it—are often swept
under the rug in discussions with MDs. Acupuncturists, on the other hand, ask
and hear a lot about people’s sex lives.
The multifaceted nature of sexuality
means that many systems throughout the body play a role, and seemingly
unrelated symptoms or habits can influence whether someone has a fulfilling sex
life. Acupuncturists are experts at making these connections and restoring
balance so that you’re able to fully experience and enjoy sex.
Relaxation Is Key to Fulfilling Sex
I hear from many patients, especially
women, that they have unsatisfying or non-existent sex lives.
Last year, my confidence went through
the roof when a very high percentage of my patients found themselves in
sexually fulfilling relationships soon after beginning treatments with me. I
started feeling like some sort of magical sex goddess—who needs Cupid’s arrow
when my acupuncture needles can bring together kindred, passionate souls?
One night I mentioned this theory to
a friend, who, after patiently suffering through my delusions of grandeur,
brought me back down to earth.
“It’s a lot easier to meet someone
and have good sex when you are relaxed, calm and happy,” she said. “That’s how
you feel after you leave an acupuncture session.”
Okay, so maybe I wasn’t taking over
for Cupid any time soon. But, my friend had a point: By calming the nervous
system, my acupuncture treatments were helping to alleviate the stress and
tension that can get in the way of good sex.
Whether you’re on a first date or in
a long-term marriage that’s been plagued for years by unsatisfying sex, you’re
probably stressed—and therefore, not showing up as your best, most confident
self.
If you’re just meeting someone, you
may nervously fumble and fidget, babble, drop things, or stutter. If you’re in
a long-term relationship, you may say things you don’t mean or shut down
emotionally. None of these things are helpful in the bedroom.
Acupuncture lowers stress. It helps
bring you out of fight-or-flight mode by inducing physical and emotional
relaxation. Over time, acupuncture has a cumulative effect, helping to keep you
in a stress-free zone long after the treatments are over.
There is nothing more attractive than
a self-assured, relaxed person. When we are relaxed, we are free to be our most
authentic selves, unimpeded by fears or disguises.
Acupuncture helps you feel content—at
peace—with who you are. This is the ideal state of mind for experiencing truly
satisfying sex.
Acupuncture for Better Orgasms
How you feel about yourself,
especially the way you relate to your body, plays a huge role in your sex life.
So many people sabotage their sexual pleasure with fear and self-criticism.
They are so focused on their perceived shortcomings that they hold back and are
unable to let go and enjoy themselves.
From an acupuncture perspective, when
emotional energy becomes stuck in this way, the energy of the body becomes
tight and constricted as well. This can make it difficult to achieve orgasm.
Acupuncturists use needles to break up
stagnation and allow for smoother flow to the sexual organs. This helps people
experience orgasms more easily and frequently.
Acupuncture can help improve libido
as well. The needles shift blood and energy to the genital area, increasing
arousal. In acupuncture terms, sexual desire is improved by building Yang
energy. Yang is the heat, the metabolism, the forward momentum of the body. It
is the spark that ignites your sex drive. Acupuncture helps light the fire.
(Read more: Acupuncture makes men better in bed)
As a bonus, acupuncture makes you
more physically enticing to your partner, by improving your skin, hair and
eyes. (Read more: Acupuncture can make you look younger)
If you’re looking to spice up your
sex life, try acupuncture.
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