Betterness Acupuncture & Herbs

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June 5, 2017 by Giles

Learn how to Cup and Scrape

Join me in the cosy, ecologically friendly warmth of the Van Raay Centre at CERES to learn how to cup and scrape. We Chinese Medicine practitioners use these methods to treat a range of conditions, but historically they are folk medicine practices used by regular folk. So this workshop is intended to teach people who are not health professionals how to use these methods to keep themselves, their friends, and family well.

Come dressed so that you can expose your shoulders and upper back.

Just 16 places for this one, get in quick.

 

  • When: Saturday July 1, 10am til 1pm.
  • Where: CERES Environment Park, Van Raay Meeting Room 2.
  • Price: $50



Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: cupping, cupping therapy, folk medicine, guasha, scraping, self-care, wellness, winter health

August 17, 2016 by Giles

Michael Phelps’ cupping marks

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Michael Phelps shows off his cupping marks. We Chinese medicine practitioners use cups to treat muscle tightness and pain, and pathogenic illness. It can be very effective alone, and can work even better when combined with acupuncture.

From our point of view the cups draw bad stuff out from deeper layers to the surface, whether it’s blood that has thickened because its flow has been restricted in a tight muscle, or external pathogenic factors that are associated with colds and flus. This explanatory model is common to traditional cupping practices throughout Asia, Europe, and Africa. A possible bio-medical explanation of how cupping helps with muscle tightness and pain is that it encourages phagocytosis to remove partially clotted blood. In his article “A Cupping Mark is not a Bruise”, cupping guru Bruce Bentley reports that a tissue sample taken from an athlete that had been cupped at the Australian Institute of Sport, was analysed as containing “old blood” (http://www.healthtraditions.com.au/uploads/212-cupping-proof.pdf).

I love doing cupping treatments. Not only do they work really well but they turn people into walking advertisements for Chinese Medicine. Not many of my patients expose their marks to as many people as Mr Phelps has though, nice one Michael.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: cupping, cupping therapy, injury rehabilitation, sports medicine

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