[quote:44afb0e20c]NOTE: The WHO Guidelines on Basic Training and Safety in Acupuncture were drafted by Professor Zhu-Fan Xie, Honorary Director of the Institute of Integrated Medicine, First Hospital of Beijing Medical University, China, based on the WHO Consultation on Acupuncture in 1996 in Cervia, Italy and the comments submited through the WHO Regional Offices and the World Federation of Acupuncture and Moxibustion Societies [/quote:44afb0e20c]
When we need a meal but we have only salads, so we may take salad as a meal, but is salad a real meal? Could we take salads everyday as meal?
By the way, Prof. Xie Zhufan, with good background of western medicine, used to be an specialist of renology. However, it is hardly to call Prof. Xie an expert of acupuncture, especially the acupressure.
Acupressure used to be a small part of the traditional Chinese therapeutic massage, but it's even more difficult to do it well than do acupuncture. The reason I compare it with salad is because majority of acupressure practitioners nowadays have not grasped the real essence of it. So, it's not a good meal, it's only a salad for most cases.
A acupoint could be thrusted with a acupuncture needle as long as 160mm, how deep one's finger force could reach? Acupuncture needles could be retained in the body for days, how long one's fingers could exert the pressure on the acupoints?
To be supreme in acupressure, one must undergo a very hard training, the physical training and the energy Qi cultivation.
So, one has very strong fingers, which might penetrate bricks and one would also have very good energy, the Qi. For sure that's also very useful in martial arts' purpose.
In any textbooks of acupuncture in the schools of traditional Chinese medicine and acupuncture in China, acupressure is not mentioned much, even nothing.
Personally I think Dr. Zhu, Lian's a good person, maybe also a good acupuncturist, but at the moment just very few people in the acupuncture circle in China know her name.
The blunt needle was indeed recorded in "Huangdi Nei Jing", but it's not really in use in China. It is also indeed used for acupressure, but one must have good energy or good Qi, so you may know if the Qi is opened or the Qi arrives to the target point.
I'm trying to make something clear.
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David King
Posted: Mon Jul 10, 2006 9:38 pm |