ACUPUNCTURE FOR YOUR BRAIN Modern medicine has been described as the greatest gift to mankind. While its role is different, I think acupuncture is just as precious a gift. This safe, simple treatment has been used by millions in China for thousands of years. Our methods are heavily influenced by this system, and it is likely to play a major role in the healthcare of the future. While researchers are still figuring out how to study acupuncture, many people swear by it because seeing is believing. And what I have seen is truly amazing! In the right hands, when inserted in the right spots, these fine needles flip switches in the body that restore balance, reduce symptoms and improve lives. If you want to get the best results from acupuncture, or from any treatment you get from a therapist, you should follow a few important rules. HOW IT WORKS Acupuncture is based on the meridian system that is one of the key pillars of Traditional Chinese Medicine. These are described as channels along which energy, or qi, flow in the body. Medical science has struggled with this concept because anatomists who dissect the body have looked for meridians - and they just can’t find them. One of the key insights about the body that has emerged in recent years is that these channels are created by fascia. This is the shiny, smooth tissue that covers a chicken breast. It is made of collagen, and it wraps around muscle groups in long sheets that travel from your head to your fingers and toes. Collagen itself is like a loudspeaker, turning the electrical waves of your nervous system into mechanical waves - sound vibrations. Injuries and trauma can alter the nervous system, and this can create very subtle changes in tissue. The areas of tightness in these areas act like fingers on a guitar string - they stop vibrations from traveling in the body. These are described as obstacles or blockages in acupuncture, and they play a key role in helping explain the mysteries of vibrational medicine. While these concepts are not yet known in mainstream medical circles, science has documented many clear effects of acupuncture on the body. It affects endorphins, cortisol and other chemicals, acting on the nerves, the spine, the cortex and the deep brain. There is no doubt that acupuncture works. There have been dozens of large randomized controlled trials that demonstrate that acupuncture works. The problem is that ‘placebo acupuncture’ seems to work quite well too. This has made researchers rethink the notion of a placebo for this kind of treatment. Unlike pills, placebo therapies still have measurable effects. Where a needle is inserted, how it is manipulated, and who is doing it can all have an important effect.