
Eastern Medicine &
Integrative Healing
Classical Chinese medicine for the body, psyche, and spirit.
This work draws from the Taoist roots of Chinese medicine, where the body is understood as a living expression of spirit—a microcosm of the natural world—and symptoms are read as signals within a larger pattern of imbalance, transformation, or becoming.
Eastern Medicine & Integrative Healing sessions address physical, emotional, and spiritual dimensions simultaneously, supporting not only relief from symptoms but also a deeper reorganization of the system as a whole. This is hands-on, table-based work designed to restore coherence at the levels where imbalance first takes shape.
What These Sessions Are For
People come to this work when something in their system is asking to be heard—sometimes through physical symptoms, sometimes through emotional strain, and sometimes through a more subtle sense of misalignment or spiritual disconnection.
In the Taoist view, imbalance does not arise in isolation. It reflects a loss of harmony between the individual and the larger forces shaping life—seasonal rhythms, cycles of change, internal timing, and the movement of spirit through the body. These sessions are for moments when that harmony feels disrupted, obscured, or ready to be restored.
This work supports a wide range of intentions: relief from pain or chronic conditions, nervous system regulation, recovery from stress or depletion, support through grief or transition, and deeper engagement with creative, spiritual, or life-directional processes. Some clients come with a clear concern; others arrive at thresholds—times when growth, reorientation, or integration is quietly underway.
How the Sessions Work
Each session begins with a conversation and classical diagnostic assessment, informed by the principles of East Asian medicine. We explore symptoms alongside sleep, digestion, emotional tone, stress response, and the subtler indicators of balance and vitality—pulse, tongue, and the overall quality of the system.
From there, the work moves to the table. Treatment unfolds through acupuncture and related modalities chosen to engage both the physical body and the deeper patterning beneath it. When appropriate, vibrational approaches such as Acutonics are incorporated to work with resonance, archetypal themes, and the subtle field—supporting alignment at levels that precede conscious thought or emotion.
Sessions are guided by attentiveness rather than force. The aim is to reestablish dialogue between body, spirit, and the rhythms of the natural world, allowing the system to reorganize itself toward greater coherence, vitality, and ease.
What Makes This Approach Distinct
This is classical Chinese medicine practiced with its philosophical and spiritual foundations intact. Rather than separating body, emotion, and spirit, the work assumes their continuous relationship—and treats imbalance as a meaningful expression within a larger pattern of change.
My training as a Doctor of East Asian Medicine is paired with long-standing engagement in Taoist-influenced frameworks, archetypal patterning, and vibrational medicine. This allows treatment to operate across multiple levels at once: regulating the nervous system, addressing physical symptoms, and engaging the deeper movements of spirit that shape health and vitality.
Care is attentive, paced, and responsive. Interventions are chosen not for intensity, but for precision—working with timing, resonance, and relationship rather than force. The goal is not constant treatment, but lasting reorganization: restoring coherence so the system can adapt, self-regulate, and realign over time.
Practical Details
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Session format: In-person, table-based sessions.
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Session length: Initial sessions are typically 75–90 minutes. Follow-up sessions are 60 minutes.
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Approach: Treatments are individualized and may include acupuncture, herbal medicine, Acutonics, and other supportive somatic or vibrational approaches, selected according to what is clinically and energetically appropriate.
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Frequency: Some clients come for focused, short-term support; others work with this medicine as an ongoing rhythm for regulation, spiritual alignment, creative vitality, or long-term health. Recommendations are collaborative rather than prescriptive.
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Preparation: Please eat something before your session to avoid lightheadedness. It does not need to be a full meal, but arriving on an empty stomach is not recommended. Wear comfortable clothing that allows you to relax and move easily.
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Aftercare: Acupuncture supports regulation and integration. Heavy physical activity is best avoided immediately afterward. Gentle walking or stretching is fine; plan your day to allow for a more spacious, grounded pace following treatment.
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Scope: This is clinical East Asian medicine practiced within a holistic and spiritually informed framework. It is not a substitute for emergency care and may complement other medical or therapeutic support when appropriate.
Next Steps
If you’re interested in working together through Eastern Medicine & Integrative Healing, in-person acupuncture sessions are scheduled by contacting me directly.
At this time, online booking is not available for in-person appointments. Reaching out directly allows us to ensure appropriate timing and alignment before beginning hands-on care.
If you’re seeking herbal consultation and lifestyle guidance without acupuncture, those sessions may be booked online and are available remotely.
If you’re unsure which option is most appropriate, you’re welcome to reach out through the contact form. I’m happy to help you orient toward what would be most supportive.