Muscle pain

Credit to Author: Tempo Desk| Date: Fri, 01 Nov 2019 16:15:45 +0000

 

dza jullie yap daza - medium rare

SPEAKING as an unlicensed medical consultant and sur­vivor of that thing called severe muscle pain, I can attest that acupuncture is the shortest way to pain management.

Not everybody believes in acu­puncture although the Chinese have lived with it and its easy, in­expensive applications for 3,000 years. One of the most famous practitioners is Sister Regina Liu of the Missionary Sisters of the Immaculate Conception of the Mother of God in Quezon City. Sister comes from a long line of Chinese doctors in the Mainland but she earned her masteral de­gree and doctorate in Eastern medicine in, of all places, Cali­fornia, USA.

Pain is a signal that some­thing’s wrong, and what’s wrong is an imbalance in the body be­tween the yin and yang, accord­ing to Sister. Between your yang and my yin, only a small minority of pain sufferers will admit that they grasp that bit about imbal­ance, until a dozen or so slim, very slim and shiny acupunc­ture needles have done their work. “Are you afraid to look at the needles?” Sister asked the first time I sought her help. Two Western-educated doctors had told me my pain was due to se­vere muscular spasm. I didn’t have to fall from a motorcycle to suffer pain of such intensity on my right shoulder that I would scream as soon as the car start­ed moving.

Forty-five minutes with Sister and her needles was all I need­ed, one session and that was it. No medicines to swallow, no ex­ercise more strenuous
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