Add any number of blogs to your site. Make them viewable to any visitor, or only your members, clients, staff, or teams. Post to your blog from the private staff area.
Mar 05 |
Massage Therapy on Wednesdays |
Posted by Shu VIP on March 5, 2018 0 Comment(s) Cinamon has been a massage therapist specializing in pain management, muscluo-skelatal structural imbalance and autoimmnune disorders in the Chicagoland area for 10 years and an licensed acupuncturist in Illinois. She recieved her acupuncture training at the Midwest College of Oriental Medicine in Racine, Wisconsin. Her modalities include: tuina, cupping, guasha, deep tissue, cranio sacral, joint mobilization and lymph drainage. She is thrilled to be studying at the Phoenix Institute of Herbal Medicine and Acupuncture for her masters in Oriental Medicine and working with this team as she learns Chinese herbs. She also collaborates with several practioners as an illustrator in wellness journals.
Sep 07 |
Special Massage Rate for a limited time! |
Posted by Shu VIP on September 7, 2017 0 Comment(s) Massage available - $20 for 25 minutes! Now through Thanksgiving
Sep 05 |
Web site updated |
Posted by admin on September 5, 2017 0 Comment(s) Updated web site, logo, verbaige changes etc. enjoy :-)
Apr 29 |
Moving to new location |
Posted by admin on April 29, 2015 0 Comment(s) Moving to new location as of May 1st.
Aug 02 |
History of Acupuncture |
Posted by admin on August 2, 2014 0 Comment(s) Accupuncture has been believed to have originated in China. Tatoo marks theat have been seen on the "Ice Man" who died in about 3300bce might have indicated that a form of stimulatory treatment similar to acupuncture developed quite independently of China. The first document that unequivocally described an organized system of diagnosis and treatment which is recognized as acupuncture is The Yellow Emperor’s Classic of Internal Medicine, dating from about 100 bce. Acupuncture continued to be developed and codified in texts over the subsequent centuries and gradually became one of the standard therapies used in China, alongside herbs, massage, diet and moxibustion (heat). It should be noted that knowledge of health and disease in China developed purely from observation of living subjects because dissection was forbidden and the subject of anatomy did not exist.