Poetry of the Body: Stories About Acupuncture Points
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About this ebook
Perhaps they asked the spirits of the points to reveal themselves and share their secrets. In this book, author Deanna Stennett does just that. She asks the spirits of the points to come forward and speak, taking readers on a ride into the human body to meet the points. In addition, she offers stories and accounts of friends and patients who remind her of each point.
If you are looking for a technical manual about acupuncture, there are many out there. If you want to explore the spirits who live in you and help you every day to be more present and healthy, join Deanna as she guides you down the rabbit hole of healing, blending the ancient traditions of acupuncture, Chinese medicine, and shamanism.
Deanna Slate Stennett L.Ac. MA
Deanna Stennett has studied acupuncture and shamanism since 1993 and eventually earned her masters in Transformative Leadership and Social Change. Deanna teaches at Maryland University of Integrative Health and runs a busy acupuncture practice in Annapolis. She also teaches workshops and classes in shamanism, including an in-depth two-year program.
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Poetry of the Body - Deanna Slate Stennett L.Ac. MA
Section 1: Autumn
If I had to pick a season I love the most, it would be Autumn, which arrives after the heat and humidity of late Summer have gone on and on until I just can’t stand another minute … then those first cool breezes of Autumn come like whispers from heaven. I will literally stand outside with my arms spread, giving thanks to the weather gods. The day I get to wear a sweater and my cheeks turn pink in the early morning coolness, I dance for joy. My steps speed up and I breathe more deeply.
In North America, Autumn is when the leaves turn brilliant colors, then fall. The colors range from bright yellow to fluorescent orange and on to a deep blood red. People actually travel to areas famous for vivid Autumns to enjoy the peak
of the season. For me, that peak
is over all too soon.
I believe that all aspects of our planet, and most likely of the entire Universe, are linked in such a way that what happens in the autumnal trees simultaneously happens in other forms of life. In the trees, though, the process is easy to see: to make ready for the chill of Winter, the trees choose what is valuable and worth storing, versus what must be let go. They pull their vital essence to the safety of the roots, depriving the leaves of that essence. So those beautiful colors are actually signs that the leaves are dying. Eventually they fall and turn brown, withered corpses of the beauty they once were.
Mammals, too, spend autumn gathering nourishment to store for the hard times coming. Bears gorge enough food to let them sleep through the winter, while squirrels and other rodents hide their booty where they can find it later. In nature, Autumn is when all forms of life store their valuables where they are safe, yet available, and let go of everything else.
When we humans live in harmony with this season, we too look at our lives and decide what is valuable, that we should hold onto, and what should be let go. The process can apply to our physical belongings, emotional baggage, or spiritual practices. The questions in every case are the same: What is most valuable? What is precious and serves life? What is unnecessary and no longer serves life? The next time we experience Autumn, let’s pay attention to life around us, let this season teach us the value of each moment, and of every person, place, or thing that brings joy to us, versus what weighs us down and causes us to suffer.
According to Chinese medicine, the two organs (or officials,
as in officials of the Chinese court) of the Autumn are the Lungs and the Colon. Lungs pull in air, essential to life, while the Colon lets go of what no longer serves. The points we will meet in this chapter are on the two meridians (or energy pathways) associated with these "officials.’
Chinese tradition holds that the emotion of this season is what we call grief.
However, this word is merely a translation of a translation from the ancient Chinese. What modern people mean by grief
is only the tip of the iceberg of what the ancients meant. To enlarge your sense of the word, think of a moment in your life that was so precious that even as it ended, you were acutely aware of the loss. Would we call that feeling grief? Or might we call it love? I know a man, a fellow acupuncturist, who says that he can’t bear to look at pictures of his son as a baby, because it is so painful to realize those moments are already gone. His experience speaks of a love so deep it actually causes him pain to remember individual moments, because in remembering, he knows he can never have those moments again. This grief
has no consolation. There is nothing anyone can to say make it okay that these precious moments are gone. The only choice is to let them go - at the same time knowing that other moments as precious will come, if we stay open to let them in.
In our Autumns, then, let’s be deliberate in deciding what we want to let go. Honor each item - then let it go. Let it be like the brown leaves that fall to the ground and return minerals to the soil as they decompose, for there’s a paradox here: in a real sense, the future value of the whatever-it-is depends on letting it go. In the mind and spirit, letting go leaves an empty place for something new. Externally, a released object can then go on to serve again. I have a friend who always says to herself, as she takes treasures to the thrift store, Someone will be so happy to find this!
Only knowing that allows her to let old treasures go.
Chapter 1: Joining of the Valleys (Large Intestine 4)
My sensitivity to spirit and the healing path, started at a very young age, but I didn’t pursue it till I was in my early thirties. Now I look down at the back of my hand to the soft hollow created where the bones of my thumb and forefinger meet. That’s where I experienced my very first acupuncture needle as it penetrated my skin and then my soul …
It was a smoggy October day in Southern California. The day before had been sparkling clear, a day when the Santa Ana winds blew the smog out to sea. Today, though, the wind was back to normal and the mountains surrounding L.A. were lost again in smog. Such an opening happens two or three times a year, the winds shift and the mountains - which I used to almost forget were there - would appear, as if from a dream. It made me breathless as I drove the freeway, to see the snowcaps so clear and shining against the blue.
My soul at the time was like the mountains - I see that now. It was hidden by a dead marriage and obligated to an oppressive religion that told me that since I was a woman I couldn’t use my mind. So I had learned to bury the gifts I was born with until, every once in a while, something would shift, like the Santa Ana winds, and my soul would surface. Then I would bury myself again with the busy-ness of motherhood and nursing a man with a debilitating illness.
I pulled up at the Acupuncture office. The day before I had brought my husband here in a desperate attempt to halt the downward spiral of Multiple Sclerosis. I had sat in the dimly lit office for close to three hours while this man asked hundreds of questions about things not even related to MS. I was envious of the gentle care given to my husband. I’d never seen a healthcare practitioner devote so much focused interest on a patient, and I wanted someone to care about me like that. So here I was. It was my turn.
It had been years since I’d wept — five, at least. When my husband and I fought, early in our marriage, I learned not to cry, so I could stand my ground. I buried my feelings with my soul. After I answered the acupuncturist’s questions, he placed the needles — the first one going into that hollow on my hand.
Each of the points, I was to learn later, had names and spirits. This point is called Joining of the Valleys,
or sometimes The Great Eliminator.
I felt an urge to cry as the needle touched my skin, I was fighting tears as I left the office, and I couldn’t contain them as I drove home. The mountains were out to