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    1st July 2010

    ACTCM – Part II

    Here's my perspective as a patient at the ACTCM clinic.

    I have been urging my friends to go to the clinic so I figured I should at least tell my story. I had not always been a believer of TCM. As recent as 4 years ago I would never have gone into the clinic of a Chinese doctor. However, like most students/patients at the school, a case that Western medicine could do nothing for changed my perspective forever.

    I had severe eczema that three Western doctors (Internal Med, Neurology, Dermatology) could not resolve and the cream (Elidel) helped when I apply it onto the problem spots but the effects are gone immediately if I didn’t keep on applying it. There was also a warning that I should not expose skin with Elidel applied to sunlight. That just seemed ridiculous. It was the middle of summer and the heat and stuffiness (from wearing long sleeves) actually intensified the eczema – so for me it was a situation of damned if you do damned if you don’t. Not to mention Elidel came with pages of warnings but all my doctors did was just keep on prescribing it. I was pulling my hair out when my mom offered “do you want to go see my herbalist?” Since I had no better idea, I figured I might as well.

    My doctor, a non-assuming kindly elderly man in a (yes, crammed room with tons of old cabinets behind him) took about 10 minutes to diagnose me and gave me 3 packs of herbal medicine to take. After the first dose of herbal medicine, the eczema got worse (I still had faith), and by the second one, I could see the rashes clearing up. By the final dose (yes, only THREE), I knew I was saying good bye to my skin condition. What I figured was that the herbs forced out whatever toxin was in my system and thus cured me from inside out instead of trying to control it from outside in like the Western doctors did. This converted me. It doesn't mean that I don't believe in Western medicine anymore. It simply means that there's a lot of wisdom in TCM that will work really well in the modern world and I don't see why we couldn't use the systems together, with equal weight and respect for both. Ok, here ends my tangent.

    I must say that I had not tried acupuncture until I got to this school. I grew up with herbal teas as part of my culture (yes, my mom's soups had medicinal purposes), but acupuncture always seemed scary (needles! And lots of them!). I was really nervous my first time at the clinic because it was not just slightly daunting to have 4 students plus a supervisor hover over you and stare at your tongue. But I got over and I have to say the experience was not as painful and much more relaxing that I had expected. What blew me away was that one time I had problem with insomnia (I kept on waking up at 7 no matter what time I went to sleep) and a complete lack of appetite (which is horrific to me since I love food) so I went to the clinic for a treatment. I didn’t expect to have everything cleared up, but I just wanted to see if it could at lease alleviate my problems a little. Right after the treatment (auricular acupuncture is SO awesome, insanely painful, but awesome!), I was able to consume as much food as I wanted (probably a little more than necessary but I was excited to have my appetite back) and the next day I was able to sleep until 8! (I had never been so happy to see 8 on my alarm clock. And from then on, just one treatment later, all my symptoms were cleared out. (for those of you curious, I was diagnosed as having Middle Jiao disharmony)

    This is an absolutely true story. No exaggeration and no personal flavoring due to my own course of career. By nature, I’ve always been a skeptic until I’ve tried something out, and this was enough to convince me that this WORKS. I’ve also gone to the clinic for a tightness (not enough to be called pain) in my mid-back (lower thoracic) – gone. And I’ve never been so “warm” in my life, thanks to my herbs (if you’re a girl with chronic cold hands and feet you know what I mean). You don’t have to believe me. I have started to accept things that I can’t “see” or “prove.” This reliance on physical “proof” actually hindered my studies in Tarot as well (which, interestingly, a lot of people in the school are also involved in). Perhaps if we had a little faith (religious or not), it would make life a bit more hopefully and cheerful. Don’t take my word for it, try it yourself!

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    23rd June 2010

    ACTCM - Part I

    For those who follow me on Yelp, this is an expansion of my review with some details filled in.

    American College of Traditional Chinese Medicine is the school where I am currently pursuing a MS degree in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), which may likely become another regular topic in this blog going forward. It may seem like a strange divergent from my path as a translator, but in subsequent posts, I will demonstrate how dreams/fantasies do come true in the most unlikely ways.

    There are two parts to my experience at ACTCM, as a student and as a patient at the clinic. In part I I will go over my experiences as a student.

    I'd like to say it's fate that led me to this place but that would be slighting the massive efforts that my fellow classmates put into researching schools so I'll just say that I was really lucky to find this school almost accidentally. This blog is actually a great record of what was going on to me last Summer, when I was on a soul searching journey.

    I was in SF when the light bulb in my head lit up and I realized that I wanted to go to acupuncture school, and if possible, in SF. I did some research online and ACTCM is the only acupuncture school that's actually in SF (though there're a quite few in the Bay area). I called the school up for a visit/tour. The people at the admissions office were extremely helpful and nice. That actually was super surprising to me since I had worked in admissions and this is just not how schools typical are. I was lucky enough to sit in on one of the classes taught by a wonderful faculty member (Mark Frost – now that I actually am in his class all of us fawn over him) and I was blown away by his in-depth knowledge of TCM and more importantly, his genuine passion for the subject. It's easy for someone to say "I think alternative medicine has a good future (in $)" but what I was looking for was a place and people with "spirit" and "passion." Then I arranged to shadow an alum (Devin Wu, an awesome PT & TCM practitioner) at his clinic and that was a great experience too. It had all the elements of the “new style” of TCM (no longer the old long-bearded doctor in his crammed room with hundreds of herbal cabinets behind him). It was fresh, new, and very positive. All in all, everything was wonderful, which is why I decided to come to this school.

    Deciding on the school was just step one. After getting to ACTCM, I truly got an appreciation for how lucky I was. The school is wonderful and actually takes their students' satisfaction seriously. The faculty is knowledgeable and very willing to help students achieve their goals, but what impressed me the most were the students. There's such a great communal atmosphere at the school. There are communal kitchens at both campuses and people are mostly pretty conscientious about cleaning up after themselves. We all try to help each other survive school and contribute our own efforts to the group voluntarily. I think that's hard to come by anywhere. None of that cutthroat-ness med schools are known for, we all know that we are here because we believe in what we do and we’re not just doing it for the money (the annual income of an acupuncturist really doesn’t have much “wow” factor). The alumni and upperclassmen are also very helpful and some go out of their way to help new students settle in. I once wrote a post to the school mailing list asking about Tuina vs. Shiatsu and more than 7-8 people responded with enthusiastic comments on their own perspective way down the line, which really helped clear up what the courses would help me achieve my goals. That also impressed and in many ways, touched me very much.

    The coursework is very vigorous but lots of fun and very interesting. The curriculum is pretty all-inclusive (the Taichi and Qigong courses were pretty awesome) so you come out a very well rounded practitioner. Right now I’m still trying to wrap my head around this 4000 year old system that pervades everything in Chinese culture, but I look forward to the day when everything just comes together and I can have another light bulb that says “I got it!”

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