{"id":96,"date":"2007-06-25T02:00:51","date_gmt":"2007-06-25T07:00:51","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/dontow.com\/wordpress\/?p=96"},"modified":"2019-06-14T22:58:50","modified_gmt":"2019-06-15T02:58:50","slug":"myth-or-reality","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.dontow.com\/2007\/06\/myth-or-reality\/","title":{"rendered":"Myth or Reality?"},"content":{"rendered":"

In this article, I discussed a few real-life examples of medical treatments based on acupressure and Qigong.\u00a0 Their results are difficult to understand from a traditional western medical point of view, and could often be dismissed as myth, and not reality.<\/p>\n

About 16 years ago I injured my left little finger while I was playing goalie in a soccer game.\u00a0 When I dove to block a shot at goal, I landed on that finger in an awkward way and damaged its tendons and ligaments.\u00a0 That finger was swollen right away and I felt a lot of pain.\u00a0 I left the game and went home.\u00a0 Since the finger did not improve after a night’s rest, the next day I went to see my orthopedic surgeon, who after examination referred me to see a specialist orthopedic surgeon who specializes in treating hand injuries.\u00a0 So I immediately made an appointment and went to see that hand specialist orthopedic surgeon who put a splint on my finger and treated me with physical therapy on a weekly basis for six months.<\/p>\n

At the end of six months, he told me that he was finished treating me, even though when I closed my left hand, my little finger could not close completely and left a gap of about one-third of an inch from touching my palm.\u00a0 Another six months passed, or a year after the injury, a friend mentioned to me about a Chinese woman doctor, Dr. Su, in the East Brunswick area.\u00a0 Having nothing to lose, I went to see her.\u00a0 While in China, Dr. Su was trained both in western medicine and in Chinese medicine, which included acupuncture treatment and acupressure treatment, and had worked in China as both a western doctor and a Chinese doctor.\u00a0 Since immigrated to the U.S., she only practiced Chinese medicine, and in particular, at that time only acupressure and herbal medicine.<\/p>\n

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Dr. Su treated me once per week with acupressure, during which she used her hands and fingers to apply pressure and massage my little left finger.\u00a0 Each treatment lasted 30-40 minutes.\u00a0 During each treatment, I felt some pain when she was pressing on my little finger.\u00a0 However, the finger felt better after each treatment, and it was able to bend a little closer to the palm.\u00a0 As a matter of fact, the more pain I felt during the treatment, the more the improvement afterward.\u00a0 After six such treatments, my little left finger could close completely and touch my palm.\u00a0 Because these treatments didn’t start until a year after the injury, Dr. Su said that she couldn’t cure me completely, and that finger is permanently slightly curved.\u00a0 Dr. Su told me that the difference between her treatment and the traditional western doctor’s treatment is that the latter would put a splint on my finger right away (which was exactly what my specialist orthopedic surgeon did), but if she were treating me from the very beginning, she would first massage and try to move my damaged tendons and ligaments back to their original positions before putting a splint on.<\/p>\n

My regular orthopedic surgeon was an experienced orthopedic surgeon and supposed to be part of a reputable orthopedic surgeon practice, since one of his senior partners was once the orthopedic surgeon for a major New York professional sports team.\u00a0 So the specialist orthopedic surgeon that he referred me to should also be a quality specialist.\u00a0 Being a Chinese American and having lived in both China\/Hong Kong and the U.S., I of course had experience with Chinese medicine before, but I never really believed in Chinese medicine and had always thought that western medicine is better and will replace Chinese medicine completely with time.<\/p>\n

Several years passed, I started learning Taiji, as well as a couple of other Chinese internal martial arts.\u00a0 Almost every style of Chinese martial arts, especially Chinese internal martial arts, has Qigong (which literally means “doing work with the breath”) as part of its advanced training to achieve the following martial arts\/health objectives:<\/p>\n