
The Dragon Rises Wellness Blog
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The Holidays: An Opportunity to Navigate Family Dynamics in a Mindful Way
You know that phrase that goes something like “That person is really pushing my buttons!”? As I perceive it, your family of origin is made up of the folks who installed those buttons in the first place… Here are 5 Hakomi-informed tips to stay present with yourself in to help you navigate challenging family dynamics during the holidays…
Welcome to the Month of the Pig!
Pigs represent the start of Winter in the lunar calendar, and at the same time they are also the final animal in the Zodiac cycle. Pigs are therefore symbols of both beginnings and endings, and this duality is meaningful: the energy of the Pig relates to…
Yin-Yang Theory
This is a way to conceive of polarities not as oppositional– like light and darkness in a battle for supremacy–but rather as complementary. Light and dark complete one another and co-exist within each other. In the world at large, we see how...
A Case of the Miraculous Sinews: Part 1
I was speaking to one of my oldest patients today in the clinic while performing a sinew channel treatment. She had come in for relief from her inguinal pain that began as a result of the impact of her seatbelt on her pelvis during a car accident...
Welcome to the Month of the Dog!
As autumn settles in, colder weather and gray skies invite us to cozy up indoors. The Chinese zodiac symbol of the Dog perfectly mirrors this seasonal shift. What’s the first thing...
Chinese Lunar Calendar and the Animals of the Chinese Zodiac
Let’s take a look at what the Chinese lunar calendar is, how it differs from the Gregorian calendar, and how the zodiac symbols are mapped onto this calendar...
Welcome to the Month of the Rooster!
...So the symbol of the Rooster, more than simply a signal of the coming day, is about “waking up” to the transformations taking place around us that are just dawning, whatever they may be...
Moxibustion: What is it and how does it work?
So what is moxibustion, how does it work, and why has it historically been given equal importance to needling, while remaining mostly unknown to the general public in the West? At the heart of east Asian medicine and philosophy is the theory of "Yin-Yang", signifying that all things which appear opposite are in fact working together in dynamic relationship…