Emotional expression may emerge during treatment, but crying alone is not a measure of healing. This reflection explores regulation, containment, and clinical responsibility when a patient’s system begins to open.
These articles are shared as learning material — emphasizing observation, clinical judgment, and decision-making rather than outcomes or protocols.
Smoking Is Not the Problem — It’s a Compensation
Smoking is rarely the real problem. In many cases, it functions as a temporary regulator of breathing, autonomic tension, and internal pressure. A clinical reflection on compensation and regulation.
Receptivity Before Intervention
In reproductive medicine, preparation is often discussed through hormones, protocols, and timing. Yet another question may come first: is the body ready to receive? A clinical reflection on receptivity, regulation, and embryo transfer preparation.
From Huangdi Neijing to Fascia-Oriented Clinical Judgment
Fasciapuncture® proposes that fascia is the living tissue where classical regulation becomes clinically observable. This essay explores how Huangdi Neijing can be understood through fascia-oriented clinical judgment.
Insomnia Is Not a Thinking Problem — It’s a Safety Problem
Insomnia is often described as a mental...
The Modern Body Is Not Weak — It Is Overloaded | Fasciapuncture®
The modern body is not failing. It is adapting. This reflection explores how sedentary living, stress, mechanical imbalance, and low-grade inflammation gradually become overload—and why pain is often the last signal to appear.






