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healing

Maximizing Recovery: Moxibustion The Game Changer

Maximizing Recovery: Moxibustion The Game Changer

Having the same post-workout tightness or old injury flareups? Do you find yourself going through the same recovery process everytime only to find yourself right back where you started with an old injury? Dealing with chronic pain that never goes away is definitely not normal. Whether you’re into sports, martial arts, strength training - whatever gets your body to its limits - there’s a powerful recovery method you may not have considered yet. It's called moxibustion.


Moxibustion is a time-tested therapy from Chinese medicine that's been used for thousands of years. Despite its long-standing roots, it's still relatively unknown in most sports medicine circles.

Moxibustion applied to the back (burning of rolled mugwort leaf)


Most athletes are familiar with massage, cupping, taping, ice or heat as part of their recovery process. If all you experience is some light muscle soreness, then your body is still relatively healthy and experiencing normal recovery, thus there’s no need to change things up. But if you're dealing with recurring abnormal pain or lingering injuries—like nerve discomfort, an old ACL tear, or a tendon that keeps flaring up—you might need a deeper, more targeted form of healing.


Let’s consider a ligament/tendon strain for example. Sometimes these injuries never fully heal and become weak points that flare up with heavy use. Massage can help, but often requires working through multiple tissue layers—compressing blood vessels, fascia, and surrounding muscles—just to reach the injury. That can cause additional trauma in otherwise healthy areas, making recovery slower and more energy-intensive.


Now imagine a treatment that directly targets the injured tendon or ligament without disturbing the surrounding tissue. That’s where acupuncture and moxibustion come in—offering a smarter, more efficient path to healing.


THE LIMITS OF HEAT AND ICE

Ice and heat can feel good, but they have limitations. For one, they struggle to reach deeper tissues. And in the case of cold therapy, you're often muting the inflammatory response that’s actually necessary for healing. Think of it like banging your thumb—it swells for a reason. That inflammation brings blood to the area, supporting tissue repair. Suppress that process too soon, and you may be cutting healing short.


HOW MOXIBUSTION WORKS

Moxibustion involves applying therapeutic heat to acupuncture points using a specialized herb (commonly mugwort) that’s burned in a controlled way to warm the body without damaging the skin. This targeted heat helps stimulate circulation, improve energy flow, and activate internal organs associated with tissue healing:

Tendons and ligaments = Liver

Muscles = Spleen

Bones and nerves = Kidneys

By activating these systems, we help the body heal the problem area from within, instead of causing trauma to the surrounding tissue. This leads to a more efficient form of healing. You feel better, with less side effects.

Acupuncture vs. Moxibustion

Acupuncture includes both traditional methods and dry needling. Dry needling is effective for directly targeting specific muscles or tendons, especially in acute injuries. But with chronic issues that resist healing, traditional acupuncture often works better by stimulating organ functions that drive circulation and regeneration—even from points distant from the pain site.

If your recovery is being held back by stress, poor sleep, or a demanding schedule, traditional acupuncture may be just what you need to slow down your nervous system and allow proper healing to begin.

When acupuncture alone doesn’t seem to deliver long-term results—meaning symptoms return once treatment ends—that’s when moxibustion may be more effective. By delivering deep-penetrating heat, moxibustion helps kickstart healing in stubborn, stagnant areas where other treatments fall short.


EFFICIENT HEALING MATTERS

Efficiency is everything when it comes to recovery. Many of my athletic clients are surprised at how fast and gentle these treatments are—and even more impressed with how quickly they feel relief. Compared to massage, there’s less post-treatment swelling and inflammation, because we’re not overworking the body. Instead, we use fewer resources and deliver more targeted healing.


SO WHICH IS RIGHT FOR YOU?

Acupuncture and moxibustion aren’t one-size-fits-all. During your session, our practiitoners can assess how your body responds to acupuncture, and if necessary, pivot to moxibustion for better results. Whether you're dealing with a stubborn shoulder injury, chronic knee pain, or recurring nerve discomfort, we can find the approach that unlocks your body’s natural healing potential.

If you're ready to take your recovery to the next level, consider incorporating moxibustion into your routine. Click below to book a session—we’re here to help you heal smarter, faster, and more completely.

Dry Skin? Try These Natural Remedies

Dry Skin? Try These Natural Remedies

With this year's extreme cold winter we have had in Toronto, you may have turned up the heat on full blast just to keep temperatures moderate indoors. As a result, you may have noticed drier skin. You might even be waking with a dry mouth and nose.

The worst part is your hands and feet are like a desert! No amount of lotion or Vaseline seems to keep them from drying up again. 

In this blog I'm going to share with you a few simple solutions to re-hydrate your body from the inside out. In doing so, you won't have to apply as much lotion continuously, and your mouth and nose should not be as dry when you wake up in the mornings. 

First let's dive into why this is happening. With dryness, there's actually 2 factors going on. 1. External dryness, 2. Internal heat. Dryness can be moistened with foods that help generate more fluid in the body. Here's a few that can help:

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1. Honey

Honey has so many healing properties. Moistening dryness is just one!

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2. Kiwis & Bananas

Great for relieving thirst. Bananas also have moistening properties that are good for regular bowel movements and help dry skin.

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3. Oatmeal

Any kind of porridge is good for restoring fluids. In asian culture congee is one made with rice and water in a ratio of 1:6.

Heat on the other hand doesn't disappear by moistening it. You actually have to clear it out of your system. 

But where is this heat coming from? It's the middle of winter, so if it's not externally generated, it must be coming from within.

"What generates heat internally though?" you might wonder. And the answer is stress.

That could be tight deadlines, or having to multi-task non-stop. You can think about a computer overheating, when it has too much to process, or hasn't been shut off in a while. Our brains need the same "TIME OFF". Otherwise, we crash and burn.

Add more meditation, or go for a weekend getaway. This is great for bringing down stress levels. In addition, here are some foods you can add to your diet to clear the heat/inflammation from your body:

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1. Peppermint

Great for clearing heat, emotional frustration, and ‘chilling you out’.

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2. Pears

Pears are a 2-in-1 combo. Not only do they clear heat, but they also moisten dryness. This is the go-to for feelings of thirst, especially if you have been eating spicy lately, or fried foods. The heat clearing properties will get you feeling refreshed and thirst quenched.


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3. Watermelon

Great for clearing heat from your system. In fact watermelon is something we typically crave during the intense summer heat. However, due to its cooling nature, it should be eaten in moderation.



I hope you enjoyed these tips. Feel free to book an acupuncture & food therapy session to dive deeper into your health concerns.

How Does Acupuncture Work?

How Does Acupuncture Work?

Here we break down how acupuncture works from a Traditional Chinese Medicine perspective.