Bruce Boldon, M.A., L.Ac.

Acupuncture & T'ai Chi for Great Health

House Calls

I’m pleased to announce that I now make House Calls for Acupuncture in Santa Rosa and the surrounding region! I hope to better serve people who would like the benefits of Acupuncture, but can’t make it into an office.


Over the years I have made a few house calls here and there on request. Recently I have had occasion to provide that service again, and I realized that I find it very rewarding to see people in their own home, to see how they live. It gives me a better sense of who my patients are and what their lives are like, which helps me give them even better Acupuncture treatments. So I have decided to make this available to everyone in Santa Rosa and the surrounding area, including Rohnert Park, Petaluma, Sebastopol, Windsor, Healdsburg and other places in the region. If I didn’t mention where you are, just call me and ask!


Call for more details. (530) 708-1628

How does Acupuncture help with Functional Health issues?

I like to call any health issue that wasn’t the result of an injury or illness a Functional health issue. As an example, let’s look at headaches. Headaches can certainly be the result of an injury; or they can come from an illness like a cold, or the flu. In these cases the headache is caused by some outside force, an injury or an illness. And these headaches would be treated the same way, by choosing Acupuncture points that open the blockages that are causing the headache.


But a headache can also come from stress, tension, or from a situation like a migraine. These are problems of the function of the body. These types of headache are coming from an imbalance in the internal environment of the body.


Functional health problems take many forms: allergies, asthma, chronic headaches, migraines, digestive problems, heartburn, irritable bowel, and women’s health issues are some of the more common issues that acupuncture can address.


Just like with an injury, these types of issues also come from blockages and imbalances in the flow of energy in the body. In the case of an illness or injury these blockages come from an outside force. But here we are talking about blockages and imbalances that we have inherited or that we have developed in response to our environment.


In Acupuncture theory we describe the meridians and the flow of Qi in relation to particular organs in the body. We understand these organs as being functions of Energy rather than just the physical organ itself. When the flow of energy to a particular organ has been blocked for some time, it creates an imbalance that affects that organ and its neighbors of the energy they need to function well. Also, we are all born with imbalances and many of these can cause functional health issues.


With Acupuncture we treat all of these kinds of problems with a combination of opening up blocked energy and balancing energy by moving it from meridians and organs where it is excessively strong to ones that are depleted. This not only helps to relieve the pain and the symptoms of the imbalance, but also can help to fix the problem in the first place!

Does Acupuncture help heal injuries, or just relieve pain?

Acupuncture does more than just mask or block pain, but there are several aspects to this question.  In all cases the short answer is that Acupuncture works by improving the flow of Qi and blood through the body, and better flow of energy and blood helps the body heal.

In the case of an injury such as a sprained joint, the swelling, pain and inflammation around the sprain are all signs that the flow of Qi and blood are being impeded.  Acupuncture helps to reduce pain, swelling and inflammation by improving the circulation through the injured area.  This can dramatically shorten the time it takes for the injury to heal.  The body needs energy and blood to get to the affected joint to nourish and repair the injured tissues.  Better circulation also sweeps away the toxins that come from the damaged tissue and cause inflammation. 

Even in the case of a broken bone Acupuncture can shorten the time it takes for the break to heal.  Of course Acupuncture can’t be done through a cast, but Acupuncture points above or below the cast can be used.  Also, corresponding points on the healthy limb can be used to affect the injured area.

The healthy flow of Qi in its regular pathways throughout the whole body is a blueprint for a healthy being.  Stimulating the Acupuncture points activates that healthy blueprint and helps to promote healing.  Psychologically this is like shifting your unconscious thought process from “I’m injured” to “I’m healing, I’m becoming healthy”.

Even with the assistance of Acupuncture treatments it still takes some time for the body to heal from an injury.  I tell my patients that with less pain and swelling constantly reminding you that you are healing, you have to be conscious of it for a while so that you don’t re-injure yourself.

In my next post I will address this same question in the context of functional health problems that didn’t come from an injury.

What my Blog is about

You know how an idea or a feeling can be expressed beautifully in some foreign language, but it doesn’t quite translate into English? For example, the French expression “Je ne sais quoi” isn’t the same as “I don’t know what”. Chinese Medicine is like another language when it comes to explaining our bodies and health issues. The real power of Chinese Medicine is not that there is some magical herb for a particular condition, or that there is an acupuncture point for almost any condition. If we are still thinking of health and disease solely in the language of Western Medicine and trying to use acupuncture within the framework of Western Medicine, then we are missing out on that “Je ne sai quois” that comes from a different language. This is an opportunity to see deeper by seeing differently. The real power is that the Acupuncture theory of Chinese Medicine gives us a true alternative, a different language to use to understand health and disease.

So this is what I want to cover in this blog. Acupuncture Theory, T’ai Chi Ch’uan and Qi Gong are all based upon these same ancient theories that form the language of Chinese Medicine. It is my feeling that all of this sprang from the deep direct understanding that comes out of meditation practice.