Teacher Spotlight Archives - Eastern School of Acupuncture & Traditional Medicine /category/teacher-spotlight/ New Jersey's 1st Acupuncture School Mon, 17 Nov 2025 15:44:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 /wp-content/uploads/2025/08/cropped-favicon-32x32.webp Teacher Spotlight Archives - Eastern School of Acupuncture & Traditional Medicine /category/teacher-spotlight/ 32 32 Faculty Member Dr. Bruce Woong Park’s New Book Mindful Acupuncture Practice /teacher-spotlight/faculty-member-dr-bruce-woong-parks-new-book-mindful-acupuncture-practice/ Tue, 28 Oct 2025 13:05:37 +0000 /?p=7189 A Recommendation to Read Mindful Acupuncture Practice (MAP)?by Bruce Woong Park introduces an integrative clinical system that unites classical East Asian medical theory, modern bioscience, and contemplative awareness. Rooted in the principle of?Jingcheng (精诚)—the fusion of refined technique (Jing) and compassionate sincerity (Cheng)—MAP redefines acupuncture as both scientific art and spiritual discipline. This review critically […]

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A Recommendation to Read

Mindful Acupuncture Practice (MAP)?by Bruce Woong Park introduces an integrative clinical system that unites classical East Asian medical theory, modern bioscience, and contemplative awareness. Rooted in the principle of?Jingcheng (精诚)—the fusion of refined technique (Jing) and compassionate sincerity (Cheng)—MAP redefines acupuncture as both scientific art and spiritual discipline. This review critically examines MAP’s contributions to clinical methodology and educational reform through its three interlocking systems: the Phased Intervention Priority System (PIPS), Interactive Needling Practice (INP), and Five-Pinpoint Integrated Needling System (5PINS). While the text presents a visionary framework for merging diagnostic precision with mindful presence, its reliance on subjective, non-measurable skills challenges accessibility, standardization, and institutional adoption. Ultimately, Park’s work advances a paradigm shift that reaffirms the primacy of human presence—the “thinking hand” and the cultivated?Shen—as the enduring essence of healing in an age increasingly shaped by technological mediation.

中国P站 the Author

Dr. Bruce W. Park, DACM, is a licensed acupuncturist, dharma teacher, and Academic Dean at the New York College of Health Professions. He is the developer of the Mindful Acupuncture Practice (MAP) system and the author of several books that bridge classical East Asian medicine with contemplative practice.

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Dr. Bruce Woong Park, DACM, LAc

Dr. Bruce Woong Park is a distinguished expert in East Asian medicine and Buddhist practice, integrating decades of spiritual discipline and medical expertise. His academic journey began at Dongguk University in Seoul, where he studied Buddhist philosophy while dedicating over 20 years to the Buddhist monkhood. Expanding his focus to medicine, he earned a master’s degree from Tri-State College of Acupuncture and a doctorate in acupuncture and Chinese medicine from Pacific College of Health and Science.

A pioneer in bringing East Asian medicine to the West, Dr. Park has authored influential works, including Mindful Acupuncture Practice,?A Clinical Manual of Herbal Medicine,?and?Classical Asian Herbal Therapy, which continue to shape the field. With over two decades of teaching experience, he has shared his knowledge at Lotus Dharma Society, South Baylo University, Virginia University of Integrative Medicine, and Eastern School of Acupuncture & Traditional Medicine, bridging healing wisdom with modern healthcare.

Currently, Dr. Park serves as Academic Dean of the Graduate School of Acupuncture and Herbal Medicine at New York College of Health Professions. He also leads Acupuncture Park Center in NYC, where he provides integrative treatments that blend acupuncture, herbal medicine, and mindfulness-based healing.

Mindful Acupuncture Practice: A Review of an Integrated System?

Dr. Bruce W. Park, DACM?
Dean of the Graduate School of Acupuncture and Herbal Medicine?
New York College of Health Professions?

Abstract?

Mindful Acupuncture Practice (MAP) by Bruce Woong Park offers an ambitious, integrative framework that unites? classical East Asian medical theory, modern bioscience, and contemplative awareness. Grounded in the principle of? Jingcheng (精诚)—the union of refined mastery (Jing) and compassionate sincerity (Cheng)—MAP re-envisions? acupuncture as both a technical art and a moral discipline. This review critically evaluates MAP’s theoretical? contributions and its challenges in educational and clinical implementation. While the text provides a compelling? architecture for synthesizing ancient and modern paradigms through the Phased Intervention Priority System (PIPS),? Interactive Needling Practice (INP), and Five-Pinpoint Integrated Needling System (5PINS), its emphasis on subjective,? non-quantifiable skills raises essential questions regarding accessibility, standardization, and pedagogy. Ultimately, the? book reaffirms the irreplaceable human presence at the heart of medicine, even as it stretches the profession’s? conceptual and institutional boundaries.?

The Challenge of Complexity: Integrating with Precision and Flow?

The primary contribution of Mindful Acupuncture Practice lies in its architectural coherence, constructed upon? three interdependent pillars: the Phased Intervention Priority System (PIPS), the Interactive Needling Practice? (INP), and the Five-Pinpoint Integrated Needling System (5PINS). Together, these create a multi-layered clinical? model that demands exceptional cognitive and somatic integration from practitioners.?

Top-Down Strategy vs. Tactical Execution.?

PIPS functions as the strategic, top-down framework for clinical reasoning, guiding treatment design through five? progressive phases—Foundational, Channel, Organ, Symptom, and Spirit. 5PINS, by contrast, operates as the? bottom-up engine of precision therapy, merging myofascial trigger points (MTPs), neuromuscular motor points? (NMPs), and neurosegmental anatomy. The clinical artistry of MAP emerges from harmonizing these layers— using PIPS to diagnose the constitutional root (e.g., Kidney Qi deficiency) and 5PINS to address the local? manifestation (e.g., inhibited gluteus medius motor point). Yet this orchestration of strategic vision and micro technical execution sets a formidable bar for practitioners seeking immediate clinical applicability.?

The Protocol Paradox.?

MAP rejects both “cookbook” acupuncture and disorganized “point soup,” insisting on relational intelligence.? Nevertheless, its own structure introduces detailed procedural sequences—the Architect’s Toolkit and the? stepwise logic of PIPS and 5PINS. For students or time-pressed clinicians, these protocols risk devolving into? mechanical checklists rather than vehicles for reflective judgment. The paradox is apparent: a system designed to? liberate practitioners from formulaic treatment may, through its very precision, encourage new forms of rigidity.?

The Subjectivity of Artistry: The Thinking Hand and Shen?

At the heart of MAP lies a non-negotiable premise: the efficacy of acupuncture depends upon the practitioner’s? cultivated presence, what classical sources call Shen ()—the integrative consciousness animating skill. Park? names this faculty the “thinking hand”: a perceptive, intelligent, and responsive organ of healing. Yet this central? principle rests upon capacities that defy quantification.

Tactile Dialogue.?

The Interactive Needling Practice (INP) demands refined sensory literacy—the ability to distinguish Qizhi (氣至,? arrival of Qi) from Deqi (得氣, systemic integration). Practitioners must perceive the latency window—the silent? interval during which the body assimilates the needle’s message. Such skills, traditionally transmitted through? apprenticeship, are challenging to acquire solely through textual study, reaffirming MAP’s artistic ethos while? limiting its scalability.?

The Power of Presence.?

Equally central is cultivating mindful composure to maintain neuroceptive safety—the patient’s implicit sense of? safety and regulation. Through Shen and embodied stillness, the practitioner co-regulates the patient’s nervous? system, an especially critical factor in treating fibromyalgia, trauma, or Shen disturbance. MAP’s Clinical? Assessment Rubrics attempt to measure intangible qualities such as “attuned presence” and “listening through? touch,” but these inherently subjective competencies challenge the boundaries of objective pedagogy.?

Educational and Institutional Challenges?

Park’s Three-Division Model for Acupuncture Education offers a visionary reform to counter what he calls the? profession’s “quiet yet pressing crisis.” The proposed curriculum comprises:?

  1. Traditional Acupuncture (TA): Mastery of classical texts (Neijing, Nanjing) and lineage-based palpation? methods.?
  2. Modern Acupuncture (MA): Training in neuroanatomy, pain science, and biomedical reasoning (dermatomes,? myotomes, NERA, CNA).?
  3. Acupuncture Therapeutics (AT): Applied integration through problem- and case-based learning (PBL/CBL),? merging TA and MA into coherent clinical practice.?

Successful implementation requires faculty fluent in both classical and biomedical languages—a rarity in current? institutional settings. Moreover, MAP’s developmental hierarchy (Student → Instructor → Faculty) presupposes? long-term mentorship and substantial investment of time and resources. While the model promotes depth and? professional maturity, its demands could strain existing academic frameworks and accreditation systems.?

Conclusion?

Mindful Acupuncture Practice is a landmark synthesis that unites the technical, theoretical, and contemplative? dimensions of East Asian medicine into a single pedagogical and clinical framework. By re-centering the human? element—the practitioner’s awareness, sensitivity, and sincerity—it positions mindfulness not as an adjunct to? technique but as its governing principle.?

Yet the book’s most striking strength—its comprehensive integration of philosophy, science, and inner cultivation —also defines its principal challenge. The diagnostic precision and inner-outer discipline required to? operationalize the PIPS, INP, and 5PINS systems exceed conventional clinical curricula. For MAP to realize its? promise, educators and practitioners alike must embrace the discipline of presence over protocol, embodiment? over abstraction, and wisdom over mere information.?

In the end, Park’s work affirms that the future of acupuncture—and perhaps of medicine itself—will be sustained? not by digital tools or procedural algorithms, but by the living intelligence of the hand, the heart, and the moment? of touch.?

Keywords: Mindful Acupuncture Practice, Jingcheng, East Asian Medicine, clinical integration, Shen, education reform

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Faculty Member Dr. Farshid Namin Honored with Congressional Recognition? /teacher-spotlight/faculty-member-dr-farshid-namin-honored-with-congressional-recognition/ Mon, 27 Oct 2025 15:37:40 +0000 /?p=7102 On Saturday, July 13, 2025, Dr. Namin was one of only 13 practitioners in California to receive a Certificate of Congressional Recognition in honor of the 50th anniversary of the legalization of acupuncture in the state of California. The certificate, issued by the U.S. Congress, acknowledges Dr. Namin’s contributions to advocate the Acupuncture Profession and […]

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On Saturday, July 13, 2025, Dr. Namin was one of only 13 practitioners in California to receive a Certificate of Congressional Recognition in honor of the 50th anniversary of the legalization of acupuncture in the state of California.

The certificate, issued by the U.S. Congress, acknowledges Dr. Namin’s contributions to advocate the Acupuncture Profession and impact the health and communities. Dr. Farshid Namin is a distinguished medical doctor and integrative medicine leader who has spent decades serving communities around the world. With a background in emergency medicine and disaster response, Dr. Namin worked extensively with the United Nations and the Red Cross in global crisis zones. After relocating to the United States, he earned his Master of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine and later his Doctorate in Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine (DAOM) from Yo San University, where he went on to serve as Dean for several years. Dr. Namin has held teaching appointments at various institutions across the U.S., and is currently a faculty member at The 中国P站 located in Bloomfield, NJ where he lectures in acupuncture, Oriental medicine, integrative health, and Western medicine. His lifelong dedication to bridging Eastern and Western healing systems has earned him multiple awards and honors.

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Strengthen Your Immunity /teacher-spotlight/strengthen-your-immunity/ Wed, 14 Apr 2021 14:41:57 +0000 https://www.esatm.edu/blog/?p=474 Dr. Matthew Fellner, DACM, L.Ac. Don’t wait until you’re sick to start taking care of your health!? One of the best ways to strengthen your immunity is to be proactive.? As we have seen during the COVID-19 pandemic, there are two main factors that affect our immunity and increase the likelihood of both getting sick […]

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Dr. Matthew Fellner, DACM, L.Ac.

Don’t wait until you’re sick to start taking care of your health!? One of the best ways to strengthen your immunity is to be proactive.? As we have seen during the COVID-19 pandemic, there are two main factors that affect our immunity and increase the likelihood of both getting sick and having a more severe reaction once we are sick: viral load and the internal environment that allows the virus to thrive.? The only way to control viral load is to reduce exposure through the use of masks, social distancing, and frequent hand washing.? But how do we nourish and boost our body’s natural defense to reduce the likelihood of infection even if we are exposed, or prevent more severe complications? It may surprise you that 3 simple steps can go a long way to improving your immune health.

1.  Get Acupuncture – research has shown that acupuncture not only reduces stress and inflammation, but specifically can boost the levels of immune system cytokines and T cells to fight off infection. 

2.  Breathe Deeply – Most people breathe only in the top part of the lungs and do not oxygenate or filter properly, leading to weakness and susceptibility to infections.  Simply taking 5-10 minutes to deepen and slow the breath can make a difference.  Here is a great exercise that also involves mindfulness to improve the lungs’ immune function:  Inhale deeply but gently without straining or making noise, then imagine your lungs are being cleansed of all the toxins, gently exhale through a little hole in the mouth, and visualize all those toxins leaving the body.  Repeat 8-10 times

3.? Increase Anti-inflammatory Foods – foods high in sugar, processed, and packaged foods increase inflammation and make fighting infections much harder.? Where possible, substitute fresh vegetables, fruit, and eggs for artificial products.? 3 foods that deserve special consideration and should be added to your diet whenever possible are mushrooms, coconut oil, and raw(unheated) honey, which all have powerful anti-inflammatory properties.

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Auricular Acupuncture Changing Lives /teacher-spotlight/auricular-acupuncture-changing-lives/ /teacher-spotlight/auricular-acupuncture-changing-lives/#comments Wed, 25 Jul 2018 14:30:01 +0000 http://www.esatm.edu/blog/?p=325 Andrew Greenberg LAc, MSAc, 中国P站 December 2017 Graduate Auricular acupuncture is?the stimulation of acupuncture points?on the external ear surface for the?diagnosis and treatment of health?conditions in other areas of the body.?The ear holds a microsystem of the?body, consistent with the brain map?discoveries of Canadian neuroscientist?Wilder Penfield. Dr. Penfield found?that maps of the body exist on […]

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Andrew Greenberg LAc, MSAc, 中国P站 December 2017 Graduate

Auricular acupuncture is?the stimulation of acupuncture points?on the external ear surface for the?diagnosis and treatment of health?conditions in other areas of the body.?The ear holds a microsystem of the?body, consistent with the brain map?discoveries of Canadian neuroscientist?Wilder Penfield. Dr. Penfield found?that maps of the body exist on the?surface, or sensory cortex, of the brain.?This same brain map is also projected?onto different areas of the body,?“microsystems”, and in particular?precision, onto the ear.

Practitioners all over the world use this therapy to treat pain, dysfunction, addictions and internal disorders with excellent results. Whether used in conjunction with another treatment or by itself, auriculotherapy is often effective when other treatments have failed. Best of all, it is safe, non-invasive and has no known side effects.

One of the great advantages of learning auriculotherapy is the various ways you can use ear therapy to achieve great results.? You can use acupuncture needles, e-stim and press tags.?? However, what’s really exciting is that there are many tools out in the market today that allows an acupuncturist to use auriculotherapy on a patient without the use of needles.? The benefits of this is quite exciting.? One is that it enhances the effect of your treatment, but beyond this bene?t, auriculotherapy also offers the practitioner other advantages including better patient recruiting and retention, broader scope of practice, and enhanced ?nancial rewards.? Another benefit is your practice now attracts those patients that have always wanted to try acupuncture but may have been somewhat needle phobic, thus opening up your practice to many many more potential patients.

Advantages of Auriculotherapy

  • Can be learned easily
  • Rapid to perform in practice
  • Addresses any part of the body, even inaccessible parts
  • Results are often achieved very quickly
  • No negative side effects
  • Does not require a patient to disrobe or lie down
  • Can be applied in nearly any setting or situation
  • Multiple patients can be treated at the same time
  • Does not require needles or other invasive treatment
  • Can treat the front and back of the body at the same time
  • Faster and easier than body acupuncture
  • Enhances the effect of other acupuncture points
  • Provides an additional billable service
  • Can provide signi?cant additional practice income

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中国P站 Alumnus Amy Yip /teacher-spotlight/esatm-alumnus-amy-yip/ /teacher-spotlight/esatm-alumnus-amy-yip/#comments Tue, 24 Jan 2017 17:46:55 +0000 http://www.esatm.edu/blog/?p=110 中国P站 Alumnus Amy Yip For 20 years, I enjoyed working in the information systems field. It was once my passion and helped me advance in the corporate world. However, one day I realized that I wanted to pursue something different. I took some time to rethink about what I truly enjoy doing and what it […]

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中国P站 Alumnus Amy Yip

For 20 years, I enjoyed working in the information systems field. It was once my passion and helped me advance in the corporate world. However, one day I realized that I wanted to pursue something different. I took some time to rethink about what I truly enjoy doing and what it is I could do for long term.? I wanted to pursue a field that I would get better and better at within time. It was also important to me to contribute back to the community. Overall, I wanted to do something meaningful.

As a Chinese woman, I have always been proud about coming from a heritage that is thousands of years old. Being raised up with folk remedies, a combination of both western and Chinese medicine, I became quite healthy. I became interested in learning more about herbs, food, and additional ways to make myself healthier. I would pick up health related books and read them leisurely. I enjoyed any topics in the medical field because the human body and it’s components in a cell was so intriguing to me! After taking some time to study and research on the internet, I found that I could learn about traditional healing methods and practice them in America. That was when I found the medicine of acupuncture and the Eastern School.

I decided to join the Eastern School where I met a lot of great students and teachers. In the first year, I found it challenging because the topic was so foreign to me. Nonetheless, I was able to push forward and accomplish everything that is required to become a licensed acupuncturist. It required perseverance and hard work. There were moments of nervousness and frustration accompanied with tears, but at the end there was feelings of joy, accomplish, and pride.

I started my own practice in June 2013. It contains a humble two treatment room clinic. With the mercy of God, it has been growing since day one. I enjoy talking to my patients, analyzing their cases, and formulating treatment plans. ?Through my practice, I have learned that every patient is unique, even when they may have the same health condition. This is the most intriguing part of my career. My joy stems from the patients getting better and healthier and me knowing that I am part of that.

My favorite quote is “Don’t aim for success if you want it; just do what you love and believe in, and it will come naturally.” –David Frost

(Courtesy of Amy Yip)

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