Found an interesting article on Vogue...
Is the Acufacial the Ultimate Pre-Party Beauty Trick?
Is the Acufacial the Ultimate Pre-Party Beauty Trick?
This past
Tuesday, I found myself lying on my back in a Union Square healing center with
nearly two dozen needles in my face. It was a remarkable experience for a
number of reasons. Mostly because I am terrified of needles. To get my blood
drawn, or even my ears pierced, I require the kind of coddling and hand-holding
usually reserved for toddlers. So how exactly did I end up volunteering to
become a human pincushion? With the Met Gala just weeks
away, I’ve narrowed my focus to getting my complexion in prime glowing order,
and research has told me that, in addition to giving me the kind of temporary
facelift usually provided by lymphatic drainage facials and microcurrent
machines, an acupuncture facial (otherwise known as an acufacial) would also
fine-tune my emotional and physical state. In other words, in a mere eighty
minutes, I would be getting an appointment with a therapist, doctor, and
aesthetician all in one. And for that kind of time-saving, I would endure
almost any form of torture.
So, at the
recommendation of an editor friend, I booked an evening acufacial with
NYC-based acupuncturist Soo-Mi Hwang. Borrowing
from the traditional Chinese medicine technique that’s used for treating
everything from osteoarthritis to back pain and stress, the skin treatment
targets acupoints to stimulate the body’s regenerative process. I arrived early
in hopes of calming my nerves before going under the needles. Instead, after
being asked to remove my shoes, I was just as swiftly handed an informational
packet that was more thorough than my 2014 taxes. Inquiring about everything
from my family’s medical history, to my mental health and my dietary
inclinations, the form was meant to create a 360-degree view of my hopes,
fears, pores, organs, and 4:00 p.m. sugar cravings.
Why? Hwang
explained that my face and skin are essentially mirrors of everything happening
inside my body and mind. After setting to work painlessly placing hair-thin
pins along my frown lines, my temples, jaw, and on my head, Hwang addressed the
blockages in my body, referring to a kind of damming of my energy meridians.
“Your stomach is very tight—that’s not a good thing,” she informed me, before
putting a pin into each of my purlicues (the skin between the thumb and the
index finger), which caused a brief charley horse in my hands, then released
tension in my whole body and made me feel a little light-headed. “See?” said
Hwang, “That’s your stomach. You hold too much stress there.”
She also placed
needles in my shins (“For your chi,” she said), and one on the top of my head.
Almost instantly, I felt energized. Before I knew it, the needles were removed,
and Hwang was painting a skin-tightening herbal mask onto my face (“secret
family recipe,” she told me when I inquired about its contents). After what
felt like seconds but was actually twenty minutes, she washed it off and
performed a circulation-stimulating massage, including a vigorous rubdown of
the knots in my jaw and along the base of my skull.
As promised, I
emerged from her studio with a radiant complexion—as well as feeling more
relaxed, and with much more energy than when I arrived. In the days that followed,
my sleep was sounder, and I was surprised by how loose and lucid my body felt.
If that’s not the ultimate pre-party appointment, I don’t know what is. And one
thing is for certain: I’ll be booking another for the morning of the Met Gala.
2 comments:
Acupuncture activates the part of the brain which is involved in the production of natural opiates. Opiates are the body's own substance that relieves pain. Acupuncture Mississauga also activates the insular in the cerebral cortex area of the brain and is involved in pain control.
Great post!!Thanks for sharing it with us....really needed.Seok Park, PhD, LAc, Dipl OM:-Dr.Park attended Korea University in Seoul, Korea and received his B.S. in Genetic Engineering. After graduating from college he completed a 2 year traditional apprenticeship under Master Hyun Kyu Choi as a full time apprentice studying Acupuncture and Traditional Oriental Medicine. He started practicing acupuncture and herbal medicine in Korea through volunteer work since 2003.Acupuncture in Ellicott City
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