What to Think About Acupuncture Needles Saturday, November 27, 2010

The fundamental question: how to do acupuncture? needs a complicated answer, but in a pragmatic way one should always start with: using a needle. This is a straightforward statement which leads nowhere but rather opens a can of interrogations. Being the "king" of instruments in Chinese acupuncture, it is the object of many discussions. Each of the paragraphs below could be lengthened and detailed considerably. Let us say that a combination of history, technical evolution, practicality and adjustments, have made the basic instrument of Chinese and non-Chinese acupuncture more civilized and less feared by western patients.

How to hold the needle, how to insert it, how deep, at what angle, and mostly, should it be manipulated to induce a bigger stimulation? Arguments are still flowing because it used to be a theoretical stronghold of traditional acupuncturists. Moreover the variety of movements of the needle that one can produce is too impressive to be realistic. What they show is most of the time not what they do. This is one of the biggest problems one encounters when teaching acupuncture (much less in herbal medicine): there are many ritual topics that must be covered in order to enhance the value of the practitioners gesture or give apparently more meaning to his diagnosis or treatment decisions.

The needles we use these days are packed in sterilized blisters and are disposable, which means that they should be thrown away after one use. They bear the acronym ISO or CE showing that they have been approved by international or European official agencies. However in some parts of the world, for financial reasons, needles are still reused after having been properly sterilized.

Where can you find needles? In congresses, seminars, big classes of acupuncture. You can also surf on the web and find the names and addresses of many companies who sell them and will send them to you through the post. The needles that are used at the present time are quite thin. The gauge seldom exceeds 0.32mm; the thinnest can have a diameter of only 0.16mm. There are even needles that are short and as thin as a hair, with a gauge of 0.10mm, sometimes coated in gold (you can imagine the thickness of that coating!) used for facial or cosmetic acupuncture.

The shaft is always made of stainless steel and often covered with a layer of silicone so that they slide without difficulty when inserted in the skin and flesh. The hardness, solidity and flexibility of the shaft or body of the needle must be balanced, so as not to break and not to bend too easily. But it is on the tip that the manufacturers have concentrated all their efforts: depending on its shape and sharpness it must glide into the skin effortlessly, and inflict as little pain as possible, if none at all. So there are many kinds of needles, and the manufacturers come from China, Japan, Korea, Germany, and I suppose other countries (I do not pretend to be an encyclopedia).

One can speculate as to the nature of the material used in the beginning for making an acupuncture needle. Bamboo, jade, bronze, copper, gold, silver, other kinds of metals. Already in the Neijing the emperor Huangdi (the Yellow Emperor) declared that he wants the stone needles to be replaced by metal ones. During the seventies there was in some circles the belief that the metal in itself had a specific role to play in the action of the needles. This idea came from the acupuncturist who introduced the technique in a practical way in Europe, Georges Soulie de Morant. This self-taught sinologist, diplomat, prolific writer, published a little book called: "Precis de la Vraie Acupuncture Chinoise". It came out for the first time in 1934. He had decided that gold and silver needles where the best for strengthening or dispersing, needles made of nickel having a balancing and neutral effect. A few researchers experimented later with all kinds of materials, from zinc to platinum, from manganese to cobalt, from copper to cadmium or molybdenum. The results were not convincing.

Before the use of stainless steel, for centuries simple steel was the favorite metal for manufacturing needles. But iron and copper, bronze, tin, all these metals or alloys had the inconvenience of deteriorating when in contact with oxygen. Only since 1913, when stainless steel, a mixture of iron, chrome and nickel, was invented, were most acupuncture needles made of that very practical combination.

The acupuncture manuals, since the very beginning, describe "the Nine Needles of Acupuncture". Actually they reflect more the kit of a medical practitioner as some of the needles are obviously used as lancets or as bleeding or massage instruments. Modern replicas of these kits have been manufactured, I hope for decoration purposes, as the length and diameter of even the thinnest of the needles are impressive. In the first book on acupuncture of which we have a copy (printed nearly one thousand years after the original), called the Neijing, the Classic of the Interior, when the authors recommend needling a point, they usually mention only one or two of them, no more. The reason lies probably in the fact that the needles made in those days were certainly much thicker, and the point not so sharp, making the insertion quite painful.

When Chinese archeologists unearth a needle, or several of them, or simply a fairly thin and pointed instrument in a site they are prospecting, they often declare that they have found an acupuncture instrument, usually because they were put together with other medical instruments or medicines. The sites often go back to the Neolithic period, making the assumption rather dubious because it is unlikely that acupuncture existed already as a coherent and sophisticated technique.

Often the question comes up as to what is acupuncture. All civilizations have been using pointed and sharpened instruments for rudimentary medical purposes like piercing an abscess. But only in China, and much later than Neolithic times, have needles been associated with a complex technique supposed to manage the flows of energy in the body. So many questions rise around the main instrument of Chinese acupuncture: material, sizes, numbers, qualities, manufacturing, hygiene, techniques of insertion, intrinsic properties, adaptation to times and countries. If one searches for all the texts where the topic is mentioned in a not too repetitive way it would be possible to write hundreds of pages, and I feel frustrated not to be able to give here everything I know, including anecdotes and stories, of which I have many. On the other hand many claims and statements are questionable. It is necessary to keep our feet on the ground and be as pragmatic as possible.




http://www.acupuncturelearningonline.com
http://acupuncture-plus.eu

- Name: Francois Beyens, born 11th February 1941 in Aylesbury, U.K. Belgian nationality
- University: Doctor in Medicine from University of Louvain. Candidate in Philosophy and Letters from Belgian National Jury. Licentiate of the London College of Osteopathy (for MDs).
- Languages: french, english, spanish, chinese.
- From 1968 to 1971: stayed for three years in Hong Kong and Taiwan. Studied chinese and acupuncture with several masters: Lu Yi Gong, Wu Wei Ping, Zhuang Yu Ming and Huang Wei San.
- Since 1971: back in Brussels, where I have been practicing acupuncture since then.
- Founding member of the Belgian Association of Medical Acupuncturists. Teaching Monitor during 10 years. Main teacher for 16 years.
- Successively Vice-President and President. Instrumental in most of its activities: courses, seminars, study trips to Taiwan, Hong-Kong, Vienna, London, Sofia, Prague, Riga, Cyprus. Has participated actively in more than 100 international congresses or symposiums.
- Founding member and General Secretary of the International Council of Acupuncture and Related Techniques (I.C.M.A.R.T.), an association which groups more than 80 medical associations of acupuncture, and represents more than 35.000 medical acupuncturists.
- Has conducted seminars in many countries: France, England, Germany, Italy, Turkey, Spain, Morocco, Brazil, USA, Denmark, Israel, Austria, Sweden, Canada, Porto Rico, Bulgaria, Latvia, etc.
- Since 1989, has been training personally dozens of medical acupuncturists.
- Has translated into french the book of Chen Ji-Rui: Acupuncture case histories.
- Has published three books: Revisiting Acupuncture, vol. I, II and III.
- Open-minded defender and critical promoter of medical acupuncture.

THE RED party / tecktonik dancers Friday, November 26, 2010

"The RED" vakarėlis, 2008 06 05. Šoko - Ev1l Power (tecktonik), go-go girls, grojo Weax (Filtered Tools), Evelyne (Filtered Tools), Chica (Switch On). Daugiau: www.tecktonik.lt http



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mh-rBd4rPio&hl=en

Life Sunday, November 21, 2010

just training



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=06CPC8NhjEw&hl=en

Value Luxury Hotels in Riga Saturday, November 20, 2010

One of the oldest cities of the Livonians is Riga. It is believed in ancient times that the river Riga used to flow through the city hence the city got the name. Riga is the vacation capital of Latvia and is one of the most developed cities. It is connected through well developed motorways and serves Latvia as a commercial hub.

The city of Riga is entwined in history and rich culture. This makes Riga one of the most desired luxury holiday spots. Riga is a city which has a great historical significance. Its historic centre, a must see place, has been declared as a world heritage site by UNESCO. Riga offers you the best of everything right from hotels to food. The luxury hotels in Riga come with a heavy price tag but it's worth every penny. These luxury hotels offer you several packages like the Romantic Package, Cultural Package and the Winter Saver package. Choose a hotel with a sea side view and enjoy Riga's maritime activities.

There are several places to dine at Riga and there are multi-cuisine restaurants that are spread throughout the city. Some of the local dishes that are available here just tingle your taste buds enticing you to have more. There are several day activities that a person can indulge himself in. Outdoor activities like bob sleighing, Kart racing, Zorbing and Quad biking are something that one should try your hand at. If not visitors could just relax in their hotel rooms or hit the spas. Riga is a city that pretty much never sleeps and is partying throughout the night. It plays host to many regular events and parties and is the perfect place for a night out!

On the whole Riga is a very pleasant place to be for a vacation. The sights and sounds of Riga are something to be experienced up front. Stay in Riga at a luxury hotel and enjoy the complete holiday package.




I am author.

7 Options To Buy Investment Property Tuesday, November 16, 2010

As well as the whole world to choose from for location, there are a number of different ways to directly invest in property. What is a little daunting is the number of variables this creates - 175 by my reckoning! (7 ways to invest multiplied by at least 25 countries). So, once you have decided what to invest in, you can then get on to deciding where to invest (which has been covered elsewhere in HPA).

There are really three key factors to consider when deciding how and where to invest - risk, reward and effort involved. How you invest is important because it affects all three key factors; where you invest only really affects risk and reward. The reality is that many people only concentrate on the (potential) reward, and often become blind to the risk involved. Even more frequently though, people do not factor in the effort required for certain types of investment. This can then lead to frustration, despondency or panic, and at worst, a desire to stop investing completely.

I have ranked each of the 7 in terms of the level of effort required (The Hassle Index!). Coming in with the lowest ranking is Guaranteed Return Investments. These are simply a cash investment in to a project or scheme, you receive a monthly, quarterly or annual fixed return on your investment. As an example, a scheme investing in UK buy to lets has been delivering a 32% return for over 3 years now, paid monthly. Another in Turkey is delivering a 25% annual return. The risk element is high with these types of investments, especially when your cash does not secure you title on an actual property (as with the UK scheme). But the effort involved is simply to sign a contract and hand over your cash, after copious amounts of due diligence though! I know of an innovative company that is going to 're-package' these schemes and offer a lower return but with an insurance scheme bolted on, protecting your cash and reducing the risk element.

These investments appeal to cash rich/time poor individuals willing to place a percentage of their cash for a high return, especially if they are unable to obtain mortgages enabling them to gear up.

The second lowest ranking in the 'Hassle Index' is Syndicate Investments. Here again you invest cash along with a number of other individuals, which is then invested and managed on everyone's behalf. You are rewarded with a return based on the level of success of the whole scheme. The timing and level of returns are not guaranteed. The structure of these schemes varies; at one end you have the hugely popular schemes run by Ready2Invest, which are fully regulated and offered via a prospectus, investing in Montenegro, Bulgaria and Croatia. Alternatively Alan Forsyth runs excellent syndicates focussed in the emerging markets of Estonia and Latvia. These are smaller schemes and you are buying shares in a listed company and effectively becoming a 'mini developer'. The current scheme aims to deliver 30% p.a. returns with initial payment after only 18 months.

These investments appeal to a similar type of investor as the Guaranteed Returns, but the risk is reduced because the syndicates spread their investments across a number of projects and the set up of them is often far more structured and professional.

A potential downside of the Guaranteed Returns and Syndicates is that your growth does not have the benefit of leverage. As an example, if you invested £100,000 and achieved 30% return in one year, you've made £30,000! If you invested the same £100,000 and with an 80% mortgage bought a £500,000 property, you only need 6% growth to equal the £30,000. Anything above that and you are ahead.

Now the 'Hassle Index' moves on to the area of off-plan purchases, which I have split in to 3 different types. Next on the 'Hassle Index' is Off-plan 'flip' investments. This is a high risk strategy that involves an individual placing a deposit on one or more properties that have yet to be built, in the hope of selling (or 'flipping') at a higher price prior to final completion. The obvious risk is where you cannot re-sell because the market has shifted and you have to complete on the purchase(s) or lose the deposit and face potential legal action. There are numerous distress sales in parts of Spain and Bulgaria now as a result of this practice (creating perhaps an eighth way to invest for buyers willing to purchase these distress sales at below market value!) This is a growing sector and warrants a separate article. These purchases have been particularly popular with Irish buyers, but if you don't have the means to comfortably hold on to your purchases should the market change, you do need a strong constitution!

In some markets the shift in the market actually creates opportunities for 'flipping' for buyers who in fact intended to complete. We are seeing this in Perth, Western Australia at the moment where demand has increased so much buyers who paid deposits last year are achieving offers prior to completion of 30%+ more than the original off-plan price.

Number 4 on the 'Hassle Index' is Off-plan Managed Investments. Here again you pay a deposit before the development is built, but you know that it will be fully managed for you, with some offering the attraction of fixed returns. The hassle is higher than if you 'flip', because you have to complete on the property and arrange finance etc, but once you have gone through that your level of involvement is minimised. These can fall in to the category of 'apart-hotels', essentially fully serviced apartments, or you can even just buy a hotel room. Capital growth can be less than pure residential apartments, because the value is more closely tied to the rental return from the investment (often less susceptible to investment hype and bubbles); more akin to commercial property. Consequently these type of investments tend to appeal to buyers more interested in rental return than all out capital growth.

A prime example is a development in Chiang Mai, Thailand, which will be managed as a 5* complex by Pan Pacific, delivering a guaranteed 10% Nett return for 3 years and expected to rise from there. Evidence elsewhere (mainly in the U.S.) suggests that if the rental demand is strong and the location in demand, capital growth on these investments can still be very good, beyond what the fundamentals would be expected to deliver.

Number 5 is your straight forward Off-plan to keep. You will go through the sale process completely and then probably have to get more involved in the rental process at the other end. This is where you need to be really up on your due diligence, because if you miss with the location (fundamental supply and demand), you may find yourself with a property you are unable to rent or re-sell. This is the most popular method of purchase for investors though, because you are initially buying with only a deposit, hopefully at a reduced price because it is off-plan, achieving capital growth on the whole property during the build period (and then beyond). In addition, investors look to ensure that the projected rental returns will at least cover all costs of finance and ownership.

Buying Second-hand property is traditionally what most people are familiar within the UK market. It does come with some advantages that should lower the risk; you know what you are buying, you can see it, touch it and get it well and truly surveyed. In addition, you should be able to better estimate the rental return as agents can again see and touch, or there is already a tenant in place. In certain respects it does come with a little more hassle, because unless you find a good sourcing agent, you are 'on your own' to find the right property. With off-plan, you can tap in to the research and resources of several investment clubs and buy knowing that they have taken an element of the risk and effort away. In reality this means that the majority of investors can buy 'sight-unseen', although I would always recommend you visit a potential site if at all practical.

Finally, you could undertake a Renovation. Certainly the highest 'hassle', but if you have the stomach and time for it, potentially the most personally and financially rewarding. A quick viewing of daytime telly property programs shows how easily these can go wrong and money can be lost; you really need to know what you are doing.

So, briefly returning to the initial point about risk, reward and effort, the table is my opinion on how each of the 7 rate. What's interesting is how the scores all fall within a close range (14-17 points out of a total of 30). This is based on placing equal importance on all three variables. If you were to conduct the analysis yourself, perhaps using real examples (so you will also be taking in to account which countries you are looking at) for each category, you should weight the three variables (risk, reward, and effort) based on your personal preference or level of importance. You may consider reward to be far more important than effort, or the risk averse will add extra weight to that category. At the very least, ask yourself which of the three is most important to you and use that to help assess your future investment decisions.




Further research: Where on Earth can advise you where in the world to invest as well as what to invest in, based on your personal circumstances. The service is currently free.

Visit http://www.whereonearth.biz
email: sales@whereonearth.biz
or telephone +44 (0)8456 343 151

Foam Kingdom 2010 @ Kestermezs open air stage / Latvia / 17.07.2010 Sunday, November 14, 2010

Dobeles, tās novada un visas Zemgales iedzīvotāji jau sen to bija pelnījuši! Paplašinot ģeogrāfiju -- 17.jūlijā karstās vasaras dzestrākais pasākums -- "FOAM KINGDOM 2010" putu karaliste pirmo reizi tās vēsturē viesosies Ķestermeža estrādē! Tā ar "Smirnoff Ice", "Pioneer DJ" un "European Hit Radio" atbalstu būs kā lieliska dāvana Baznīcas ielas svētkos Dobelē! !!! 3 deju zonas !!! Lielā -- "Rockstar" skatuve tiks aprīkota ar jaudīgu un kvalitatīvu skaņas sistēmu, putu mašīnām -- viena no tām Austrumeiropā lielākais putu lielgabals, kas ražots Francijā, kā arī lielizmēra video ekrāniem. Savukārt, muzikālais virzītājspēks būs Dobeles pusē jau labi zināmie dīdžeji un producenti -- [Ex] da Bass un Trakais Mārtiņš, kuri kopā ar dīdžeju Beatax veido putu karalistes īpašo trio. Viņiem talkā nāks Rihards Zauska, bet šī pasākuma īpašā odziņa -- viens no "FOAM KINGDOM 2010" himnas izdevējiem un remiksu autoriem, dīdžeju un producentu duo Whirl & Mayer līderis -- DJ WHIRL ("Blaya Music") no Igaunijas! "European Hit Radio" deju zonā -- pirktākie hīti Eiropā kopā ar dīdžejiem Ikazz un Mārtiņš Kreilis. "Latviešu Radio" dejas kopā ar Ivo Lorencu un pašu Robertu Lejasmeijeru, kuru droši var dēvēt par iespējams labāko latviešu mūzikas remiksu autoru. Vizualizācijas radīs vīdžejs Pe Joke un LJ Lightboy no "ILLEGAL DJ TEAM RIGA". Kopā ar mums: "Smirnoff Ice", "Pioneer DJ" un "DJrent.lv". Oficiālais radio -- "European Hit Radio". Informāciju tālāk izziņo: "EHR Party Service", "Progressive FM ...



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GrU2_1NYOxA&hl=en

Sandra - Silent Running Friday, November 12, 2010

Fun Weekend in Riga Guided by 'RIGA exquisite'. 'RIGA exquisite' is a party guidence project to help You and Your friends find the best places in town, have a fantastic weekend and get just about anything You can possibly expect to get from visiting Riga, Latvia. Experience Riga's nightlife, enjoy clubs, pubs, our first class hotels and restaurants, have a nice time with one of our eye-candy guides, take a trip through the town, dance, drink, party. We have everything covered. To discuss possibilities, services, terms and prices, contact us: rigaexquisite@hotmail.com or talk to our employees directly via skype - 'rigaexquisite'



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nFebNVBZv6A&hl=en

LAROCCA Nightclub (Riga, Latvia) Wednesday, November 10, 2010

The biggest dance floor in Baltic. Professional deejays and the most beautiful dancers of the country. Qualitative sound, one of the best laser-shows of Europe. 9 offer many different kinds of drinks and cocktails suited to every fancy. Unique colors, styled design of well-known red stars of Kremlin and exciting rhytms of Russian music create the festive atmosphere every weekend. Only here you can drink «Vodka» and eat salted cucumber, smiling dancers will not allow you to be bored till the morning. The dancing floor where sounds R'n'B is very popular in the last years. Soft beats of the music and musical songs of popular singers will make you move to the beat of hypnotizing and sexy music Rithm and Blues.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dorWw_Ul9M4&hl=en

Nightclub "Studio-69" Monday, November 1, 2010

26 June 2010 Nightclub Studio-69 Riga



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q4G_vnQtJgM&hl=en

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