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August 30, 2023

Palpating Head Points

Jason Robertson, DAHM, L.Ac

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In this Shoptalk, Jason Robertson highlights the importance of putting your hands on your patients’ heads to truly sense where points are physically located.

Drawing on his experience with Dr. Wang Ju-Yi, he explains that points are “jie”—junctions or spaces that you can feel under your hands. This isn’t just about points on the head; it applies throughout the body. Letting the body inform your touch reveals where the point truly lies.

Dr. Wang had a particular affinity for DU19 and DU21, exploring their use for back pain and issues arising when clear yang fails to ascend.

Clear diagnosis is central to effective treatment. Hands-on exploration—both as a diagnostic tool and to locate the most potent points—is a practice that will serve you well in the clinic.

Jason Robertson, DAHM, L.Ac

 I began studying Chinese when I was 17 after having a great high-school teacher. In college I majored in East Asian studies, eventually spending most of my 20s living and working in Taiwan. After studying at ACTCM, I went to Chengdu for a year to study herbs then spent two years in my native Kentucky practicing acupuncture.

After a few years seeing patients, I realized that I had much more to learn. I had seen Dr. Wang Juyi speak at a weekend seminar in California and, on a whim, I was determined to look him up. With what now looks like a bizarre leap of faith, my wife and I moved to Beijing. I called Dr. Wang on the phone (only after arriving) and he happened to be home. What thus began in what I thought would be a brief sojourn to collect a few clinical tricks ended up shaping the rest of my life. The approach to Chinese medicine that Dr. Wang embodied was one shaped by the earthy, practical reality of twentieth century China. He strove to come up with ideas that worked while drawing from the maps provided in the classics; to get out of his head and into his hands.

He was like me in the sense that he loved to think and found that a hands-on palpation based approach to acupuncture helpfully limited the temptation to devise beautiful and elegant diagnoses and treatments that didn’t actually work. Palpation prevents theoretical quicksand.

Twenty years later, I’m still finding new things through palpation, learning from other palpation traditions and chipping away at the edges of what I think I can do with Chinese medicine.

Links and Resources

Curious for more? Explore Jason Robertson’s other Qiological podcasts:

#311 – Principles, Methods, Knowing and Know-How
#178  –  Questioning Like a Detective
#092  – The Power of Story
#021 – Applied Channel Theory: The Clinical Brilliance of Dr. Wang Ju-Yi

You can find out more about Jason’s work at www.channelpalpation.org

Listen to his podcast on Applied Channel Theory.

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