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You can even keep them on for up to 24 hours to extend the therapeutic effects. The press tacks may be removed by you at anytime following the Float session. Then, after a brief shower, which will not interfere with the press tacks, your session of bliss will begin! For most first time Floaters, an hour is sufficient, but for the veterans Dan has longer float sessions available. You will then, if this is your first time Floating, have a brief primer with Dan Martin (Float Guru), who will guide you through the ins and outs of Floating. So the whole procedure (proceed-cake says winnie-the-pooh) is thus…Īrrive 30 minutes before your scheduled Float (at Afloat, Bellingham’s premier Floatation facility), I, the acupuncturist (and herbalist), will run you through a few Chinese Medicinal Diagnostic tests (including the Acu-Graph, which will measure the state of energy flow through your meridians), then proceed (cake) to place a certain number of press tacks in strategic places on your body, usually on your limbs.
#Afloat bellingham skin#
The tape also protects the skin from potential irritants, like epsom salt. The procedure is painless (even more so than regular acupuncture), the needle is still inserted though not very deep, allowing more freedom of movement while still stimulating the point. The press tack is a super nifty invention that takes an intradermal needle (ie a very small, fine needle) and a piece of tape, and ‘tacks’ the specified acupuncture point. But what about the logistics? Surely you can’t get two people into the tank to have an acupuncture session!? And what about the needles, won’t the salt make the stimulated points sting (just like having a cut or an abrasion would)? The Solution: …Enter the press tack. So, I thought, why not use them together and see what happens? And it works, it works well. And with floating, sometimes it takes a while to get relaxed and turn off the mind when you’re in the tank. Or perhaps they are easily distracted by the construction noises outside.
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I mean, they’re both amazing in their own right, but sometimes in Acupuncture sessions I have patients who can’t quite get comfortable on the table because of their chronic or acute pain. So for a long time I’ve been speculating on the potentially synergistic effects of Floatation + Acupuncture. Stress melts away, pain melts away, the mind clears and creativity is enhanced. Relaxation squared, a return to the womb. Or rather, your skin disappears and the boundaries between yourself and your environment begin to fade. For those who don’t know, to Float, you are suspended on an extremely buoyant epsom salt solution in a darkened chamber, with the ambient sound still, and the ambient temperature exactly right so that instead of feeling the water, the water feels like part of your skin. A rocket powered boost for your meditation practice. I was attracted to the ‘instant-samadhi’ that people were describing who floated in the tank. I’d actually experienced Floating long before I had ever experienced Acupuncture. That from just a few needles? No drugs? No side effects? No hangovers? And it’s good for me? I was sold.įewer of us know the relaxing and transformative power of floating in a womb-like environment such as the Floatation Tank (aka Sensory Deprivation Tank, Isolation Tank – though calling it such things is out of vogue, you might scare off potential clients). The whole reason I got into this profession is because the first time I had acupuncture done on me, I felt euphoric.
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I mean, I should know, I’m an Acupuncturist. Those of us who are Acupuncture junkies know the relaxing and transformative power of placing tiny needles at various points in the body.
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