10.03.2020

🍁 Jiling's October news

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Happy Moon Festival,


I hope that you are breathing easily through our wildfires. May the cooling breezes of the changing seasons blow ease and sweetness into your life. Drink nourishing broths, plant autumn perennials, and rest.


The Moon Festival is a traditional Chinese harvest celebration. I remember playing music under the full moon in Taiwan's Yangmingshan mountains with dear friends, sipping tea, eating moon cake, and sharing stories.


How do you celebrate seasonal transitions, and the fattening moon?


October News Overview

🍁 Autumn Transitions YOGA event

🍁 MEMBERSHIP Site

🍁 Fresh CLINIC page

🍁 Herbal BLOG + PODCAST


Yoga

🍁 Join our Autumn Transitions Wellness Fair this Sunday, October 4! Nourish resilience with affordable yoga & more from 8 AM to noon, at The Pharm.


I'M DOWN, DAWG


Membership Site

🍁 While developing online classes for UCSB, I realized:

I can share this with everyone.


If we ever leave Ventura, then I'd love to continue sharing holistic health resources with you, to keep you thriving & healthy. All those health tips I keep reminding you about every treatment? Get it here.


I'm considering creating a membership site, with Chinese medicine, herbal, yoga, and other holistic wellness tools. Something like:

  • 4 pieces of members- only content delivered to you each month (once/ week)
  • 1 monthly live chat/ Q+A
  • private community room
  • access to archived past content

The content may include:

  • Acupressure articles/ videos
  • Herbal articles/ videos
  • Yoga videos/ illustrated pose guide
  • Seasonal articles/ videos
  • Chinese medicine practical + philosophical gems


Want to join me?

Hit reply! I'll follow up with details once I move forward with this project.


Acupuncture

🍁 Visit our revamped Clinic page!

  • Updated Services & Fees
  • Discounted treatment packages
  • New 30- minute yoga private session add-on for your treatment


CLINIC


Herbs

🍁 Learn about Sages' edible/ medicinal benefits (Salvia spp.)


PODCAST



🍁 Check my blog for regular updates... like an upcoming TCM autumn formula post, on the Mountain Rose Herbs blog!


BLOG


Enjoy Autumn,

Jiling


Jiling Lin, L.Ac.

Jiling Lin, L.Ac. 林基玲

acupuncture . herbs . yoga

​JilingLin.com | 575.342.1050

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9.26.2020

Sage monograph


Read, listen, and learn about edible/ medicinal uses for Sages (Salvia spp.) on my Sage monograph + podcast on HerbRally.com

Sage Monograph - HerbRally

I reach out to pet various aromatic sages as I walk up and down our southern California trails, where we are blessed with an abundance of sages, or plants of the genus . The most commonly seen species among our myriad local natives in my Ventura County backyard include Salvia apiana (white sage), S.

For more, visit JilingLin.com

9.15.2020

Herbs for Smokey Lungs

Choking on wildfire smoke? Here's some helpful herbs for smokey lungs, from my mentor 7song


View this post on Instagram

Herbs for Smoke Inhalation part 1 I cannot express how terrible I feel about the devastating western wildfires. I hope everyone is safe in body and property, though I know this is not always the case. The main primary consideration is wearing a mask to avoid breathing in small particulate matter, which is in the smoke. The current masks that most people are wearing due to Covid work well as does wearing a doubly folded bandana over one’s mouth and nose. Since this is not always possible, there are some herbs that can offer some assistance in loosening and bringing up these small smoke particles. Consider plants that are mucilaginous, that is, having a thick consistency. The reason they are helpful is that they can increase mucous production in the respiratory tree. Mucous is the main way that the body expels small particles from the bronchi. By increasing this with good moist mucous (rather than thin and sticky), it can be very helpful in moving the particulate matter up and out. There are 3 common plants for this: Licorice root (Glycyrrhiza uralensis and G. glabra), Marshmallow root (Althaea officinalis) and Slippery elm inner bark (Ulmus rubra). The best way to take these is to mix 1 teaspoon or so of the powdered root or inner bark in a glass of water (or other liquid) and drink it down. This provides a lot more of the mucilage than taking a preparation such as a tincture. The second best way is to make a strong tea of these plants. You can also take 2-3 capsules a few times a day. I suggest doing this with any of these preparations 3-4 times a day if possible depending on how much smoke you are inhaling. Licorice root as it also an antiinflammatory. Respiratory inflammation can be a consequence of breathing in smoke. Do not use this plant if you have high blood pressure (or if you hate the taste of Licorice). If you choose to use Slippery elm, please try to get it from a reliable sustainable source. Siberian elm (Ulmus pumila) can also be very mucilaginous, with the inner bark being the most ‘slippery’. And this plant is non-native and commonly planted in cities.

A post shared by 7Song (@7songsevensong) on

8.26.2020

Outdoor Community Acupuncture

  • Outdoor Community Acupuncture on Saturday, September 26. 11 AM- 12 noon, at The Pharm (1899 E Main. Ventura, CA)
  • $25. Limited space. SIGN UP here!
  • More information at JilingLin.com

8.07.2020

Mount Giraud & Motivation


I free-fall 40 feet, fracturing the crisp Sierra Nevada air. Bouncing and rolling down another 400 feet over rock and ice, I mar the tranquil alpine tundra with bones and blood. Somehow, I live. “What will you do with your one wild precious life?” whispers the landscape.

I quit my job and travel across the US and Asia, discovering myself through the world around me. I experience deep pain, wonder, confusion, and clarity. I guide wilderness trips, gaining grace and confidence. “I’m doing this for you,” I smile, “and me.”
I return to Mount Giraud three times, finally summiting its austere 12,608 foot beauty. I sit atop what transformed my life, gazing down, grateful. Again, “What will you do with your one wild precious life?”
I return to my roots and practice Chinese medicine, providing quality holistic healthcare with the same curiosity and respect as I’d approached Giraud. Wilderness experiences invigorate my embodied understanding of life, and the body. Nature bolsters classical Chinese medical theory, strengthens my clinical logic and intuition, and enlivens profound metaphors for explaining complex concepts and crafting well-rounded treatment plans.
I ground my busy professional life by digging in my garden, and exploring wild places inaccessible by car. On longer adventures, I challenge both constructed and actual physical and mental limitations, gracefully honoring what’s unchangeable, and gently transforming more malleable boundaries. Through experience, I ask my patients, students, and community, “What will you do with your one wild precious life?”


7.22.2020

Gan Mai Da Zao Tang 甘麥大棗湯

New blog on Mountain Rose Herbs, about the Chinese formula Gan Mai Da Zao Tang 甘麥大棗湯 !


Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) Formula for Summer Wellness

Jiling Lin, L.Ac. is an Earth-centered acupuncturist, herbalist, and yoga teacher in Ventura, CA. She cultivates thriving health for fellow healthcare practitioners, artists, and athletes through holistically accessible clinical and educational support, specializing in managing pain, chronic illness, and psycho-spiritual wellness. Jiling connects wilderness, creativity, and Spirit through both internal and external environmental stewardship.

7.06.2020

June backpacking poem


travel far
feet bare
heart open
reach out
arms wide
reach in
smiling
breathing
simply
walking

north or south?
listen
observe
the wind
moves me
in the right direction
i notice
and
respond

blistering heels
peeling skin
dry lips
water far,
but coming.
internal map,
I've been here before
shady Oaks
Sagebrush
sand.

Sycamores and Cottonwoods ahead
river sounds follow
leaping heart
running feet
gratitude

simple ways
beautiful life

i gather
gifts
to take home
for my
clinic, patients, friends, family, community,
self

6.15.2020

Outdoor Adventures


Reaching for a right crimp while shaking and sweating, I slip on the cold smooth wall, and whip out over the triangular crag. Unseen and unheard, my climbing partner belays from above. Fingers scrabbling on uncompromising rock, I dangle under the overhang, swinging back and forth over the ocean. As the sun rapidly sets, I focus, clamber back onto the crux, zone in and, one deliberate move at a time, send it home.
Surfing the next day, the swell fills the horizon. I paddle into position, anticipating the surging wave. As I power through the pinkening pre-dawn water, I feel it push. I pop up, merging with the wave. I gaze down the line with single-focused present moment intent, body graceful, actions aligned, brilliantly alive.
I share this crystalline clarity and vibrant aliveness with the athletes, artists, and healthcare practitioners who I support through pain, trauma, and complex chronic conditions in my Earth-centered acupuncture and Chinese medicine practice. They know that my adventures hiking, backpacking, surfing, climbing, and traveling inspire my dedicated clinical focus, and their positive treatment results. The joys and challenges of wilderness adventures creates internal resilience in both me and my patients, inspiring love and understanding for our Earth, while empowering personal and environmental stewardship.