11 Nov 2010
by adminin Blog
Big News! Big News! Big News!
To all of my loyal Padma Healing Arts supporters,
As of November 1st, Padma Healing Arts will be merging with Medicine for the People. For those of you who do not know, Medicine for the People is a clinic run by Thomas Garbarino, licensed acupuncturist and Qi Gong teacher. His clinic was housed in the Tavern building across from the parking lot from Padma Healing Arts. After many years of talking about a collaboration, the opportunity finally arrived for Thomas and myself to make it happen. By joining our practices together we hope to provide more comprehensive care to the public.
We have decided to retain the name, Medicine for the People, as we agree that our philosophy is continued support and collaboration with our clients.
Our working mission is to utilize ancient and modern healing modalities to help people heal from physical, emotional and/or spiritual pain. Through integrated natural medicine, education, and life coaching, we support individuals in returning to and maintaining their innate health and well-being. Medicine for the People strives to inspire and empower each client to participate fully in their personal healing journey while also assisting in integrating that healing into everyday life.
For now, Thomas and I will be keeping our respective websites that hold information about each of our practices. So please continue to visit www.padmahealingarts.com and for more information about Thomas’s work please visit www.medicineforthepeople.org. You will notice that my prices have changed very slightly to reflect our expansion but keep an eye out for holiday specials and deals. I can still be contacted at padmahealingarts@gmail.com and 802-387-5511 until next week when my new phone number will be 802-387-3028. I look forward to your continued support and encourage you to investigate the other modalities being offered at our new clinic.
Medicine for the People is now located at 125 Main street in the Carriage House behind the town hall in Putney, where Padma Healing Arts once resided. Now with three beautiful treatment rooms and five certified practitioners, we offer a variety of services including Acupuncture/Chinese Medicine, Therapeutic Massage, Herbal Medicine, Physical Therapy, and classes in Qi Gong, Taiji Quan, and Prenatal/Postnatal Birthing. Our office hours are Monday-Friday by appointment only. For a more complete description of our services and fees please contact us at 802-387-3028.
In Health,
Adrienne DeGuevara
06 Aug 2010
by adminin Blog

Taking Time to Take Good Care-Earth Season
Late summer or Indian summer—as some like to call it—is upon us here in New England. The consistent buzzing sound of a combination of crickets and cicadas replaces the excited chirping of birds in the early morning. The morning atmosphere has a heavy lazy quality that pulls my attention inward causing me to notice and attend to my inner world with more care. Another common marker of the turning of the seasonal wheel to late summer—you gardeners will truly relate to this—is food production from our gardens begins to speed up like coasting down a fast hill. Soon there will be more food than we will know what to do with. Folks will be surreptitiously leaving zucchini, cucumbers, and green beans on their neighbor’s porches ringing the doorbell and making a break for it before anyone is the wiser.
Late summer always has a faint tinge of sadness for me because I know the dog days will be ending soon. And for Vermonters that also means winter is that much closer. Don’t get me wrong, winter is a beautiful season, it has its many blessings too. It just happens to be longer than any of the other seasons here. And, there is nothing like the freedom and joy of a Vermont summer with its swimming holes, potlucks, outdoor events, warm moonlit evenings with a touch of breeze and the perfect skies that hang cumulus clouds in the most artful compositions. Why wouldn’t we mourn the passing of such ecstatic perfection?
So that is why I would like to suggest, during this transition from summer’s end to the beginning of fall, that we all take time to take care. It’s easy to become overwhelmed with all that there is to do—getting the wood in, weeding the garden beds, putting food by, cleaning the kitchen for the fortieth time in a day, back to school shopping for the kids, last minute visits with relatives and friends and still keeping up with careers too—we can easily fill our calendars with doing and become overwhelmed with the abundance that life is offering.
Chinese medicine refers to this season as Earth season. In this holistic health model, the seasons are broken up into five rather than four. Each season has an element, body system, taste and energetic attribute that give us clues to how we might incorporate our, mind, body and spirit in harmonious living with the natural world.
Earth season in this paradigm asks us to pay attention to our relationship to nurture and nourishment. The nurture and nourishment we receive comes in many forms. It comes from the earth in the form of food, water and air. It comes from our relationships with friends and loved ones, our spiritual lives, and the care we receive from our medical and holistic practitioners who partner with us to keep our bodies in balance.
The body system associated with the Earth season and the earth element is the digestive system. As harvest time gets underway there is ample opportunity to become more acquainted with our digestive health. Digestion is the breaking down of food into fuel that is distributed throughout our bodies and eventually becomes the tissue that is our bodies; literalizing the old maxim “you are what you eat”. The same could be said for mental and spiritual digestion. What we take into our thoughts and our hearts also has the potential to fuel our beings and become the building blocks of who we are as people; “you are who you think you are”. This idea exemplifies the importance of watching our physical and mental diets.
Sweetness is not just a metaphorical term for life during late summer but it is also the taste associated with this season. Traditional gastronomists tell us that a bit of sweet helps to stimulate digestion after a meal, hence the invention of dessert. The attribute of sweet plays an important part in nurture. The kind words of someone hold us when we feel vulnerable. An empathetic tone can soften emotional upheaval or soothe a physical pain. As Mary Poppins tells us “ A spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down” in other words sweetness can comfort us during difficult times or help us get through difficult life lessons. Another corny favorite is “you can catch more flies with honey than salt” this saying reminds us that kind words open people’s ears where harsh ones close them up. However, as we all know too much sweet can become detrimental to our health. On a physical level it can tax the pancreas so much so that it is unable to function anymore causing diabetes. Other symptoms of exaggerated sweet in the body can be sleeplessness, a burned out feeling after eating, a bloated belly or mood swings. On an emotional level, seeking too much sweetness in our lives can cause us to turn a blind eye to dealing with difficult times at all. Sometimes the temptation to brush over important issues with more that one spoonful of sugar can lead to a Pollyanna-style attitude toward life.
Helpful questions we might ask ourselves about nurture and nourishment to help attune ourselves to the energetic of the times might be: how do we receive nurture? Are we able to accept nourishment? What are the things in life that give stability and structure to my life? How do I feel about home? Taking time to answer some of these questions honestly could be a useful tool in working with the anxiety of the times.
Other tips are to eat sweet fruits and vegetables instead of processed desserts. The natural sugars in these foods are easier for our bodies to assimilate. If you find that you just love to eat sugary sweets and cannot moderate your intake; say a quiet thank you to your body for the work it is about to do whenever you eat your favorite dessert. This can help you become more aware of your actions and politeness never hurts even to yourself.
Enjoy the harvest
27 Jul 2010
by adminin Herbal Teas - Shop
26 Jul 2010
by Adriennein Gift Certificates - Shop
90 minute massage
Gift Certificates

26 Jul 2010
by Adriennein Gift Certificates - Shop
60 minute massage
gift certificate.

26 Jul 2010
by adminin Herbal Teas - Shop
Good for female tonic for reproductive organs
Contains: Raspberry leaf, Dandelion flowers, Yarrow, Nettles and Red Clover

26 Jul 2010
by adminin Herbal Teas - Shop
Tummy Time Tea for easing an upset stomache or chronic digestive problems
Contains: Catnip, Motherwort and Scotchmint

26 Jul 2010
by adminin Herbal Teas - Shop
Calming tea for stressful days or for helping get a good night’s sleep.
Contains: Lemon Balm, Catnip, Hops, Mugwort and Scullcap

26 Jul 2010
by adminin Herbal Teas - Shop
Classic formula for basic mineral supplimenting.
Contains: Oatstraw and Nettles

26 Jul 2010
by Adriennein Herbal Extracts - Shop
Made with Scullcap, He Shou Wu, Mugwort, and Valerian.

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