Acupuncture therapist offers a different kind of care
for trauma
Kim
Calandra wants to use her craft to help sexual assault survivors.
Kim Calandra, owner of Carrboro Community
Acupuncture, sits in her office April 22, 2015. Calandra opened it in late
2014, and says she has strived to make the community a big part of the space.
With natural light filling the room,
the smell of patchouli wafting through the air and serene music playing, Kim
Calandra’s studio allows a wave of tranquility to wash over those who enter.
Calandra, an acupuncture therapist
in Carrboro, helps patients deal with the emotional and physical trauma
associated with sexual assault.
As a sexual assault survivor,
Calandra discovered the benefits of acupuncture therapy for herself and decided
to open her own practice. She opened her practice about seven months ago and
hopes survivors will reach out to her for help.
“I use acupuncture as a therapy to
heal from sexual violence and that inspired me to do that specifically,”
Calandra said. “I already treat people for (post-traumatic stress disorder) on
a regular basis but I wanted to be more specific and defined, and I felt like
it was important to specifically say that I treat symptoms of rape trauma and
to use that word so that people felt comfortable with me being able to talk
about it and coming to me.”
Acupuncture therapy is an invasive
therapy that can help patients process trauma that happens to their body.
“Acupuncture is primarily a
neurological intervention,” said Jacob Godwin, a director for the American
Association of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine. “It has several mechanisms of
action that affect the central and peripheral nervous systems, so primarily
acupuncture is most commonly used for pain conditions, but it is also highly
effective for neurological and psychological conditions because it does affect
the nervous system and how it functions.”
Although not widely known,
acupuncture can be a helpful therapy for many conditions.
“So basically it kind of tricks the
nervous system into doing a lot of the self healing, pain management, self
repair things that the body is already prepared to do,” Godwin said.
This type of therapy accesses many
different parts of the mind and body and can help patients deal with different
conditions.
“Acupuncture (works) endogenously
because it triggers these responses in the brain itself — it typically has a
quicker and sometimes longer lasting effect (than medication),” Godwin said.
Calandra explained that although
acupuncture worked for her, it is not for everyone and it is not a stand-alone
therapy. Other types of therapy such as psychotherapy can be helpful to
survivors.
“I don’t think it’s important for
everybody,” said Emily Berman, a psychotherapist located in Carrboro. “It’s one
of those things that building relationships is important, that can happen in a
therapeutic relationship in terms of building trust and how people have learned
to attach to other people.”
This report is from here.
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