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TCM

The Path of Transformation

My Path with Traditional Chinese Medicine ,

My relationship with Traditional Chinese Medicine did not begin as a concept to study, but as something I gradually recognized in my own experience.

It started through my practice of Qigong. While working with movement, breath, and awareness, I became naturally curious about what lies beneath these practices — the inner functioning of the body, the organs, and the pathways through which Qi moves. As someone deeply rooted in movement, this was not an abstract curiosity, but something I could feel directly.

A turning point came through injury. What initially felt like a limitation became the doorway into a much deeper understanding. During this time, I was already reading and exploring Chinese medicine, and surprisingly, it did not feel foreign to me. It resonated with something I already knew.Long before that, I had encountered the Dao De Jing — in my mother tongue, Persian — at a time when I could not yet fully access it intellectually, but somehow understood its essence. Looking back, I see that this early connection shaped the way I later approached Chinese medicine: not as something to learn from the outside, but as something to recognize from within.

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The Practice of Transformation

After my injury, I received treatment through my teachers in the internal martial arts. Experiencing the effectiveness of these methods in my own body made the path clear. What had been interest became commitment.

From there, my study of Chinese medicine unfolded step by step — through practice, observation, and continuous learning. Over time, I became deeply connected to its way of understanding the human being: as a dynamic system where body, mind, and life are inseparable.I have been fortunate to learn from teachers who carry not only knowledge, but a living tradition. What I offer today is shaped by this lineage, by my own experience, and by a sincere wish to make this medicine accessible in a way that is tangible and relevant. For me, Chinese medicine is not only a therapeutic system. It is a way of seeing — and a way of returning to balance, clarity, and direction in one’s life. 

Ready to begin your journey?

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Treat the Whole System, Not Just the Problem

Body, mind, and energy are one system — lasting change comes from addressing them together.

The Essence of TCM

Traditional Chinese Medicine is based on the dynamic balance of Yin and Yang — the continuous movement between opposites within the body.
Through the lens of Wu Xing, this movement is understood as cycles of transformation, where growth, change, and renewal are constantly unfolding.
At the center of it all is Qi — the force that connects structure, function, and awareness.
When balance, rhythm, and flow are restored, the body reorganizes itself naturally toward clarity, stability, and vitality.

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Restore Balance Instead of Forcing Solutions

Health is not created by force, but by helping the body return to its natural state of balance

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Like nature, your system follows rhythms of growth, transformation, and rest.


Your Body Moves in Cycles
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