MISSION
Mission
Provide effective treatments, tools, and resources based on Traditional Chinese Medicine to nurture your body, mind, and spirit, unlocking your full potential for optimal well-being with high-quality care, compassion, and kindness.
Vision
Consistently grow to help people gain good physical and mental health by offering evidence-base health care services and educating people to understand Eastern medicine and apply it in daily life.
I envision empowering people on a journey of rejuvenation and self-discovery with a holistic approach. Developing a new culture of wealth is healthy and happy.
Once one is well, one can encourage others to do the same for someone else, which creates a positive ripple effect on their family, friends, community, and the world.
Philosophy of Patient care
The core value of Nina Acupuncture is in the logo and the name itself. It starts with the word Nirvana. Remove RVA, and then it becomes Nina.
What is Nirvana? In Buddhism, Nirvana is a place of perfect peace and happiness, like heaven. How can we go there? How can we go to heaven while we are alive? We all can go there by applying the noble eightfold path.
Right View – know the truth; Right Intention – free your mind of negative thoughts; Right Speech – say nothing that hurts others; Right Action – work for the good of others, Right Livelihood – respect life; Right Effort – resist the wrong things, Right Concentration – practice meditation, Right Mindfulness – control your thoughts to focus on.
The Lotus flower holds as a symbol of purity, enlightenment, and rebirth. These flowers are also a symbol for overcoming adversity and retaining the purity of spirit through life’s challenges, as lotus flowers are most commonly found in swampy, rugged terrain – emerging from the dark, murky water pristine and beautiful. I believe all humans have the same chance to rise above the mud and water as the lotus flower.
The yin-yang symbol represents the interconnectedness of the world, particularly the natural world. There can be no positive without a negative, no open without closed, and no light without shadow. The yin-yang symbol itself portrays that interrelatedness. This concept is essential for our medicine, and I continually educate patients about finding balance in their lives.
I use my clinic as my spiritual practice and where I can contribute to our society.
To promote a peaceful and mindful community, I donate a portion of my revenue to Redding Center for Meditation, West Redding, CT. It is a non-profit organization offering free meditation to everyone.