My Journey to Acupuncture and Wellness How It All Started

My Journey to Acupuncture and Wellness How It All Started

Many of my friends and patients have encouraged me to share my story, and I feel now is the right time. Welcome—and I hope you find my experience helpful on your own path toward better health and balance.

I’m often asked how I got into acupuncture and wellness. Usually, I give the short version, but here, I’d like to give you the whole picture of my journey—how I went from a student unsure of his future to a passionate practitioner of Chinese therapy and Traditional Chinese Medicine.

From Uncertainty to Purpose

After graduating high school in 1990, I started college at Wayne State University in Detroit as a political science major. But I wasn’t feeling motivated, and after my first year, I dropped out. I worked a few different jobs and eventually took a physically demanding position in one of my father’s companies doing asbestos removal.

Later, I returned to college and shifted my focus to pre-med, thinking I might go into sports medicine. But the job’s heavy lifting left me with painful tendonitis in my elbow. I followed the standard medical route—internist, orthopedist, anti-inflammatories—but nothing worked. That’s when my father suggested I try acupuncture. I was skeptical, but desperate.

My First Real Experience with Acupuncture

This wasn’t my first exposure to acupuncture services. Years earlier, I had accompanied my father to appointments for his stress-induced tinnitus. He found relief through acupuncture, herbs, and clean eating—though, as a teenager, I didn’t appreciate it at the time.

When I finally went for my own appointment with Stefan Brink, I was open-minded. Along with the treatments, Stefan emphasized the importance of clean eating and a balanced lifestyle. After just a few sessions, my elbow pain was gone. I did a three-week detox, switched to a vegetarian organic diet, and felt more energized and mentally clear than ever.

I was sold.

Discovering the Benefits of Chinese Medicine

I began reading books on Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) and was amazed by the depth and philosophy behind it. I realized that the benefits of Chinese medicine went far beyond just treating symptoms—they addressed the root causes of imbalance.

I soon found a school in Denver—the Colorado School of Traditional Chinese Medicine—that aligned with my values and aspirations. After three years at Wayne, I applied and was accepted.

Training to Become an Acupuncture Specialist

My training was intense: 25 credit hours a semester, classes year-round, and a strong focus on both Chinese and Western theory. I was one of the youngest in my class, and among only a few who made it to graduation.

During my second year, I was honored to intern with two highly respected acupuncture specialists:

  • Dr. Zhang Li Xin, a 7th-generation master of acupuncture and former head of the Red Cross acupuncture department in China.

  • Dr. Ron Rosin, OMD, who learned directly from his grandfather and Chinese mentors in a time when Chinese therapy was virtually unknown in the U.S.

These internships gave me hands-on experience that shaped how I practice today.