J. R. Worsley
J. R. Worsley (14 September 1923 – 2 June 2003) was a British acupuncturist who is credited with European five element acupunture also known as 'classical acupuncture'. The origons of Chinese Wuxing medicines have a Taoist, Chinese folk religious background distinguish it from the more widely known Confucian style of modernised traditional Chinese medicine.[1][2]
For many years J.R.Worsely resided in the UK, where he opened the College of Traditional Chinese Acupuncture, which trained many of the leading five element practitioners practising today, including Dianne Connelly and Bob Duggan, who founded the Tai Sophia Institute (formerly the Traditional Acupuncture Institute) in Laurel, Maryland, United States. Tai Sophia has gained university status and is now named the Maryland University of Integrative Health.
Worsley was also responsible for starting the Academy for Five Element Acupuncture (AFEA), currently in Gainesville, Florida. This college was founded as the Worsley Institute and was located in Miami Lakes, Florida for many years, where Worsley and his wife lived. This college was non-profit and was led by Dorit Reznik for several years. In later years, the professor had ties to the acupuncture training school in Boulder, Colorado. Today, his wife, Judy Becker Worsley, carries on the five element acupuncture tradition, training and certifying practitioners in schools she endorses.
J. R. Worsley's influence was widely cited by others within the five element tradition, including Peter Eckman, author of In the Footsteps of the Yellow Emperor.
External links
- Worsley Acupuncture site
- Academy for Five Element Acupuncture - Gainesville, Florida
- Maryland University of Integrative Health
- School of Five Element Acupuncture - London, UK
- London Institute of Five-Element Acupuncture - London, UK
- Oriental Medical World Mourns Passing of Professor J. R. Worsley
- Worsley Institute
- The Acupuncture Academy - Leamington Spa, UK
- School of Five Element Medical Meditation and Mindfulness.
References
- ^ Eckmann, Peter, In the Footsteps of the Yellow Emperor
- ^ "The Su Wen of the Huangdi Neijing (Inner Classic of the Yellow Emperor)". www.wdl.org. 1115. Retrieved 2020-11-22.