Electro-Acupuncture, Cupping & Gua Sha, and Herbal Medicines

Hand-Made Medicine since 1999

First, treat the spirit.

Chronic stress, anxiety, and pain interfere with our well-being and centeredness.

Stress is running from the tiger; resilience is how quickly we recover from the shock. To enjoy a peaceful meal and have a good night sleep means we are in the present and not still running from the tiger.

Acupuncture engages self-healing and can focus it specific problems:

Internal Medicine- respiration, digestion, reproduction, sleep rhythm, immune function and inflammation

External medicine-eliminating pain and restoring full function by treating pain, inflammation, and trigger points. I started studying “dry needing” from a top student of Janet Travell herself over 25 years ago.

Contact Us

608 Moreland Ave.
Atlanta, GA 30307

hollisteracupuncture@gmail.com
(404) 259-2055

click on map to expand

Areas of Practice


Acupuncture,

Dry Needling,

Electro-Acupuncture

Acupuncture engages the nervous system and brings vitality and healing. Chinese Medicine brings over 2,000 years of needling experience to the table. Modern sciences bring a rigor of exploration and expanded understanding, but the human experience of illness remains unchanged. My training in Integrative Orthopedics always included Trigger Point Acupuncture (Dry Needing.) The more you know, the better you can treat.


Cupping and Gua Sha

After acupuncture has changed the tone of muscles and packed the blood with happy chemicals, then the shape of the muscles(the fascia) is pumped and flushed allowing a new sense of space and comfort.


Herbal Medicines

A 2,000 year tradition of combining herbs to match sophisticated diagnostic criteria, Chinese herbal formulas are embraced by modern science as having broad, effective therapeutic results. The traditional use of herbs is supplemented by pharmacological research to achieve greater effectiveness.


“If there is flow, there is no pain. If there is pain, there is no flow.”

– 痛則不通不通這痛 Core concept of pain

Person receiving electroacupuncture treatment on their back, with multiple needles connected to colored wires and clips.