Professional Developments This Month (March 2026): Frequency Specific Microcurrent & Yangsheng
- rmdyacu
- Mar 2
- 3 min read
This month feels expansive in the best way.
After a season of slowing down and healing, I’m stepping back into learning, not from a place of urgency, but from R E S O N A N C E.
Here’s what I’m diving into in March, and why I’m genuinely excited about it.
Frequency Specific Microcurrent (FSM) Training – Phoenix, AZ
March 11-15th, I’ll be in Phoenix, Arizona for a 5-day intensive Core Seminar in Frequency Specific Microcurrent (FSM).
If you haven’t heard of FSM before, you’re not alone. It’s a powerful and precise modality that uses low-level electrical current delivered at specific frequencies to target different tissues and conditions in the body.
What is Frequency Specific Microcurrent?
Frequency Specific Microcurrent is a form of microcurrent therapy that uses:
Very low-level electrical current (measured in microamps)
Specific frequency combinations
Targeted application for pain, inflammation, scar tissue, nerve irritation, and more
Unlike TENS units (which stimulate muscles and can feel buzzy or strong), FSM uses current that is often sub-sensory. Most people feel very little — sometimes nothing at all — yet profound changes can happen in tissue response.
The idea is that different tissues and conditions respond to different frequency pairs. By matching the right frequency to the right tissue, the body can shift out of inflammation and into repair more efficiently.
My Personal Experience with FSM
I first received Frequency Specific Microcurrent after my knee injury in October 2025.
My pain was hovering around a 7.
After one treatment:
My pain dropped to a 2
Swelling significantly decreased
Range of motion improved
My nervous system softened
It felt like my body finally got the memo:“You’re safe to heal now.”
I’ve continued receiving FSM treatments to support post-operative healing, reduce inflammation, and improve tissue repair. The results have been consistent and measurable.
That experience is what prompted me to pursue formal training.
If something helps my body that much, I want to understand it deeply.
How FSM Complements Acupuncture
What excites me most is how beautifully FSM can integrate with acupuncture.
Acupuncture:
Regulates the nervous system
Moves Qi and blood
Reduces inflammation
Supports systemic balance
FSM:
Targets specific injured tissues
Reduces inflammatory signaling
Helps calm nerve irritation
Supports post-surgical healing
Together, they offer:
Nervous system regulation
Tissue-level precision
Accelerated recovery
Deeper pain relief
For patients dealing with:
Acute injuries
Chronic pain
Post-operative recovery
Scar tissue
Persistent inflammation
This combination can be incredibly supportive.
I’ll be completing the 5-day core seminar in Phoenix and will begin thoughtfully integrating FSM into treatments where appropriate.
More to come on that soon.
YangSheng & Seasonal Alignment Course
I’m also currently enrolled in a YangSheng course with my teacher, Anne Shelton Crute DAOM, L.Ac. & Tara Rado, L.Ac.
YangSheng translates to “nourishing life.” It’s the practice of living in alignment with seasonal rhythms, internal Qi cycles, and the body’s natural transitions.
This online course focuses on:
Qi nodes (energetic transition points between seasons)
Seasonal physiology
How to support the body during shifts
Living in rhythm instead of resistance
If you’ve ever felt:
Off during seasonal transitions
More inflamed in certain months
Emotionally reactive during change
There’s often a rhythm component at play.
YangSheng invites us to pay attention before imbalance becomes pathology.
This course is open to anyone who wants to join — I’ll include the link below for those who feel called. LINK
Why This Matters for My Patients
What I’m most excited about is this:
Everything I’m studying right now revolves around one theme — resonance.
Resonance in tissue healing
Resonance in seasonal living
Resonance between practitioner and patient
Resonance between nervous system and environment
My recent injury reminded me that healing isn’t performative — it’s relational and precise.
Frequency Specific Microcurrent brings precision. YangSheng brings rhythm. Acupuncture brings regulation.
Together, they create a more complete ecosystem of care.
I’m grateful to keep learning. I’m grateful to bring these tools back to my clinic. And I’m grateful to practice medicine in a way that continues to evolve.
More updates soon as I complete training.
With care,
Dr. L




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