Chinese Medicine Based Support for Head Pain, TMJ, and Stress-Linked Tension
- Apr 3
- 2 min read
Updated: Apr 6
Jesse will regularly see clients navigating migraines, pressure headaches, jaw tightness (TMJ), or lingering sinus congestion, conditions that share a common thread: neurological tension. Jesse provides a calm, grounded treatment space where the focus is on recognising patterns in the nervous system, circulation, and muscular tension that may be contributing to these symptoms. Using acupuncture and Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) diagnostics, treatments are designed to decrease reactivity, restore flow, and reduce overall system strain.
What Often presents in Clinic for Jesse
People often come in for support with:
Recurring migraines or tension headaches
Jaw clenching or TMJ pain
Sinus pressure or facial congestion
Postural strain from screens or grinding
Neurological tension that cycles with hormones, sleep or stress
General nervous system overload — where everything feels “too much”
These conditions often overlap. Jesse looks at the full pattern, not just isolated symptoms, and adapts treatment based on what your system is showing each session.
How Acupuncture Can Help Headaches
In Chinese Medicine, migraines and head tension are often seen as patterns of internal imbalance, such as disrupted circulation of Qi, heat accumulation, or tension in the Liver system. These patterns can be linked to stress, emotional strain, hormonal shifts, or poor postural habits.
How Jesse Can Help:
Scalp and facial acupuncture for local neurological input
Electro-acupuncture to target jaw tension or nerve patterns
Gua Sha around the neck or base of skull to ease congestion
Cupping to release shoulder tension contributing to head pressure
Herbal medicine for ongoing support between treatments
What About TMJ and Sinus Tension?
Jesse often treats jaw tension (TMJ disorders) using a combination of facial and distal points, gua sha, and gentle motor point acupuncture, especially effective for clenching, grinding, and stress-related tightness.
For sinus pressure, acupuncture may support drainage and circulation around the face and head, often alongside facial cupping, gua sha, or herbal formulas selected to address underlying patterns like dampness or heat.
Who Jesse Will Work With
People experiencing frequent or cyclical migraines
Clients recovering from high-stress burnout or hormonal fluctuations
Jaw clenchers, grinders or those with past dental trauma
Desk workers with screen-related postural tension
Individuals with chronic sinus sensitivity or facial pressure
People seeking alternatives to ongoing medication for head-related pain
You don’t need a diagnosis, just a willingness to explore what your body’s trying to communicate.

_edited_edited.jpg)


