Anasuya
Batliner teaches several classes at the Acupressure Institute: Nutrition
for Pain & Depression, Women’s Health, and Acupressure for Menopause.
She completed the Institute’s Basic Training, in 1995, a specialization
in Traditional Asian Therapy in 1996, and graduated from the 850-hour
Acupressure Therapy Program in 1999. As a firm believer in continuing
education, Anasuya became a certified Nutrition Consultant and also
studied advanced CranioSacral Therapy. She has maintained a private
practice in Berkeley since 1996 and twice a month offers therapeutic
bodywork at the Cerebral Palsy Center in Oakland.
Her
acupressure training helps guide her nutrition consulting as she
uses tongue and pulse assessments to determine each client’s individual
eating plan. She believes that as health practitioners, “We need
to recognize when a client is sabotaging their healing process by
poor eating and make simple, healthy recommendations.”
Career Success Strategies
Anasuya
found marketing classes valuable for improving her business skills.
She has worked with professional business coaches to get the support
she needs to build her practice. She also hires a bookkeeper to
keep her records in order.
Anasuya started her healing practice with a chair massage business
called ‘Office Shiatsu’ in San Francisco’s financial district. She
contacted property managers of high rises to offer her service for
their tenants. She told them, “It will cost you nothing, just the
space to work and put up fliers.” Anasuya found that by giving away
five minute samplers of acupressure in the lobby people wanted to
sign up for longer sessions. Almost a decade later some of these
same office workers are still her loyal clients now coming to her
Berkeley office.
Advertising and health fairs did not generate many clients for
her; however, networking with other health practitioners was fruitful.
She found a yearlong job at a doctor’s office this way, where she
worked on ten people a day. Today many of her clients are referrals
from doctors, chiropractors, and other healthcare workers.
In
Anasuya’s private practice, she sees twelve to twenty-two clients
a week, charging $65 for forty minutes, $90 for one hour and $125
for an hour and a half. She uses Tui Na, Jin Shin, and Shiatsu,
and integrates the knowledge of points and meridians with CranioSacral
Therapy. Anasuya’s practice focuses on women’s health and chronic
pain. Her own clinical research at a holistic nutrition school found
that improving dietary habits reduced chronic pain and so she often
incorporates nutrition counseling with her clients. This research
also formed the basis for her class, Nutrition for Pain and Depression.
Meaningful Work
One
of her clients, a postal worker, suffered from chronic fatigue for
ten years. He had been on disability and unable to do his artwork.
Simple nutritional suggestions reduced his pain significantly. Following
up with acupressure and more nutrition counseling, Anasuya saw gradual
improvements, and after several months he went back to work, his
creativity in art expanded, and he started a romantic relationship
for the first time in a decade. He stands out to her because she
realized “This actually works and makes a difference!”
“I am very happy,” Anasuya says “to offer skills that are beneficial
to other people, and to do something good in the world.” She especially
enjoys the meditative quality of the work. “The care I give in the
therapeutic relationship with clients is returned through their
appreciation; it’s a very respectful, gratifying relationship.”
“The body holds an incredible spiritual energy that thrives on
being balanced and healthy. Acupressure, bodywork, and nutrition
are ways to meet the challenges of human life, so we can shine forth
and share more of our best qualities.”
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