8 Acupressure Points That You Can Stimulate To Cure Everything From Headaches To Nausea.


When you bump your elbow or stub your toe, your first instinct is to touch the spot that hurts, isn’t it? This instinct, to soothe pain with touch, forms the basis of acupressure.

A 5,000-year-old form of traditional Chinese healing, acupressure attempts to balance life energy (qi) by applying pressure to certain points along the body. These acupoints are located along channels of energy in the body, known as meridians. We usually experience pain when these meridians are blocked or out of balance.

Acupressure unblocks these meridians by applying pressure to these acupoints, which triggers the release of endorphins in the brain. Endorphins reduce pain and trigger feelings of pleasure. Once your body is no longer in pain, your muscles can relax and so your blood flow improves, allowing your body to come back into balance. Acupressure is a safe practice for beginners, and if you don’t get the exact point, you will still be okay. However, pregnant women and cancer patients shouldn’t attempt to do acupressure without supervision.

There are hundreds of acupoints on the human body, however, these are a few basic ones that you can start with.

1. Headaches: Joining the Valley (L 14)

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This point is commonly used to cure headaches, but it can also treat toothaches, neck pain, shoulder pain, arthritis, hangovers and constipation.

Location: Between the thumb and forefinger, at the highest point of the muscle, where the two fingers are joined.

How to press it: Press and massage the point on one hand for a few minutes, then do the same to the other hand. Repeat as required.

2. Nausea and vomiting: Pericardium (P6)

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This point helps prevent nausea and vomiting that is caused by a number of factors, including pregnancy, motion-sickness and chemotherapy. It also helps treat upset stomachs, headaches, chest pain and carpel tunnel syndrome.

Location: This point is located between the two large tendons on the inside of your wrist, about 3 finger widths below the base of your palm.

How to press it: Press the point with your index and middle fingers for half a minute, then do the same on your other hand. Repeat several times, till the nausea passes.

3. Fatigue and eye strain: Third Eye (GV24.5)

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This point relieves fatigue, eye strain, headaches, insomnia, sinus problems and congestion. It also improves memory, calms you down and improves your spiritual and emotional health.

Location: This point is located where the bridge of your nose meets the middle of your eyebrows.

How to press it: Use your middle finger to press this point for a few seconds, for up to a minute. Try to do this several times a week.

4. Depression: Sea of Tranquillity (CV 17)

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Also known as Conception Vessel 17 (CV 17), this point helps with emotional and mental health problems like depression, anxiety, nervousness and hysteria. It also helps improve immunity.

Location: This point is located in a dent in your breastbone, about 3 – 4 finger widths above the base of the breastbone. It is pretty much in the centre of your chest, between your nipples.

How to press it: Sit on a chair with your spine absolutely erect. Join your hands as though you are praying, with your fingers pointing upward. Press the knuckles of your thumb into this point, moving your hands up and down for a few minutes while taking deep breaths.

5. Digestive problems: Leg Three Miles (ST 36)

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This point is used to relieve all sorts of digestive problems like gas, diarrhoea, constipation, nausea, vomiting, bloating and indigestion. It also boosts immunity, prevents fatigue and improves your overall wellness.

Location: Bend your leg and wrap your fingers around your leg, just below your kneecap. The point is located where your little finger rests, not in the middle of your leg, but on the outside of your shin bone. On your right leg, this point will be a little to the right of the centre of your leg and on your left leg this point will be a little to the left of the centre of your leg.

How to press it: Apply moderate pressure to this point for a few seconds every day. You can press the point on both legs at the same time.

6. Knee pain: Commanding Middle (B 54)

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This point helps treat problems related to arthritis and sciatica, like knee pain, back pain, hip pain and stiffness.

Location: This point is located behind your knee, right in the centre of the kneecap area.

How to press it: Press it gently for about a minute, then switch to the other leg. Repeat every day.

7. Menstrual pain: Sacral Points

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Pressing these points relaxes the uterus and relieves menstrual cramps. It also reduces lower back pain and sciatica pain.

Location: These points are located on the sacrum, which is at the base of the spine, right above the tailbone. When you press down on it, you should feel your sacrum bones, just below your upper buttocks.

How to press them: Lie down and place both hands on the area, one on top of the other, applying firm pressure on the area. Do this for a few minutes.

8. Insomnia and stress: Heavenly Pillar (B 10)

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These points help with problems like stress, anxiety, exhaustion, burnout, headaches, heaviness in the head, neck pain and stiffness, insomnia and eye strain.

Location: These points are located 1 finger width below the base of the skull, on the neck muscles that jut out on either side of your spine.

How to press them: Press these points for a couple minutes every day, for several weeks.

5 Simple Acupressure Points to Relieve Stress and Anxiety.


The ancient healing modality of acupressure was developed in Asia over 5,000 years ago and has been filtered and refined ever since. It is a simple yet effective therapy that is often used as a means of self-treatment to reduce pain and tension, decrease stress, fire up the immune system and boost circulation, contributing to the treatment’s broad scope of use from healing emotional pain to improving sexual performance.

This article will provide numerous acupressure points that you can self-administer as and when is necessary, to reduce and eliminate a state of mind that can plague any one of us; stress and anxiety.

Acupressure uses the same pressure point locations as acupuncture, however, it uses different strengths of finger pressure to stimulate them, as opposed to the needles used in acupuncture. The mechanism of action is based on theory that, by applying pressure to these points, we can manipulate Qi (energy) that flows through energy pathways inside of our bodies known to Traditional Chinese Medicine as meridians. The Traditional Chinese Medicine Foundation describes meridians in the following manner:

“Picture a road map: a profusion of points woven into a web by lines of travel. Now imagine this system 3-D in your body: a vast network of invisible energy pathways connecting to each other and to every atom, cell, tendon, bone, organ, each centimeter of skin — everything in your body! They link the upper portion with the lower and the surface with the interior, so that nothing is truly separate.

“Now add other dimensions to this 3-D interconnected body “map”: your mind, your emotions, and spirit — everything conscious and unconscious within you. These amazing pathways are the meridians, and they form your body and all invisible aspects of your being into an intercommunicating whole.”

Acupressure – The How and Why

Modern living offers many incredible benefits such as comfortable and leisurely standards of living, and easy access to healthy food and clean water. However these positives comes with a negative price in the forms of financial stress, tight work deadlines, rocky and wavering relationships, just to list a few, which all ultimately contribute to levels of stress and anxiety that are bodies simply did not evolve to counter and cope with. Exposing our bodies to frequentstress and anxiety can manifest in all sorts of problematic and health-impacting symptoms such as insomnia, head aches, diminished sexual desire and low energy, all of which prevent us from effectively pursuing our passions and dreams.

As mentioned, acupressure can be used to alleviate a host of varying ailments. Modern western science has not quite drawn up an empirical conclusion as to how or why exactly meridian therapy works, but it does nonetheless recognize its effectiveness. The scientific literature is abundant with evidence of its successful application, one such catalog of studies can be found at pubmed.com which houses studies on the effects of acupressure on ailments from nausea to pain and stiffness to anxiety.

Below is a list of five of the most potent acupressure points which each one of us can utilize on a daily basis to stop stress and anxiety dead in its tracks when it starts to arise in our bodies and minds.

A single acupressure point can work in two different ways. When a point is stimulated in the same area that pain and tension is occurring, this is referred to as a local point. Other points may be stimulated on a specific part of the body with the intent of relieving a symptom or ailment elsewhere in the body; this is called a trigger point and works through the electrical pathways of the meridian system at a distance.

Before self-administering acupressure, it is advisable to do some deep breathing and light stretching, in order to maximize relaxation and muster a peaceful mental state beforehand.

To apply pressure and stimulate the pressure points, a firm pressure is the most fundamental and effective technique. Using either the thumbs, fingers, knuckles, palms or the side of the hands, apply firm and stationary pressure to the chosen point. You should slowly increase the amount of pressure applied to the point over a period of 3 minutes to experience optimal results from the treatment. Each point will feel slightly different when pressure is applied and you should be firm enough that it begins to hurt somewhat. If the point is particularly sensitive, you should gradually decrease the pressure until a balance between pain and pleasure is struck.

Caution: If you have a serious or life-threatening illness, please consult with your physician before practicing acupressure.

Using Acupressure to Relieve Stress and Anxiety

Acupressure - Point 1 (PC6)Point 1 (Nei Guan)

Starting from the wrist, measure the length of three fingers down the forearm. Where the third finger meets the middle of the arms width is where the point is located. Apply firm pressure using the thumb and gently rotated the thumb in a circular motion to massage the point for 2-3 minutes. Doing this to both arms will help to melt anxiety and will also help reduce any nausea present.

Acupressure - Point 2 (Union Valley)Point 2 (Union Valley)

This point is located between the webbing of the index finger and thumb. Apply the index finger and thumb from the opposing hands to either side of the webbing to form a pinch. Apply firm pressure for three minutes whilst taking deep enough breathes to fully inflate the abdomen. Applying pressure to this point will help to relive stress and tension in the body.

Acupressure - Point 3 (Shoulder Well)Point 3 (Shoulder Well)

This stimulation point is located half way between the point of the shoulder and the base of the neck. Applying pressure with your index finger to this point aids in relieving stress and decreasing tension in the body. According to the principles of Traditional Chinese Medicine, this point also helps to free up the flow of Qi throughout the meridian system.

Acupressure - Point 4 (Central Treasury) 2Point 4 (Central Treasury)

This meridian point is located on the tender tissue two finger widths above where the underneath of the arm meets the chest. Using the tip of the index finger and applying moderate pressure to this point, to either one or both sides simultaneously, will aid with deep breathing and increased blood circulation, and help with the balancing of unstable emotions.

Acupressure - Point 5 (Heavenly Pillar)Point 5 (Heavenly Pillar)

This point lies one fingers width below the base of the skull, upon the rope-like muscles roughly one half-inch either side of the spine. Web the fingers across the back of the skull and use both thumbs to apply firm pressure to both points. Close the eyes and take long and deep breathes whilst stimulating the point for around 3 minutes to relieve stress. These points also assist in insomnia, a stiff neck, over exhaustion and swollen eyes.