Cupping Therapy: Blood, Moon Cycles, Energy And Experience Review...
I wanted to share my thoughts and experience with cupping therapy—a practice deeply connected to blood flow in the body—and explore why that matters from both scientific and spiritual perspectives. This isn’t just theory for me. I tried it, it helped me, and that’s why I’m talking about it.
When we think about blood, we usually think biologically. But blood is also a liquid, and liquid systems are influenced by forces we don’t always pay attention to. The most obvious example is water on Earth. The moon directly affects oceans, tides, and waves. That influence is measurable and undeniable.
In a similar way—though less obvious—the moon appears to affect the blood within us. When blood pressure or volume shifts upward, especially toward the head, it can influence mood and mental states. Frustration, anxiety, anger, bitterness—these emotional patterns often show up when there’s excess activity or pressure in the upper body.
Ancient cultures noticed this long before modern science had explanations. That’s where myths came from. They weren’t random fantasies; they were observations without formal language. The classic example is the werewolf myth—again, tied to lunar cycles and blood behavior.
On the other end of the spectrum, when there’s less blood congestion in the head, people tend to feel lighter, calmer, and more emotionally balanced.
Beyond the moon, there’s also the role of electromagnetism. Moving electrical charges create magnetic fields—this is basic physics and the foundation of most modern technology. Our bodies are electrically conductive systems. Because of that, we generate subtle electromagnetic fields around us.
These fields are tiny compared to something like a refrigerator, but they exist. And when it comes to the nervous system, tiny changes matter. Slight shifts in electrical signaling can affect how you think, feel, behave, and process emotions.
Cupping therapy interacts with more than just blood and nerves. One of the more recent explanations focuses on fascia—the connective tissue that wraps around muscles, organs, and structures throughout the body. Fascia plays a major role in circulation, tension, and communication between systems.
When blood flow through these layers becomes restricted or imbalanced, it can affect the nervous system and overall wellbeing. Cupping helps redistribute and balance that flow. If there’s an issue in a specific area—linked to stress, posture, or emotional patterns—this kind of therapy can help release it.
That’s the theory. Now here’s what actually happened.
My experience with cupping involved suction cups placed on the body, creating negative pressure that pulls blood toward the surface. Small incisions are made so some of that blood can exit. It sounds intense, and honestly, parts of it are.
The practitioner was around my mother’s age, which I mention because the needles themselves aren’t aggressive, but your mind expects pain. On areas like the scalp, where skin is thicker, you do feel a sharp, stingy sensation once the skin is punctured. I wasn’t moving or reacting much, but you’re definitely aware of it.
Some people time cupping sessions with tidal or lunar cycles—periods of release versus pull. I didn’t do that, yet I still felt a noticeable effect.
At one point, I asked myself: what’s the difference between cupping therapy and simply donating blood? I think about athletes like Cristiano Ronaldo, who are known for donating blood while maintaining peak performance. Donating blood is often framed as weakening, yet it can also be regenerative.
This ties into themes I often explore—depletion, fasting, and controlled stressors that actually sharpen the mind rather than dull it.
Despite skepticism, especially among men, cupping remains one of those practices where belief ratios are heavily skewed. Whether that’s due to disbelief, lack of time, or cultural bias doesn’t really matter to me. What matters is that it worked.
I felt clearer, more balanced, and more grounded afterward. That’s why I’m sharing this—not as a claim, but as a personal review.
Key Takeaways
Blood flow influences mood, emotion, and mental clarity
Lunar and electromagnetic forces may subtly affect the body
The nervous system responds to even tiny physiological changes
Fascia plays a major role in circulation and energetic balance
Cupping can support clarity, release, and nervous-system regulation
I’m also working on another video related to 5D concepts and déjà vu experiences. It’s something I’ve delayed—not because of lack of interest, but because it sits right at the edge of what I can explain scientifically and mystically.
Thanks for taking the time to read. I’ll see you in the next one.
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