Aram Tzayig has been a therapist for 25 years, specializing in emotional problems and pediatrics.

He got to know chinese medicine by chance. After a very effective treatment from a friend who studied chinese medicine, he decided that this was the field he wanted to delve into.

Studies

From the moment he started with his study, he knew he wanted to treat children. In his second year, Julian Scott came to teach in Israel. He taught there only for one year and there were no further possibilities to study pediatrics in Israel. So Aram started to learn pediatrics from a student from Julian and began treating under her guidance.
In 2000, Peter Van Kervel came to teach in Israel. Aram joined his lectures in Stems and Branches theory and CCTM for two years.

Teaching

Later, together with Peter and a group of students, they founded the School for the Theory of Stems and Branches in Israel under the auspices of the Hebrew University. Aram managed the establishment of this project. The school closed in 2020.

In his work he combines the theory of Stems and Branches and the CCTM for pediatrics according to the five elements. Together with Efrat Abramson he began to teach pediatrics in Israel and Europe; in the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Finland.

Treatments

His therapeutic concept is based on the emotional context of the imbalance from the understanding that an emotional imbalance is the root of the problem and the symptoms are the branches. Therefore it is important to concentrate on the root of the problem. The emotional treatment is based, among other things, on the Gui treatments technique that Aram has been using frequently for the past twenty years, with surprising results in the clinic.

The treatment of children fits well with the concept that emotions are usually the root of the problem. In children the emotional imbalance is not yet fixed, and therefore it is possible to balance children relatively easily on the emotional level. In adults, the emotional imbalance over the years creates symptomatic problems that need direct treatment. In children, balancing the emotional layer usually solves the symptomatic problems as well.

Simplicity

From the beginning Aram found great interest in Taoism and its connection to chinese medicine. Taoism is a way of life and a worldview, and it is also used to shape the therapeutic worldview. Part of the Taoist concept is a connection to nature and simplicity, Aram strives for simplicity in treatments and has been treating with one needle technique for over 20 years, an approach that he attributes many advantages to. Pulse diagnosing is also a necessary and central step in the therapeutic approach.

Aram is father to 3 children.

Books

Over the years Aram wrote 4 books:

  • Philosophical and Clinical Tools in Chinese Medicine

  • Phase of Wood – Pediatrics according to the Five Elements

  • Parenting in the Spirit of Tao

  • Dao and Chinese Medicine