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Hoshino
Therapy®
Professor Tomezo Hoshino
Tomezo Hoshino was born in Atsugui,
Japan, in 1910 to a long line of acupuncturists, and it was
assumed he would follow in the family tradition. As fate would
have it, when he was 16 years old he was injured in a motorcycle
accident and lost his eyesight. In need of a vocation, he
studied Hama massage, which is specifically for blind
practitioners. After 18 months, he had another blow to his head,
and his sight was restored.
At that point, he did not want to
work as an Hama masseur any longer, but rather wanted to see the
world. He traveled first to Argentina, where he worked as a
gaucho, but after some time, because he was suffering from a
neuralgia resulting from his original injury, he returned to
Japan for acupuncture treatments. The acupuncturist who treated
him noticed his hands, and asked him if he was a musician,
saying that he had very special hands. Hoshino always remembered
this, but did not want to be known as an Hama massage
practitioner. He entered the Tokyo School of Acupuncture and
graduated in 1939.
Afterwards, Hoshino returned to
Argentina and, because at that time acupuncture was not
recognized as a legitimate profession there, he found work as a
massage therapist at an institute for pedicurists. Here he began
to use the great sensitivity in his hands that he had developed
during his blindness. Because of his massage, many of the
customers were not developing callouses as they had been, and so
they did not need to return for their regular pedicures. This
was noticed by the director of the institute, and Hoshino was
subsequently fired from his position. Hoshino started his own
practice and successfully treated several of the Buenos Aires
elite and also a polo player, Michael Phipps, from Florida.
Phipps had been crippled with arthritis and when he walked he
was “bent like a crab” according to Hoshino. Fourteen months
later he was pain-free, walked normally, and actually won an
important golf tournament. He was so grateful to Hoshino that he
donated $1 million toward the establishment of an institute in
Florida where students could learn the Hoshino technique. Before
this institute was started, Hoshino had programs under the
auspices of Florida Atlantic University, in Boca Raton, as well
as Doctors Hospital in Plantation, Florida where he successfully
treated hundreds of cases which were fully documented. In 1969
Hoshino opened the Institute for the Treatment of Arthritis and
Allied Disorders in Deerfield Beach, Florida, where he spent six
months each year teaching his art and treating hundreds of cases
of arthrosis (see below). In 1973, Phipps died and the
institute was closed, so Hoshino and two students whom he
trained opened a clinic in Boca Raton and later another clinic
in Coconut Grove. Hoshino continued to divide his time equally
between the U.S. and Argentina and in 1986, his therapy was
officially recognized as a approved profession by the Argentina
Association of Kinesiology. Starting that same year, his course
was taught as a post-graduate specialty at the Academy of
Kinesiology and Physiatry in Buenos Aires.
Hoshino retired from full-time
teaching in the early 1990’s and died in 2000 in Argentina.
Famous people treated by Hoshino:
Arthur Rubenstein, Maurice Chevalier,
Gary Cooper, Tyrone Power, Marlene Dietrich, Princess Joan of
Luxemburg, Cesar Chavez, the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, and
Prince Phillip, the son of the king of Spain
What Is Arthrosis?
Arthrosis is the term used in Hoshino
Therapy to describe the disorder commonly referred to as
arthritis or osteo-arthritis. It has plagued mankind throughout
history and today ranks among the most important medical
problems of the civilized world. While the terms arthritis or osteo-arthritis refer to bone disorders, arthrosis is a broad
term referring to disorders resulting from the hardening of
skeletal-related soft tissues, i.e. muscles, tendons and
ligaments. It
includes impairments such as bursitis, tendonitis, sciatica,
migraine headaches, non-traumatic back problems (meaning not
caused by direct trauma to the spine), and joint problems such
as limited finger mobility which are not complicated by systemic
disease. |