Posts Tagged ‘physical’

Salon Aspen

Monday, April 6th, 2009

Come see all of the exciting things that are happening at our full service salon here at The Aspen Club!

The off-season is the perfect time to pamper yourself! We offer everything from spray tanning to acrylic nails. Book a salon service and receive 50% off a spray tan! With wedding season around the corner, there’s no better time to have that healthy glow.

Relax in our massaging pedicure chairs while getting a spa pedicure. Leaving Salon Aspen with pretty toes may seem like the only reward you gain, but there are many physical benefits of a pedicure as well:
- Removal of dead skin and calluses alleviates uneven pressure when you walk or stand eliminating pain throughout your day.
- Foot reflexology stimulates blood flow to the feet and legs.
- Foot massage encourages overall health improvement anywhere in the body.
- Certain scents and oils can be beneficial for improving circulation, focus, memory and mood.
Finish off your salon trip with a paraffin dip on your hands and feed. A great way to get rid of winter skin and create a nice glow for summer.

Book your salon services today! Call (970) 925-8900 for reservations.

Adventures of ‘Michael’s Angels’

Monday, August 11th, 2008

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Adventures of ‘Michael’s Angels’

by Catherine Lutz, Aspen Daily News Staff Writer

They half-jokingly call themselves “Michael’s Angels” — after Michael Fox, co-owner of the Aspen Club, who has opened the Club’s doors to  help Amanda Boxtel, Kasie Burtard and Leah Potts in their fundraising efforts.

It’s an apt comparison to TV’s famous female trio. The local women are  every bit as tough as they are feminine, full of spunk and passion. But  instead of battling bad guys with guns, they’re fighting their way out of the wheelchairs and walking aids that have limited their movements for a combined 30-plus years, with human embryonic stem cells.

And it seems to be working.

The women’s challenges, however, are today almost more financial than  physical. All three have experienced marked physical improvements since  starting embryonic stem cell treatment at Dr. Geeta Shroff’s clinic in India. But with multiple trips costing tens of thousands of dollars  each (not to mention time off work and zero insurance coverage), fundraising has become as much of a key focus as everything else Boxtel, Burtard and Potts are doing to be able to walk again.

“This treatment is not available anywhere else in the world, and I see it as being injected with the divine gift of life,” said Boxtel, trying to summarize the complex process.

This Tuesday, the Aspen Club is once again hosting an evening of  awareness for “Michael’s Angels.” From 5-8 p.m., everyone is invited for live music, free food and drinks, and the opportunity to find out more about their unique experiences. There’s no ticket price but donations are of course encouraged and appreciated.

Progress

Most valley residents are by now familiar with the story of Boxtel,  co-founder of local nonprofit Challenge Aspen, who has been confined to a wheelchair since a skiing accident rendered her a paraplegic more than 16 years ago.

Last year, Boxtel became the first American woman to ever receive human embryonic stem cell treatment, and her experience — told on her Web site, via an e-mail blog and in a forthcoming book — has drawn intense curiosity and numerous inquiries from others with similar injuries.

Two of those people are Burtard and Potts, who followed Boxtel’s blog and  were taken under her wing as she explained and encouraged Dr. Shroff’s  pioneering work. An end-of-the-year fundraiser at the Aspen Club last  December raised $33,000 for each of the three women to either begin or  continue human embryonic stem cell treatment in India.

“Knowing Amanda did it and had huge success really helped,” Burtard  said at the time. “I’m so blessed that Amanda is in our valley and  introduced it, because otherwise it probably would be five more years  before I could convince my family to let me try it.”

Illegal in the United States, human embryonic stem cell treatment was  pioneered by Dr. Shroff, who developed a single embryo in a lab from which she created multiple stem cell lines. The treatment has been used  on a number of disorders, including terminal ones, and in the last two years 72 patients with complete spinal cord injuries have seen an average 63 percent improvement, said Boxtel. That level of improvement, she said, is astounding because most of these people were given no hope of even 1 percent improvement in their lifetimes.

In her own blog, Boxtel says her body has changed “miraculously” since  her first stem cell injection in June 2007. She writes of wiggling  toes, feeling her leg muscles and wearing a dress for the first time in 16 years while “standing proud” in leg braces.

“My legs are continuing to get stronger and my body is coming alive,” she wrote on July 24, and earlier this week she proudly showed off her ankles, which used to be in a permanent state of swollenness.

Boxtel, who lives in Basalt and is a professional speaker and coach, has made three trips to India so far for embryonic stem cell treatment, part of a three-year plan that involves going back every four to five months for one month at a time. The fourth trip is booked and planned for Oct. 23-Nov. 26   — though she still needs to raise money for the $15,000 stay — and her budget for next year, she figures, is $78,000 for three treatments.

Asked whether she feels the money is being properly spent, Boxtel answers, “I can’t put a dollar amount on my ability to pee again.”

Boxtel has made it her mission to tout the treatment she so fervently believes is “life giving life.” She points to Burtard, who after her initial session in India can stand without leg braces by locking her knees.

Burtard, 26, is the youngest of the three women. A valley native and 2000 graduate of Roaring Fork High School, Burtard was in a serious car accident in 2002 that left her paralyzed from the waist down. Burtard is no stranger to traveling for treatment — for two years she traveled to Texas almost every other month for physical therapy — but India was a whole new ball game.

Comparing notes on treatments, Burtard said she hardly felt anything from a procedure that caused some pain in Boxtel and Potts. She giggles about her ability to eat fast food while the others expressed concern about their diets in India (especially since healthy food is a component of getting better). And she seems to be taking in stride her life being turned upside down again — while in India her landlord sold her apartment and she was homeless for one-and-a-half months.

But Burtard was the first to agree that such a drawn out course of treatment can try a person’s patience. Embryonic stem cells, like babies, take time to gestate, and while as many as half will die off, the others need time (about five years, it is believed) to fully integrate themselves into the body and cause the desired changes.

“When I was in India I wasn’t impatient, just frustrated that it wasn’t getting any better,” she said. “But I know it’s not going to get any better unless I try really hard.”

Burtard, who now lives in Silt and works as a nanny, is planning to go back to India in September.

Potts, who came back from her first three-month treatment just three weeks ago, joked that “by the end of it I felt half-Indian,” because of the sheer amount of time spent there and the fact that the 100 million stem cells a day she received as part of the treatment all come from one Indian embryo.

Potts, like Boxtel, was injured in a ski accident, but is a recovering quadriplegic who could walk with the aid of a cane — even before starting stem cell treatment she has defied her doctors’ expectations. But her body, which was changed so dramatically nearly 10 years ago, is coming back, she writes in her blog. Her posture is straighter; her balance is better; limbs and muscles are functioning more as they should; she has fewer spasms throughout her body; and she is completely off her pain medicine.

“I thought I would (see improvements), but it’s still hard to believe,” said Potts, who uses a recumbent bicycle to get around and exercise her legs at the same time. “It seems too good to be true, but it’s true not without dedication and sweat and tears.”

Potts, 32, lives in Aspen and works as a spinning instructor at the Aspen Athletic Club. (Known to many as Leah Rowland — Potts is changing her name because she’s getting divorced.) She is hoping to go back to India Oct. 27, depending on how fundraising efforts go.

On Wednesday, Boxtel, Burtard and Potts appeared on Jeannie Walla’s Channel 19 TV show, “Showcase Aspen,” and they retell their updated stories time and time again to friends and even strangers wherever they go. As far as being home versus being in India, there they were able to focus solely on themselves and their improbable journey. Here, they lead lives like most of us: having to work, cook, clean and walk their dogs — on top of raising more money and focus on an intensive six-day-a-week program of physical therapy, yoga, massage, standing in leg braces, and keeping on a healthy, nutritious diet. They’re gushingly grateful for the family, friends and therapists who help, often without compensation — and in particular for the caregivers who sacrifice so much to travel with them to India as required by the clinic.

And there’s a lot of crying and frustration, they say. But, as Potts puts it, “I choose to make this my lifestyle. This is what I do.”

For more information: www.amandaboxtel.com [1], www.leahpotts.com [2], www.helpkasieburtard.wetpaint.com [3]

lutz@aspendailynews.com

From India to Aspen

Thursday, August 7th, 2008

By Charles Agar of the Aspen Times

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Three local women with spinal injuries are back from stem cell treatment in India and say they’re much improved.

Amanda Boxtel, Leah Roland and Kasie Burtard turned to valley residents in 2007 for the thousands of dollars needed for a treatment banned in the United States, and all three women said the controversial embryonic stem cell injections paid dividends.

They are holding an event Tuesday at the Aspen Club to say thank-you to the community and also raise more funds for ongoing treatment overseas.

The cost of an initial two-month treatment at the 20-room private clinic in New Delhi is about $40,000.

For Boxtel, who was paralyzed from the waist down in a ski accident almost 16 years ago, it was her third trip for a treatment by Dr. Geeta Shroff, who uses a groundbreaking embryonic stem cell therapy to treat people with incurable diseases, or people with injuries deemed irreversible.

Boxtel experienced surprising results from initial treatments a year ago, she said, including use of muscles long-dormant and regained bladder control.

Subsequent one-month visits to India over the past year have meant more subtle improvements, she said.

“It’s going to be a really long road for me,” Boxtel said.

Reversing some 16 years of muscle atrophy won’t be easy, she said, and she’s not sure she’ll be able to walk as a result of the treatment.

But Boxtel is grateful that she has improved muscle control, can now walk on her knees and can wiggle her toes.

And muscle aches from physical therapy are signs of healing, she said.

Burtard, who made her first trip to India this year and stayed two months, can now move her quadriceps muscles, can stand with the help of leg braces and took her first step without them during her time in India.

Since the treatment, Roland, who walks with a cane, is off medication, and can stand straight with her knees locked and has improved use of one hand affected by her injury.

The women said the treatment program in India was rigorous, with morning and afternoon physical therapy sessions as well “gait training.”

“You have to work hard and dig deep to make ‘em fire,” Roland said of atrophied muscles.

But it’s working, she added.

“We are improving,” Roland said.

But it wasn’t all about physical therapy and hospital rooms.

Burtard rode an elephant and went to the Taj Mahal, and Roland said she “went native,” shopping in markets and practicing yoga and meditation with locals.

All three said that time them made them grateful for clean air and drinking water in Aspen.

Doctors in the U.S. are “curious” about the results of stem cell therapy, Boxtel said, but don’t condone the treatment, which raises ethical issues for many and won’t pass a “conservative” Food and Drug Administration,.

Doctors at the Craig Hospital, however, are updating “unreliable and archaic” testing for spinal injury patients, Boxtel said, and in the future will be able to better measure improvements.

The fundraiser will be at the Aspen Club on Tuesday from 5 to 8 p.m. and is a chance to eat, drink, listen to live music and talk with the three women about their experience overseas.

“Come check out our new bodies,” Roland said with a laugh.

Amanda Boxtel update

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

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Let nothing perturb you, nothing frighten you.  All things pass. 

God does not change.  Patience achieves everything.

–Mother Teresa

I am keeping strong, holding my vision, continuing with my yoga practice, meditation, and physical therapy…and practicing walking in my leg braces.  Sometimes it’s really tough, I sweat, cry, and I wonder about the future…but I push on regardless keeping my faith and hope.  I am not afraid.  I am living my dream.  My legs are continuing to get stronger and my body is coming alive.

Thank you to those who offered housing for my Korean healers.  Long-time Challenge Aspen supporters Rusty and Nona Jones have graciously donated their two-bedroom condo in Snowmass Village for the week of August 10-17.  It will be an intense and exciting week of energy work and oriental healing—eight hours per day for seven days straight.  I will continue to create the divine foundation for my embryonic stem cells to gestate in my body and restore function to my limbs.  Thank you to my “anonymous” friends who have helped fund Dr. Choe and Dr. Jung’s visit.  I am so very grateful.  

I am leaving no stone unturned.

Sending so much love, gratitude, and healing light,

Amanda (and Tucker too J) xoxo

Tune Up As You Tone Up

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

Have you ever considered that your exercise routine could be hurting you? What about that “glitch” in your shoulder when you throw a ball or reach in to the back seat to grab your purse? How about the pain in your lower back that crops up at random times? Have your knees started to hurt so much that you’ve stopped bending them past thirty degrees?

 

These are just a few of the nagging problems that we assume are a part of being an aging athlete. As these injuries have occurred in our lives, we may have sought out treatment for them, but for the most part, we have learned to adapt our sports and activities to accommodate them. We’ve even become so used to these changes that we don’t notice them anymore. Maybe we’ll take an extra few cruisers before hitting the steeps because the knees seem to need more warming up. Doesn’t everybody tie their shoes using the “Beer Belly Tie” (one foot crossed over opposite knee resulting in the knot being on the inside of the laces instead of on the top like you learned when you were three!)?

 

These aren’t normal and with a few adjustments and/or additions to your exercise routines, they can be helped. Our goal is to discover effective strategies to build optimal strength and mobility while minimizing future pain and injury.

 

One thing to keep in mind is that some of these injuries are the result of serious injury, surgery, etc. and treatment should be pursued with the appropriate professionals.

 

A much higher percentage of these conditions can be helped and I would like to list a few of the more common complaints that I hear frequently. Remember, this is a general overview. There is much more involved in the full treatment of each condition. Along with each condition I have listed possible causes followed be treatments and suggested exercises.

 

Again, I can’t stress enough that if you think that your problem is serious, stop in and see one of our Physical Therapists.

Click here to read the full article

Tai Chi in June

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

Tai Chi is a moving meditation of simple movements that are easy to learn. The movements are slow, gentle and can be easily done by anyone, regardless of age or physical condition. The emphasis of Tai Chi is self-awareness, well-being and energy flow. It provides excellent preparation for spiritual work, meditation, yoga, massage, running or any sport.

This class is open to all ability levels. If you’ve never tried Tai Chi before this is a great introduction to a lifetime spiritual journey. The class will be held in the warming room beginning June 2 on Monday and Wednesday mornings from 8-8:45am. A great way to begin the day and Springtime in the Rockies!

Why should you exercise?

Monday, April 7th, 2008
g Nutrition Site
Moss Greene
BellaOnline’s Nutrition Editor

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Exercise – Find Your Groove and Move!
Why should you exercise?

“Well little Miss Smarty-Pants, looks like you’ve gotten too big for your britches!” That’s what my Dad used to tell me. And it pretty much sums up the fix most of us have gotten ourselves into!

This smart modern world we’ve created is so automated we barely need to lift a finger or move a muscle to make things happen. Everything’s at our fingertips. We don’t have to walk to work, walk to the store or even walk across the room to change the dial on the TV set.

And, as a result of all our “smarty-pants” advances, our health is rapidly declining. Our muscles have atrophied and the majority of us – about 66% – are definitely “too big for our britches.”

Government Exercise Guidelines

To top it off, the government keeps shaking a finger, demanding we do something about it. They treat us like lame-brained children, lecturing us to start exercising and lose some weight.

But most of us have disobeyed. We rebelliously gain more weight and exercise less.

So what does Uncle Sam do about it? In case you haven’t heard, the government’s latest guidelines have gone and doubled our homework assignment. Instead of a half-hour’s worth of daily exercise, we’re now being told we need to exercise for an hour a day.

Some may be thinking, “Fat chance, Uncle Sam – why don’t you mind your own business!”

Now does that sound mature? Not in the least! So maybe it’s time for us to grow up and stop being so rebellious. As mature adults we should definitely be able to make rational exercise decisions all on our own. Right? Sure we can!

Taking Responsibility for Our Own Health

When you consider the fact that our not-too-distant ancestors used to have to farm the land, scrub their clothes, knead the bread and walk great distances to hunt for food, that one hour’s worth of daily exercise starts to sound like – “duh?” Of course our bodies need it!

Effective exercise has been proven to help protect you from:

  • diabetes,
  • heart disease,
  • weight gain,
  • backaches,
  • cancer,
  • migraines,
  • infections,
  • osteoporosis
  • and many other health problems.

Plus, it’s an essential part of any weight loss program.

So how do we go about this exercise thing? First of all, repeat after me, “If I’m too busy to exercise, I’m just too busy!” And then again, “If I’m too busy to exercise, I’m just too busy!” Now once more, “If I’m too busy to exercise, I’m just too busy!”

There you have it. The rest is up to you. Find a place – a park, your neighborhood, the local gym or your own home – and rearrange your schedule to make it happen. Take it slow and easy, then gradually increase. But do something that gets your heart thumping and pumping.

Health Benefits of Exercise for You

What can you get out of daily exercise?

  • It’s been shown to increase endorphins (feel-good hormones) and reduce depression. So, once you get moving, you’ll feel a lot better.
  • According to studies, exercise can lower your biological age by 10 to 20 years. It also helps you lose weight and maintain weight loss. So you’ll look better too.
  • Sensible regular physical activity decreases the possibility of injuries and strengthens your endurance and stamina. So you’ll be stronger and more invincible.
  • Plus, daily exercise protects you from the host of degenerative, debilitating and deadly diseases named above. So you can create a much better future for yourself.

Wow! In that case, let’s all repeat again together, just one more time, “If I’m too busy to exercise, I’m just too busy!” Now, for your own benefit, find your groove and move!

What is Acupuncture

Thursday, March 27th, 2008

Acupuncture is a medical modality, originating from China, with a 5000 year old history. It is a method of inserting sterile, disposable needles into specific acupuncture points to encourage the body to promote its own natural healing ability and to improve overall bodily function. Many people have only heard about Acupuncture for pain management however, Chinese medicine is a complete and comprehensive medical system with the ability to diagnose, treat, and most importantly prevent disease. Acupuncturists are trained in Chinese Medicine as well as Western Medicine, allowing for these practitioners to work closely with Medical Doctors and within the western diagnostic system. The treatment differs in that Chinese Medicine practitioners are trained to get to the root of disease by treating with herbal formulas and natural remedies to promote the body’s own healing ability.

Chinese Medicine is known to have its origins in Ayurvedic Medicine (medicine from India). Ayurveda translates as the ‘science of life’, representing a balance of the whole body matrix of mind, body, and spirit. The idea is that an imbalance of one of these leads to disease or disorder within the system. Both of these ancient medicines look at nature as the representation of order and harmony. As we follow the cycles of nature, and act in congruence with the changing of the seasons, we can then establish a reflection of synchronicity between the body and our surrounding environment. If yin and yang (also known as The Tao), represent this state of balance, it is also important to notice that balance comes from a blending of these two opposite poles. In life, there is a continuous alternation of every phenomenon (hot vs. cold, day vs. night, happy vs. sad, etc). Since one is constantly changing into another, balance can only be achieved for a nanosecond. For example, is a glass ever half empty and half full at the same time? By the time you count the water molecules, it has already changed through condensation. Everything in life, including our bodies can thus be summarized by this theory. Balance is obtained through the additions of some elements and the reduction of other elements. This is the reason why Acupuncture and Chinese medicine are so effective.

Acupuncture came before X-rays, pharmaceuticals and machines. Our bodies are made of energy at a cellular level, in which positive and negative ions are constantly firing in order to have specific bodily functions to be regulated, such as heartbeat, metabolic rate, and digestion. The Chinese knew this long ago, as they discovered over 360 acupuncture points where small vortexes of energy existed all over the body. The points run along specific channels and these energetic channels, called meridians, are like rivers flowing through the body to irrigate and nourish the tissues. An obstruction in the movement of these energy rivers is like a dam that backs up and causes stagnation. The meridians can be influenced by needling the acupuncture points since each meridian corresponds to a particular body organ. It works by unblocking the obstructions at the dams where the energy is stagnating, and reestablishes the regular flow of Qi, or energy. Acupuncture treatments can therefore help the body’s internal organs to correct imbalances in digestion, absorption, and energy production. Acupuncture is now being backed by scientific evidence, whereby needling a series of acupuncture points has proven to stimulate the nervous system. This results in the release of excitatory signals in the muscles, spinal cord, and brain. These signals send a message to the brain to block the feeling of pain in the thalamus. Acupuncture also sends a signal to the hypothalamus to release endorphins (the happy neurotransmitters) in the brain which produces a euphoric feeling. Not only does the patient experience a release of pain, but they become very relaxed and ‘naturally high’ from the biochemical changes that are taking place.

Acupuncture has been proven to be highly effective for physical ailments such as colds, coughs, flus, diabetes, hormonal imbalances, migraines, allergies, digestive problems, etc. However, it is also highly effective for any type of psychological, emotional or spiritual imbalance. The medicine is extremely diverse in its ability to bring the body back to harmony. People who have undergone treatments have reported a sense of euphoria that has not been experienced otherwise. Aspen Club members have claimed that through the use of acupuncture, they are stronger and healthier than they have ever been. I invite you to come in and experience the amazing healing abilities of Chinese Medicine and allow yourself to relax after a long ski day/work week. This is the best ‘Rocky Mountain High’ you can get!

Aspen Club expansion gets scrutiny from public, P&Z

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

by Brent Gardner-Smith, Aspen Daily News Staff Writer

The city of Aspen will have some weighty factors to sift through with the proposed Aspen Club residential expansion project.

The owners of the Aspen Club and Spa, located east of downtown Aspen, are proposing to build 19 condominiums through a building expansion and on what is now the club’s tennis courts.

In a concept called Aspen Club Living, owners of the units would buy two weeks each year to come for a healthy retreat, taking advantage of Aspen’s amenities and expanded wellness programs at the club.

The proceeds from the sales of the 304 timeshare interests, which if sold at $2,000 per square foot would top $94 million in sales, would finance a renovation of existing club facilities, including a new outdoor pool and new locker rooms. The timeshare owners would not have access to their units in the shoulder seasons, when the club would offer weeklong wellness retreats to the general public.

The project would also include 12 affordable housing units that would house about 27 employees. All this is proposed to be built to LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) standards, and would include an array of solar panels and a ground-source heat-pump system.

In a two-hour meeting with Aspen’s Planning and Zoning Commission on Tuesday, a wide range of issues were touched upon, but no vote was taken. The P&Z must recommend approval or denial to Aspen City Council.

Town staff supports the concept of a wellness-themed timeshare development, but has issues with its design, architecture and mass, and how it relates to the nearby Roaring Fork River. The design of the residential buildings, particularly one long building that will house seven of the 19 units, cuts off the view from the entrance of the club to the nearby riparian area, city planner Jessica Garrow told the commissioners. The planning office would like to see the structure more broken up, Garrow said, and finds the architecture itself uninspiring.

“I don’t think the architecture represents the mission that has been stated,” Garrow said.

An architect from Poss Architecture and Planning, which designed the units, said perhaps the planning office had not been able to “pull out of the drawings” the project’s unique features. The architect cautioned that pulling the mass of the building apart would create dark, U-shaped dead spaces between the buildings.

Some of the club’s 200 employees showed up to praise their workplace, saying the club’s expansion would further professional opportunities for its personal trainers, massage therapists and physical therapists. The club was presented as an organization that does right by its community through its existing wellness programs and the dozens of local nonprofits it supports.

“This is exactly what you would want to see for the next level for the club,” said Mindy Nagle, a local physician who said the club is a major source of referrals to her office.

“We could all grow in a direction that we wouldn’t normally be able to do,” said Morgan Walsh, a massage therapist at the club.

The most clear opposition came from a lawyer representing neighbors, who said it’s “just another real estate development” with questionable benefits to the community.

Rick Nieley pointed out that for Aspen Club owner Michael Fox to get approval to build a timeshare lodge, he must be approved under a provision of the land-use code known as a specially planned area, or SPA. According to the code language, an SPA is reserved for areas where because of the “unique historic, natural, physical or locational characteristics of the site” the public interest would be better served if different zoning was granted.

Nieley argued that the Aspen Club Living project meets none of these criteria.

Happiness with the way club is run is not reason enough to approve essentially a hotel surrounded by residential zoning, Nieley said, adding that Fox would have to demonstrate the new growth would add something more to the community than continuing existing services.

Time constraints prevented Fox from being able to respond to Neiley’s statement. But prior to Tuesday’s meeting, Fox denied that Aspen Club Living is another real estate development; rather, it’s a unique opportunity to create a sustainable, holistic amenity that will secure the Aspen Club’s future for generations.

“If it’s done right, the Aspen Club could be an icon throughout the world,” Fox said.

The traffic debate

Opponents of the project say that club-generated traffic on Ute Avenue is already bad enough, and that this project would make it worse. But Fox said steps can be taken to reduce traffic currently generated by the club’s 1,900 members (up from 400 just five years ago).

Club representatives presented traffic estimates that concluded the residential expansion would increase traffic volume on Ute Avenue by 15 percent. Fox said that can be mitigated by instituting paid parking for members and guests, doubling or tripling the level of its shuttle service to and from the club, and providing a fleet of electric cars for guests and affordable-housing residents to use.

Sunny Vann, the club’s planning consultant, said that the real issue is traffic capacity on Ute Avenue, which he said isn’t close to being full. Opposition to more traffic isn’t sufficient reason to deny the project when the road has more capacity, Vann said.

But the city, and neighbors to the project, are demanding more specifics on what measures the club would take to reduce traffic and how much traffic, specifically, the club thinks its mitigation measures will take off the road.

“I don’t think anyone has focused on what really will work,” said Gary Rappaport, a part-time homeowner on Ute Avenue.

Other members of the community expressed fear that if the club is not allowed redevelopment, its owners would sell to someone who would raze the community institution to build second homes.

Aspenite Steve Marolt, who acknowledged that his reputation of late has been against development, said the city must consider the alternative if the timeshare project isn’t built.

The city “wouldn’t have to give the world” to Fox to make the project work, but Fox could easily sell to another owner who wouldn’t think twice about tearing down the club and replacing it with 5,000-square-foot trophy homes, Marolt said. He termed Fox’s proposal the best alternative.

curtis@aspendailynews.com

Aspen Acupuncture

Friday, February 29th, 2008

The Aspen Club and Spa Sports Medicine Institute is now offering Acupuncture with Amy Suplee.

Acupuncture/Herbal Consultation-1hr
The insertion of very small needles into points on
the meridians, effective to eliminate physical
or emotional pain, balance “chi” in the body,
increase energy, and improve organ function
and overall health.

Acupuncture Facial Rejuvenation-1hr or
1.5 hrs with Deluxe facial
Fine needles are placed at a variety of
acupuncture points on the face, neck and
around the eyes to stimulate the body’s natural
energy, or “chi”. Small muscle groups are
addressed through the acupuncture points, as
the face lifts itself, through the muscles’ toning
and tightening action. The needles also stimulate
blood and circulation, which improves facial
color. ( A deluxe facial includes steam and the
highest quality organic facial products as well as
gua-sha, an ancient Chinese massage for the
face that increases facial tonicity)

Herbal Consultation only-30 mins
A 30 minute herbal consultation is designed
for those who do not have time for a full
acupuncture treatment or for individuals who
have been treated recently and would just like
to renew an herbal prescription. We use only
the finest quality herbal products and diagnose
each individual specifically and tailor a formula
explicitly for each patients’ needs.

Tui Na Massage-1hr
Tui Na is the oldest known system of massage
that has been used in China since 2300 B.C.
Tui Na methods include the use of hand and
arm techniques to massage the soft tissue
(muscles and tendons) of the body, stimulation
of acupressure points to directly affect the flow
of “chi” energy through the system of channels
and collaterals, and manipulation techniques to
realign the musculo-skeletal system.

Reconnective Healing-1 hr
Reconnective Healing is a type of energy
medicine different from any other. It is a
‘universal healing energy’ similar to Reiki, but
these evolutionary frequencies are at a new
bandwidth brought in via a spectrum of light

Treatments
Initial Consultation w/ Acupuncture 160
Follow-up Treatments 135
Deluxe Facial Rejuvenation (1 hr) 175
Tui Na Massage 135
Reconnective Healing 160
House Calls (hotel/home/office) 275
Herbal Consultation only 85

Mind-Body-Spirit Counseling-1hr
The idea behind this unique counseling approach
is that negative thought patterns start with a
belief, driven by emotions. These negative belief
patterns lead to behavioral patterns that are
unhealthy, which often times manifest as states
of disharmony or disease within the body. We
work together to uncover the root of these beliefs
and unresolved conflicts while instilling seeds of
wisdom and positivity, distinguishing truth from
error within the mind. This allows for new and
positive thought patterns to be formed, which
then allows for healing on all levels.

“To be spiritually well is to enjoy your own thoughts
and to move joyously in your feelings about
life.”-P. Quimby

Nutritional Consultation-1hr
Since food is the basis of medicine, Nutritional
counseling is crucial to the body’s ability to
maintain health and recover from any type of
illness. These consultations cover a wide range
of assessments and philosophies regarding the
quality of nutrition in the diet. This is an overall
education on the best possible foods one can
consume, eating habits for an optimally healthy
body, the mechanisms of food assimilation, and
successful weight loss. We work with individuals
to develop dietary patterns that are delicious
and healthy using the philosophies of Traditional
Chinese Medicine, Ayurveda, macrobiotic
cooking, and western nutrition.

Sports Medicine Department 925.8940