What is Shiatsu Compared to Acupressure?

Point Oriented Bodywork Versus Whole Body Shiatsu Therapy
Kathy Kapps Practicing Zen Shiatsu
For years this has been the most common question people ask me. Honestly, I believe my answer is controversial...
— Michael Reed Gach
Acupressure uses the same points as Acupuncture, but works with the hands, fists, forearms, elbows, knees, and feet instead of needles. Thus, any method that stimulates Acupressure points without needles can be considered a style of Acupressure.

Shiatsu techniques stimulate the Acupressure points directly and very powerfully for healing purposes, thus it’s a major form of Acupressure. Many Shiatsu teachers would state this differently, keeping Shiatsu in its own unique category.
Shaitsu Styles & Applications
Shiatsu therapy has many applications, such as sports medicine, pain management, and spa work. The different forms of Shiatsu depend upon the way the Acupressure points are stimulated: 1) through the rhythm of the practitioner, and 2) through the Shiatsu bodywork method – using the hands, knuckles, knees, elbows, feet, full-body movements, and gentle stretching. Many Acupressure routines include Shiatsu techniques.
Michael Reed Gach Receiving Zen Shiatsu From His Teacher Reuho Yamada
Shiatsu, as a healing art, has profound cultural Japanese roots. The Namikoshi family, beginning in the early 1900s, developed Shiatsu therapy in Japan, separating it from traditional Japanese Amma massage. Namikoshi was the first to provide a physiological understanding of Shiatsu therapy’s benefits.
Since the establishment of Namikoshi Shiatsu in Japan, which uses primarily the thumbs, many other styles of Shiatsu have developed, incorporating numerous creative ways of pressing and stretching the body.

Shiatsu is one of the most well-known forms of Acupressure in the Western hemisphere. This was mainly the result of several Shiatsu books by Japan Publications, which were distributed by Harper and Row, bringing these teachings mainstream in the 1960s, 70s, and 80s.

Shiatsu therapy has continued to grow throughout the world in scope, application, technique, and training, and is a recognized healing practice.
Acupressure & Shiatsu Resources
To learn more about how to practice Shiatsu therapy, there are two resources for you. First, the Zen Shiatsu video, which has demonstrations on how to give a complete Shiatsu treatment to the entire body. The video is available as a rental, a download, and a DVD.

Next, there’s the instructional Shiatsu booklet, which is fully illustrated showing 50 traditional Zen Shiatsu techniques.
With the Zen Shiatsu video learn Shiatsu therapy from Michael Reed Gach, as he demonstrates and explains how to give a complete Shiatsu treatment.
DVD • Download • Rent
The fully illustrated instructional Shiatsu booklet shows 50 traditional Shiatsu techniques and a holistic Shiatsu bodywork program.
Booklet Details
Acupressure.com