Floating needle therapy is completely different from anesthesia and closure in that no drugs are used and no intervention is made on the sensory nerves. After anesthesia, there is no response to external stimuli for a certain period of time. In contrast, floating needle therapy followed by acupuncture or other stimulation, the response is as usual. Therefore, the understanding of floating needles as a pain relief or analgesic method is really the result of not thinking deeply. Floating needles can treat pain and can treat the cause of the pain. Often, the cause of pain is not a cause such as osteophytes or disc lesions as many people think, but a pathological state of myofascia, a state of dysfunction. Currently, people are unaware of these pathological functional states of the muscles that are actually prevalent, or they are oblivious to them, as if this second largest organ of the human body does not get sick or fatigued. Because muscles do not only contract and relax to maintain homeostasis, they are also heat-producing organs, and there are many organs closely associated with them: dermal nerves, arteries, lymphatics, and medium veins, so muscle lesions can produce a wide range of complex clinical phenomena. Pain is only one manifestation of muscle lesions, but numbness, dizziness, localized edema, cough, asthma, localized coldness, weakness, reduced range of motion of joints, etc. can all be manifestations of muscle lesions. Like the treatment of localized numbness, partial dizziness, etc., floating acupuncture for pain simply changes the pathological state of the muscle, and the pain or other symptoms then disappear. Therefore, acupuncture is not an analgesic for pain, but a treatment for pain. Many scholars have not thought deeply about it and are just passing it off as false.