Do we listen to the numbers? Or our feelings?
Placing the health standards of younger people on the elderly is not only unnecessary. It's unrealistic and unhealthy.
What's the difference between "Yang", "Ji" and "Bing?
Chinese medicine revolves around the idea that disease is caused by internal and external factors, with the external as far-reaching as the generational.
Should we get more used to getting sick than being healthy?
Chinese medicine stresses prevention of disease rather than treating that which has already happened.
Chinese medicine is about observing the effect of an illness and the patient's personal experience, rather than the medical probing of pathogens.
Chinese medicine is helpful in detecting ailments not found in Western techniques.
Chinese medicine is about prevention rather than covering up symptoms.
Modern technology is helping us cope with disease, not cure it.
Chinese medicine teaches us to look after ourselves by preventing disease, rather than dealing with it when it arrives.
I am from Xinjiang but that doesn't mean I ride horses, it doesn't mean I eat qiegao, it also doesn't mean I am a thief or a terrorist. Listen to these young Xinjiang voices tell you what Xinjiang people are really like.
Even though we explain to others what Xinjiang is like, it is still hard to break down the image mainstream media creates of place like Urumqi. I can only do my best to tell you that Urumqi is not just grassland.
Stereotypes are dangerous, especially if they make up your entire understanding of something or someone. It is important to remember that everything and everyone is multifaceted. Just because one person does something a certain way doesn't mean everyone else does too.
Stereotypes of Xinjiang people don't only create confusion for the general population but also effect how Xinjiang people self-identify themselves.
How do we break down this ugly stereotype of Xinjiang? Both side need to openly communicate and work together to clear up misunderstandings. But where do we start? Start from yourself of course!
China is full of pet markets. In this video, see one for yourself—and learn a little about the linguistic and cultural aspects of fish, insects, and bunnies.
Andy Lau is one of Hong Kong's most successful singers and actors. He has been in over 150 films since the 1980s, and has had a successful career as a Cantonese pop singer. In this interview, he reminisces about his early days as a singer and talks about his recent album.
Canadian Mark Henry Rowswell is perhaps the most famous foreigner in China. He talks to talk show host, Chen Luyu, about his life and remarkable career in China as xiangsheng (a traditional form of "crosstalk" comedy) performer and cultural ambassador, Dashan.
Dashan talks about when he first came to China and reveals that even he once struggled to master the language.
Dashan talks about the moment he realized he was a household name in China, while old friends and xiangsheng legends Jiang Kun and Ding Guangqun reveal what makes the Canadian such a special talent.
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