Evonne checks on her transformer with Mr. Zeng. A buyer that claims to be God has made a bid. Mr. Zeng unsatisfied with the low bid wants to drive the price up.
Sean's date with Xiaoxue takes a turn for the worse when they run into Loura at the bar. Loura is very suspicious about Xiaoxue and Sean's relationship.
The transformer Mr. Zeng and Evonne posted on Taobao just got another hit. Kim is excited someone else has recognized the worth of the transformer and has countered his original offer of 3000. The bidding war begins!
Sean takes his date home only to have his date run into Kimi in her lingerie. Somehow Sean manages to get Kimi to play the part of his distant cousin, but the two still get in a heated argument.
Sean unearths Kimi's seduction plan and is appalled, but he's more worried about what this means for their rent arrangement.
Eric comes home with good news only to find a beautiful girl he doesn't know sitting on the couch. The two get to talking and there seems to be a bit of chemistry. Meanwhile, Sean and Kimi are still fighting in the bedroom.
Kim is excited the transformer he was watching on online just sold for a big price. He is even more excited to share this good news with Evonne.
In this first of an interview series with a Chinese medicine expert, listen to her discuss the terminology used concerning Chinese, Western, and modern medicine in general.
In this second video in a series with a Chinese medicine expert, our interviewee goes on to discuss the history of medicine, her own experiences at the hospital as a child, and her move from the world of literature into Chinese medicine.
Acupuncturist Mr. He only needs to insert a needle into one spot to treat a case of knee joint pain. Where will it be?
This video introduces another acupoint, the "Chungwan," further supporting the principle that "All it takes is one needle."
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.
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