China Yijing Association Feng Shui. Com registered teacher.
Standing Committee member of Sub-health Branch of Chinese Medicine Association
Associate Professor, Department of Sub-health Management, Western Higher Vocational College
Visiting Professor of state administration of traditional chinese medicine Zhonghe Sub-health Consulting Center
Traditional Chinese medicine qixuetong research institute qi and blood energy Yu feng shui health experts
Member of China Medical Care International Promotion Association.
Chinese medicine rehabilitation physiotherapist and reflexotherapy examiner of the Ministry of Health
The recommendation of Buddhism gave me the opportunity to know Brother Fu Xue. People around him praised him too much, which made me feel a little miserable here. After all, we are all Buddhist disciples. I don't want to look at everything about Brother Fu with the eyes of the world. I just want to talk about the greatest feeling from the perspective of Buddhist practice-meekness is not only a temperament, but also a kind of compassion. I think I have changed a lot since I studied Buddhism for four years. In terms of temper, I'm not in a hurry. I'm not angry when people call me names. Others pushed me and I fell to the ground. I thought it had been repaired to a certain softness. When I saw Brother Fu the day before yesterday, I suddenly felt arrogant. With him, my car-scrapping suddenly came out, and I felt I was not qualified to talk to him. He is really obedient. He was accompanied by a brother, who was straightforward and had just returned from abroad. He is not familiar with Beijing, especially where he eats. He takes good care of him and is very careful. Tell him to turn slowly even when he goes to the bathroom. Language is soft and as fresh as spring breeze. Plus, my senior has a particularly obedient foreign minister, which makes me feel that I really don't deserve to be a girl. After ten years of believing in Buddhism, Brother Fu's temperament has also changed greatly. He himself said that he constantly thanked the Buddha and Bodhisattva for their blessings when he practiced.