The Challenge of a Farmhouse Son-in-Law Chapter 356 - 356 366 I've Been Learning My Skills for a Lon
356: Chapter 366: I’ve Been Learning My Skills for a Long Ti 356: Chapter 366: I’ve Been Learning My Skills for a Long Ti He spoke with so difficulty, “This female doctor said that my illness does not require dication, just drinking more water will cure it.”
“What?” The crowd began to stir, their gazes shifting toward Gu Youyou with strange expressions.
“Hey!
Thought we’d found a good doctor, turns out she’s a fraud.”
“Exactly, who gets cured without dicine?
If water could heal, why would anyone open a dical clinic?
Patients would just stay ho and drink water.”
In the tea house opposite, several elders sipped their tea and chuckled.
“Thought we had a formidable competitor here, but it’s just a naive little girl.
Water can cure, huh, you should drink more.”
Another person laughed loudly, saying, “I’m not sick, you drink more!”
All these voices reached Gu Youyou’s ears, yet she rely smiled faintly and said nothing.
At dusk, Jisheng Hall closed its doors, and Gu Youyou seed quite pleased, whereas Banxia had a look of worry on her face.
She wanted to say sothing, but rembering she was just a little helper, she didn’t say a word.
Instead, she went to the backyard to boil water with a heavy sigh.
Jin Zijin also wore a grave expression, seeing as Jisheng Hall had only one patient on their opening day.
They didn’t charge them and even after treatnt, the patient dismissed them that way, resulting in no one coming for free consultations anymore.
A few days prior, Gu Youyou had brought ho a sign in secrecy, calling it their winning trump card.
She showed it to no one, and it turned out to be nothing but a sign offering free dical consultations, which greatly disappointed him.
Using the allure of ‘free’ is good, but free doesn’t necessarily an valuable.
Free advantages in other tangible things might be fine, like if it were free stead buns, many would happily co to try.
But free dical consultation?
Who would joke with their own health?
“Youyou!” Jin Zijin didn’t really want to discourage her and struggled for a long ti before finding so gentle words to comfort her: “I know you have excellent dical skills, but it is indeed hard for a woman to practice dicine.
I still have so personal savings; we aren’t short on silver.
Perhaps we should close the clinic.”
Gu Youyou wasn’t upset upon hearing this; she just smiled lightly and said, “How can I abandon my undertaking halfway?
Now that Jisheng Hall has opened, I will not disgrace its na and will continue to operate it.”
Continue to operate?
But if no one seeks treatnt, how can it remain open?
“Those from the Marquis Residence are waiting to see you fail, you really are…”
“I know they want to see make a fool of myself, but I can prove with my ability that they won’t see that happen.
The illnesses other doctors can cure, I can cure; the illnesses they can’t, I can also cure.
What I rely on is nothing but my own skill, the result of many years of study.
I cannot let these abilities go to waste, otherwise my masters would know and curse to death.”
Jin Zijin was taken aback by Gu Youyou’s determination and also noticed the other things she had said – many years of study, masters.
“Your dical skills and handwriting…
weren’t acquired overnight, were they?”
“Indeed!” Gu Youyou made no attempt to conceal it, saying, “I’ve told you the story of the ‘Yellow Millet Dream’ before, I wonder how much of it you believed?”
Jin Zijin said nothing, fixing his gaze on her intently.
Gu Youyou smiled faintly, “Even if you do not believe a single word, what has happened to can only be explained this way.”
Recalling the past, her tone beca sowhat lancholic, “I began practicing that handwriting at the age of six, and achieved so proficiency at fifteen.
It wasn’t that I was too slow, mainly because there was so much I had to learn, and the ti I could spend on handwriting was limited.
As for dicine, I’ve been exposed to traditional Chinese dicine since I can rember – it’s my family heritage.
I formally started learning Western dicine at eighteen, studying far away for four years.”
Reviews
All reviews (0)