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Fight, Flight, or Freeze: The Healer's Story

Have you ever wondered what it would be like to wake up in a body that wasn't yours? A much, much younger body? I can't say that I had ever given it much thought. That was until one night when a patient entered the ER where I was working at and shot me point blank in the head. You know, if he wanted a second opinion, all he had to do was ask. But that's besides the point... Some how, some way, I work up in a strange hospital with a woman that looked suspiciously like my mother holding my hand and crying. Over joyed to see her, it took me a few minutes to realize that I was no longer the 25 year old, successful doctor at one of the most prestigious hospitals in the world. Nope, I was a 6 year old girl that for a moment... wanted her mother. When the apocalypse comes, it is everyone for themselves. I have three choices: do I fight for what I want? Will I run away and hide, or will I freeze when the demons of my past come back to haunt me? You might know me as the Healer, but this is my story to tell. ------ Fight, Flight, or Freeze is the second novel in the Rebirth in the Apocalypse series, this time featuring the Healer: Wang Tian Mu and her men. You won't have to read the first one to be able to understand this one, and she is not going to stay a child for the whole thing. Li Dai Lu and her guys will be popping in occasionally, but this is strictly Wang Tian Mu's story! I hope you enjoy! Other Novels: Rebirth in the Apocalypse: Third Time's A Charm (Completed) Star's Ships (Completed) Dancing With Monsters (Ongoing) As Silent As A Mouse (Ongoing) Find me on Discord: devilbesideyou666 (@Sakura#6289)

Devilbesideyou666 · Khoa huyễn
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I Was Nothing If Not Smart

Ye Yao Zu and I once had a long discussion on the idea of 'do no harm'. It was one of the days that he, Si Dong, Fan Teng Fei, and Cheng Bo Jing were just lounging around the house, waiting for Bai Long Qiang to come back from the base. 

Those days seemed to happen several times a week to the point where I looked forward to them. They were the only friends I really had in this life. 

Anyways. I thought it was pretty straightforward: 'Do no harm' meant don't do anything to cause the person in your care any harm. 

Ye Yao Zu argued that the phrase meant that the doctor needed to do what was in the patient's best interest, whether the doctor agreed with it or not. 

Case in point: setting a dislocated shoulder or a broken bone caused the patient to experience more pain, but when the treatment was over, they would be better.