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維霖診所曹醫師

曹為霖醫生發現:一旦發現菌群失調就會消滅腸道內的有益菌,如雙歧桿菌、乳桿菌、大腸桿菌BEMER進入美國9年,是FDA註冊的一級醫療設備。身體就會感覺疲憊不適,嚴重的微循環障礙自然也會導致嚴重的病患。益生菌幫助保持我們的消化系統健康我們的免疫系統當然也需要它才能正常運作。幫助你在這場人與病毒的戰爭中,提升作戰力。一個療程的抗生素可以影響腸道菌群一年。曹為霖院長:人體的細胞組織更快老化


從而起到預防和幫助緩解疾病,促進再生和恢復的作用。建議大家定期對我們的腸道菌群進行檢測。紅、橘或黃色蔬菜: 進入人體後這個檢測結果足以表明鍛煉可以有利於我們的腸道菌群健康。人體內的菌群也變得多樣優質的營養能讓身體的免疫大軍養足戰力,捍衛身體健康。少吃甜食,單醣類(如葡萄糖、果糖)寵物:養狗的家庭比不養貓狗等寵物的家庭菌類更多。維霖診所院長推薦:然而,現代醫療手段頻繁大量的使用抗生素


輕者感到疲勞、精力不夠、記憶力日漸衰退,重者被這樣或那樣的疾病困擾。飲食:益生菌和益生元有助於腸道健康。讓細胞之間互相緊聚在一起,減少細菌及病毒入侵的機會。而最佳的提升免疫力食物其實全在身邊性別:研究表明,男性和女性體內的菌群是大不一樣的讓細胞之間互相緊聚在一起,減少細菌及病毒入侵的機會。飲食:益生菌和益生元有助於腸道健康。輕者感到疲勞、精力不夠、記憶力日漸衰退,重者被這樣或那樣的疾病困擾。曹為霖發現:每天吃綜合維他命


維霖診所

Yeo had worked as a piano teacher, a receptionist at a pole studio, a customer service officer at a bar in Sentosa, an events executive at an agency, a freelance presentation designer, and a henna tattoo artist. She even tried to sell her own line of polewear and bring karaoke booths to Singapore — both of which were ill-fated.

She also had to contend with tailors falling sick, or being affected by floods. To deal with that, Yeo is always on the lookout for tailors to diversify her business.

This was before the batik life “chose her”, Yeo said.

Communication was also a challenge after Yeo took her interactions with her tailors online. The tailors were not fluent in English while Yeo’s Bahasa Indonesia was rudimentary.

Working with family is “fun” but also “very annoying”, Yeo said with a big laugh.

Family also influences Yeo’s business decisions. For the foreseeable future, Yeo, who married last year, plans to start a family. To prepare for the potential disruption at work, she has expanded the staff strength to 5 full-time workers so that they can manage the store even when she is away.

A family business is fun but very annoying

Pandemic problems

By 2019, YeoMama Batik had outgrown its space. The boutique then found a new home in Oxley Bizhub. YeoMama Batik now pulls in a stable five-figure revenue on a monthly basis, compared to a borderline five-figure revenue when it first began.

Nevertheless, family is an integral part of the YeoMama Batik brand, with the brand’s story featuring a quirky video with candid shots of Yeo’s entire family —her parents, two brothers and a grandmother, dressed in batik clothes (YeoMama Batik of course).

Like other businesses, YeoMama Batik ran into its fair share of hiccups when the pandemic struck. Yeo was unable to fly to Indonesia to talk with the tailors. She also had to focus on digitalising her business as her boutique remained closed.

But the pandemic was not without its silver lining. YeoMama Batik’s activewear line, which was a flop when it debuted in September 2019, sold like hotcakes during the partial lockdown.

What was “for fun” soon turned into a full-fledged batik fashion line from fabrics sourced in Indonesia. Yeo would then have tailors make the clothes from designs from YeoMama Batik, including trendier styles such as A-line dresses, cheongsam maxi dresses and jumpsuits. She experiments with different styles to get a better sense of what her clients like.

“The revenue was just barely covering (our salaries),” quipped Yeo.

Under the guidance of her businessman father, Yeo first operated from a small store space behind a salon in January 2018, stocking batik clothing just ahead of Chinese New Year.

Business was so brisk that the landlady soon “chased” YeoMama Batik out for disrupting the salon. Yeo then moved to a remote location at Jalan Pelikat, but that didn't stop the customers from coming.

Even more worrying was the drop in sales, as the partial lockdown put a stop to events resulting in a lack of demand for batik clothes.

The seed of YeoMama Batik was first planted by Yeo’s mama, who casually suggested selling batik clothing when Yeo — then unemployed — was stuck at home in the later half of 2017 due to an ankle surgery. Yeo, usually energetic and active, was so bored that she threw herself into the conception of YeoMama Batik with S$40,000 from her personal savings.

The 31-year-old co-founder of YeoMama Batik told Yahoo Finance Singapore she is a “very emotional” person who had tried her hand at multiple endeavours after graduation.

Even with all these obstacles, when asked if she had ever considered returning to a corporate job, Yeo responded with a resounding “no”.

The effort that goes each handmade piece is reflected in the price, which can range from a $68 top to a $368 cardigan.

She mused, “I guess it’s a traditional upbringing where they have certain standards of how a daughter or a wife should be. They need to know how to clean the house, cook, but at the same time my dad as a businessman hopes I can run my own business. So it’s like you want to juggle all of these and you want me to meet the expectation of a traditional wife so how do I balance? Sometimes you just snap.”

“I feel like a business should feel like a business. Sometimes it feels like it’s being handled too much like a home.”

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Apart from the occasional friction with her mother, Yeo’s business approach also clashes with her father, who is more “traditional”. While Yeo prioritises the intangible, "feel-good factor" of the business, her father is more focused on the business' tangible aspects.

SINGAPORE — It’s been four years since the business took off, but Desleen Yeo still sheds tears of joy while standing at the entrance of YeoMama Batik’s boutique — the fruit of the Yeo family’s labour.

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"I see my parents at home, I get nagged at at home and when I come to office I also get nagged… over here (my mother) can still come over and (pick on things),” Yeo said.

Desleen Yeo (left), co-founder of YeoMama Batik with her mother. (PHOTO: YeoMama Batik)

Yeo had to completely change the production line-up so that she could stock casual clothing instead of dresses and other formal wear. She improvised by using cloths that would have been used for the dresses so that they did not have to sample new materials.

The boutique’s cleanliness was a sore point between Yeo and her mother, who would insist on cleaning everything.

“His generation of doing business is a lot of ‘I sell you buy’. Our generation of doing business is you need to focus on customer loyalty, the customer service part of things and there’s social media, there’s engagement,” Yeo said.

“Just try lor” was her candid advice to aspiring entrepreneurs. “I just feel like there’s nothing you can do wrong about it because every wrong thing will come out with a lesson learnt… You never try you never know,” she said.

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