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Uống trà mâm xôi thấy đẩy ra nhiều dịch khí hư hơn #biquyetsongkhoe #...
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Uống trà mâm xôi thấy đẩy ra nhiều dịch khí hư hơn #biquyetsongkhoe #...

55.5k views·Jun 21, 2026
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Transcript

0:00Since drinking raspberry tea.
0:01Do you have more bad air?
0:03so the sky will not be panicked beautiful sister,
0:05That's a good sign.
0:07because when you drink raspberry tea,
0:09your body gets warmer.
0:10blood gas circulation,
0:11the uterus will start to self-expel the inflammatory fluid and the gas.
0:13accumulated for a long time out.
0:15in the forest raspberry tea,
0:16virgin royal palace,
0:17earth gourd,
0:18female ginseng,
0:19sweet grass and jasmine flowers help the body relax and be softer
0:23After a while,
0:23I find my body more comfortable.
0:25reduce inflammation,
0:26hormones are fine from which the skin is also more beautiful.

Mind Map

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Viral Breakdown

Hook (first 3 seconds)

  • Verbatim opening line: "Since drinking raspberry tea. Do you have more bad air? so the sky will not be panicked beautiful sister, That's a good sign."
  • Hook pattern: Question + Contrast (a rhetorical question about "bad air" paired with a direct, reassuring address to the viewer as "beautiful sister")
  • Why it stops scrolling: The phrase "bad air" is unusual, visceral, and creates immediate intrigue. Pairing it with "beautiful sister" feels personal and intimate, breaking the fourth wall and making the viewer feel directly spoken to. The disjointed grammar adds a raw, authentic, "unpolished" vibe that feels like insider knowledge.

Emotional Rhythm

  1. Curiosity/Intrigue (0–3s): "Since drinking raspberry tea. Do you have more bad air?" — The viewer is puzzled and wants to know what "bad air" means.
  2. Reassurance/Validation (3–6s): "so the sky will not be panicked beautiful sister, That's a good sign." — The viewer feels seen and validated; the "good sign" creates relief.
  3. Explanation/Tension (6–12s): "because when you drink raspberry tea, your body gets warmer. blood gas circulation, the uterus will start to self-expel the inflammatory fluid and the gas." — A mini science-y explanation builds a sense of authority and suspense about what happens next.
  4. Relief/Satisfaction (12–18s): "accumulated for a long time out. in the forest raspberry tea, virgin royal palace, earth gourd, female ginseng, sweet grass and jasmine flowers help the body relax and be softer" — The list of ingredients feels like a magical recipe, delivering a satisfying payoff.
  5. Aspirational Reward (18–25s): "After a while, I find my body more comfortable. reduce inflammation, hormones are fine from which the skin is also more beautiful." — Climax: the ultimate benefit (clear skin + hormonal balance) is the emotional peak, tying back to the "beautiful sister" opener.
  • Climax moment: "the skin is also more beautiful" — the final, most desirable outcome.

Keyword Density

Keyword/Phrase Frequency (approx.) Why it works
"raspberry tea" 3 Algorithmic reach — high search volume for wellness/tea content.
"bad air" 2 Emotional pull — unique, memorable, creates curiosity.
"body" 3 Algorithmic + emotional — taps into health/wellness SEO and personal benefit.
"uterus" 1 Emotional pull — specific, taboo-ish, triggers engagement (comments/shares).
"inflammation" 1 Algorithmic reach — high-ranking health keyword.
"skin" 1 Emotional pull — vanity/beauty angle, aspirational.
"beautiful sister" 1 Emotional pull — direct address, builds community/trust.

Why It Spreads

  1. Unconventional language creates shareability — "bad air" is not a standard medical term, so viewers share it out of curiosity or to ask "What does that mean?" The phrase is sticky and quotable.
  2. Personal + taboo topic drives engagement — Mentioning "uterus" and "inflammatory fluid" in a casual, sisterly tone makes viewers feel like they're learning a secret. This triggers comments like "Is this real?" or "Tell me more," boosting the algorithm.
  3. Promise of a simple fix for a complex problem — The video claims raspberry tea can fix "bad air," inflammation, hormones, and skin. This high-reward, low-effort promise is irresistible to viewers struggling with bloating, acne, or hormonal issues.
  4. "Beautiful sister" builds community identity — The direct address creates an in-group feeling. Viewers who see this are more likely to tag friends, comment "I need this," or save the video to try later — all high-signal actions for viral spread.
  5. List of exotic ingredients adds authority — "Virgin royal palace, earth gourd, female ginseng, sweet grass, jasmine flowers" sounds ancient, secret, and potent. It makes the tea seem rare and special, prompting viewers to search for or ask about the recipe.

What You Can Steal

  1. Use a visceral, non-obvious problem word — Instead of "bloating" or "inflammation," invent or borrow a phrase like "bad air." It stops the scroll and makes your content feel like a secret.
  2. Address the viewer as a specific persona — "Beautiful sister" works because it's intimate and aspirational. In your own video, try "Tired mom," "Overworked queen," or "Anxious achiever" to create instant connection.
  3. End with a skin/beauty payoff — Even if your topic is internal health, always tie it back to an external, visible benefit (clear skin, bright eyes, glowing hair). That's the reward that gets saved and shared.
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