17 minutes read

The Man Behind Evil Bone Water: Mark Brinson’s Mission to Restore Chinese Medicine’s Most Powerful Liniment

Will Sheppy, Founder and Acupuncturist at Valley Health Clinic
Willard Sheppy Dipl. OM, LAc, BS

Willard Sheppy is a licensed acupuncturist (LAc) and Founder of Valley Health Clinic specializing in using Traditional Chinese Medicine to treat acute injuries and chronic conditions, and to improve sports performance and rehabilitation.

A Single Evil Bone Water Bottle With Smoke Around it

Table of Contents

If you’ve ever used Evil Bone Water and wondered why it feels different from every other liniment on the market, stronger, cleaner, more alive ,the answer starts with one man’s refusal to accept a watered-down version of a remedy he believed in. Dr. Mark Brinson, DOM, is the practitioner, veteran, and self-described “brew master” behind Evil Bone Water. His story is worth knowing.
This article draws on a conversation with Mark where he shared the full story: his path into Chinese medicine, how Evil Bone Water was born out of frustration, why herb quality changes everything, and what he sees ahead for the profession. It is one of the most candid and instructive conversations about topical Chinese herbal medicine you will find anywhere.

From Army Veteran to Doctor of Oriental Medicine

Mark Brinson did not set out to become an acupuncturist. He originally wanted to be a doctor of osteopathy , an MD-equivalent who still practiced hands-on, holistic medicine. After serving in the U.S. Army’s Old Guard in Washington, D.C., he worked as a trainer, strength and conditioning coach, massage therapist, and physical therapist while saving money for osteopathic school.
What he found when the catalogs arrived killed that plan. Most American osteopathic programs had been pressured by the American Medical Association in the late 1970s to mirror a standard MD curriculum. Two-thirds of the coursework was devoted to drugs and drug interactions. For someone who had zero interest in prescribing pharmaceuticals, the path forward suddenly vanished.
“I kind of had a minor existential crisis,” Mark said. “But then I just thought about what I actually wanted. What did I want my office to look like? What tools did I want for patients? How many days a week did I want to work?”
The answer, for a man deathly afraid of needles at the time, turned out to be Chinese medicine. He enrolled at what was then one of the top programs in the nation in St. Petersburg, Florida a school with eighteen double doctors from China, each of them former department heads who were both MDs and doctors of Oriental medicine. He fell in love with the medicine almost immediately.

"If today somebody offered me an MD or DO license in exchange for mine, there is no way I would do it. Not even close. You cannot pay me to do it."

The Problem: A Classic Formula Being Quietly Diluted

For years, Mark’s two go-to topicals in clinic were a traditional oil called Po Sum On and the classic commercial version of Zheng Gu Shui the liniment formula that would eventually become Evil Bone Water. That two-product system served him well for a long time.
But over the years, he watched the commercial version change. A key herb San Qi (the same compound found in Yunnan Baiyao) was quietly removed from the export version in 1999 to cut costs. Other herbs were gradually reduced or replaced. A company called Solstice began acquiring the rights to popular Chinese medicine patents and reformulating them for the mass market cheaper ingredients, heavier advertising, and prices that tripled while potency dropped.
“With over twenty products, they’ve now done that , three times the cost and half the strength,” Mark said. “They’ve created the market for what I do.”
When his wholesale cost hit twelve to fifteen dollars per bottle for a formula he no longer fully trusted, Mark made a decision: he would build it back to the way it was supposed to be. He spent months researching the original texts, tracking down the herbs that had been removed, and reformulating Zheng Gu Shui as a complete, uncompromised remedy.

Why Herb Quality Changes Everything

The first batches Mark made, in his own words, were made amateurishly. He followed the formula correctly, but the herbs were standard quality. His clinic staff and patients already accustomed to the commercial version tried it and were immediately struck by the difference.
“They were just blown away. Like, oh my gosh, this is so much better.”
That response pushed Mark to go further. He eventually connected with Andrew Miles and Xuelan Qiu, PhD, DOM, of Botanical Biohacking practitioners who had dedicated their careers to sourcing what Mark calls imperial-grade herbs: the highest quality available, rigorously verified, traceable to origin.
The minimum order from their sourcing network runs in the thousands of dollars. Mark’s first order was a leap of faith on pre-orders alone. Today, Evil Bone Water’s herb orders routinely run $12,000 at a time.
Mark still uses grain alcohol lspecifically Everclear 190-proof rather than industrial ethanol for extraction. When asked why, he said the difference on the skin is immediate and obvious, even if he cannot fully explain the mechanism. He has not changed this since the beginning.
He holds up the cinnamon bark he uses as an example: sheets from thirty-year-old mountain trees, never broken up until right before they go into the formula. “I even hate to break it,” he said. “I treat it really specially.”

How Evil Bone Water Got Its Name

The name Zheng Gu Shui translates most accurately as “Rectify Bone Water” or “Correct Bone Water” a reference to its original use in treating bone, tendon, and ligament injuries. Zheng means to correct or rectify. Shui means water. Gu means bone.
So how did “evil” get into the name? Mark traced it to a running joke among the Chinese doctors at his school. When students asked what Zheng Gu Shui meant, the instructors kept answering: “Evil Bone Water.” Mark suspected it was an inside joke possibly related to the formula’s controversial origin story, in which the recipe may have been appropriated from a family to prevent a sedition charge. He never got a definitive answer.
What he did notice was that patients remembered it. When he sent bottles home as homework, the ones who heard the story never forgot it. They might not say the name correctly “bone juice,” “bone water,” “bone stuff” but they always came back for more.
When he launched his own version, he chose a name that honored the original while adding his own framing: technically, it means “Rectify, Correct, Vanquish Evil Bone Water.” The label design, antique, bold, deliberately unusual, was chosen for the same reason. Memorable products create loyal patients.

What Evil Bone Water Is Used For

Evil Bone Water was originally designed for bone, tendon, and ligament injuries , the classic use case of the Zheng Gu Shui formula. In practice, Mark and the practitioners who use it have documented a much wider range of applications:
Mark has also seen it used for hemorrhoid relief, skin infections, burn care, and nail fungus treatment ,not because the formula was designed for those uses, but because the quality of the herbs and the skin permeability effect produce results that practitioners keep reporting.
One of the most consistent findings Mark reports: applying Evil Bone Water before any other topical significantly improves the absorption and duration of what follows. Applied before CBD, for example, users reported onset dropping from 30-40 minutes to about 15 minutes, and duration extending from four hours to six. This is why it is the first product we apply in every layering protocol at Valley Health Market.
Zheng Xie Gu Shui

Evil Bone Water

Evil Bone Water (Zheng Gu Shui) is a Chinese topical medicinal hand-crafted with only empirical grade herbal ingredients in an approved facility.

The Business That Grew Without Advertising

Mark posted two videos online explaining how to make the formula, expecting only other practitioners to watch. Both videos got 3,000 views overnight. The overwhelming response was not technical questions. It was: “Can I buy some?”
He started selling cases to acupuncturists from the back of his clinic. Three orders the first week. Five the next. By the end of the first two months, herb suppliers were struggling to keep up with the demand.
Five years later, Evil Bone Water’s revenue is on track to be three times Mark’s best single clinic year , with zero advertising spend. Every dollar goes back into the product. He sells exclusively to acupuncturists and acupuncture students, intentionally keeping it within the profession so practitioners can offer it clinically and educationally.
“When in doubt, put some Evil Bone Water on it,” he said. “It’s strong enough you’ll know the difference within days. And it’s safe enough that it won’t bother anything.”

Why This Story Matters at Valley Health Market

At Valley Health Market, we carry Evil Bone Water because it is the product we reach for first in our own clinic. It is the starting layer in every combination we recommend,
Because it works faster, absorbs cleaner, and enhances everything applied after it.
Mark’s story is also the reason we built this store the way we did. He showed us that the difference between a mediocre herbal product and a remarkable one comes down almost entirely to sourcing and intention. Every maker we carry has made the same choice: to do it right, even when it is more expensive and more difficult.
That is the standard we hold ourselves to. Not the cheapest. The most trustworthy.

Shop Evil Bone Water at Valley Health Market

Evil Bone Water is available individually or as part of our combination packages — including the Pain Power Combo (with Corydalis Relief Salve), the Fire & Ice Combo (with Red Emperor’s Immortal Flame), and the Trifecta Combo for full-spectrum relief. Each combination is designed around the layering principle Mark describes: fast-acting foundation first, then targeted support on top.
Visit the Valley Health Market shop to explore Evil Bone Water and our full collection of practitioner-selected topical Chinese medicine products. Every product we carry has been personally used and tested in our clinic.

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Will Sheppy, Founder and Acupuncturist at Valley Health Clinic
By Will Sheppy, L.Ac
Will Sheppy, L.Ac., is the founder of Valley Health Clinic and Valley Health Marketplace in Albany, Oregon. He specializes in sports acupuncture, pain management, and Chinese topical medicine. Valley Health Marketplace carries only products he has personally tested in his clinic.

FAQ's

What makes Evil Bone Water different from commercial Zheng Gu Shui?
Commercial Zheng Gu Shui formulas particularly those sold for export have had key herbs removed or reduced over the past few decades. San Qi, one of the formula’s most important blood-moving herbs, was removed from the export version in 1999. Evil Bone Water restores the complete formula using imperial-grade herbs sourced through a vetted network of quality-focused suppliers. Mark Brinson also uses Everclear grain alcohol rather than industrial ethanol for extraction, which he believes contributes to its clean absorption profile.
Mark reports that across hundreds of thousands of bottles sold, there have been zero meaningful adverse reactions including in people with known allergies to some of the individual ingredients. That said, Evil Bone Water is alcohol-based, so it should not be applied to open cuts or broken skin, and it may cause dryness with very frequent use on already-dry skin. It is not for use on open wounds. For those situations, Herbal Ice or Corydalis Relief Salve is the better choice.
One of the reasons menthol and camphor appear in virtually every effective topical pain formula worldwide is not just their cooling and warming sensations. it’s their ability to help other ingredients penetrate the skin barrier. The stratum corneum, your skin’s outermost layer, is designed to keep things out. It’s a dense wall of lipids and proteins that blocks most molecules from entering. Camphor and menthol work synergistically to disrupt this barrier temporarily, creating tiny channels for other active compounds to slip through. Think of them as opening the door so the healing ingredients can actually get to work. The alcohol base in products like Evil Bone Water plays an equally critical role: it breaks apart and clears away parts of the lipid barrier, acts as a solvent to help dissolve and deliver botanical compounds, and evaporates quickly to create a concentration gradient that drives ingredients deeper into tissue. This is why alcohol-based liniments feel like they “work faster”—they do. The combination of menthol + camphor + alcohol creates a delivery system that’s far more effective than any single ingredient alone. Without these penetration enhancers, even the most powerful herbs would largely remain on the skin’s surface, unable to reach the deeper tissues where pain and inflammation actually exist.
The name Zheng Gu Shui means “Rectify Bone Water” in Mandarin — a reference to its traditional use in correcting bone and tendon injuries. The “evil” translation appears to have been a long-running inside joke among Chinese doctors at Mark’s school, possibly connected to the formula’s complicated origin story. Mark kept the name because it was unforgettable. His technical name for his version is Zheng Que Gu Shui — “Rectify, Correct, Vanquish Evil Bone Water” — though most people just call it Evil Bone Water.
Mark sells Evil Bone Water directly to licensed acupuncturists and acupuncture students to keep it within the professional community. However, it is available through acupuncture clinics and practitioner-curated stores like Valley Health Market, where it is carried specifically because it meets the sourcing and quality standards we require of every product we stock.
For chronic pain, Evil Bone Water works best as the foundation layer in a combination protocol. Apply it first to open circulation and improve absorption, then layer a warming oil like Red Emperor’s Immortal Flame for deep, cold-type pain, or Corydalis Relief Salve for nerve involvement. For round-the-clock relief, finish with a pain patch (AOYI or Muscle Melt) to sustain the effect overnight. This layering approach — alcohol first, oil second, balm or salve third, patch last — is what Mark teaches and what we use in our own clinic.
Evil Bone Water is the most versatile and fastest-acting topical we carry. It works for the broadest range of conditions: muscle pain, joint stiffness, bruising, acute injuries, bug bites, and more. Its main limitation is that it is not ideal for nerve-dominant pain — for that, Corydalis Relief Salve is the better first choice. For deep cold-pattern pain or stiffness that worsens in cold weather, Red Emperor’s Immortal Flame provides more targeted warming. Most chronic pain situations benefit from using all three together.

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