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Traveling among Mountains and
Rivers
Early one Saturday morning, Shi Lei, a computer
programmer, got up and began to pack. After a careful examination of his tent,
backpack, and mountaineering shoes, he set off. Together with some Internet
friends, he took that weekend to challenge Lingshan Mountain, the highest peak
in the suburbs of Beijing. He joined a team of outdoor sports enthusiasts by
chance and has become enthusiastic about such thrilling adventures.
Outdoor sports, originating in the West, started with
outings and picnics in small groups. Later on, it was elevated to difficult,
risky levels. Today, there is a diverse range of outdoor adventure activities,
from field camping to mountaineering, river rafting, hiking, cave and jungle
exploration, and field survival.
Outdoor sports were introduced to China in the
mid-1990s. Along with the development of the economy, a special group of youth
has emerged-people with admirable jobs, considerable incomes-and free time. More
importantly, they are energetic and adventurous, and willing to get closer to
nature and challenge themselves.
Shi's first experience in outdoor sports was really
challenging. On the first day, it was pouring rain, and his team got lost in the
downpour. They struggled until the next morning, when the sun rose and the green
mountains and white clouds greeted them. Today, the memory of that experience
still lingers in Shi's mind.
In his diary, Shi wrote: "This is a meaningful
experience. It brought me a chance to approach nature, escape the uproar and
worries of the city, relax my mind, and enjoy myself. At the moment when I had
all but decided to give up, I changed my mind and struggled through. When I
summitted [the mountain], I was overwhelmed by a feeling of happiness and
success that I have never experienced before."
In the last year or two, outdoor sports in China have
raged in popularity, attracting nature lovers and adventurers from all ages. In
their view, outdoor sports are not only thrilling experiences, but also part of
a health-boosting lifestyle.
Offices at
Home
Li Gang, a partner at a law firm, works at home most
of time, except for Fridays, when he goes to his firm to attend regular
meetings. He uses telephones and the Internet to communicate with his clients
and agents, a way of life that allows him to sleep in every morning (unless he
is required for a court hearing). Still, he earns hundreds of thousands of RMB a
year.
After graduating from an academy of fine arts, Zhang
Ming did not hunt for a fixed job, deciding instead to work at home as a
freelance cartoonist for newspapers. This decision has brought him a respectable
income, and in the meantime, he is able to manage time as he pleases.
SOHO (small office, home office), a new lifestyle
made possible by the Internet, has become chic among professionals, including
lawyers, writers, painters, designers, web page hosts, and even actors and
actresses. It has also given birth to part-time job contractors, such as
freelance teachers, reporters, and software technicians.
While the regular office-goers admire the SOHO
members for their freedom in managing their time, SOHO members have to learn how
to deal with relationships with others and how to manage their concerns. It
seems that SOHO members have a lot of reasons to worry about their future, but
most of them put on a smiling face.
If life is a sea, then everyone is a passenger on a
ship. The ships are spacious and stable, but some of the passengers dislike the
regulations and rules, so they transfer to small boats they have made on their
own. While enjoying complete freedom and the excitement of riding the waves,
they have to independently overcome risks in the open sea.
SOHO is literally explained as "working in a small
office/home office environment," and in fact, it also mirrors people's tendency
to choose a new, free lifestyle with the rising economic tide. As competitive
players in the market, SOHO members have shown their energy and creativity while
contributing to society.
A Healthy
Future
Health experts say that you may not possess
everything even if you have your health, but you will indeed lose everything if
you don't have your health. So an increasing number of young people have
appeared in fitness centers, taking part in a wide array of exercises from
calisthenics to aerobics to yoga. Health lectures enjoy popularity. Health books
are best sellers. Health food is sought by people of all ages. And health
product stores have mushroomed.
On beautiful days, it is common to find young
exercisers playing shuttlecock, flying kites, and playing badminton in parks and
public playgrounds. Li Fenglin, 65, has flown kites at the Beijing Huangchenggen
Site Park for several years. According to him, most of the kite enthusiasts in
the past were close to his age, but recently more and more youngsters have
joined in.
"I have become their coach," he said.
Indoor physical exercises are equally sizzling. In
Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and other large cities, physical fitness is on the
rise, and various gymnasiums have sprung up in busy city areas. In addition to
body work, Japanese Kendo, Korean Taekwondo, Indian Yoga, and Western boxercise
have all developed their own enthusiasts.
Spreading Love throughout
the World
In 1985, the United Nations General Assembly
proclaimed December 5 as the annual International Volunteers Day. The Chinese
government launched its Youth Volunteers Campaign in December 1993, and since
then, numerous warmhearted young people, upholding the mottoes of "dedication,
friendship, mutual aid, and progress," have donated their love and intelligence
to society, especially to disadvantaged groups.
The China Youth Volunteers Green Project, under the
Campaign, is committed to constructing "green action camps and bases" and
organizing young people to carry out environment-friendly volunteer activities,
such as planting trees, cleaning up deserts, controlling water pollution, and
picking up trash. In June 1999, the first event of the project was started in
Fengning, Hebei Province. In less than half a year, more than 1,000 volunteers
from 19 of China's provinces and autonomous regions, as well as 12 foreign
countries including France, Germany, Japan, and Great Britain, joined in and
planted trees over some 1 million square meters. The project also launched
activities in Sichuan, Zhejiang and Jilin Provinces as well as the Inner
Mongolia Autonomous Region, which are still ongoing.
Xu Qu, identified as "Little Wood" at www.lvye.org,
is well known among the tens of thousands of young registrants of the Web site,
because she was the major organizer of one of the Web site's volunteer programs.
Every weekend, young volunteers gathered together through Lvye to go to a
special school in the suburbs of Beijing, bringing love and information to the
autistic children at the school. Although the volunteers are conscious of the
difficulty in communicating with the children and that their efforts will most
likely be in vain, they have kept doing this for two years. Xu always encourages
new volunteers with these words: "Every child's smile to us is the thrust for us
to keep it up!"
To date, many Chinese cities have established youth
volunteer associations, which are competing with each other in public-welfare
activities. Since China's volunteer registration system was established, more
than 10 million young people have registered as volunteers, and according to
rough statistics, they have offered more than 4 billion hours of volunteer
services for society.
Life on
Wheels
According to the latest statistics from the
automobile market of Chengdu, the capital city of Sichuan Province, during the
seven-day National Holiday last October, the city sold more than 1,000 cars to
private owners. At a low price (29,800 yuan each), the Aoto cars attracted a
long line of buyers.
Among China's more than 600 large and medium-sized
cities, Chengdu is inferior to coastal, developed cities in economic strength,
but its citizens' enthusiasm in buying and driving cars can match those in the
developed cities. By the end of September 2003, nearly 50 percent of Chengdu's
more than 1 million automobiles were private vehicles, with this proportion
growing by several hundred cars each day.
Chengdu now ranks fourth in China in private car
ownership, next to Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou. Some people attribute this
to Chengdu residents' long-standing tradition of pursuing an easy life.
Since the arrival of the new century, a large number
of Chinese have become car-owners. Gripping the steering wheel, they find
themselves exploring their individuality. The rapid increase of private cars has
benefited tourism in the suburbs of Chengdu.
Turn to Beijing. By November 2003, Beijing's
automobiles had topped 2 million, and 1.3 million of those were private cars.
Beijing has become an auto-based city.
According to the statistics from the Beijing Traffic
Administration, in Beijing the number of private automobiles reached 1 million
in February 1997, 48 years after the founding of New China. Just six years
later, the number doubled. Zhang Jingli, deputy director of the administration,
says that according to the current growth rate, Beijing is expected to see 3
million automobiles in three years.
(China Pictorial)
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