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BEIJING, Dec. 2 (Xinhuanet) -- At only eight months
old, my son has been driving us toward bankruptcy. At the same time, he has kept
us haunted by a sense of guilt. Sound impossible? The following is my story.
 A big ad is put up at the entrance of an
infant commodities' shop in
Shanghai.[newsphoto/file] |
Right after he was born, dozens of sales ladies from
various gift companies miraculously appeared at the hospital to congratulate me
and recommended their good quality, red painted eggs (usually used to celebrate
the birth of a child). I paid 175 yuan (US$21) for 250 such eggs to hand out
among our relatives and colleagues. A week later I went home and was immediately
bombarded by hundreds of phone calls ranging from miscellaneous milk powders to
numerous insurance policies.
I bought one sponsored by Shanghai Child Welfare
Foundation and refused all the others. That was not the end, however. Since then
our mailbox has been stuffed with tons of ads and journals focusing on infant
commodities and training, with my son’s name and address on every one of them.
I felt very happy to see my boy cared for by so many
people and greatly appreciated the journals as they taught me in detail how to
be a qualified mother.
For example, I learned to hire a professional
baby-sitter at 2,000 yuan (US$240) and to rear the boy in a most scientific way
for the first month. I learned to make a 2,000 yuan (US$241.6) foetal hair
brush, as well as 450 yuan (US$54) hand-and-foot prints in commemoration of the
significant birth of my baby. And I learned to buy capsules for the development
of his cranial nerves at 52-104 yuan (US$6-12) a month.
I could have attended certain infant training
programmes with my son, but I did not have the strength. Then I found my son was
not so bright as those trained infants.
Three months later, my baby was allowed to go out for
sunlight and fresh air for two hours a day. Every time I took him out for a
walk, sales people would spring up as if from nowhere, praised the little boy
for his cuteness and then advised his going to a training centre for a second
language. But how could he pick up a second language while he was unable to
speak the first language?
"You will regret not signing up for our programme,"
they said. I did regret it, as quite a few infants in our neighborhood
registered later at 5,000 yuan (US$602) and my parents accused me of
irresponsibility.
To make up for that, I bought a series of "My First
Book" for him to tear up. (It is said that we should let them "read" such books
from their birth) and began to take him to swim once a week in a pool for about
15 minutes at 58 yuan (US$7) per swim. And I had to hire a taxi to get there and
come back.
 A new-born baby
swims in a pool in Taiyuan, North China's Shanxi Province. It is popular
to take babies to swim after it is reported that babies who have an
early swimming experience show improved physical and psychological
development. [newsphoto/file] |
Magazines also taught me that a three-month-old baby
was old enough to play with toys, so I began to squander money on all kinds of
toys to develop his brain and body. Those toys, made of plastic, wood or cloth,
were very expensive but fragile, and easily broken. So far I can not find a
single intact toy.
When he was six months old, I was told by the doctor
to adopt bottle-feeding, as beast milk is no more nutritious after six months.
So I spent about 800 yuan (US$96) for milk powder, 100 yuan (US$12) for Niuchuru
(a cow's first milk used to improve immunity), 100 yuan for fish liver oil
and calcium, and 150 yuan (US$18) for supplementary food every month.
From then on, I stopped dressing him in hand-me-down
clothes given by others and began to buy brand names so that he might grow with
self-respect and self-confidence.
He has been to hospital quite a few times. He
has never been seriously ill, but as soon as we heard him sneezing or
sniffing or having a poor appetite or developing a skin rash, we rushed him to
hospital. Doctors are very thoughtful and considerate, and every time they
prescribed a large quantity of medicine. My home has been well stocked with
mountains of drops, capsules and tablets ?enough that we may be able to run a
drugstore for children.
Yesterday I met with a young mother in the
neighborhood who told me that she was going to sign up for a baby training
centre to get her baby educated in both English and social etiquette. Cost to
her will be more than 10,000 yuan (US$1,204) a year. Upon hearing that, I
immediately had an impulse to rob a bank.
Being the only child in a family, today's babies are
really raised with gold.
(Shanghai Star) |