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Stressed out white-collar workers are scaling skyscrapers, camping out on rooftops, smashing up restaurants, pretending to be children and even visiting cemeteries in a bid to relieve the pressure of modern life.(File photo)
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BEIJING, Aug. 21 -- Stressed out white-collar workers
are scaling skyscrapers, camping out on rooftops, smashing up restaurants,
pretending to be children and even visiting cemeteries in a bid to relieve the
pressure of modern life.
As the country's economy continues to steam ahead,
once popular forms of entertainment, such as karaoke, card games and even boxing
bars, appear to be losing their appeal.
Consider the members of Shanghai's Cat Rain club. By
day, this group of young women works executive jobs, but by night they climb
buildings so they can spend the night on the roof.
"It's a good way to release our pressure. You feel
relaxed when you're sitting on the roof, looking up to the sky and chatting with
intimate friends," said Gong Ying, 25.
The stress of work is not just limited to people in
Shanghai.
A recently opened restaurant in Beijing encourages
customers to smash plates - as long as they are willing to pay to replace them.
Though there has been some debate about the
extravagance of such services, some psychologists say the activity reflects the
desire of some white-collar workers to vent their angst.
Some workers even appear eager to return to their
childhoods. This May, hundreds of people took part in a festival in which adults
pretended to be children. It was an adults-only event, and participants could
read comics and eat sweets all day.
Scenic places such as parks and rivers can also help
people relax and put things in perspective. But a cemetery?
Cemetery companies in Shanghai organized visits to
local graveyards for stressed-out workers in March. The participants were taken
to quiet spots in the cemetery where they could contemplate life and their
future.
Roof-camper Chen Bin, an IT marketing professional,
said she had camped out on a rooftop about 30 times. When she's not sleeping out
under the stars, she also has several other adrenalin-fueled interests, such as
downhill racing and paragliding.
"Pressure may bring us distress, but it doesn't mean
we can't find ways out," Chen says. "Life should be imaginative."
(Source: China Daily)