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          Home / China / Life

          Healing in the countryside

          By Guo Yali | China Daily | Updated: 2014-05-28 06:58

          Healing in the countryside

          Feng Lili's husband Rong Xiaojie and Tiantian find a better life in Beijing's Wugezhuang village in 2009. Provided to China Daily

          When their 8-year-old daughter couldn't cope with school and city life, a desperate couple found the answer in a simpler life. Guo Yali follows their story.

          Raise the Child in the Countryside is not the kind of parenting book that is written by "tiger moms" or "wolf dads", explaining their way of bringing up children to excel. It is by a mother whose daughter had problems fitting into society.

          Author Feng Lili tells the story of how at first she and her husband thought there was nothing wrong with their daughter Tiantian, or themselves, and the problem was with school teachers. How they kept transferring their daughter to a new kindergarten-five in all-because each time the little girl felt too nervous to go. And how one month after she started primary school, they decided to keep her at home for good because she was simply too frightened by the rules-and finally didn't dare to sleep because she said, "when the day breaks, I'll have to go to school again".

          The parents quit their office jobs and became proofreaders at a publishing house so they could work from home and spend more time with their daughter. But the girl just ended up playing all night and then sleeping during the day, leaving the two desperate parents exhausted.

          These "darkest days", as Feng calls them, came to an end in March 2009, when the family moved to a village in Beijing's Tongzhou district, more than 30 kilometers away from their downtown home. The idea came from their friend Qiao Yankun, an education expert who was living in the countryside for health reasons.

          The living conditions in the village were not what they were used to, but they found life colorful. They grew vegetables, and raised chickens, ducks, rabbits and dogs. They even had a little goat.

          But best of all were changes they noticed in 8-year-old Tiantian.

          With the help of Qiao, the girl learned to cook using a firewood stove. She took care of the poultry and animals and washed clothes. She became interested in the wildflowers when herding the goat, and she started reading a book about plants.

          Within a month Tiantian was able to make a meal for the family independently. Soon she was able to stay at home alone and take care of herself and all the animals. She also learned to deal with disputes between herself and her young friend next door.

          The book ends in June that year, when the family leases out their home in downtown Beijing and settles down in the village.

          The book, originally written as a diary, records the subtle details of village life in simple words: What they ate, what they did, what they said and what Feng thought, day by day.

          When the first half of the story was published in Duku, a popular bimonthly magazine, in 2013, controversy raged among readers. Its critics complained it was unreadable and a waste of paper and their money. Those who liked it could not wait to read the second half, saying they found it enlightening and could see themselves in the story.

          I admit I am one of those that like it. Feng was a careful observer; her exquisite accounts of their daily life engages readers emotionally, and the way she describes quotidian scenes is powerful. The vivid accounts of growing vegetables, raising animals and playing in the countryside will certainly touch the hearts of people, who feel trapped in city life and are willing to pay to work on resort farms during the weekends.

          As the mother of a 9-year-old girl, I was moved by the efforts the couple had made to love and protect their daughter. At first, they came across as people who aren't able to cope with society. Yet as the story unfolds, we realize their courage in giving up what is normally perceived as success in pursuit of their daughter's happiness.

          But we also see that their love was too heavy and their overprotectiveness almost ruined the girl in the early years.

          Fortunately, they had their wise counselor Qiao, whom I found to be the most interesting part of the story because she comes and goes in the family's daily life, doing simple cooking and setting simple rules.

          She enlightens the couple so they correct their obsession to protect their daughter and helps the girl gain confidence, independence and inner strength.

          In the spring of 2010, Tiantian started going to a private school and transferred to a school in the city in 2013, where she became a student leader in the class. She will go to middle school next semester.

          Contact the writer at guoyali@chinadaily.com.cn

          OTHER CHINESE BEST-SELLERS ON PARENTING

          Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother (Chinese, 2011)

          By Amy Chua, translated by Zhang Xinhua

          Citic Publishing House

          288 pages, 32 yuan ($5)

          Yale law school professor Chua, a Chinese-American mother, describes the strict upbringing of her two daughters. The cover says: "This is a story about a mother, two daughters, and two dogs. This was supposed to be a story of how Chinese parents are better at raising kids than Western ones. But instead, it's about a bitter clash of cultures, a fleeting taste of glory, and how I was humbled by a 13-year-old."

          So, Brothers and Sisters of Peking University (2011)

          By Xiao Baiyou

          Shanghai Joint Publishing Company

          238 pages, 28 yuan ($4.5)

          The Hong Kong-based businessman and self-styled "wolf dad" touts how his philosophy of "stick parenting" landed his three children in a prestigious university.

          Eagle Dad's Education What Can I Give the Child (2012)

          By He Liesheng

          Beijing Education Publishing House

          164 pages, 26 yuan ($4.2)

          The father author considers himself a new Chinese parental archetype in the tradition of the so-called "tiger mom". He adopted extreme techniques, such as forcing his 4-year-old to run naked in the snow, to train his son who once was "sentenced" by doctors to be "good-for-nothing".

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