CP3: Treatment of Children
The third Chinarchy audio post. This is my general thoughts on the treatment of children. Most of you guys already know this and it’s nothing new, but it can’t be said too many times. And if you’re a reader who doesn’t know me personally or know my thoughts on this, I think this is a really, really important thing to listen to.
As always, leave your comments or email me.
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CP2: Non-Verbal Communication
Here is my second attempt at an audio-post. I describe an anecdote from school and talk about the importance of non-verbal communication.
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Note 1: yes, I know it’s pronounced “in-ter-rog-a-tive.” I’m living in China, just be happy I can form any real sentences.
Note 2: I didn’t mean “only 15 episodes” sarcastically. I realized it sounded that way upon re-listening. That wasn’t my intent. I’m genuinely impressed at how quickly Brett Veinotte started addressing family issues in the School Sucks Podcast.
Let me know what you think in the comments!
30 Million Children With Mental Disorders
Handsome reader Will sent me this story today from China Daily. Here’s some excerpts:
Nearly one in ten young Chinese under the age of 17 have some sort of mental disorders, a recent survey suggests.
The Beijing Anding Hospital and the Chinese Medical Association hosted an international conference about the mental health of young people on Sunday.
At the meeting, Chinese scholars said that at least 30 million minors in China are plagued with mental disorders or behavior problems.
By the year 2007, China had 341 million minors, accounting for 26 percent of the country’s total population.
“The number 30 million is based on regional researches in recent years. Since the mental health of children must have worsened over time, the real number could be even higher,” said Cui Yonghua, a child psychiatrist with the Beijing Anding Hospital.
“Child patients have been increasing sharply over the past years. Now we do not have enough beds for them,” said psychiatrist Cui.
This is tragic, truly. But I’m going to make a maybe somewhat controversial statement that this is a good thing. In fact, I’m sure every generation prior to this one has had a higher percentage of mental disorder. These kids acting out and receiving actual psychological attention (and media attention) means that things may get better for them and for future generations.
Still, this is a powerful and sad indicator of the terrible treatment of children.
Reader Will also juxtaposed the mental disorder story with this one from the day before. I think it speaks for itself.
CP1: Against Group Learning
Below is my first attempt at an audio post. Let me know what you think!
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Passion of the Chine
I’ve been meaning to write some posts about Chinese culture for a long time, since before I even arrived in China, but I’m always hesitant to do it. Whenever you talk about culture you have to paint with such a broad brush and make all kinds of generalizations and qualifications, and there are always dozens of exceptions and counter-examples.
But I have been here for over 3 months, so I want to try. Remember, I’m just going off what I’ve experienced and extending it with a little reason. If I’m totally off-base and you think everything I’m saying is nonsense, please let me know.
Okay, enough qualifying. Here’s what I’m going to say about Chinese people: They lacky the passion.
Among almost all the Chinese people I have met and talked with, I find a total absence of passion.
In order to understand what I mean when I talk about passion, we’re going to have to use the West (specifically America) as a comparison. Which means I’m going to have to paint another culture with a broad brush.
Genuine Passion
When I think about passion in the West I usually break it down into two categories. The first is genuine passion.
Genuine passion is a deep love and enthusiasm and drive for something. It’s easy to associate this with artists. People who truly and deeply care about painting, or music, or cinema, or literature. But it could be about anything.
I consider Richard Dawkins and Carl Sagan some of the most passionate authors I’ve read. It’s science and reason and truth that they are passionate about, and you can feel their enthusiasm in almost everything they write.
I think you can have that same enthusiasm and joy toward anything and everything, from stamp collecting to webdesign to philosophy to psychology to baking to chemistry to life itself. And I think most passionate people are passionate about everything they do, not just their main interests.
It’s sometimes hard to quantify, but you just know. You can tell by the way the person talks and by their body language. You can sense their excitement or awe or enthusiasm.
I’m sure you’ve probably experienced both sides of this. You’ve been able to tell when someone you’re talking to really cares about the subject, when it excites them and energizes them. And you know what it’s like to talk about something you really love. (At least I hope you know what it’s like.)
This type of passion — genuine passion — I also associate with a few other traits.
One of them is a level of disregard for what other people think. Passionate people pursue the things they love, despite what anyone else (friends, family, society) thinks about them. It’s part of that drive that a passionate person has. They are individuals, not conformists. Social norms aren’t going to stop them.
Another set of traits I find in most passionate people is honesty, openness, and curiosity. They don’t hide or hedge or minimize the things they believe and value. They are open about how they feel and what they think. And at the same time they are often curious and willing — in fact happy — to listen to other people’s thoughts and opinions. Passionate people are excited by others who want to engage them on the things they care about.
(I would say this is true even for passionate religious people. In my experience, people who are really passionate about religion are often the ones willing to listen to my (very opposing) ideas. It is your average my-parents-were-religious-so-now-I-am religious people that get defensive or evasive about their beliefs.)
(Oh, and I would also like to clarify that I don’t count zealotry and fanaticism as being passionate. I see that more as an unhealthy obsession. So, just like I wouldn’t call a heroin addict “a person who is passionate about heroin,” I don’t consider a fanatic “just a really passionate person.”)
Bandwagon Passion
I see genuine passion here and there in the West, but overall it’s pretty rare. What I see a lot more of is a watered-down version of passion, something I’ll call bandwagon passion.
This pseudo-passion copies the enthusiasm of real passion, but little else. It leaves out the true dedication, and joy, and individualism, and curiosity found in genuine passion. And it’s easy. It’s so easy.
This is embodied in almost every popular issue or movement in America. From environmentalism to health-care reform to supporting the troops to helping the poor to protecting small business owners to blah blah blah. Just pick an easy issue and jump on board.
Listen to celebrities talk about environmentalism as they fly around in their Gulfstreams. Or the conservative politicians talk about family values as they cheat on their wives. Or the college kid who thinks it’s so important to stop war as he supports a president sending 10,000 more young men to die in the desert. Yes, psuedo-passion almost always comes with a healthy helping of hypocrisy.
I do realize that some of the people who care about these issues are genuinely passionate and not hypocritical. But they are the rare ones. Most are just followers who are defensive when challenged and always ready to jump on the next up-and-coming topic.
Raise a flag for some trendy social issue and watch these slithering bandwagon passionistas gather round.
Wasn’t This Supposed To Be About China?
Yes. There was a reason for those tangents. And here it is: I see none of that in China.
The genuine passion, already a rare thing, is unsurprisingly absent. But so is the bandwagon passion.
Most young Chinese people I talk to — not all, but most — are totally devoid of either form of passion. I met an American girl in a bar and one of the first things she talked about was how she is “really into human rights.” Whether it’s genuine or bandwagon passion, this doesn’t happen when you talk to Chinese people.
I ask Chinese people what they care about and what they are really interested in and I usually get the most mundane answers: hanging out with friends, going shopping, going to the movies with friends. I mentioned this to my Chinese assistant and she said “Chinese girls do care about things. They care about shopping and shopping and make-up.” She was being funny, but there was some truth to it.
And it isn’t just the content of the interests. It’s also the way they talk about them. That spark of enthusiasm and excitement I talked about before, I don’t see that. They sound bored with their own interests. They sound bored that you even asked them a question about their interests.
Again, there are exceptions.
I was talking with a 26-year-old Chinese girl the other day who was extremely passionate about everything she brought up, even her job. I was so surprised that I actually said something to her.
“You know, I really think it’s cool how passionate you are. Most people I talk to here aren’t really excited about anything. You’re pretty enthusiastic about everything.”
She looked at me and smiled, “I love life. Being pretty will fade when I get old, but I hope I always keep my passion.”
Ballin’.
As cool as that was, it was only shocking because it’s so counter to my normal experiences with Chinese people.
Show Me The Passion
Obviously, I don’t want Chinese people to fix this problem by following Americans and jumping on every trendy bandwagon. But at least that Western pseudo-passion reveals an underlying desire to be enthusiastic and excited about something. A desire I’m having real trouble finding in China.
I have some ideas about why there is this lack of passion. Most of them have to do with parenting and the treatment of children. It’s also part of the culture in general. It’s a topic that needs a lot more thought and investigation.
I can say this: The biggest exception to everything I’ve been describing is children. Children are absolutely not like this. My students are passionate and enthusiastic and excited every day, about all kinds of things. I can’t even count the number of times a day one of my 5-year-olds runs up to me and breathlessly explains something they are excited about. And when I respond with enthusiasm, they get even more passionate.
So don’t think I’m describing some genetic problem or anything like that. This is a result of nurture, not nature. The kids in China start out just as passionate as all children. It’s ground out of them by the usual suspects: parents, teachers, and politicians.
How in particular is something I’m not sure about. And why it is different than in the West. Why isn’t there at least bandwagon passion here?
In the comments let me know what you think of this. Am I right or wrong? What do you think the causes are? And tell me your thoughts on why I’ve found China to be a passionless desert.
