Global EditionASIA 中文双语Français
China
Home / China / Society

Young and old unite in sunny senior home

Xinhua | Updated: 2018-10-21 08:28
Share
Share - WeChat
An undated photo shows an elderly woman dining at a nursing home in Hangzhou. [Photo by Sun Yidou/Provided to China Daily]

HANGZHOU -- Shan Tingting is 23 years old. She lives in a nursing home.

Every day after work, she catches the bus, and in half an hour arrives home, where her fellow tenants - mostly elderly and several youngsters - greet her return at "Sunny Home," a senior care center in the Binjiang District of Hangzhou, China's eastern Zhejiang Province.

Shan says she is both a volunteer and a beneficiary of an innovative program called "Companionship is the long-lasting expression of love."

About two months ago, Shan read about a retirement home looking for young people, who couldn't afford to purchase an apartment of their own, to rent vacant, fully furnished rooms at the facility for only 300 yuan ($43) a month.

The location was ideal, the room was spacious with additional services, and the rent was scandalously cheap, unimaginable in the eastern metropolis.

The only condition was that the young people would have to spend 20 hours every month keeping the seniors company, either through casual chat, reading a book or teaching them how to use smartphones.

For many young professionals struggling to survive in the big cities, this is an offer too tempting to reject.

Yang Yunhai, 29, and his associate run a workshop in Hangzhou, teaching traditional ink painting and calligraphy. He used to live in his art studio, but it had grown inconvenient and rent for a single-room studio was 1,400 yuan, a bit beyond his budget.

At Sunny Home, the monthly rent of 300 yuan wouldn't be enough to cover his studio's gas and water bills, he told Xinhua.

"I used to teach children before I moved in. I thought I could take the opportunity to gain some experience teaching grown-ups here," he said.

Almost instantly, his teaching skills won him the title of "Teacher Big Hai" and enormous popularity among his elderly disciples.

A calligraphy room is set up on every floor of the home, which has a capacity of 2,000 seniors, located by the scenic Baima (White Horse) Lake.

Every Saturday at 2 p.m. sharp, Yang's calligraphy class began with an ever expanding group of enthusiastic seniors.

There were around 30 participants when the project first started, which has since doubled since Yang's first class.

Teacher Big Hai is now so big that he has to tour from one practice group to another, whenever he can squeeze time out of his work schedule.

Grandma Chi, 77, said she had always found calligraphy fascinating. "I had been wanting to learn since I was a young girl, but never had the chance."

Now she has become one of Teacher Big Hai's most earnest pupils.

Shan doesn't teach calligraphy. Instead, she offers English lessons at Sunny Home.

"I was surprised by the enthusiasm of our elderly to learn a new language," she said.

In and out of class, the youngsters are always patient and encouraging, for their students sometimes have trouble hearing or reading clearly; while the elderly feel rejuvenated from the energetic presence of their young friends.

"This program aims to encourage the two generations to have warm, positive interactions to inspire what we'd call 'intergenerational communication,'" said Wang Kai, director of social work at Sunny Home.

It was created jointly by the senior care center and the local civil affairs authorities as a solution to mitigating the challenges posed by an aging population in China.

Due to longer life expectancy and declining fertility rates, the proportion of people above the age of 60 is growing faster than other age groups in many countries.

1 2 Next   >>|
Top
BACK TO THE TOP
English
Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349
FOLLOW US