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Social Media Digest (April 29, 2026)

By XIONG XINYI | China Daily | Updated: 2026-04-29 10:02
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Some young adults are renting cubicle spaces to escape distractions and carve out time for career reflection. VCG

Cubicle for rent

Who says you need a salary to go to work? Some young adults are paying for the privilege of pretending to be busy.

Across cities like Hangzhou and Beijing, "pretend-to-work" spaces have emerged where a desk, a chair, and Wi-Fi can be rented for as little as 30 yuan ($4.39) a day, according to Tide News. There are no bosses, no KPIs, and no paycheck — just the illusion of productivity. Freelancers, early-stage entrepreneurs, and people in career limbo flock here to escape the distractions of home.

Facing career uncertainty and family pressure, many use the space simply as a buffer from social judgment — a place to regroup, plan their next move, and regain a sense of control. Every minute counts, so scrolling TikTok suddenly feels like a financial mistake.

And it's not all pretense. According to Tide News, one visitor in Hangzhou found that the structured environment helped her earn 70,000-80,000 yuan a month from her side hustle. Another attendee used the space to develop an online tutoring service, helping both herself and others earn extra income while learning the ropes of running a small venture.

Young people may be paying to sit and look busy, but in the process, they're building skills, routines, and connections that turn pretense into progress. Productivity has never been so performative — or so practical.

Today’s youth are rewriting the script for success, embracing their own power instead of playing by someone else’s rules. VCG

Tougher than life

For generations, young people have been told to brace for life: step into the world, see how hard it is, swallow your pride, smooth your edges. Success meant surviving by someone else's rules.

But today's youth are rewriting that script.

Chinese social media is buzzing with a simple, fiery line: "Everyone's telling them: 'You've seen how tough the world is, right?' They say: 'No. I've seen how tough I am.'"

Suddenly, it's everywhere. Short videos, memes, posts — young people highlighting moments of quiet victory: finishing a grueling exam, surviving a tough job, or just keeping their head up when life piles on.

Look at the stories that went viral: a factory worker becoming a world skills champion, a vocational school graduate climbing to a doctorate. Neither had a perfect start, and both relied on persistence and belief in themselves.

Unlike old mantras that demand external validation, "I've seen how tough I am" celebrates victories big and small, ordinary and extraordinary. It's no longer just a saying — it's a signal: we see ourselves, we value ourselves, and we refuse to be flattened by anyone else's narrative.

And just like that, this social media trend becomes a quiet revolution, one video, one post, one moment of self-belief at a time.

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