Modernisation kiss of life to amorous singles
November 13, 2007
By Zhang Lijia, Observer
As printed in the New Zealand Herald, November 10, 2007
Kissing in public, something Chinese people once saw only in foreign
films, is now part of the landscape. Photo / Reuters
Kissing in public, something Chinese people once saw only in foreign
films, is now part of the landscape. Photo / Reuters
"Scored yet?" That was the first question from several young
adventurers crowded around a table at a bar in Lhasa, Tibet's
colourful capital city.
Between sips of yak butter tea, they trade jokes and swap tales about
their latest sexual encounters.
These Gotech-clad twenty-somethings on leave from city jobs could
have been from anywhere in the world looking for spiritual
enlightenment, romantic encounters, or both.
But they were all from China, where such conversations and attitudes
would have been unthinkable just a few years ago.
"Why not?" said Sandy Li, a 28-year-old fashion designer from
Beijing, lighting a cigarette from a flickering candle and confessing
that she took the trip with the idea of meeting someone with no
strings attached.
"Just for a bit of harmless fun. We don't have to behave ourselves
here - we don't know anyone. Finding a proper boyfriend is a lot
harder than finding a man you can go to bed with."
Li's attitude is typical of many of the young urban middle class,
whose slogan could well be carpe diem - or rather carpe noctem. Apart
from Lhasa, another popular pick-up place is Lijiang, in Yunnan
province.
Of course, people don't have to travel to far-flung places for casual
sex. Your own flat would do.
Less than 20 years ago, singles had little choice but to stay with
their parents. Now cohabitation, like sex before marriage, is
commonplace.
Before a split six months ago, Li lived with her photographer
boyfriend for three years but had never introduced him to her family.
"For my parents, bringing a boyfriend home means impending marriage.
I am still young. I'd like to make a splash in my career first, and
explore what life can offer."
"The singles are not talking about marriages, and lovers aren't
talking about the future," goes one popular saying among colleague
students.
And a joke describes the pattern of "one-week" relationships: "On
Monday, you send out vibes. Tuesday, you express true desire.
Wednesday, you hold hands. Thursday, you sleep together. Friday, a
feeling of distance sets in. Saturday, you want out. On Sunday, you
start searching again."
Youngsters' unwillingness to settle down is causing great anxiety to
the older generation.
In Zhongshan Park, a stone's throw from the Forbidden City, dozens of
parents, armed with photographs and information about their children,
gather and search for potential partners. Some even go "eight-minute
speed dating" on behalf of children who themselves will be chatting
and flirting on the internet.
"Today's young people are probably more sexually charged than their
parents' generation," said Susie Huang, author of All About Susie,
essays about the love and sex lives of today's budding bourgeois.
It's China's literary version of Sex and the City.
"To start with, it's now safe to be naughty," she said. "Before you
might have landed in a labour camp for conducting an extramarital
affair."
But is it safe? A more tolerant social environment has led many to
experiment in uncharted waters, with mixed results. Divorce rates are
climbing steadily in major cities like Beijing and Shanghai, where
one in three marriages ends in failure. Syphilis has skyrocketed,
with a 25-fold increase since the early 1990s. And extra-marital
affairs are now common.
Maybe Muzi Mei, a former sex blogger, is an extreme example of
today's restless and hedonistic crowds. Her site used to attract 10
million visitors a day before it was shut down by the Government in
2003.
Officials objected to her explicit online diary. She was forced to
resign from her Guangzhou-based magazine as a sex columnist and now
works for a website, but still continues her man-hopping ways.
"My sex life is very interesting. Some may find it educational as
well as entertaining," said the 29-year-old journalist in a Beijing
restaurant. "I sleep with lots of men because I don't want to be
imprisoned in one relationship," she declared to the giggles of
eavesdropping waitresses. "I am a free spirit. "
She is also a romantic. In her magazine she offered tips on creating
the right ambience on a date, such as playing music while making love.
There are books available too, offering step-by-step guides to dating.
Kissing, something the Chinese people once saw only in foreign films,
is now part of the landscape.
A recent cover story in the national News Weekly concluded that
"China's love life is in a stage of revelry, featuring the emphasis
on sex rather than love; on physical pleasure rather than spiritual
fulfilment".
Susie Huang thinks she knows why: "It is a globalisation of some
sort: China is becoming more westernised. And, in some ways, more
human."
- Observer