The place to ask China-related questions!
Beijing Shanghai Guangzhou Shenzhen Chengdu Xi'an Hangzhou Qingdao Dalian Suzhou Nanjing More Cities>>

Categories

Close
Welcome to eChinacities Answers! Please or register if you wish to join conversations or ask questions relating to life in China. For help, click here.
X

Verify email

Your verification code has been sent to:

Didn`t receive your code? Resend code

By continuing you agree to eChinacities's Privacy Policy .

Sign up with Google Sign up with Facebook
Sign up with Email Already have an account? .
Posts: 362

Shifu

0
0
You must be a registered user to vote!
You must be a registered user to vote!
0

Q: Chinese way of venting out?

Come to think of it, I think I've never seen a Chinese person get really really angry. They talk loud, but a Chinese friend told me it doesn't necesarly mean they are uber mad.

And a lot of Chinese people are really reserved. So I was wondering how do they vent out when too much stress is accumulated? Do they get drunk?

I personnally put on my glow in the dark spandex pants, put on my Lucky Charm hat and dance the Macarena while singing "who let the dogs out". It really helps evacuating the stress, and it doesn't harm anybody, except that one time when my Chinese girlfriend came home with a friend of her, but i managed to explain it is normal behavior in 'Merica.

So what are the most common way to evacuate stress among Chinese people?

12 years 44 weeks ago in  Culture - China

 
Answers (3)
Comments (0)
Posts: 335

Shifu

0
0
You must be a registered user to vote!
You must be a registered user to vote!
0

It seems that in the West, anger is akin to a bottle of fizzy cola-pop (let's say Panda Pops because they were really REALLY fizzy, even if they only came in tiny bottles... my favourite flavour was cherry, what was yours?) being shaken vigorously for 4 minutes, then uncapped. The anger (represented by the fizzy cherry pop) will gush out all at once in a sticky mess.

However, despite the common 'panda' link, Chinese people have never drunk panda pops, so know nothing of it's volatile nature. Instead, Chinese people are like a tea flask with a tiny tiny crack in. The tea will drip out slowly but constantly. Every so often (because drinking tea is good), the flask will be refilled, so it never runs out of tea. The Chinese 'drip' out their anger by spitting, shouting down the phone, scamming people, driving badly, going to KTV, having a foot massage, clubbing baby puppies to death, and visiting prostitutes. It's a slow, but constant evacuation of stress and anger, unlike in the West where we simply flip the bird, shout "You smelly son of a gun I really dislike you!" poop in a paper bag and set fire to it, or go on a shotgun massacre in high school.

Source(s)
Report Abuse
12 years 44 weeks ago
 
0
0
You must be a registered user to vote!
You must be a registered user to vote!
0

Chinese do not get angry, they get even.

Revenge is a major Chinese obsession.

Report Abuse
12 years 44 weeks ago
 
Posts: 108

Governor

0
0
You must be a registered user to vote!
You must be a registered user to vote!
0

@ludocivo

I saw on a tabloid that this school Hongtang High School in Ningbo city, in East China's Zhejiang province said they put a psychological venting room.

If the students feel depressed, they can kick the dummies in the venting room to release their pent-up emotions.The boys are more likely to beat the dummies and the girls are more like to cry in the venting room.

Back home ('merica) they just hit on the small,poor, defenselessness,chubby geeks ...
witch then creates them psychopath killers that go on shooting rampage in our schools.

Report Abuse
12 years 44 weeks ago
 
Know the answer ?
Please or register to post answer.

Report Abuse

Security Code: * Enter the text diplayed in the box below
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <img> <br> <p> <u>
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Textual smileys will be replaced with graphical ones.

More information about formatting options

Forward Question

Answer of the DayMORE >>
A: I had a similar experience in HK. If I recall correctly, before or at
A:I had a similar experience in HK. If I recall correctly, before or at the Z visa application, I had to submit ME from the ordinary HK clinic, where I explained why I need ME and I asked them to examine only necessary things (I don't remember the cost ...), and then ... I got Z stamp and when back in China, I had to complete another RP ME, which was on the employer, i.e. included in the Contract ...We've never discussed refund of payment for HK ME with my employer. Year 2013 ...I'd say, that is a regular thingy embassies around the world require, before issuing visas for LT stay in the country. "Vladimir Vladimiro-Witch ras-Putin" (LOL@your pronunciation ..) demands the same thingy before granting LT stay in Ruski.  ... Haa, 2013 was the Snowden's year. I was in Kowloon at the time of his landing .. with all these files ... I'm-Still-in-LMAO-State ... Cost for the ME in HK was around HK$ 2000/200 EUR, and ME was kind of swift, quicker and way shorter than on the mainland ... -- icnif77