Beijing Lights: "I’ve Never Dreamed of Wealth or Fame"
This post is part of an ongoing series called Beijing Lights by the Spittoon Collective that aims to share some of the voices that make up Beijing’s 21.7 million humans. They ask: Who are these people we pass on the street every day? Who lives behind those endless walls of apartment windows? These interviews take a small, but meaningful look.
Since retiring a decade ago, Wang has been feeding stray cats every day. She has adopted over 20 of them. Over the years, the expenses add up. She and her husband live on their retirement pension, which is just enough to support their basic needs with some thrift and planning. If you’d like to offer any help caring for the cats, financially or otherwise, please contact me on WeChat via ID: melodypan0316.
Wang Rongzhi, female, 65 years old, from Shandong, stray cat feeder
I just love cats so much. Whenever I see a cat I just can’t take my eyes off it.
My ancestral home is in Shandong. When I was 12, my father was sent down to Shaanxi. Our whole family moved to Ansai, a typical small city south of Yan’an in the Shanbei region.
We pictured Ansai as a nice place. Mao had lived in Yan’an during his revolutionary days so how bad could it be? But when we got there we were dumbfounded – there were only dusty hills as far as the eye could see. It felt as if we’d walked over a whole mountain before we finally arrived in Ansai.
The county was like one big slum. We lived in a cave house without a toilet. If you needed to use one you had to walk a long way to the public toilets. The roads were all made of dirt. When it rained, your shoes got covered in mud. During the winter, it got so cold you would choke.
In 1972, summoned by the Central Government’s initiative to “send young people to poor areas” for reeducation, I was sent to a remote farm. I was only 16, short, and super skinny, so the elders took it easy on me. I was assigned to duties involving less intensive labor – serving food and tea in the production brigade canteens, and occasionally feeding their horses.
Things got a lot harder when I was later transferred to a medicine factory. My job was to cut herbs every day. After a day of work, I was so tired that I could barely lift my arms. But I was lucky, many others were in much worse situations. There were some people who could not bear their heavy workloads, day after day, and even committed suicide.
I met my husband in Yan’an. He is originally from Beijing but was sent down to Yan’an for “receiving reeducation from the poor peasants.” My father took a liking to him. My father said he treated others well, and was the type of person you could trust for a lifetime. Arranged by my father, we got married in Yan’an.
My father was so right about him. After we got married, he not only took very good care of me, but of the whole family. During festivals and holidays, he was even more considerate than I was about bringing the best gifts for my parents.
Our daughter was born in 1979. We lived in Yan’an until 1991, when Beijing introduced new policies allowing those sent-down youth to return back to the city. We followed my husband back to Beijing.
Coming back to Beijing didn’t promise an easier life. The government didn’t provide any support for the returning sent-back youth except a hukou. We could only rely on ourselves to try and earn a living.
My husband got a job in Tongren Hospital doing logistics. He stayed at his position until retirement. Meanwhile, I changed jobs quite a few times. First I worked in a grocery store, then when it closed, I worked as a care worker in a hospital. Through the family of one of the patients, I was introduced to a job as a cleaner at a travel agency. The pay was good and everyone there treated me well. They saved plastic bottles and paper boxes for me, which was enough for me to make an extra 10 to 20 kuai a day. I worked for that company for over a decade until my legs could no longer handle the job.
After retiring, I started going out to feed the stray cats. I am as punctual as when I was working: Every day I leave the house at 3pm and walk to the park nearby. If you count the cats on the way to the park, there are at least 30 to 40 of them. Whenever they hear me, they know their food is coming. They rush out from their hiding place in the grass. I have given a name to each of them. Three Flower, Sweet Fragrance, and Dahlia – I’ve been feeding them since they were baby kittens.
I’ve rescued and adopted so many cats. In my house right now I’m raising over 20 of them! I can’t afford fancy cat food, only the most basic kind that comes in big packages. A package of 10kg lasts only five days. I mix in some canned food, the cats like it more this way. When I see them enjoying the food, it makes me happy.
My knees are not good, so when I walk I have to take a short rest every once in a while. It is usually 8pm when I get home. At my age, I should be enjoying rest and leisure but here I am, spending my days feeding and caring for stray cats. But who made me love cats so much? No matter how exhausting it is, when I see them I don’t feel tired anymore.
Over the years, whenever a cat dies, I try to find a place to properly bury it. I try to hold a small ceremony, and ask Buddha to give it better fortune in the next life.
Perhaps it is a reward for feeding the cats – life has been good to me.
Both my husband and I have retirement pensions, not a big sum but enough to support us. As for my daughter, although she is 40 years old and remains unmarried, she is healthy and doing well. She is a good daughter too. We used to worry a lot about her being single, but now we don’t think it’s a problem as long as she is happy. As parents, what more do you need from your children?
If we’re on the subject of happiness again, I have to talk more about my husband.
We got married when I was 22. It’s been over 40 years and he has never stopped being affectionate. I’m not good-looking – I was born with a lipoma on my face, but that doesn’t seem to bother him at all. He only sees the good in me. Even when I’m quick-tempered sometimes, he is patient and forgiving.
It’s also all thanks to his consistent support that I can take care of all these cats. He helps me buy them food and take them to the vet. He also bought me a pushcart and a small folding chair so that I can rest when I’m out. He bought me a cover for my knees to help ease the pain; even when it wasn’t the right fit and he had to go back and forth to exchange for different sizes, he didn’t think it was any trouble. In our house, he is also the one buying groceries and cooking three meals a day.
My whole life I’ve never dreamed of having wealth or fame. Because of my husband, my life feels so full and content. Finding the right partner has been the great fortune of my life. And being with him has been my life’s great meaning.
READ: "My Days Have Become an Endless Loop"
This article is provided by our content partners Spittoon Collective. You can read more content just like this from Beijing's creative literary minds via their website here. You can also find the article above in its original Chinese form here.
Image: Tencent (interviewee not pictured)
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China Boy Submitted by Guest on Mon, 06/15/2020 - 21:13 Permalink
Re: Beijing Lights: "I’ve Never Dreamed of Wealth or Fame"
Lots of cat aunties here in GuangZhou. They get themselves organised into teams so everyday, come rain shine or Covid-19, the cats are fed, watered and looked after. One at home is enough for us, but I do carry some cat biscuits in my man-bag just in case we encounter a hungry feline.
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