Growing tea helps indebted widow cope with her loss
Updated: 2016-06-30 08:09
By Zhu Lixin in Lu'An, Anhui(China Daily)
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Anhui woman left with huge medical bill after death of husband and son
Out of Cheng Shilian's loss, came tea. The 76-year-old has experienced the deaths of several family members, but keeping her hands in the soil of East China's Anhui province has helped her to cope.
"It is only when I am busy working in the field that I feel stronger," said Cheng, who grows green-tea seedlings in Niujiaochong village in Lu'an city's mountainous Huoshan county.
Nurturing her seedlings helps her grieve for the loss of her husband and their only son, gives her courage to care for a daughter-in-law with breast cancer and helps her grapple with her own loneliness.
"My difficulties are temporary, and I believe I can overcome them with my own hands," she said. "I can't stop moving on, or the grief and loneliness would kill me."
Cheng's son was diagnosed with bone marrow cancer in 2013, the same year she learned how to grow tea. He died the next year and Cheng's first farm, a 70-square-meter plot near her hilltop home, failed too.
Her son's year-long medical care left the family with 200,000 yuan ($30,860) of debt - money they borrowed from relatives and other villagers. Cheng needed away to repay them, so she turned once more to planting tea.
She asked for advice from agriculture technicians about how to improve her farming practices. She tripled the land she put under cultivation and met some success, earning 5,000 yuan in profit.
Then, last year, Cheng's daughter-in-law was diagnosed with breast cancer. Her only grandson, who works in Hefei, the provincial capital, helps the family with expenses, but his salary alone cannot repay the family's debts.
So Cheng decided to rent 2,700 sq m of land and work harder at growing tea seedlings. She also has more than 70 chestnut trees.
Her efforts earned her about 20,000 yuan last year, on top of her retirement pension of 1,800 yuan a month.
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