2024 RT Amination Banner.gif

China Daily

Focus> Life & Art> Content
Tuesday, July 07, 2020, 15:30
Brave woman sets heroic example making dolls
By Wang Qian
Tuesday, July 07, 2020, 15:30 By Wang Qian

Xiang Chenxi, a 27-year-old woman with progressive muscular dystrophy, makes a clay doll at the workbench in her home in Wuxi, Jiangsu province. (PHOTO PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY)

There are different types of courage, different types of heroes. But the ability to inspire others is a hallmark of those earning the title of hero. Xiang Chenxi, 27, is one such person. Using a ventilator, Xiang sits or stands in front of her workbench at home in Wuxi, Jiangsu province, livestreaming her clay doll-making classes every day. This may seem an everyday occurrence, but it is actually a hero in action.

The dolls help her not only to make a living, but also to face life positively. She was diagnosed with progressive muscular dystrophy at the age of 8 when she frequently stumbled while walking. Her muscles, including her heart and the part of muscles that control breathing, will get weaker and weaker. There is no cure.

In 2018, she lost the ability to walk.

Last year, she had difficulty standing and in February, due to a lung infection, her disease progressed rapidly and she had to start using a ventilator for at least 15 hours a day to breathe.

Even in the darkest days, Xiang didn't give up her passion for dolls.

"Although most parts of my body cannot move, and I have to use a ventilator, the flexibility of my hands is a blessing in disguise," Xiang says.

Her doll-making video has gone viral, and has been viewed about 60 million times on Sina Weibo as of Monday. Many Weibo users commented that life is short, but her spirit makes it splendid.

"For me, every day after diagnosis is the healthiest day in the rest of my life," Xiang says.

What most of us consider mundane tasks, like lifting a cup, are hard for her. Consequently, making a doll can take her months.

But Xiang, showing a determination that is truly astounding, considers that she is "lucky" to be able to do what she loves.

What's more, she wants to bring luck to others. Last year, she began teaching doll-making courses online. It costs about 300 yuan (US$43) to master the skill. So far, more than 260 students have enrolled for her course.

For students with physical disadvantages, the course is free. More than 30 such people have taken the course so far.

Despite her physical limitations, Xiang has kept trying to find meaning in her daily life and to be grateful for what she can do.

Xiang's handmade clay dolls. (PHOTO PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY)

Frozen life

Born in 1993, Xiang had a happy family before she received her myotonic dystrophy diagnosis.

From then on, Xiang's mother became her full-time caregiver. Her father is a construction worker.

Due to health issues, Xiang quit school in 2011 and she started to find jobs online such as consumer services to help ease the family burden.

"My parents' love supports me to live every day to the fullest," Xiang says, adding that she has studied playing instruments, like the ukelele and electric organ, by herself and taken up craft hobbies, including cross-stitch and doll-making.

Inspired by a hearing-impaired woman who livestreams her life, Xiang began to livestream her making clay dolls in 2016.

As her skills improved, many followers commented that they wanted to buy her dolls. Her hobby helps her make a living and last year, at peak season, she made more than 20 dolls.

"My body cannot move, but my dolls can take my soul to experience the world," Xiang says.

She can get thousands of yuan every month from her doll business, which has built her confidence and allows her to make a contribution to the family.

But Xiang realizes that one day she will not be able to make dolls. She wants to pass her skills to others like her. Last year, she started to teach doll-making online.

In February, due to pulmonary hypertension, Xiang was hospitalized for surgery. To prepare for the worst, she even recorded a video to donate her body if she could not make it.

After a two-week hospitalization, Xiang was finally back home, but using a ventilator is "a new normal", she says.

In the future, she may need a series of medical equipment to help her cope with coughing.

"Before I have to stay in bed all day, maybe in two years, I will enjoy every day, not be afraid of tomorrow," Xiang says in a WeChat post.

wangqian@chinadaily.com.cn


Share this story

CHINA DAILY
HONG KONG NEWS
OPEN
Please click in the upper right corner to open it in your browser !