China Daily (Hong Kong)

Doing math every day may add to longevity

Online

- Contact the writer at nelly@chinadaily.com.cn

Asians are known the world over as being “good at math”. This is a stereotype perpetuate­d by popular culture in the West.

But is there some truth to it? Probably, and I can see how it happens. I’ve observed that in daily life, Chinese people do more math than those in the United States. In fact, one can even say daily life in China is an ongoing math test. I can think of three examples, starting with shopping.

Walk into any department store in Beijing, chances are there is a sale going on. You will see signs with a single digit number and a Chinese character prominentl­y displayed next to the sale prod- ucts. Some shoppers may jump to the conclusion that 70 percent must mean a 70 percent discount. Alas, the Chinese system encourages shoppers to go one extra step in calculatin­g their discount: i.e., 70 percent means you pay 70 percent, resulting in a 30 percent discount. Some adults in the West couldn’t do this simple math in their heads. Because, why would you need to? We left all that behind in elementary school.

Another example is the loyalty or membership card, offered by many retailers, dentists, hair salons and massage parlors, just to name a few. But signing up requires you to do math quickly in your head. The more you spend up front, the bigger the discount, a not uncommon sales strategy. But commit at your own risk. If that business goes under, you will not be refunded, nor will you even be notified.

Shopping for groceries was among the early challenges we encountere­d in Beijing. Trying to buy milk and yogurt at the local supermarke­t almost turned into an internatio­nal incident when, upon seeing all the expired dates throughout the dairy section, I demanded to see a manager to bring it to his attention. In vain, of course, as the language barrier prevented us from communicat­ing effectivel­y.

Later, a friend explained that those were production dates, not expiration dates, as I had assumed. She also showed me where they helpfully printed the shelf life of each product. So, to put it in US terms, production date + shelf life = expiration date. Again, they are encouragin­g shoppers to do math.

Newcomers to China will no doubt be confused about this system, which none of my Chinese friends seems to think twice about. But as an American, it was all very taxing until I got clued in.

I often felt put out that I had to do math when I simply wanted to buy stuff.

But now that I’ve been here a while, I see the wisdom in such a system. Could it be how Chinese people stay sharp into old age? After all, using your brain with word games and riddles is believed to be a countermea­sure against the onset of Alzheimer’s disease and other age-related ailments.

It appears that in China, they’ve incorporat­ed into ordinary daily life a brilliant system where nobody forgets their early math lessons.

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 ??  ?? Nelly Min Second Thoughts
Nelly Min Second Thoughts

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