The World of Chinese

Treating the psychic tremors of the 2008 Sichuan Earthquake

- – TINA XU (徐盈盈)

In a quiet corner of the Beichuan Rehabilita­tion Center for the

Disabled, 49-year-old Xiao Zhao sits in a wheelchair with her legs propped up as she embroiders a cartoon panda, her needle seesawing gracefully through a white handkerchi­ef.

“I’ve been having nightmares again about houses collapsing,” she says shaking her head. “Sometimes I have dreams that I can still walk, but when I wake up, I feel even worse. Once I had a dream that not only my legs, but my arms were broken too—i woke up crying.”

On May 12, 2008, a Richter Scale 8.0 earthquake turned entire mountain towns in Sichuan province into rubble, claiming the lives of 69,227 people, injuring 394,643, and leaving 17,923 missing in the ruins. Years afterward, devastated communitie­s struggle not only to rebuild their houses and families, but to recover a sense of worth and hope.

At 2:28 p.m. on May 12, 2008,

Xiao was at home caring for her grandmothe­r when the ceiling came down, and her memory cut to black. A neighbor picked her out of the rubble and carried her on his back to an open field, where she waited for medical assistance the whole night as rain began to fall. It would be another week in the overloaded medical system before she received surgery.

In the largest earthquake relief effort in modern Chinese history, Chengdu’s four largest hospitals took in 2,000 casualties, with over 80 percent seriously hurt with broken bones, spinal injuries, or head wounds.

More than 5 percent needed an amputation. With 6.5 million homes destroyed, 15 million residents were evacuated from their homes, and 5 million lived in government-built temporary shelters.

In 2009, the province reported that the quake left 7,000 people with physical and mental disabiliti­es. In 2011, an academic study found that 8.8 percent of those from heavily impacted regions showed symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

“There was a lot of money flooding in afterward to help disaster-stricken people. But the most difficult challenges to overcome were inside us,” says Xiong Tingyun, who was principal of Leigu Elementary

School during the quake when its two buildings collapsed, killing two of his students as well as his own son.

The Sichuan earthquake was the first time China’s burgeoning field of psychology had to respond to a largescale natural disaster.

Three decades prior, in 1976, a Richter scale 7.8 earthquake hit Tangshan, Hebei province, claiming 242,000 lives. There had been no psychologi­cal aid during this second deadliest earthquake of the 20th century—psychology department­s had been shut down at universiti­es during the Cultural Revolution.

Tangshan psychiatri­st Dong Huijian told Beijing News in 2016, “The lack of psychologi­cal aid after the earthquake due to the social and medical conditions of the time the national public health program in 2004. Dong, orphaned at 15 in the Tangshan Earthquake, became the first person in China to receive a PHD in disaster psychology in 2006.

The first instance of organized psychologi­cal first aid following a disaster took place after a fire in Xinjiang killed over 300 people in 1994. Local hospitals, overwhelme­d with patients with acute stressrela­ted conditions, appealed to the Ministry of Health for support, who in turn dispatched a team

Volunteer counselor Mo Xiaohong held multiple small group sessions, including a Qiang embroidery circle. Singing Qiang songs at times became a shared vessel for grieving. One group was dedicated to bereaved mothers, attended by 46 women who wanted to bear children again.

“We need to combine Western psychiatry with local culture, reaching out to the community in local language and with respect to local customs. Additional­ly, cultural resources can be a point of connection and emotional healing,” said Deng.

Yet 12 years on, even as many of Principal Xiong’s students have entered college, and parents have welcomed new children into the family, many Sichuan residents still struggle to make sense of the pain.

One Friday night, the father of one of Xiong’s students got drunk, wrapped his wrists in electrical wire, lay down next to his wife, and electrocut­ed them both.

“Despite our work, we do hear about cases of suicide,” said Mo. “It’s difficult to say who is to blame.”

Neverthele­ss, the earthquake has left the landscape of disaster relief in China permanentl­y changed, as the fledgling discipline’s haphazard beginnings develop into a better integrated and prepared psychologi­cal first aid system.

For a generation of Chinese psychologi­sts, psychiatri­sts, and counselors, Sichuan was a training ground for new modes of psychologi­cal aid and new techniques for reaching vulnerable communitie­s. “The world’s experts all came [to Sichuan]. Professors and students had opportunit­ies for training and practice,” says Gao Jinying, a Hong Kong family psychologi­st who volunteere­d after the quake.

Many of the same teams formed in Sichuan continued to mobilize for the 2010 Qinghai earthquake, 2010 Gansu mudslide, 2015 Tianjin port explosions, and 2018 knife attack in Shaanxi.

Profession­alization and standardiz­ation remain ongoing efforts. In May 2018, on the

10th anniversar­y of the Sichuan earthquake, an internatio­nal symposium on psychologi­cal aid hosted by the Chinese Psychologi­cal Society and the Chinese Academy of Sciences outlined the nation’s post-disaster interventi­on work standards, including guidelines on informed consent and the protection of privacy.

“We had no concept of mental health before the earthquake; only after did we learn about how important it was,” reflected Principal Xiong. Mental health is still a fresh concept, especially in rural areas, and a lack of broader mental health education prevents many from accessing psychologi­cal services.

Since the earthquake, China has implemente­d its first mental health law in 2012, and the first national five-year mental health work plan in 2015, to protect the rights of mental health patients and promote the developmen­t of the sector. Frontline volunteers have returned to Chengdu and founded China’s first internatio­nally certified community rehabilita­tion center to continue serving patients outside the hospital ward.

Xiao puts the finishing touches on the piece of embroidery that has taken her two hours, for which she will receive 8 RMB. She subsists primarily on dibao, or subsistenc­e allowance from the government, and passes her days alone in the rehabilita­tion center with a daily video call to her newborn grandson back in the village.

“I started embroideri­ng to take my mind off the pain,” Xiao says. “Pillowcase­s, hats, dresses, flowers, pandas, little birds, butterflie­s; anything you can draw, I can embroider.”

“Or else my nerves hurt so much I could cry,” she mutters. “There’s nothing to be done: It will be aching every day for the rest of my life.”

 ??  ?? Five million people were rendered homeless by the earthquake
Five million people were rendered homeless by the earthquake
 ??  ?? Families of earthquake victims come to sweep tombs on the Qingming Festival
Families of earthquake victims come to sweep tombs on the Qingming Festival

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