xi's moments
Home | Society

Volunteering straight from the heart

By ZHANG YANGFEI | China Daily Global | Updated: 2020-03-13 09:06

Ming works at the construction site of Leishenshan Hospital in Wuhan. CHINA DAILY

Volunteering

On Jan 31, Ming learned from one of his former classmates who works in construction that the hospital builders were recruiting workers. He signed up without hesitation.

Ming's motivation for joining in was personal, and also risky.

Since he was a child he has suffered from cardiac illness and has undergone heart surgery several times.

During the Chinese New Year holiday 10 years ago, he fell ill again and went to a hospital. But it had a shortage of beds and he waited for three days, sleeping in an aisle, before finally being allocated a bed.

Ming still has major heart and lung problems. "Because I had experienced the pain of not being offered a hospital bed I knew how patients felt," Ming said of his offer to volunteer.

Even though his parents strongly objected to his decision to help build Leishenshan Hospital, Ming set off to the construction site on Jan 31.

He had never worked in construction before.

Due to his physical condition, Ming took on less strenuous work such as laying optical cables and wires. His daily routine consisted of rising at 6:30 am, walking 2.5 kilometers from his dormitory to the site, having breakfast, and starting work at 7:30 am.

He and the other builders ate at noon, rested for an hour, then resumed work. At 5 pm they had dinner then worked until 10:30 pm. After finishing work they walked back to the dormitory to rest.

Job done

The construction work was finished on Feb 5, and the hospital was ready to accept patients on Feb 8.

When Ming left Leishenshan Hospital on a company bus with other construction workers, traffic police saluted them and praised them as heroes.

Ming said he felt deeply touched and proud.

"I was extremely happy when I returned home," he said.

"I felt I had created a miracle in my life."

After returning home, Ming put himself in isolation. He asked his family not to touch anything that he had used.

His father helped clean the old toilet located outside the house so Ming could use it. Ming also built a wooden barrier between his van and the house, not only as a physical deterrent, but also a mental reminder to stay away.

Every morning, his family would leave hot water beside the barrier for Ming to wash. At mealtime, they would put the food in disposable containers and place them outside for him to collect. Family members, including his father and older brother, sat on the footsteps of the house and chatted with Ming to keep him company.

On Feb 20, he posted a video of his life in isolation on his social media account with the comment: "The epidemic has isolated people, but it cannot isolate our lives. Be joyful every day, everything is normal".

Ming finished his isolation on Feb 23 and went back indoors. He said he was happy to reunite with his wife and family but he will continue self quarantine until the epidemic is over.

"I will only move when Wuhan announces that the epidemic is resolved," he said, adding he hoped it would end soon so he could return to Beijing.

|<< Previous 1 2   
Global Edition
BACK TO THE TOP
Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349