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Disappointed employees flock to psychologists
(China Daily)
Updated: 2005-01-31 16:32

**Schoolboy sleuth tracks unfaithful father

A Nanjing schoolboy tailed his father and then hired private detectives to get evidence to prove he was having an affair.

The lad decided to take matters into his own hands after discovering his father was planning to get a divorce.

His dad had begun seeing another woman three years earlier, wrecking what the boy, 15, regarded as his "happy family."

After gathering the necessary evidence of the husband's infidelity, the private detectives presented it to the wife, reports the Nanjing Morning Post.

**Innovative rehab village under construction

A village for HIV infected drug users is under construction in Taipei, Taiwan Province.

With dorms, classrooms, dining halls, outdoor recreational facilities and vegetable garden, the innovative project is expected to be completed in half a year.

The village will be free and open to HIV positive addicts who currently are rejected by other rehabilitation units. Initially it will house 30 males.

According to statistics, the island had 200 plus HIV positive drug addicts in 2004. Four years ago they numbered in single figures, reports Xinhuanet.com.

**Disappointed employees flock to psychologists

As the Chinese lunar New Year draws closer and employees open their annual bonus pay packets, psychologists in Fuzhou are being flooded with enquiries.

You may be forgiven for not seeing the connection between the two. The problem, it seems, lies with the long-standing tradition of employers rewarding staff with year-end bonuses.

But cuts in bonuses, for a variety of reasons, are impacting employees emotionally. Some feel aggrieved, while the self-confidence and sense of security of others are undermined.

And most who seek psychiatric help say they believe they are not fairly paid, reports Southeast Express.

Psychologists advise people to do more outdoor exercise and adjust their attitude towards life and work.

**Online romance unites brother and sister

A university undergraduate thought she had found the proverbial man of her dreams.

But she had a nasty shock when eventually she and her online love arranged a rendezvous. The boy who turned up was her kid brother, reports the China News Agency.

They "met" in the middle of 2004 when she was studying in Guangzhou and arranged to meet when she returned to her hometown in Zhejiang Province at the start of this year's university vacation.

**Pre-marital deal secures woman house

A not-so-blushing bride has slapped a legal ban on her rich husband's property in case he has an affair, reports the New Express.

The woman, in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province, has placed an order on her husband's house so that if he flies the marital nest, they will divorce and she will get the house.




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