DOWN TO EARTH
Why a new generation is seeking solitude and spiritualitity outside the city
告别都市,现代隐士的别样生活
You ask me why I dwell in the green mountains, I smile and make no reply for my heart is free of care. As the peach blossom flows downstream into the unknown, I have a world apart that is not among men
— Green Mountain, Li Bai
For the past three decades, China has embraced a breakneck economic model that has prioritized three main values—family, fortune, and face. Some 690 million of China’s total 1.35-billion population now live in cities, where career prospects are considered greater, and economists expect 300 million more to follow in the next 15years; ninety percent now own their own homes, one of the highest rates in the world. Increasingly, though, young people are turning away from the priorities of their parents. They’re less concerned with GDP growth and stability than they are with quality of life, a better environment and a strong sense of personal fulfillment.
As the cities fill with migrants, many in the middle class feel squeezed, left to wonder if there’s much more to life than morning commutes, marriage and mortgage payments. For some, it’s simply about giving greater spiritual meaning to their daily lives; others favor aspects of China’s ancient past over the moral vacuum of its urban materialism. And increasingly, many seek to find a balance in between—pursuing entrepreneurial ambitions without sacrificing the eternal human desire for the peace and solitude of “the green mountains…a world apart.”