The Daily Mail, Pakistan
Pandemic changes people’s everyday habits & rituals
By Ji Jing  ·  2020-10-08  ·   Source: Daily Mail

As a senior manager at a training institution in north China, Chang Qing used to have a hectic schedule, which left her no time for cooking. But since the novel coronavirus outbreak, which has forced people to stay indoor till it is brought under complete control, she has transformed into a chef. She cooks regularly at home now and often posts photos of the dishes on social networking platforms.

“I follow a healthier diet now,” Chang, who used to eat out or order food online in the past, told Shijiazhuang-based Hebei Daily. “I am going to maintain a healthy diet even after the epidemic is over and I go back to my normal work schedule.”

Like Chang, many people are cooking more often at home as many restaurants still remain closed and many are worried about the safety of delivered food.

According to data released by food delivery company Meituan-Dianping on February 19, the number of searches for baking tools and materials jumped more than 100 times during the Spring Festival holiday period, which lasted from January 24 to February 2 this year. The sale of yeast, another baking ingredient, increased nearly forty-fold and dumpling wraps over seven times. Many respondents reported making dumplings and bread at home, while making cakes in a rice cooker also became a fad.

The enforced stay at home has also become quality time spent with parents and other family members, especially for those who work outside their hometown.

Liu Yizhou, who works in Beijing, went home in Hengshui in north China for the Spring Festival and has been held up there by the outbreak. While the entire family stays mostly at home, cooking has become a stronger bonding factor for them. Every day Liu goes out to buy vegetables, his wife helps him wash them, and his mother cooks. Over their meals, the whole family shares news they find interesting. Liu said he had never spent so much time with his family for years.

Moreover, in recent months, people have also begun to read more. The photograph of a patient reading The Origins of Political Order: From Prehuman Times to the French Revolution, a book by American political scientist Francis Fukuyama, in a temporary hospital in Wuhan, the city ravaged by the epidemic, went viral last month. The 39-year-old reader’s composure in the face of the epidemic made netizens admire him. A teacher at Florida State University in the U.S., identified only by his surname Fu, he came to Wuhan to visit his parents, where he got infected. He was cured after over 20 days’ treatment in hospital.

“People have been feeling anxious during the epidemic and the anxiety becomes even more acute when they browse news about the epidemic. It was not until I saw the photo that I realized reading can help me calm down,” Zheng Yushan, who works with a cultural institution in Hebei Province, told Hebei Daily. Zheng said before the epidemic, being busy with his work, he read mostly in a fragmented way, so it usually took him over 10 days or even a month to finish a book. Now with more time and being more focused, he can finish reading one or even two books in a day.

Books on epidemics and medicine were among the most searched ones, according to data service provider Shenzhen Hexun Huagu Information Technology Co. Ltd. Its big data shows that 3.76 million active users of WeRead, an online community for book lovers, spent 70 minutes on average reading on the platform every day at the end of February.  

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