I know two Chinese families; one lives in New York the other in London. Each has a child, a boy of eighteen and a girl of fifteen.
The New York couple’s son is studying medicine with the intention of becoming a doctor: I say his intention when in fact it’s his mother’s because it seems that doctors’ are looked up to as the epitome of social and academic success in China. Being in regular contact by phone with the family, I know that the boy is working himself to a frazzle in pursuit of his mother’s obsession.
A couple of days ago, I had a call from the girl’s mother who said that her daughter was now studying for her GCSE exams but that there was a problem with her daughter adamantly refusing to follow the suggestion that she too might consider medicine as a future profession as she had a loathing of all things medical.
I immediately took the child’s side and said it was quite wrong to try to force her into something that she had no inclination for.
The Chinese tiger mother has become a cliché but, while it’s obvious that most people want their children to succeed academically, surely a child’s working life shouldn’t be foisted on them at the behest of the parents.



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