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CHINA
A Billion Men, Zero Permission to Break Down. That Changes Now.
Men in China are settling. Elder X has been through bipolar, psych wards, religious trauma, and came out the other side. He gives personal advice — not therapy — for $250/week. Elder X speaks English. Submit your message in your language. He will respond to every person. We will use translation tools to communicate.
An estimated 30 million "surplus" men exist due to the gender imbalance from the one-child policy
The 996 work culture (9am-9pm, 6 days) is standard in tech and many industries
Male suicide rates in rural China are significantly elevated
China has approximately 3 psychiatrists per 100,000 people, far below demand
Over 200 million men are internal migrants (liudong renkou), separated from families
The Little Emperor Under Siege: Chinese masculinity has been distorted by the one-child policy into the "little emperor" — a man who bears the entire hope of two parents and four grandparents, with no siblings to share the weight. He must score high on the gaokao, secure a prestigious job, buy an apartment (essential for marriage), and produce a grandchild — in a society where the gender imbalance means 30+ million men will never find a wife. The tang ping (lying flat) and bai lan (let it rot) movements represent men who have calculated that the game is unwinnable and refused to play.
China's one-child policy (1980-2015) created a masculine crisis of unprecedented scale: an estimated 30 million men who will never marry because there simply aren't enough women. These "bare branches" (guanggun) face a life sentence of involuntary singlehood in a culture where marriage and fatherhood are the benchmarks of adult masculinity. In rural villages, the bride price has inflated to the equivalent of years of income, and men without sufficient wealth — no apartment, no car, no savings — are automatically disqualified from the marriage market.
The tang ping (lying flat) movement is China's equivalent of Japan's hikikomori, but with a political dimension that makes it genuinely threatening to the state. Young men who refuse to participate in the 996 grind — who choose minimal work, minimal consumption, and minimal reproduction — are making a political statement in a system that depends on their productivity and compliance. The government has attempted to suppress tang ping discussion online, recognizing that male disengagement threatens economic growth. Meanwhile, the 200+ million internal migrants — men who leave rural homes for factory cities like Shenzhen and Dongguan — live in dormitories, work assembly lines, and send money home to children they see once a year during Spring Festival. Their sacrifice powers the world's factory floor, and their isolation powers a mental health crisis that the Chinese healthcare system is decades away from being able to address.
Chinese masculinity is filial duty scaled to a billion — men are expected to support parents, provide for families, and power an economy, all while showing nothing but strength.
996 work culture treats exhaustion as dedication and burnout as weakness
One-child policy created "little emperor" pressure — sole provider, sole hope
Bride price and housing costs make marriage financially devastating
Lying flat (tang ping) and let-it-rot (bai lan) movements reflect male despair
Government surveillance makes organizing around male mental health dangerous
CITY COVERAGE IN CHINA
220 city pages indexed
Shanghai
22.3M people
Beijing
11.7M people
Tianjin
11.1M people
Guangzhou
11.1M people
Shenzhen
10.4M people
Wuhan
9.8M people
Dongguan
8.0M people
Chongqing
7.5M people
Chengdu
7.4M people
Nanjing
7.2M people
Nanchong
7.2M people
Xi’an
6.5M people
Shenyang
6.3M people
Hangzhou
6.2M people
Harbin
5.9M people
Tai’an
5.5M people
Suzhou
5.3M people
Shantou
5.3M people
Jinan
4.3M people
Zhengzhou
4.3M people
Changchun
4.2M people
Dalian
4.1M people
Kunming
3.9M people
Qingdao
3.7M people
Foshan
3.6M people
Puyang
3.6M people
Wuxi
3.5M people
Xiamen
3.5M people
Tianshui
3.5M people
Ningbo
3.5M people
Shiyan
3.5M people
Taiyuan
3.4M people
Tangshan
3.4M people
Hefei
3.3M people
Zibo
3.1M people
Zhongshan
3.1M people
Changsha
3.1M people
Ürümqi
3.0M people
Shijiazhuang
2.8M people
Lanzhou
2.6M people
Yunfu
2.6M people
Nanchang
2.4M people
Dadonghai
2.0M people
Ordos
1.9M people
Jilin
1.9M people
Bayan Nur
1.8M people
Kunshan
1.6M people
Xinyang
1.6M people
Fushun
1.4M people
Luoyang
1.4M people
Guankou
1.4M people
Handan
1.4M people
Baotou
1.3M people
Xuchang
1.3M people
Yueyang
1.2M people
Anshan
1.2M people
Tongshan
1.2M people
Fuzhou
1.2M people
Guiyang
1.2M people
Lijiang
1.1M people
NO ESTAS SOLO
Chinese masculinity is filial duty scaled to a billion — men are expected to support parents, provide for families, and power an economy, all while showing nothing but strength.
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