Jian Lili:Psychological Pioneer

来源 :China Pictorial | 被引量 : 0次 | 上传用户:dzxt720
下载到本地 , 更方便阅读
声明 : 本文档内容版权归属内容提供方 , 如果您对本文有版权争议 , 可与客服联系进行内容授权或下架
论文部分内容阅读
   Making Change
  In 2011, Jian Lili felt stuck. Born in 1985, Jian started elementary school at age four and university at 15. At 20, she received a master’s degree in cognitive neuroscience from University of London. Seen as a prodigy by many, Jian had already become a university psychological consultant by her twenties. However, she was far from content with her personal life as a young woman. She tried hard to make changes. She stayed active on Weibo, the Chinese equivalent of Twitter, joined an entrepreneur association of overseas returnees, and volunteered during her summer and winter breaks.
  In 2012, at an invitation from friends, she began answering psychological questions for a Douban group. Douban.com is a Chinese social networking site that records user information and content related to films, books, music, recent events and activities in Chinese cities. Different groups form around different activities or topics. While answering users’ questions, Jian found many common themes and decided to turn her replies into articles. After publishing several articles, she gained many fans and became popular on Chinese social media. Jian began to receive more and more emails asking for help with psychological problems. Quite a few websites, including guokr.com and 163.com, invited her to teach open online courses on psychology.


   New Opportunities
  Psychological counseling is a young industry in China. For a long time in China, anyone who visited a psychologist was deemed crazy. Chinese people tend to relate emotion to the macro environment. Personal emotional expressions removed from the overall environment are considered inappropriate and cause social alienation. In this theory, many Chinese tend towards self-adjustment over seeking professional help when they encounter psychological problems.
  However, during her several years of online psychological service, Jian has found that a growing number of Chinese people are seeking psychological help nowadays. In her online courses, Jian elaborated on such topics as depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder, autism, coping with emotions, and gender relationships. Jian answered many odd questions, such as “What kind of job and lifestyle are suitable for bipolar disorder sufferers?” and “I am an actor, and I recently developed an aversion to acting. Is this a manifestation of depression?”
  By early 2014, Jian had amassed more than 20,000 followers on Douban.com. Facing more and more emails asking for help, Jian and her friends established a simple website featuring short videos of psychologists she trusted. She hoped to refer those in need to suitable and trustworthy help. This move turned out to be the embryonic stage of her psychological consultation website jiandanxinli.com.   More life-changing opportunities emerged for Jian in 2014 when she discovered Draper University on the internet. Tim Draper, a well-known venture capitalist from Silicon Valley, founded the school that advocates students changing the world. The university had announced its immersive program in entrepreneurship and was providing scholarships. Jian applied for the program and soon got good news.
  During the seven-week residential program, Jian completed a wilderness survival adventure, topped the board of a sex toys selling competition, and shared stories with international classmates about the pressures faced by young Chinese women. When the program was almost over, it sponsored a graduation “road show” attended by a bunch of investors from Silicon Valley, where Jian spoke her heart. “I want to change the psychological therapy industry in China,” she declared. Before leaving the university, Jian met with Tim Draper in person for 10 minutes, tradition of the school. “I will invest in your program myself,” said the venture capitalist.


   Entrepreneurial Lifestyle
  Just two weeks after Jian returned to China, she received investments from China Growth Capital and ZhenFund successively. In June 2014, Jian quit her job at the university to launch jiandanxinli.com, the first mobile psychological counseling platform in China, heralding onset of her entrepreneurial journey which caused “world-shaking changes to her life,” in her own words.
  The greatest change was Jian’s deeper understanding of the psychological therapy industry. Jian believes her business led her to a fuller picture of the industry as a whole and the real needs as well as the real problems. And as a business insider, she earned a chance to help solve these problems by default.
  “The psychological counseling industry on the Chinese mainland is quite unique,”opines Jian. “From wartime, the ‘cultural revolution’ (1966-1976), reform and opening-up, economic lift-off, to the internet age, the country has witnessed drastic changes, which are seen in every household and person. Both the government and people are looking ahead and expect the industry to play its role. However, in China today, structure for the whole industry has yet to be established. Many problems have arisen alongside great opportunity. What we, the industry insiders, are doing at this moment, is tremendously important.” After more than a year of efforts, jiandanxinli.com has amassed a roster of 270 high-quality psychotherapists from all over the world. With verified professional qualifications, these counselors have been selected based on strict criteria and their devotion to providing reliable service. At the same time, Jian and her team are working with research teams from both the United States and China to produce new products and programs to promote the development of psychotherapy in China. Jian doesn’t know where her venture will take her or if it will even still exist in 10 years. However, she believes it doesn’t matter. “Jiandanxinli.com is just a tool to promote the development of China’s psychological counseling industry,” she concludes. “I hope that in 10 years, China will have more high-qualified practitioners working in a better environment for development.”

其他文献
Running Fever  On January 2, 2016, a gun heralded the start of the Xiamen International Marathon, where 32-year-old Yao Ruichong and his wife Jia Jia joined 30,000 other runners in beginning the New Y
期刊
Three years ago, Xi Jinping, General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC), met the press from home and abroad just after the formation of China’s new-generation cen
期刊
At the 2015 climate change confer- ence in Paris, China played an important role in achieving the Paris Agreement. At the opening ceremony of the conference, Chinese President Xi Jinping delivered a s
期刊
During a trip to Jiangsu Province, we had the opportunity to visit Taizhou People’s Hospital Community Medical Center, which is a pioneering structure for elderly care, especially in a relatively smal
期刊
The term “Online Silk Road” refers to the multi-faceted, multi-layered economic information belt, based on the internet+, that links countries along the Belt and Road to enhance network connection and
期刊
Nanyu Island is located in Dongshan County of Zhangzhou City, Fujian Province, in southern China. Its fine-sand beaches stretch some four miles; and its waters are striped thanks to varying depths. Wa
期刊
In a satellite image of China, a deep green patch in the southwestern part of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region marks Nonggang Reserve. It protects a large flourishing Karst forest which is home to man
期刊
On January 19, 2016, Chinese President Xi Jinping embarked on state visits to Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Iran in the Middle East. As two major ancient human civilizations, China and the Middle East were
期刊
At 10 a.m. on a late summer day, strong sunlight begins dispelling the early morning coolness, as green trees thrive in tranquil Purun Garden on Phoenix Mountain in suburban Beijing.  Purun Garden cov
期刊
With an astute grasp of both international and domestic situations, China’s diplomacy continued to forge ahead with a pioneering spirit, leaving a wake of major achievements and advances in many ways,
期刊