Lucky in love three times
Updated: 2014-11-14 15:53
By Zhou Wenting(Shanghai Star)
|
||||||||
Lu Xin has always been attracted to tall men, and when she met Yang Yixiu, they clicked. Photo provided to Shanghai Star |
Lu Xin has three important men in her life, her father, her brother and now her husband-to-be. Zhou Wenting meets a girl who has plenty of people looking out for her.
Everybody wants to have love in his or her life - whether it is from family or a romantic partner. Lu Xin is lucky to be adored by three men. She was brought up by a loving father, accompanied and guided by an elder brother and now she has found her Mr Right.
Determined father
Lu Xin's mother fell pregnant when her son was 9-years-old and a second child was forbidden under the family planning policy of the 1980s. Even though violating the policy would mean Lu Zuyin, the father, would be dismissed from the Party and lose his job at a State-owned enterprise, the family was determined to keep the child.
"I'm an adopted child and I know how bitter it is to be abandoned. I won't let that happen to my child," says Lu Zuyin, 60.
The happiness of having a son and a daughter after the girl was born distracted the father from the pain of losing his job. However, the parents were devastated to discover their newborn daughter suffered from a congenital dislocation of the right knee.
"Nobody could promise success to cure my girl of this rare disease, but I didn't want to give up. I would not leave the baby with any regrets even if I have to surrender my last resources to wager on her future," says the father.
Lu clearly remembers her father taking her to many hospitals, one after another, to seek medical advice. "I couldn't even walk when I was in kindergarten,” says Lu, who is now a 26-year-old freelancer.
Some neighbors advised her father to abandon the child, a suggestion he firmly refuted. "She's my precious daughter who I got after making sacrifices in work. Moreover, nobody would take her for medical treatment if they adopted her," Lu Zuyin says.
After years of medical treatment, Lu Xin began to learn to walk at 6. Her father had spent all his savings and had debts of about 80,000 yuan ($13,000).
"All my neighbors called me 'Santana’ at that time because the car model had just been introduced to China and cost nearly 200,000 yuan," says Lu, who can now run and jump just like anyone else.
- S. Korea to hold drill in islets disputed with Japan: Seoul
- China, Pakistan pledge to strengthen air force cooperation
- B20 urges G20 to make bold commitments for growth, jobs
- Britain to introduce tough new foreign fighter laws
- World's tallest man meets world's shortest man
- Lang Lang honored with German award
- Premier Li pledges to strengthen cooperation with India
- Lang Lang honored with German award
- Airshow China soars to success in Zhuhai
- The most people dine on the beds
- Dangling workers rescued from World Trade Center
- Long-term visas issued for China, US citizens
- Long-term visas issued for China, US citizens
- Culture Insider: Chic items in ancient China
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
China pushes for code at South China Sea |
Forbes sees Xi as world's third most powerful person |
Special: APEC China 2014 |
Reporting on the route to Tibet |
Young students seek a different class of education |
Foundations of financial folly |
Today's Top News
US spying scheme targets Americans' cellphones
The Waldorf's hefty price tag
China, US to build milk-powder plant in Kansas
China, ASEAN set goal for upgrading FTA
Country pushes for code at South China Sea
Beijing wants to keep 'APEC blue'
US, China reach landmark pacts
Youth urged to get politically involved
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |