The technique became popular
after two students at the Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University in Fujian
province uploaded pictures of themselves on Weibo. Chen Tang, 20 and her
roommate Huang Lu, 21, had been struggling with a huge workload and needed a
quick fix to fight the urge to nap. They had tried the regular methods –
caffeine, push-ups and cranking up the air-conditioning – but none of that
worked. That’s when they decided to hit the history books for a solution.
Chen and Huang read about
two famous Chinese scholars who practiced extreme methods to keep their minds
alert. One would stab himself with needles every time he started to get drowsy,
while the other would tie his hair to a beam in the ceiling so that it pulled
every time he nodded off. Chen saw merit in the second method and decided to
give it a try. “Chen is so keen to succeed that she decided to give the hair
trick a try, as you can see her hair is more than long enough,” said Huang, who
posted the pictures online.
“As we didn’t have a beam in
our dorm, she used the clothes dryer and claims it worked really well.” Chen
said that the trick helped her clear her mind. She plans to use it more often
in the future. “The preparation is boring, but the hanging hair practice makes
it interesting and I really feel much more energetic by studying this way,” she
said. After Huang put up the pictures, the hair-hanging technique seems to have
gone viral. Weibo is now full of photographs of Chinese students emulating
Chen.
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