Beijing: The Chinese couple who are trapped on the date that never thanks for the locking of the virus has been relieved to find love, not Coronavirus, in the air and have agreed to tie the knot.
This is the second time this month that Chinese media has published reports about pairs on the date trapped by sudden locking rules but this one has a happier end.
Zhao Xiaoqing, a 28-year-old woman from Shaanxi Province, North China, thinking of her date in mid-December with a young man who lives in a different city will be a matter of one day where he will also get to know his family.
Young Chinese in small cities and rural communities often depend on family and friends to introduce potential matching and can meet their friend’s family at the same time.
“I never thought of staying that night, because it was quite awkward,” Zhao Xiaoqing, who met the man was only a second time, told Local Media Jimu News on Monday.
But the authorities in the city of Dating Xianyang suddenly ordered the lock because of a surge in a virus case, leaving the woman could not return home.
The man’s parents urged a partner to get engaged after just one week together but Zhao said he felt it was “too rushed.” Zhao said he was “not too interested” when he first saw the photo of the man named Zhao Fei but then thought he looked better in real life.
Although the initial awkward, the couple began to develop feelings of each other, and now have decided to get engaged.
“We are very good harmonious,” Zhao Xiaoqing, who is an Apple online trader, told Jimu News.
“I have to sell apples at Livestream at his house, but no matter how late it was he was always by my side.
I was very touched by this,” he said.
“Our soul is compatible, we get along well, and both of our parents are happy,” he said.
The story captures the imagination of the online audience.
But while some fainted over the parade was unrelenting, the others warned that the decision was in a hurry.
“Then after one or two years, you will get bored with each other and divorce.
I have seen too many of these types of flash marriage,” wrote one.
“Sis, think clearly about this,” Warn the others.
The story of Zhao became a viral in Chinese social media just a few days after another couple became the headlines to get caught up on a blind date throughout the week thanks to the Kuncian Covid.
Wang, a woman in Henan Province in Central China, has been trapped in her lavian apartment because she went to eat at home as their first date in early January.
But the romance hasn’t bloomed for Wang, who complained of his date as many as “wooden mannequins”.