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Jia Meng used to keep a diary in Chinese. But one year
a__1__, the 14-year-old girl from Hei Longjiang began to write her diary
in E__2__, because Jia found her mother was reading her diary secretly.
She changed the language because her mother can’t read English. “It’s like
killing two birds with one stone.” said Jia, “My privacy (隐私) became safe and my English improves a lot.”
Jia’s mother is not the o__3__ mom who reads
her child’s diary. Recently, Renmin University of China had a national survey
among over 2, 3000 parents. The results s_4__that 40% of parents read
their children’s secrets. That’s why, like Jia, many teenagers try to find ways
to protect their privacy.
Wu Lei, 15, of Shanxi, keeps a diary, too. But he
doesn’t write them on the paper. He writes o__5__ which he thinks is
perfectly safe because his parents “know n__6__ about the Internet.”
Lu Huan, 13, of Guangdong, said her parents always
secretly listened to the talk b__7__ her friends and her on the
telephone in their room. To solve this p__8__, Lu asked her parents to
buy her a mobile phone.
“Parents want to know what is going on in their
children’s l__9__,” said Shao Xiazhen, a teenage expert in Beijing. “
But sometimes they go about it the wrong way.” Shao suggested to teenagers that
instead of hiding their secrets, t__10__ to parents is a better
solution. “If your parents know that you are safe, they’ll let you keep your
secrets.”