share time: 2025-11-18 00:31:21
In 1980s northern Shanxi countryside, Lin Zhaodi was called a "burden" by her mother-in-law for having no dowry—her husband cowered in the corner smoking, and Chen Aqiang, who had jilted her, returned with an urban girlfriend to taunt: "You'll never get ahead." But Zhaodi refused to give up—she secretly learned to raise Angora rabbits from an educated youth, spent six months' egg savings on breeding rabbits, only to have her mother-in-law smash the cages. Just as she picked up the injured rabbits, Li Jianguo, the town enterprise office director, handed her a note: "The county animal husbandry station supports farmers—I signed you up." She persisted—cutting grass at midnight, learning epidemic prevention from a vet—and finally made her rabbit farm profitable, building the village's first brick house. Her mother-in-law wept holding the brown sugar eggs Zhaodi gave her, her husband dared to stand up for her, and Chen Aqiang's face turned green watching her teach villagers breeding techniques. And Li Jianguo's love letter made her realize: A woman's rise is living as her own light.
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