“Don’t you think it’s terrible? He studied electronics and got a high degree, but he doesn’t have a job.”
The expressionlessness of the graduate is probably not due to his natural temperament. I believe that by nature he is a cheerful fellow.
For now, all he can do is work as a waiter in a small restaurant. From morning to night, he listens to customers’ whimsical orders and inputs them into the terminal.
He takes the food out of the kitchen onto a tray and carries it to the customer’s table, then runs to another customer yelling something.
His knowledge of electronics is irrelevant to his daily life.
Israel and Palestinian militants declare Gaza truce | Reuters… Israeli forces pounded Palestinian targets through the weekend, …
- Can things progress without friction?
- One of the conditions for the relatively easy implementation of the act of change or progress is that it be gradual.
When something progresses easily, there is no noticeable friction. However, it is doubtful whether such a thing is real progress.
Because we often find that after making slow progress in something, we have made no progress at all.
“Please keep everything confidential about what just happened and what I said.”
The expressionless man begged me with an unusually embarrassed expression. He had quarreled with a customer.
As I expected, the customers who quarreled with him were students attending a school near the restaurant.
All students have one thing in common. That is, they still do not realize that they will not be able to find an ideal job after graduating from school.
He must have been annoyed by such optimistic students. That’s a given, isn’t it?
- What are the prerequisites for genuine progress?
- Real progress is always accompanied by intense friction. No real progress occurs without intense friction or strife.
Because progress comes after destruction.
The appearance of college students who put only drinks on the table, open notebooks and textbooks, and smile is just like him until last year. As a person who knew the reality, he must have wanted to give some sincere advice, not to argue with current university students.
That’s all for today’s post. Thank you
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