The eyes can t lose hope, Mao Dingjuan s Choice is Better Than Effort .

Mondo Health Updated on 2024-02-01

Mao Dingjuan's "Choice is Better Than Effort" mainly from the perspective of work and life, in-depth understanding of the meaning of growth and the value of choice. This book aims to help readers have a clearer understanding of themselves and a more perfect plan for life. It emphasizes that every step of growth is a build-up of strength for success, and every choice is a picture of hope for the future.

1. British psychologist Sagai: People who wear one watch can always know the exact time, but people who wear two watches dare not determine the time at the moment.

2. Napoleon Hill: You're right, the whole world is right.

3. In the 70s, although Sony color TV was successful, but no one cared about it in the United States, the Minister of International Affairs, Ugi Zhao, found inspiration from a shepherd boy herding cattle, found a leading cow, and then he went to the largest retailer to understand the reasons and correct them one by one, and finally this retailer drove sales.

4. "Efficiency is 'doing things the right way', while efficiency is 'doing the right thing'. When you can't have both, you can maintain efficiency.

5. A thunderbolt burned down a manor, and his grandmother comforted him: Your eyes have lost their luster, how can you see hope in a pair of old eyes?Later, the owner went out to the market and found a lot of people buying charcoal, so he found a way out of the predicament.

6. Lee Kun-hee, President of Samsung: Except for his wife and children, everything has to change.

7. During the reign of Song Shenzong Xining, Zhao Bian, the new governor of Yuezhou, issued a notice that did not limit the price of grain, and grain merchants from all sides poured in, and then more people sold rice than bought rice, and the price of rice was limited in other places, so the people of Yuezhou only bought rice a little more expensive than other places.

8. In ancient times, a merchant exchanged garlic for gold in a place far away from civilization, and another merchant went to that place to sell green onions when he heard about it, and finally he exchanged it for garlic.

9. The Lion Responds to the Mouse's Challenge: If I accept your challenge, you will get the honor of having fought a duel with a lion, and I am ridiculed for having fought with a mouse!

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