I have been in the army for 20 years, and I have been transferred to the local government for 10 years, and I have experienced many ups and downs, and occasionally when the spring breeze blows, but looking back now, it seems that everything is a floating cloud.
Why do you feel this way? It is that as I grow older and have insight into the world, I gradually understand that the company of my family is the greatest happiness.
Some of my comrades-in-arms retired from the army, some violated the family planning policy when they were young and were dealt with as demobilized, some chose to choose their own jobs, and some changed jobs to become civil servants. It can be seen how arrogant he was in the enterprise back then.
When I was in the army, I racked my brains with my colleagues over who would be transferred to the next level early, and one of my competitors went directly to the leader's house as a "temporary worker", as if he was a member of the family, doing all the work, and I really moved the leader. Once, when the leader's mother was sick, when he was carrying people down from the ambulance, he went directly under the stretcher in order to make the patient more comfortable, which stunned everyone at the time and moved his direct leader, needless to say, he was adjusted in advance.
As a cadre from other places without any background, the pressure of competition can be imagined. You don't have a father-in-law to speak for you, you don't know your leader in particular to support you, just by doing your job, how big can there be a gap between comrades?
I'm like Don Quixote wielding a sword in his hand. When I was drinking with someone who came above, I poured a teacup of high wine into my stomach without hesitation, and I couldn't show an uncomfortable expression on my face, so I wiped my mouth and sat down quickly, and I couldn't take a bite of the food, and my stomach hurt.
You seem to be a man, but you're nothing. As soon as the leader leaves, what should he do?
So, some of the things I experienced seem strange now, but in fact, they seem to be useless, but they just prove your character.
A fellow is very good to me, thinks that I don't have much heart, but can do work, maybe the orangutan sympathizes, so he gives some reminders from time to time. One year, there was a place for further study, and he told me as soon as he got the news, so that I could find the leader in charge in time to put forward my ideas, and I got the leader's consent one step faster, which later proved to be a study that changed my fate.
After returning from study, I was adjusted to a regiment-level cadre, which was a hurdle for many rural children, so I easily crossed it, but at this time, the fellow who helped me did not smoke a cigarette.
After I returned to the local area, in order to go further, I also argued with local comrades about right and wrong, and even had conflicts. I was even hesitant about whether to give gifts for my own future, and I understood everything, but I didn't have the strength, so I had to give up. What's more, once a troublesome organization came forward to explain that others did not covet **, so that I could not use the army's set of standards to measure local people. I gave up my principles and had to pretend to be deaf and dumb. How sensible it is now.
In the face of the upcoming retirement life, now that I think about it, I am ordinary, I have no quarrel with the world, I have food to eat every day, I have a bed to sleep, and my family life is quite happy, isn't it beautiful!