Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - Brother Cui from North America talks about studying abroad: Which Chinese people do better in the United States?

Brother Cui from North America talks about studying abroad: Which Chinese people do better in the United States?

It can be seen that all the Yanhuang grandchildren who have done well in the United States have turned the charm of China into their own charm. Once they master this skill, their English is extremely bad, and even their English is very poor. Even if you don’t speak English, you can still be popular and drink spicy food in the United States. You said, if you send your child to the United States at a very young age, where does his Chinese talent come from? As time goes by, he has half-learned American culture, and has almost forgotten Chinese. He doesn’t know anything about Chinese culture. Neither Chinese nor foreign, they are politely called trash snacks everywhere. Brother Cui from North America, I think it’s best to let your children finish college and graduate school in China, learn Chinese even after a stroke and hemiplegia, and then choose a slightly better American university to study for a Ph.D., and directly apply to an American university after graduation. company. The advantage of this is that it has a higher starting point, less detours, and less money. In the United States, a bachelor's degree and a master's degree are not that important. What matters is whether you have a doctorate. This is a stepping stone to becoming a senior executive in a large company. As long as you get a Ph.D., no one will care about you even if your undergraduate university is not an Ivy League school or even if there is no grass growing on campus. This is called a shortcut, and some people say it is a secret. Generally, few people spread the word. If I were not truly patriotic, I would probably not tell it even if I was beaten to death. What I say may make many people born in the 80s and 90s sad, because they may want to be pure Americans, forget all about the Chinese language, Chinese customs, and all the bad things in Chinese history, and become proud and arrogant American citizens. Son, your uncle Cui from North America also thought this way 25 years ago. However, the ironclad reality reminds me every day: the more Chinese you are, the cooler Americans think you are; the more Chinese you are, the more valuable they think you are. Let’s just talk about our senior engineers at Microsoft and Boeing in Seattle. The higher-ranking Chinese people are, the more they insist on using their Chinese names. For example, Microsoft Global Vice President Lu Qi, his English name is Qi Lu. This was not the case more than 20 years ago. When Chinese people arrived in the United States, they first gave them American names, such as Tom, Mike, and Donald Duck. Americans today think Chinese names are cool and classy. If you want to find a job in the United States in the future, you will have a deep understanding: you are also a police officer, just because you can speak Chinese, your salary is higher than that of an American police officer at the same level; you are also a public relations officer at the airport, just because you can speak Mandarin and If you speak Cantonese, you will get twice as much salary as your American counterparts. I think back then, Brother Cui and I were working as an extra in New York. Just because I looked vicious, could do a few kung fu gestures, and could speak Chinese, I was chosen by an American director to be a bank robber. My salary rose from five dollars an hour. To seventeen dollars, give me something beautiful. It's not easy to get along abroad. You can only get along well if you are better than others. Take a good look at the combination of the word "mix" to see if there is a word "bia" in it. Today's China, whether in terms of soft power or hard power, can give you enough capital to compete with immigrants from other countries. We should be grateful that we are Chinese nationals. You said that if we were born in the wrong child and became a national of Cambodia, Afghanistan, Zimbabwe or North Korea, we would definitely be more unjust than Dou E in this life. Of course, some people will say that I can still do well in the United States without relying on my Chinese background. I admit that there are such people, but I can’t name a few people who have made their fortune without relying on China, which means that not many people know about it. How well they mix. Maybe they are really doing very well; but no matter how well they do, if no other Chinese people know about it, no one applauds, no one is envious, jealous, and hateful, then it is all in vain. The Chinese value gaining both fame and fortune and leaving a name in history. It would be better to be dead than to have profit but no fame. In order to prevent tragedies from happening, someone invented WeChat, which allows well-off Chinese people to show off every day what their little kids are eating, how loving their husbands are to them, and which far-flung countries they have enough money to travel to. Yes, I picked up such a young girl again, wait, wait, wait. We Chinese must show off, because our lives are not lived for ourselves, but for others. We don’t care about eating delicious food alone, we care more about having others watch when we eat delicious food. (The third famous quote by Brother Cui has been registered all over the world.) Forget it, let me recite this quote in the end: We all come from all over the world and came to the United States for the same ulterior goal.

(Editor:dq1964)