If one can achieve results, a sales position often offers better income and future prospects than technical roles, and it also helps develop one's personality.
When you want something, you need to think clearly about your choices and learn to cherish them, much like the attitude required in marriage.
Believe that No choice is absolutely better or worse; people often feel that what they did not choose would have been better.
No matter your age or company, you should focus on developing your own “value of usefulness.” This value can be divided into three levels: first, enduring what others cannot endure; second, doing what others cannot do; third, thinking what others cannot think.
Work and life should be separated. Do not let fluctuations at work completely affect your mood, as this is unhealthy. The first priority is to enjoy life rather than forcing yourself for certain goals. As the saying goes on airplanes: “Before you help others put on an oxygen mask, put on your own first,” even if the other person is your family member.
The question of how to gain happiness and wealth is complex and has no simple answer. Most young people lack careers and money but have strong desires, leaving them at a low point in life. The real purpose is to help people find ways out of this low point, not to carry them out directly.
In fact, any path can be walked well; what matters is not what you do, but how you do it.
Whether pursuing risk or ideals, one must be mentally prepared: if you choose risk, accept the possibility of loss; if you pursue ideals, accept the possibility of failure. If you always view things pessimistically—worrying about the future when pursuing ideals, or feeling constrained when pursuing material goals—you will fall into contradiction. In life, being able to focus and do one thing well is already remarkable; wanting everything often results in gaining nothing.