Inspiring!
@SusieQQQ , Just read this. Great and quite inspiring.
I was valedictorian too in my graduate studies in the US with 4.0/4.0 GPA. Interestingly, It has not helped me much in my professional career, so far.http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/...ian_n_7697236.html?ncid=fcbklnkushpmg00000023
Another American Dream story. Ethiopian immigrant parents, father arrived unable to speak English...his daughter has just graduated valedictorian of her class and is going on to attend a top liberal arts college.
So how did you go go about try in to slice out your 'profitable share of the pie'?I was valedictorian too in my graduate studies in the US with 4.0/4.0 GPA. Interestingly, It has not helped me much in my professional career, so far.
I hear this quote from Richard Quest on CNN all the time. With my profits I can get a slice of the pie every now and then, and I am crazy about sweet stuff.So how did you go go about try in to slice out your 'profitable share of the pie'?
In my valedictory speech I quoted Jonny Wilkinson who was paraphrasing a Roman philosopher: "Luck - it is when an ability meets an opportunity".http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/...ian_n_7697236.html?ncid=fcbklnkushpmg00000023
Another American Dream story. Ethiopian immigrant parents, father arrived unable to speak English...his daughter has just graduated valedictorian of her class and is going on to attend a top liberal arts college.
OMG!I hear this quote from Richard Quest on CNN all the time. With my profits I can get a slice of the pie every now and then, and I am crazy about sweet stuff.
As I am frugal, I've been on a diet. I lost 12 kg in the last three month.
Trailblazing = 49% effort,49% talent and 2% luck.In my valedictory speech I quoted Jonny Wilkinson who was paraphrasing a Roman philosopher: "Luck - it is when an ability meets an opportunity".
I was valedictorian too in my graduate studies in the US with 4.0/4.0 GPA. Interestingly, It has not helped me much in my professional career, so far.
I am pretty sure the poor immigrants in the US are in a better position (eventhough they have to learn a new language), than the poorest of the poor in the original country. My parents are a single mother with two sons in the country where being poor was a standard, and we were below being poor.Yeah but your parents weren't poor immigrants who couldn't speak English.
I am pretty sure the poor immigrants in the US are in a better position (eventhough they have to learn a new language), than the poorest of the poor in the original country. My parents are a single mother with two sons in the country where being poor was a standard, and we were below being poor.
I had to wear some castoff light garments in -33 C, which is quite an experience. Cup of tea and a chunk of rye bread was my daily ration. Since I have been physically fit, I remeber fainting of starvation only several times.
My point is that for a lot of immigrants the minimum wage is an epic upgrade. And it follows that, since they are just so pathologically frugal, they can do much more than with much less (fund children's education while on minimum wage, for example).
They see opportunities where locals of comparable social status, who don't know any worse, see none.