[Life] The Untold Truth of China's Work Culture

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  • Опубликовано: 13 апр 2023
  • Join me as I share my 35-year journey and China's work culture, exploring challenges faced by vulnerable groups, and promoting empathy and understanding. Let's gain fresh insights into life in China. If you enjoy the video, please like, share, and subscribe for more content.
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Комментарии • 16

  • @singleplayergamerr
    @singleplayergamerr 9 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you so much for your video. You are very well spoken in English!! I have been waiting years for a Chinese content creator born in Mainland China to make videos because it is crucial for foreigners to see their perspective. Your videos are so valuable! Thank you so much. I am a black female American who want to visit China one day and videos like this are a reason why I want to go to meet people like you!! People who know their culture!

    • @user-jc2we4sn1i
      @user-jc2we4sn1i 9 дней назад

      Cheng Ho transliterated Wade Giles or Zheng He transliterated Pinyin was a Ming Dynasty professional adventurer who brought wives back to China from South Africa to alleviate China's constant wife shortages so Hottentots or Kung often have Asian faces so it was not until Queen Victoria and Sun Yatsen signed treaties to end how at one time it was a social norm of how navies were pirates.

  • @regalcompendium
    @regalcompendium Год назад +4

    I just wanted to wholeheartedly thank you for sharing your work conditions with us in Guangzhou. I really appreciate this as I had a chance to move there a while back and I was always wondering what the environment would be. I have now watched a couple of your videos and became a subscriber. Please continue making more content around this topic as I think it would help enlighten your viewers such as myself. Thanks again!

    • @AChinesetranslator
      @AChinesetranslator  Год назад +1

      Honestly, as a regular person like myself, most days are pretty ordinary. Talking about my job situation in Guangzhou might sound like a simple thing, but it's actually a reflection of my own experiences in recent weeks or years. That's why it's not possible for me to churn out videos about employment issues super frequently, like updating them every 1-3 days.
      But here's the thing: whenever I stumble upon RUclips comments about me and think about why I learned English, I can't resist grabbing a notebook and jotting down some valuable insights. It's funny how watching an episode of "Life in Pieces" can trigger memories of my past work experiences and motivate me to share even more. So, thanks a lot! Don't worry; I'll make sure to keep you updated.

    • @regalcompendium
      @regalcompendium Год назад +1

      @@AChinesetranslator Hi Friend, I fully understand you won't be to produce new videos frequently and I didn't expect you to. I just want to say how valuable your videos are to me when you share your thoughts and experience with us. I have always wondered what my life would be like if I moved to Guangzhou 15 years ago. You really made me think would I really enjoy the working environment there (I live in Canada). Nonetheless, I really enjoy your thoughts and reflections.

  • @thatboyunfazed99
    @thatboyunfazed99 10 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you, very refreshing to see like minded people. It's a shame we're far apart, but it still makes me happy to know they exist.

  • @lukasfoo
    @lukasfoo Год назад +2

    Hello from the USA. Thanks for sharing your thoughts. I was surprised by your charitable giving to the homeless and attendance at Mass, both of which are not common in China, to my understanding.

    • @AChinesetranslator
      @AChinesetranslator  Год назад +1

      Honestly, if I had a 9-5 job, I don't think I would be doing this. But as a freelancer, I have the flexibility to explore different avenues. I think what I have to offer is unique and authentic, and while my channel may not have a huge following, I believe it can bring you something different than what mainstream media offers. Everything in the world seems so polarized these days, but what I bring to the table is something in between - shades of gray that are often overlooked.

    • @lukasfoo
      @lukasfoo Год назад +1

      @@AChinesetranslator You do offer a unique perspective on life in China. I think we in America enjoy learning about how people on the other side of the world live their daily lives. Please do more and don't give up. Your channel will grow. Give each video an interesting title to attract more of an audience. Best wishes.

    • @user-jc2we4sn1i
      @user-jc2we4sn1i 9 дней назад

      How ironic since a racial epithet originated from how Chinese would beg for rice when a seaplane arrived to also remember how China has feng shui geomancers along with ancestral shrines of how Bruce Lee's family had to seek refuge in Hong Kong so later he went to American West Coast in search of his father Considering how Chinese are the few who still believe in families while elsewhere it went the way of royalty.

  • @natapattawanyapote2911
    @natapattawanyapote2911 10 месяцев назад

    I totally agree with you.

  • @jimmyfang5346
    @jimmyfang5346 Год назад +2

    In deed, people are curious.
    Check out Niki from Russia, he talks about Russia in youtube and make enough money from this.
    Hope it may enlight your mind as well.

  • @user-jc2we4sn1i
    @user-jc2we4sn1i 9 дней назад

    Mainland China is of a Brobdingnagian population of an Asimov bathroom metaphor analogous to perception of a gigantic teenage girl using aerosol to layer over acne zits at before a dressing table vanity amid toiletries adjacent to plumbing fixtures upwind from Vancouver Seattle so one can selectively reach conclusions of generalities.

    • @user-jc2we4sn1i
      @user-jc2we4sn1i 9 дней назад

      However, working conditions in of China are often described similar to a Charles Dickens story of how March 2004 issue of "National Geographic" had a photo of how in of China hands were saponified into soap so some have even referred to China as "Xmas Sweat Shop".