Current location - Health Preservation Learning Network - Slimming men and women - Zhong Haoqun's wind is rustling.
Zhong Haoqun's wind is rustling.
Teacher Zhong said that he graduated and came to Guangdong Institute of Petrochemical Technology. That's 1988. He's only 23 years old. He said that in those days, watching the train fly over the Yangtze River like Youlong, he stuck his head out of the window and couldn't help shouting Jing Ke's Song of Xiao Shui: "The wind blows and the water cools, and the strong man is gone forever!" "I burst into tears. When he came to Maoming College, Mr. Zhong first worked as a student counselor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, took on the task of teaching Chinese, and then went to the factory to exercise for half a year. A year later, he was transferred to the library. In the school library, I undertook the classification and cataloging of humanities and social sciences books, and a few years later I undertook the teaching task of literature retrieval. When he first went to the library, he felt a little wasteful. However, later he figured it out and began to work hard. The ten years in the library is not only a decade in which Mr. Zhong took root at the grassroots level, but also a decade in which he extensively read and deeply understood the classics of Chinese studies. Teacher Zhong said that at that time, he often took Laozi's Tao Te Ching with him, and he learned wherever he went. Looking back, Mr. Zhong was filled with emotion. He said: "people should learn to be tolerant, not only to others, but also to the ups and downs in life." Laozi said,' goodness is like water, and water is the goodness of all things without dispute.' In adversity, people will feel bitter, but in retrospect, it is this kind of life experience of' hurting bones and hurting their minds' that makes people more broad-minded and flexible. Ten years in the library has laid a good foundation for Mr. Zhong's future teaching work and the road of carrying forward the wisdom of Chinese studies.