We just graduated from college, in fact, we only know some of the theoretical knowledge. For the practice of what we experience is not enough. Experience is gained in practice out. So we have to experience each of our report to the attitude of gratitude, because whether it is good experience or bad experience can teach us something. They are our wealth.
With Europe pushing austerity measures on Greece in exchange for another round of bailouts, the Greek public in the streets responds with chants: "We won't pay." Faced with pain and suffering, they are contemplating suicide.
It is almost as if the script was lifted from Mel Brooks' film "Blazing Saddles." Cleavon Little's character faces a gun-wielding mob about to run him out of town -- or worse. To escape, he puts his gun to his own head and threatens to shoot unless members of the mob drop their guns first.
In this case, Europe is tired of bailing out Greece, having already done so once. In the Netherlands and Finland, nationalist parties have even called for Greece to leave the euro, angry that previous Greek governments lied to them about their level of deficit. That debt allowed Greece to bloat its federal payroll, with more than one in five Greeks employed by the government or a state-owned enterprise.
Wealth is actually in many ways, not only material wealth is the wealth and spiritual wealth is more important. Treat every day as the day came, I think we can get more wealth. In fact, a lot of things from our attitude, your attitude is right, the result is good. There is no absolute good or bad thing to say something, for some people is good, for others perhaps bad.
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