How are those who graduated and didn't go to the big city doing now?

The beginning of the new year is also the time when college students are preparing for their final exams.

Some students began intermittent efforts to read a semester's worth of textbooks in a week and then passed their final exams with flying colors.

For the senior party, there are essentially no finals left, and they're in the midst of an anxious period of internships, job hunting, and waiting for test scores.

Mu Hua graduated in the summer of 2016, and it's been a year and a half since she graduated, and she's considered to be in the good category of her fellow graduates.

Mu Hua is a liberal arts student, usually like to read literature, history and philosophy, and study current news.

He took the provincial civil service exam and the national civil service exam one after another in his senior year because he thought:

Graduates like us, who do not have the aura of a prestigious school, can't find a job by spelling out our resumes.

The two exams were successfully shortlisted for interviews, just short of an interview from the shore, however, he still lost in the national exam interviews, after the provincial exam interviews were accepted by a county authority.

In this way, Mu Hua is also considered to find a job, the school for the examination of civil servants or enter the state-owned enterprises graduates will mostly be praised, for entering the ordinary business graduates, not a word.

Perhaps in this kind of small university, some of the middle-aged and elderly people think that a graduate of this school into the organization can add a lot of light and color for the school.

Mu Hua signed a three-way agreement early after he was sure he would be hired, so he could go to work after graduation with his diploma and degree and his own suitcase.

Most of his classmates went to coastal cities or provincial cities, with only a few going to county towns.

With four months to go before graduation, Mu Hua didn't look for an internship related to his major, but chose to continue to go to the library every day to read books that he hadn't had time to read during his previous exam preparation.

Mu Hua is not a nerd, and he wants to take advantage of some of his last free time to rationalize his final campus life.

Mu Hua is lucky compared to other students who are still looking for jobs.

He doesn't have to go around casting resumes, and he doesn't have to contribute his ticket to the railroad transportation business.

Yes, those who are still on the road will also envy Muhua's job in a stable organization after graduation, even though it is only a small county.

After graduation, Muhua went home to visit his parents and old friends in his hometown, and then reported to a unit in another county.

Meanwhile, most of Muhua's classmates went to provincial cities or big cities on the coast.

As time went by, the class was not as lively as it used to be, and everyone seemed to be "addicted to making money".

Mu Hua feels more and more that he doesn't like it here, not because of the hard work of working overtime to make materials, but because he feels that he is surrounded by middle-aged and old people, and he's not used to working in this kind of old atmosphere.

The county is just so big, and you can run into leaders or coworkers after work.

Occasionally, when he had to go to the provincial capital, Muhua was always envious of this kind of place full of youth and opportunities.

Between jobs, older colleagues would always discuss how to bring up small children, how to learn new square dances, and what to eat to avoid high blood pressure in their groups, and Muhua and a few other young people usually didn't bother with this kind of news.

Once in a while, I see my classmates posting photos of the neon-flashing metropolis, and I'm always envious of them, and I hate that I had to go to the big city to get ahead of myself.

The low-rise buildings and old streets of the county town always make Mu Hua feel depressed.

Mu Hua gradually found that several other young colleagues also had this psychological condition, and although they also complained, no one ever made up their mind to leave

Saying one thing and doing another is the most important feature of Mu Hua's behavioral style.

Since he no longer likes it here, since there is no more running in this small county, it is decided that Muhua will finally choose to quit.

The resignation of civil servants, although already commonplace, still caused a stir in this small organization.

Family and friends persuaded him, and the leadership retained him, but in the end, Mu Hua chose to leave, and after a series of approval procedures, Mu Hua finally left that organization, and no longer retained the status of the system.

Mu Hua said:

While this is the age of the Internet, being on the edge of information still limits one's vision, and young people should go out.

When others are discussing the newly opened subway line, you only have to be silent; when others are discussing the newly opened commercial center, you only have to be silent.

These are probably what motivated Muwah to quit his job.

Mu Hua redid his resume after quitting his job and submitted it frequently on online job search platforms.

His only work experience was in the personnel department of an organization, and he encountered a lot of hurdles in his search for a job at a non-famous school.

Finally, he received a call from a dropship company inviting him for an interview. Luck favored MUHUA, and after passing several rounds of test interviews, he finally decided that he could stay with the company.

A week later, Muhua reported to the HR and administrative department of a dropship company in the province.

The company is a new taxi service company, there are no layers of leadership organization, no official tone of superior leaders, Mu Hua mood than before a lot of comfort.

Mu Hua said: now work rarely see people who leave work early, in the former authorities to work, five o'clock off the clock, some people four and a half on the go.

While work is now stressful, Muhua thinks it's good to have a head start and money to earn, but the key is to have a very different vision and social circle in the big city.

"In the past, it was close to 3,000 yuan a month, and not much at the end of the year. It's stable, but stable is only good for eating."

Mu Hua said the system is something that can also be retested later, there is no need to just graduated into it, especially such a small place.

Mu Hua has been working in his new city for more than half a year now, and his monthly salary is around seven thousand, which is more than twice what he used to earn.

At this level, he's now one of the best paid graduates in his class.