Hello Mr. myth2000, I admire your pertinent and detailed answers online. I am a mechanical graduate student, graduated in July this year, and now within the

Hello, owner!

Thank you very much for your question, because in answering your question, I have found a very wonderful friend. The answer upstairs is very, very wonderful, and that's what I've been saying all along, and I hope you don't ask questions by name, so why give up the whole forest because of this tree of mine. Baidu can be a lot of people, we still need to learn from all the strengths of a hundred words is right.

Slightsea's response has actually been very spot on, I even think lightsea is doing HR work or not, huh?

And thank you very much for lightsea's reply, I also have a lot of touching, although the reason they understand, but from other people's mouth out, always give themselves more touched.

My views and lightsea are completely consistent, please refer to lightsea's comments, I am here to simply add a few sentences, the owner will be considered as my tail continue sable it.

My thoughts on you are:

1. It is true that for a job, there are numerous skills required. Another friend just asked me what basic skills are needed to get a job, and I just can't describe it in a few words, and I'm afraid I didn't say it all in all my previous replies. Because each of you has individual differences, and there is also diversity in the types of jobs and positions, it is impossible to find a complete **** common point.

But there are some ****ty ones, and that's just a matter of combining your soft and hard skills. Although you say that you failed in the final physical examination, can you confirm that you did pass all your hard skill strengths as well? Because for some strong companies, they don't care much about the physical examination as an indicator. So first you must confirm that you have such strength to apply for the job, and the other party's refusal is not out of politeness on the pretext.

2. If you are strong enough, then I would say, please don't care too much about the hepatitis B issue. Previously, the limitations of medical development portrayed Hepatitis B as so intimidating that people with Hepatitis B were shut out of at least half of all careers. But medical development in recent years has proved that Hepatitis B is not transmitted through the ordinary food chain, so even the catering and service industries, which were strictly prohibited before, are now gradually opening up to Hepatitis B people. In Shanghai, it has been explicitly stipulated that employers should not use hepatitis B indicators as a reason for refusing to accept or sign a contract, and even officials have affirmed that hepatitis B and other diseases will no longer be included in the scope of the employment physical examination.

So you don't have to worry, I don't know if other coastal cities already have similar regulations, but at least Shanghai is certainly welcome.

3. As slightsea said, please let go of your baggage. Your experience just shows me that some people are still ignorant and some people are still backward. You don't need to take it out on yourself for someone else's ignorance, much less carry a heavy burden for it.

The reasoning behind career development is comprehensive, and resilience is a very important one.

I believe that you also have your own judgment of your own physical condition, and I also believe that you are loving yourself, then stick to your current lifestyle.

It's a good habit not to smoke or drink, and it's a good habit to work and rest regularly, so I hope you'll stick to it. I can tell you that my liver isn't very good, and although I don't have the virus, it's also a disease of my heart, and I don't have the regularity of working and resting, which is something I'd like to learn from you.

Keep your body in good shape, then with what I said above, your career reasoning can be very wide.

In the face of rejection, you have to learn to use your own posture. What I said above can totally be your argument, when you justify the official corresponding terms and regulations, you can see how the other party replies to you?

If the other party still insists, then do you think you will stay with such a company? Maybe your plea won't change anything, and maybe you won't actually go to the labor department and file a complaint because of it, but when you speak up in your own defense, that's building your own confidence and image.

You get sick just by God's will, we can't change it, but all the efforts of the latter are man-made, and no one knows what's going to happen at any given moment. But if you face it with a positive mindset and learn to respond to suffering with a smile, then I believe you will become a constant and solid person.

4. Finally, about your current career

I still don't recommend a career in the non-standard industry. As I've repeated many times, it may be relatively easy to find a job because there are more people working in the non-standard industry at the moment. For newcomers, there are benefits to doing non-standard for a while because of the set-up and the ability to be exposed to a large amount of content in a short period of time that you wouldn't have been able to in school, but the nature of this isn't that different from rotating jobs. Therefore, it is recommended that the time engaged is not too long, and once you have accumulated a certain amount of experience, you are still expected to jump out and change direction. In the coastal areas, there is a large amount of light industry and manufacturing, you can be exposed to the assembly line and quality management and other career direction.

My final advice to you is:

Spiritually, listen to all of lightsea's words well, let go of the burden of your thoughts, and at the same time, to stand up and be a man, and say out loud to yourself, "I can! I'm no worse than anyone else!"

Action, suggest that you can come to the coast, your disease for your work, I should say, as long as you maintain yourself properly, that will not have any impact. In view of the liver disease can not be tired, so you do not have to die to drill in the development and design departments, but do not go to the processing sector, because the conventional processing equipment will be a large number of industrial supplies, many of which are volatile, long time ago on the body will have some impact. Suggest that you can go in the direction of traditional mechanical engineers, such as control assembly line, responsible for testing and debugging, technical analysis, etc. Relatively clean and not too tired to work in the direction of development, if you can go to the quality department to engage in the QA, that is the best. The best thing is to get the 6sigma certification, and then your income will be better, and the work will be relatively easy.

That's all, and thanks a lot to lightsea for the advice, I'll take it on board, thanks!