我是大帝哥
我是大帝哥
Profit and loss are at your own risk, otherwise you will copy the order in a hurry (remember to withdraw profits)
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Why are cerebrovascular diseases like cerebral infarction and cerebral hemorrhage so prevalent in China? On the surface, it appears to be issues related to diet, smoking, and hypertension, but at a deeper level, it is actually the result of the combined shaping by social structure, institutional environment, and long-standing cultural beliefs. Many people live their entire lives in a high-pressure, competitive, and insecure state: long working hours, intense competition, disproportionate income to effort, and their truly personal time for rest, exercise, and emotional recovery is constantly squeezed.
Under prolonged anxiety and fatigue, the body instinctively seeks the cheapest and easiest "compensation": high-fat, high-salt foods, smoking and drinking, binge eating after staying up late, and brief entertainment after long periods of sitting, using oral stimulation to combat spiritual emptiness and real-life pressure.
The problem is that this social environment simultaneously creates pressure while lacking truly effective health support systems. Many low-level workers lack stable health management awareness and conditions, as well as long-term exercise spaces, nutrition education, and channels for psychological stress relief.
The medical system leans more toward market-driven "treatment" rather than "prevention," and many people only truly confront health issues when their blood pressure is out of control or their blood vessels are blocked.
At the same time, some intergenerational cultures continue to increase risk. The previous generation experienced material scarcity and thus regarded "big fish and meat," "eating oily food," and "eating to fullness" as symbols of improved living standards; many male cultures also treat smoking and drinking as part of social etiquette, socializing, and identity recognition, as if not overexerting the body means not truly integrating into society.
Adding to this is the traditional admiration for "endurance" and "bearing it," where many people, even with long-term headaches, insomnia, or abnormal blood pressure, think "just hold on a bit longer," until one day they suddenly collapse.
Therefore, you will find that cerebral infarction and cerebral hemorrhage are never just medical issues; essentially, they are social problems: a long-term high-pressure environment lacking relaxation and a healthy culture continuously pushes the body toward overexertion; and when the system tacitly permits this overexertion and culture continuously rationalizes it, the blood vessels ultimately just "explode" as a reflection of the entire lifestyle.
Some truths take a lifetime for many people to understand.
First, if you don't build your own life, you will always be helping others complete theirs.
Second, emotional control is a person's strongest ability. If a harsh word or bad news can ruin your mood for the day, you are too easily manipulated by others.
Third, if you are unwilling to exchange lives with someone, don't easily accept their advice.
Fourth, the loudest person in a room is often the most insecure inside.
Fifth, you don't need complicated morning rituals or expensive productivity tools; what you really need to face is the problem you've been avoiding.
Finally, confidence is never something you just "think up"; it is the proof accumulated from doing things over and over again.
Truly powerful people are often quiet. Just like mosquitoes, when they are really drawing blood, they don't buzz because they don't want to expose themselves; they only make noise when they can't get blood and feel anxious and impatient. Human nature is the same: those who truly gain benefits are mostly low-key and silent, working quietly; on the other hand, those who constantly express themselves loudly and are eager to prove themselves often indicate that they haven't really achieved results yet. Because the more you lack something, the more you tend to shout about it; true hunters always approach the world quietly.
A trend will become increasingly apparent in the future: many truly skilled people in vertical fields will no longer spend a lot of time on packaging, marketing, and performance, but will instead focus long-term on their own expertise. Because as information becomes more and more overwhelming, what becomes truly scarce is "real ability." Valuable people will eventually be uncovered bit by bit by the market, the industry, and those who truly understand, just like gold.
One of the easiest things to be deceived by in this era is thinking that choosing the right major equals choosing the right life path. The truth is: your major is basically useless, college is depreciating, and stable paths are disappearing. If you're still stuck on "what to study for stability," you're essentially using an industrial-age map to find the future, and you'll definitely get lost. What truly determines whether you can live well has never been what you studied, but whether you have these few things: the ability to keep learning, the ability to solve real problems, the courage to try and change, and a resilient body and mindset. Without these, no matter how good your major is, you're just switching to a more respectable assembly line; with these, you can survive doing anything, even thrive.
There is nothing in the world that reflects a person's overall ability more truthfully than making money. It tests your IQ, emotional intelligence, courage, thinking, judgment, and even your fortune.
Therefore, you must develop your ability to make money. Because only when you achieve financial freedom can you have freedom of choice and ultimately attain independence and freedom of character.