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Quit your job to become a freeter

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发表于 2017-8-6 14:21:22 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
英语阅读是考研英语的重头戏,怎么复习?怎么训练?建议同学们采取英语朗读的方法每天练习10-20分钟,快速提升英语的阅读能力和听力水平!
   
   
How many of you have ever felt bored by your current job and thought it was time for a change? Just remember you are not alone.
Here in China, there’s a group of people who call themselves as "freeters". Not only do they feel bored and think about a change, but also put their thinking into practice. These freeters quit their jobs and start living on temporary jobs or off their savings. To know find out more of what their lives are like, read on.
Mr. Li is in his early 30s and single. Most recently he was a salesperson in a foreign company and earned about 7,000 to 8,000 yuan per month. Yet a few days ago, he resigned.
According to Li, as a salesperson, he often needs to have dinners with his customers and they will drink a lot of Chinese wine. However, given such hot weather, drinking too much of this strong alcoholic beverage will put his health in great jeopardy.
So once for all, he resigned and decided to stay jobless for sometime. When asked whether he regretted quitting, Li replied, “As a salesperson, I have too much pressure at work. I just feel I need some rest. And I have confidence in myself. With my working experiences and my social network, I don’t think it will be hard for me to find a good job. And as long as I have tens of thousands of yuan in my banking account, I can stay jobless comfortably for several months,” he added.
Miss Xiaowen is also single, and in her middle 20s. While majoring in architecture at university, Xiaowen was also fascinated with photography and drawing.
After graduation, she first taught in a college for two years, but she just felt that her creativity was totally dried up by the complicated interpersonal relationships at work. So she quit and started her freeter life.
She now lives on temporary jobs, like teaching at a drawing course, or fashion and product photograph y for some ad companies or fashion magazines. When she has no work to do, she takes her cameras out, and wanders the streets and snaps whatever she thinks is interesting. According to Xiaowen, she feels quite content with her current life and her creativity also seems to be rejuvenated. Xiaowen now plans to set up her own design firm.
   
Jack started his freeter life ever since he left graduate school. The single man in his late 20s is a programmer at an IT company, which is a relative stable income to him. But he doesn’t need to sit in the company.
Instead he can stay at home as long as he delivers his work in time. In addition, he also writes software reviews and online games handbooks for some websites and magazines, which earn him a good amount of money and which can also be done from home.
According to Jake, the great difference between freeters and non-freeters is that non-freeters work for a better job, while freeters work for a better life. Working at home saves him the time from commuting. And unlike those employed by a company and need to sit through eight hours a day at the office, as long as Jake finishes the work on time, his down time is more flexible.
And through his varied workload, Jake gets to know many industries and companies through socializing with people from different sectors. He says, “Although many people say freelancers don’t have a stable income, I believe as long as you can finish the work in time and it’s of good quality as well as have a good personal network, you can manage to maintain a stable customer base.”
Tips on how to become a freeter
First and foremost, before quitting your job, make sure you have two to three months’ worth of savings in your bank account to support you, because when you move into a new lifestyle, it always takes time for you to get started.
Secondly, freeters live on reputation. If you do your work well, people will give you more jobs and through word of mouth get recommended for work. But if you screw up one job, it may kill a string of potential jobs.
Socialization makes a good part of freeters’ lives. Working at home doesn’t mean not leaving your place. Go out and meet friends. Casual conversations may also give you some inspiration or more directly, job opportunities.
About the history of freeters
The word “freeter” was first used around 1987 or 1988 in Japan and is thought to be an amalgamation of the English word free, or perhaps freelance, and the German word arbeiter, or "worker".
A Japanese part-time job magazine started using the term. “Freeter” in Japan, refers to people between the ages of 15 and 34 who lack full-time employment or are unemployed. They do not start a career after high school or university, but instead usually live as at home with their parents and earn some money with low-skilled and low-paying jobs.
Unlike the negative images associated with Japanese freeters, ever since freeter was imported into China, it refers to those talented people who are pursuing a dream and opt for a freeter life voluntarily. According to them, being a freeter is a better existence than being employed.
            听力和书面表达通常是我们学生的弱项,希望大家在英语朗读的方法下,并结合实际情况安排练习,不要一味模仿别人,要在练习过程中及时总结经验,包括时间安排等,让自己的考研英语水平得到一个很大的提升!
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