Sharing something most people don't know


The bankruptcy rate of wealthy second-generation families in Chaoshan is only 3%,
while in other regions it reaches as high as 47%, a full 15 times difference!
Chaoshan family wealth can be passed down through generations, and the secret lies in education.
When filming the movie "A Letter to Grandma," funds were tight, and few were willing to collaborate on a niche subject,
but many Chaoshan compatriots stepped in out of hometown sentiment to support.
It was a kind gesture, and unexpectedly, the film became a huge hit, grossing over a billion in box office revenue,
bringing an unexpected surprise.
Listening to Chaoshan friends talk about the lives of local big families, it refreshed my understanding.
At the local New Year’s dinner, adults don’t discuss grades or school choices,
they talk about projects, inventory, profits, and cash flow throughout the meal,
while children sit nearby listening and even actively participate in discussions.
Most ordinary families keep their children isolated from the real world before they turn 18;
but Chaoshan people grow up immersed directly in the real world.
Chaoshan people are also famous for the "Three Fears":
Not afraid of hardship, not afraid of suffering losses, not afraid of losing face.
Truly powerful families don’t give resources to their children, but pressure.
Many think Chaoshan education is "hardship education," but it’s not about suffering,
it’s a complete social pressure system.
They see "survival ability" very clearly.
In this era, the most valuable thing isn’t academic qualifications, but negotiation skills:
Can you negotiate? Can you read people? Can you do the math? Can you bear the consequences of decisions?
If a child only knows how to take exams from a young age, what’s the biggest risk when they grow up?
They think the world is fair.
But the business world has never been fair; it’s a game of strategy.
Only when you truly enter the market do you realize:
Education solves cognition, but the market solves survival.
If a person has never experienced a real trading environment, they will never know how fragile they are.
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