It is said that Hong Kong women are independent, with independent personalities and financial independence, not relying on men. But in fact, there are also many so-called "little fairies" from the mainland.



I came across a local Hong Kong news story: a middle-aged Hong Kong man lost his job, losing a job that paid 32,000 per month, and had to take on several part-time jobs, including food delivery and courier services. On weekends, he also drove for Uber as a ride-hailing driver, with not a single day off, barely making 25,000 a month.

The man's wife is a full-time homemaker, and they have two children aged 9 and 11. They also hired a Filipino domestic worker for 5,000 HKD. When this Hong Kong full-time homemaker saw her husband lose his job, she did not think of finding a job herself to share the financial pressure, nor did she fire the domestic worker and handle the housework herself. Instead, she complained that her husband was incompetent and couldn't earn enough to support the family.

To make her husband earn more money, the full-time homemaker called her best friend and asked her to introduce her husband to a nighttime part-time job. The best friend advised her to be considerate of her husband and to go out and find a job to share the pressure. She then scolded her best friend, saying that she didn't empathize with her and was forcing her to go out to work.

This is a typical "little fairy," who doesn't treat her husband as a human being, a refined egoist. It reminds me of a meme I saw online, which instantly became concrete: There are always people complaining that money is hard to earn nowadays, but it's just because people are too lazy.

Get up in the morning to set up a breakfast stall, work a regular day job, deliver food during lunch breaks, drive for Didi in the afternoon, set up a barbecue stall at the night market in the evening, work as a designated driver late at night, and then work as a street sweeper in the early morning.

After a full round, the sky gets bright again, and then continue selling breakfast. If you follow this schedule non-stop, it's hard not to get rich!

This meme applies perfectly to this Hong Kong "little fairy" without any sense of dissonance! #gStocks代币化股票上线
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