My business plan

My business plan

Every graduate faces a question when he starts his career. Want to be a small fish in a big pond or the other way round? As a college student on how well the future is the way I have been considering.

Now, I am 22 years old. My favorite subjects are math, English and history. I like to make friends with others. My study ability is strong. Can soon adapt to new surroundings .Be good at confabulation, the personality is bright.

I like logistics management professional, I have been in this industry. The following is my years of occupation planning:

1. March 1 2013 - December, during the internship in logistics industry based on knowledge, learn to find and solve problems, to consolidate the logistics knowledge, improve the operation level. This is my foundation for the future.

2. In 2014 years, to find a suitable development of the logistics company, set the mentality, from a worker. And during the work concerned skill competition, and actively participate in, seek to obtain good results.

3. 2015---2016 years, through hard work, strive for the manager assistant's position, with the guests to establish a good communication, for future development, networking.

4. 2017 - 2018, strive for the manager's post, enhance their

leadership, command and control ability.

5. 2019 years, resigned from the company. Open my own logistics company.

The above is my years of planning and that is what I want to do. I know that the plan is important, but the most important is the action, I will do for my goal constantly trying.

 

第二篇:吉林省英语导游证口试伪满皇宫缉熙楼英语导游词The Puppet Manchurian Imperial Palace Museum

The Puppet Manchurian Imperial Palace Museum

---Jixi Building

Jixi Building is a two-story one with black brick-and-iron roof. It was originally the office building of Salt Administration of Jilin and Heilongjiang provinces. And after the rebuilding and repair on April 3rd,1932, it became the dormitory for Puyi and his concubines. Puyi named the building Jixi according to an ancient poem. The two characters of Jixi symbolize the brightness. By contrast, when Puyi moved in, he found that everything here was absolutely different from what he imagined. His life was controlled by Japanese Guandong Army with total absence of freedom and liberty.

(Bedroom)

Entering the building, up along the stairs, we come to the second floor. The west part of this floor is the living quarter of Puyi, which mainly contains bedroom, study, barber’s room, the room of Buddists, washing room and the tradition Chinese medicine room. The bedroom is decorated simply and brightly. The bed is made of mahogany wood covered with two dragons playing a pearl. It is said the two silk pillows were made by Puyi’s concubine Tan Yuling. Puyi was afraid of hot very much. He got a habbit of covering toweling coverlet when sleeping, covering one in summer and two in winter. Some part of his body was wrapped with a clean sheet which was washed and changed everyday. Strangely enough, there were two human models, one male, another female, under his window facing south, covered by cloth in usual. When he went to bed, Puyi always put them in front of his bed. It is said that they served as Puyi’s body guards. (Study)

The room connecting with the bedroom is his study. As a puppet, there were no affairs to deal with, instead, he spent more and more time in Jixi Building. His study became another office, and he often met Yoshioka here. Generally, without his permit, nobody was allowed to enter his room. But Yoshioka was an exception. Moreover, he came in and out several times a day. Each time he came in, Puyi would stand up and greet him because of fright. Look at this picture. The painting on the wall was painted by Yoshioka. Although it was not well done, Puyi hung it in the prominent position respectfully. Another arresting article in the room was the model of “Hiji”—a worship of Japan. When Puyi first visited Japan, Japanese made the model to send him to make him more close to Japan. In April 2nd,1935, arranged by Guandong Army, Puyi began his voyage by the worship for Japan in Dalian City. During the voyage, in order to express his gratefulness, Puyi scripted a poem:

Japan the worship sails for,

The sea is as calm as a mirror.

With two states hand in hand,

The oriental will be strong forever.

On May 2nd, five days after Puyi’s returning from Japan, he issued his instruction to advocate the friendship between Japan and China. He often said that China and Japan should be of one heart and one mind.

(Barber’s Room)

Puyi’s barber’s room is not big, but well-equiped. There was a Japanese hair dresser serving him only, whose name was Tsuta. When he finished his job, Puyi would wrap the hair in a yellow

piece luster, writing the and keeping it well to show his cherish of his hair. Besides, it was the disinfecting room. Puyi was injected with imported tonic hormone, and all the instruments used must be disinfected here. As a mysophobia, Puyi changed and washed his shirt everyday. Even in summer, he brought an alcohol box with him anytime. Even if a fly fell on his body, he would clean it with alcohol cotton in case of getting infected.

(Room of Buddists)

Puyi had been a devout Buddist since his childhood, so far as to be superstitious. Whenever he went out or had important activities, he would divine by means of the Eight Diagrams predicting his future. Sometimes it would last one or two hours until he was entirely satisfied with his outcome. As Japanese lost its dominance gradually, Puyi was at his gloomy days. Eating, sleeping, jerking lots and diving were the only things he could do. The palace was like a temple. He beats wooden fish day and night. However, Puyi showed no sympathy to his servants. Taking the teenagers serving as cleaners for example, they work 15~16 hours per day and they had to work at night. They did the hardest job and ate the worst food so that they were thin and pale. They would be punished, beaten and even imprisoned for some little errors. In the year of 1944, one of the teenagers named Sun Boyuan couldn’t bear the suffering and tried to escape twice. He was beaten to death at last. Puyi didn’t think that it was his fault but blamed onto the one who beat Sun Boyuan and punished him. After that accident, he prayed for him just because he was afraid of the revenge of Sun Boyuan’s ghost.

(Bathroom)

In the opposite side of the bedroom was his toilet, the bathroom and the washroom. Can you find something different? Yes. There was a small wooden desk with newspapers and magazines on it. Why? That’s because Puyi suffered serious hemorrhoids, so he had to sit on the toilet seat for a long time. Therefore, he developed into a habbit of reading and signing the memorials in the toilet. Everytime the memorial presenter handed the documents to him, he would sign them without reading it, then dropped the documents onto the floor. The presenter picked them up one by one and went out. A lot of reactionary documents were signed in this way. Maybe Puyi never thought his such behaviours brought a lot of disasters to the people in the Northeast.

(Chinese Drug Store)

Puyi had been unhealthy since he was a child, or we can say, he could doctor himself because he was ill for a long time. He was even addicted to taking and collecting medicine. Therefore, he set up a Chinese drug store besides his room. Puyi had had read a lot of medical books, which made him a master of Traditional Chinese Medicine more or less. At that time, there were four imperial doctors who diagnose him by turn. Everyday they would feel his pulse even if he was not ill. He would ask doctor for writing a prescription and boiling down medical herbs well serving as tea, but were useless. Puyi didn’t take them. When he really wanted to take medicine, he would add or reduce some medicine herbs off the prescription by the imperial doctors or he would rewrite a new prescription and carry medicine from Chinese drug store in person.

(Wanrong)

In the eastern part of the second floor is the living quarter of Empress Wanrong, consisting of a bedroom, a study, a room of smoking opium and bathroom. Wanrong, a Manchu in Zhengbai Banner, was born in Tianjin in 1906. She was well-educated and could speak English fluently. She was not only beautiful but also excelled in lute playing, chess, calligraphy and painting. Her beauty and intelligence were renowned in the Banner. In December of 1922, the sixteen-year-old

girl Wanrong and Puyi held a great wedding ceremony in the Forbidden City. In march of 1932, she came to Changchun with Puyi and became the Empress of Puppet Emperor. Because she didn’t get along well with Puyi and her spiritual life was blank, she had secret relationship with Puyi’s servant. Puyi deserted her after he knew the truth. From then on, she was driven into the limbo and confined to the eastern part of the second floor. In order to remove the empress, Puyi found an excuse of taking her to Lvshun. Because of Wanrong’s refusal and Japanese Guandong Army’s interruption, the plan was in vain. Although Wanrong lived so near to her husband, in fact, she was isolated from outside. She couldn’t see her relatives. She was tortured both physically and mentally. In order to relieve the pain, she had no way but lay on bed to anaesthetize her by smoking. Her addition became havier and havier day by day. She smoked 100 grams of opium per day. Everytime she used eight pipes with eighty-five cigarettes. She even couldn’t live without opium and suffered from schizophrenia. As she confined herself in the room, her eyes feared light and she also couldn’t walk normally. After the Puppet Emperor collapsed, Wanrong escaped with Puyi to Dalizigou, Tonghua City. On June 20th,1946, Wanrong died in Yanji on the way of escaping. If she wouldn’t have followed Puyi to Changchun as a puppet empress at that moment, how would the brilliant beauty have had so tragic fate? Compared with Wanrong, another imperal concubine Wenxiu was lucky. She entered the palace at the same time with Wanrong, but she was an independent and progressive female. In October of 1931, unbearing Puyi’s desolation and Wanrong’s insult, she resolutely devoiced with Puyi in Tianjin and lived a self-reliant life. However, Wanrong loved vanity so much that she became a victim of Puyi and feudal system. (Tan Yuling)

In the western part of the first floor of Jixi Building lived Puyi’s third wife, Tan Yuling. This part contains the bedroom, study, sitting room, living room and bathroom. After Wanrong was put into the limbo, Puyi married Tan Yuling, a middle school student in Beijing in 1937. Tan Yuling was chosen by Puyi at the age of 17. She was so considerate that when Puyi got angry and shouted at her, or even he tore her clothes, she would not get annoyed. On the contary, she would try to persuade Puyi to calm himself down. Hence, she won his favor. On the way to Changchun city, she witnessed what the Japanese had done to the Chinese people, so in chatting with Puyi, she would slightly expose her dissatisfaction. In 1942, she became ill and was considered being infect by typhoid fever. But the medicine didn’t seem to take effect on her. Later, with the recommendation of Yoshioka, a Japanese doctor named Ounodera came to ture her. Ounodera believed that she had got tuberculosis and began his treatment. However, all his effort failed. Finally after the doctor had a long talk with Yoshioka, he injected something to her. And she died before the next dawn at the age of 22. Her death remains a mystery till today. Puyi suspected that the Japanese killed her and he even exclaimed this on the military court. In order to memorize Tanyuling, Puyi wrote down “Yuling my beloved” on the back of her photo. Furthermore, the emperor even kept her nails and a wisp of her black hair together with the photo into a wallet and brought it wherever he went. On her funeral, Puyi arranged many specialized orchids named Junzilan to be put along her coffin, for these flowers were Tanyuling’s favorite and also peculiar within Puyi’s regime. Her coffin was kept in the Bore Temple. Later these orchids were bred in the temple and became the most famous type of orchids. The folks called them “heshangtou” meaning the head of monks. Until the collapse of the puppet regime, Puyi finally agreed to cremate her body and the ashes was taken to Beijing. With several turnarounds, Tanyuling’s ashes were kept in this museum after all.

The visit of Jixi Building is over. Please follow me to Tongde Building.

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