The 4-day offline study tour was truly rewarding, and at the same time, I discovered many problems within myself.
In fact, Teacher Zhang, in the Dayou Class group, is like a party secretary, doing ideological work for us every day. He tells us to follow his requirements seriously: regardless of whether something will succeed, just do it first; if you can’t figure something out, start doing it first.
But I completely treated it like empty slogans. I’d glance at the group messages every day without taking them seriously, then dive into "fake busyness." Day after day, year after year, I stayed stuck in place, complacent with myself.
After each day’s study tour activity, as I drove home alone, I kept thinking: why are the things Teacher Zhang talks about, which sound so easy, things I couldn’t stick to? What should I do next?
This study tour had a huge impact on me. Some classmates who studied with us could finish a diary within 40 minutes of getting home, while I was still overthinking, not knowing where to start. Actually, I was just thinking too much—afraid of writing poorly, afraid of this and that. But it’s really unnecessary. If you want to do something, you have to be bold and just do it. No one actually cares, and even if they do, so what?
I remember that four years ago, I also persisted in writing a daily Weibo diary, each no less than 800 words, and wrote nearly 200 in one go.
I especially remember the first one—it felt as hard as climbing a mountain. But later, it became a habit: one diary a day, written smoothly in one go. If I missed a day, it would feel strange.
A client friend once saw the diaries I occasionally posted on my Moments and asked why I bothered writing them, wondering what use they were. My answer was: to record bits and pieces of work and life every day. When I look back years later, it will feel like a beautiful thing.
Now I want to start writing again because I see how persistent the excellent classmates are—they’re all highly productive, never stopping even on workdays. It’s like a competition; no one wants to write less than others. I feel honored to be in such a group.
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