I worked in this building for three years and moved here on 20 13. Because I have business dealings with some units in this building, I used to run here before I moved here. At that time, Lao Huang was already the doorman here, and in my eyes he was still a doorman with a bad attitude.
The first time I came to work, I was stopped and asked me fiercely what I was doing here. I have to register my visit before I can let Ken go. Later, I still looked serious and didn't like it.
On the day our unit moved in, Lao Huang also helped to move it, which was quite awesome. Because we moved here from another unit, there should be someone who is responsible for cleaning the office. Lao Huang is not only the doorman of this building, but also responsible for the cleaning of other units. So the leader also asked Lao Huang to clean our office for several hundred dollars a month.
When I first moved here, I often worked overtime, so at night, the whole building was left with Lao Huang who cleaned up and me who typed in the office. When he came to my office to clean, we chatted occasionally.
Lao Huang eats and lives in his reception room. The place where he works can also be regarded as his other home. He has a wife and children's home in another town, and his children have long been married and have a good life. People in their sixties enjoy their old age at home, but holding two thousand dollars here is not too high a salary. Lao Huang said that if you make money and have money in your pocket, you don't have to reach out and ask others for it. Be free.
Lao Huang works hard. Every day after work, he takes two bites of rice and begins to clean the whole building (fifth floor). Offices and toilets are generally cleaned from top to bottom until afternoon 10 and 1 1. 365 days a year, except for two days off during the Spring Festival, the rest of the time should be to repeat the same work in this building. When something was called Lao Huang, he immediately answered "Yes" and ran to help. Boil the water in the thermos bottle every morning.
Lao Huang has a special life in his eyes. He delivered the courier from the reception room to the office one by one. The toilet paper in the toilet paper box can be replenished in time. Whenever a person comes and goes, he will boil water for the conference room. The shredder was almost full, and he knew it, so he came to clean it. Lao Huang knows exactly what to do and what to do.
When it rains, the ground will always get wet when it comes and goes. If someone else were you, you might think about it. Anyway, as long as someone walks, the ground will not be clean. Just wait until nobody gets off work. But Lao Huang didn't do it. He mops the floor every once in a while, trying to keep it clean and not slippery.
One morning, as soon as I entered the office, Lao Huang sent the boiled hot water to the leadership office on the same floor as me and turned to tell me that there was no pure water in the office of another leader upstairs. I said, ok, the leader will call us to send it up at work later. Lao Huang said, it's gone Why don't I send you two barrels? You also sent it when you called. I see what Lao Huang means. What he means is to save us some energy. For him, it means lifting a finger. We should know how to be compassionate and considerate for this simple task.
My colleague's car is parked under a tree in front of her house, so the car body is always covered with bird droppings. We sometimes make fun of it. Maybe Lao Huang couldn't stand it anymore and silently helped her wash the car. Lao Huang didn't intend to talk about it at all, but happened to be caught by another colleague and me. The colleague who is washing the car is very grateful after knowing it. And Lao Huang washed it more than once. It takes at least twenty or thirty years to wash in the garage. But if you give this money to Lao Huang, it will really humiliate his mind. Lao Huang is the kind of person who wants to give him nothing. He is particularly polite and adds more value to our hearts.
Maybe many people think that what Lao Huang did is no big deal, just a trivial matter. But if someone else does it, but he can't, then everyone will know that Lao Huang is fine.
He has done what you didn't say, and he won't say what you said. He is so easy to use that he has no sense of existence. But we often make honest people suffer. Children who cry have milk to eat, and Lao Huang is the type who pays silently. He doesn't make trouble, rob or stand out. His reality and contribution deserve more attention and return, but this is not the case, which is where we need to reflect.
If a job has neither the possibility of a big salary increase nor the room for promotion, it may be replaced at any time, but it can still be done so seriously. This is character. A person with character, no matter how much salary he gets, whether he has a position or not, and what kind of academic background he has, will not prevent him from becoming a person worthy of respect.
I really respect Lao Huang from the bottom of my heart. Every morning when I go to work, I always arrive at work at eight o'clock. The first person I saw at the door was Lao Huang. I always take the initiative to say hello and say early. Every afternoon around four o'clock, he will come to the office to clean up. I will always thank him for helping me sweep the corners of tables and chairs several times. He said you're welcome. But I really don't know what else to say to express my respect for Lao Huang except thank you.
I have a new understanding of the sentence "no matter how high or low the occupation is". Occupations are the same as people, and there are three or six grades. What really makes this profession noble is the people who do it, and what really makes people equal is personality and soul. Status and position do not necessarily determine that you will be a respectable person. For example, there is an aunt in Japan who cleans at the airport. With her diligence and dedication, she made cleanliness the ultimate and professional, and became a national treasure.
Lao Huang has many qualities that are worth learning and thinking about by young people now.