To sum up there are those amongst us who, after having achieved resounding successes in life and career (such as getting scholarships to further tertiary education at overseas institutions and subsequently getting hired at top GLCs), have become forgetful of who they were and what had made them what they are today.
To these people, their successes are the fruits of their own effort and hard work, without realizing that the 'rezeki' that they have received would not have been possible without the contributions of the upper hand who had initially had high hopes of seeing them giving back for the betterment of the community, in exchange for the aid sought for them.
We need not say more what can be made of them. Values my parents taught me are 'not to bite back the hand that fed' and I shall never once become 'kacang lupakan kulit'. Or,I'd be less of a person that they are.
And I do not want to be that....
To these people, their successes are the fruits of their own effort and hard work, without realizing that the 'rezeki' that they have received would not have been possible without the contributions of the upper hand who had initially had high hopes of seeing them giving back for the betterment of the community, in exchange for the aid sought for them.
We need not say more what can be made of them. Values my parents taught me are 'not to bite back the hand that fed' and I shall never once become 'kacang lupakan kulit'. Or,I'd be less of a person that they are.
And I do not want to be that....
I absolutely agree with that statement given. Their successful had made them arrogant and forget what they are coming from. No doubt their achievement had made them full of egoistic.
ReplyDeleteI admit even though it's hard, but I don't hate arrogant people. For me they're usually trying to hide a painful past, an aspect of themselves they don't like, or have been seriously hurt by other people...
ReplyDelete