Saya tidak baca bukunya, tapi saya nonton filmya mas Iwan Setyawan, 9 Summers 10 Autumns, nangis terus kalo nonton filmnya
@selviani100 Жыл бұрын
Kepercayaan diri ditaro di barang2. Keren sih itu.
@RumahAydin2 жыл бұрын
It resonates with me a lot. Embrace the difficulty, don’t make excuses, be the best version of ourselves. Sukses itu akan merapat dan ikut…alhamdulillah
@merryyetty36422 жыл бұрын
kusukaa mendengar obrolan sperti ini 😍 Ilmu nya banyakk, tambah semangat untuk berjuang, masih part 1 udh banyak ilmu nya, gk sabar dgn part selanjutnya 😉 terimakasih 🙏
@jinan3449 Жыл бұрын
Menginpirasi anak muda..
@penikmatrintikhujan2 жыл бұрын
Menginspirasi sekali obrolan & sharing dari host & narsum. Semoga anak muda bisa stop hanya fokus ke kelemahannya dan bs cari peluang dari privilege yg dimiliki ..
@yohanarini2 жыл бұрын
Menarik bangettt pembahasannya, byk insight yg di dapat dan bintang tamu nya kereeeen benar2 menginspirasi.
@florianamaria88594 ай бұрын
Intinya seorang ibu harus bisa menjadi seorang ibu bukan ibu2.
@yuliadjajani27022 жыл бұрын
Ci Wanda Ci Grace ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@RorasVlog2 жыл бұрын
Terimakasih mba Wanda ☺️. Semoga kedepannya semakin banyak org2 yg lebih tertarik nonton konten berbobot seperti ini 😊.
@yuliazyn07922 жыл бұрын
Obrolan yg sngat brbobot . Alhamdulillah bs dpt ilmu
@hendrosujono30662 жыл бұрын
Terima kasih atas podcast nya mbak wanda isi podcastnya daging semua... Membantu kita anak muda ini bagaimana berjuang hidup dari bawah
@endangkolve73552 жыл бұрын
Terima kasih atas obrolan yg sangat bagus, semoga banyak meng-inspirasi masyarakat yg menonton tayangan ini. sementara saya akan foward video ini buat keluarga tersayang saya. Di tunggu episode lanjutan nya 🙏
@welianaiwan70422 жыл бұрын
Apaan sih mom Wanda!!! Kok pendek banget.... belom puas terima wejangannya dari kalian bertiga. Protes protes protes.... berasa banget kok dadakan habis. Anyway, thanks and stay safe and God blessed you all. Keep inspiring and bring blessing to others.
@lennipabrina2 жыл бұрын
Kerennnnn, ilmu nya dapat 😍😍😍😍
@reginamaria92652 жыл бұрын
can't wait for the next part!
@reginahakim262 жыл бұрын
panutan org byk 👍👍🙏🙏
@thomassanjaya98982 жыл бұрын
hidup sudah semakin aneh banyak virus dan perang dimana mana . mending sekarang kt hidup nyaman aja gak usah terlalu hemat tp tersiksa tp jangan terlalu mewah. nyaman aja
@ervingka2 жыл бұрын
Love this mba Wanda... Stay inspired❤❤❤
@sarli21212 жыл бұрын
Yah cik lagi asik nonton malah bersambung 😢😢😢
@andyyang48722 жыл бұрын
actually, to be honest, people who are financially poor do not mean they are not hard working. Instead, they are more hard-working than the majority of people think them to be. Most people earn below equal minimum wage and work 2-3 jobs just enough to eat. It is easy for someone who is rich and has the resources to say "you need to work hard and be smart and plan for your future". The sad truth is when you earn minimum wage or lower, all you think you "will I be able to buy my next meal?", "Will I have a roof above my head next month?" - when you work 2-3 jobs a day, work from 6 am to 11 pm, you simply have no energy left to think about the future and plan. In one sentence to summarise,- when you do not have the money and resource, your brain simply does not have the capability to plan and see into the future, as the brain is stressed and keep thinking about how to survive the next day. Most importantly, people who are tagged "self-made" richness, have a survivorship bias, as we only focus on those who are successful already. People who are "self-made" are never truly self-made - our society defines "self-made" as a person who starts a business by themself, uses their own money or gets an investment or borrows money from the bank, and then was successful in running their business and became financially rich. Many business founders depend on their parent's initial support or their family/community etc;- be it a garage, a place to stay, monetary investment, free labour or simply the society (some received government tax write-offs when their business is loss-making, unemployment support from the government etc.) - these costs most of the time are not accounted and overlooked. Simply said, even if Grace's father went through difficult times, her grandfather was a business owner - being a business owner already having assets (liquid and fixed assets) that are leaps and bounds of the average person in Indonesia. Also, business owners have different mindsets when they educate their children, therefore assuming that Grace's father is an average factory worker in Indonesia, I simply doubt that he will walk the path of a businessman. Grace's father received resources beyond financial benefits,- experience, philosophy of life, worldview etc., essentially soft skills to be a financially successful person which takes years to hone and is something, not the average person has access to from a young age. Assuming Grace's dad is born in a lower-income class in Indonesia (i.e., earning around USD10-50) a month back in 1950-60, and is not exposed to the business world as his father is not a business owner, will he become a successful businessman that we know today? The answer is most likely no. Let's take the example of all the other famous businessmen in the world, Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg etc. - Bill Gates's family are already rich to start with, going to an elite private school that has computer before some of the major universities [what percentage of the people in the USA is able to have this access to resources?]. Furthermore, his mom was able to connect to the then chairman of IBM and was able to convince him to purchase the product from Bill Gates company [what percentage of people in USA has this network of resources?] - these are some of the major events in Bill Gate's life that have a life long effect, any of these missing factors will not lead to him being the Bill Gates we know. Another example is, Jeff Bezos was already rich before he started Amazon, he was VP at a Hedge Fund (D. E. Shaw & Co.) in the USA, and his parents invested close to USD300k - [what percentage of parents have USD300K lying around for their child to play and start a business?]. Simply saying, I just wanted to deliver a message that, by ONLY working hard and being smart, you will not be rich, there are so many other factors that can lead you to financial success, listening to people who are already successful there is a survivorship bias and also it does not present you the "whole story" of their financial success. I believe that everyone is hardworking and no one wants to be financially poor. Instead of believing that people who are poor because they choose to be is dumb, it should be they do not have the resources and the "view" they can achieve it. What we as a society should do is provide channels for the low-income group to ascend to the higher-income group; through providing education, social support, reducing their burden to save (cheaper transport and healthcare), financial support etc. Thank you and above are my two cents.
@facharimah47862 жыл бұрын
suka banget sama kontennya ci wanda, educated sekali.
@ervingka2 жыл бұрын
Menit 31...
@bluekuthukblue42912 жыл бұрын
Grace Tahir gak usah sok2 pernah hidup susah deh, sesusah2nya hidupmu dan orangtuamu waktu kau kecil- kalian itu tetap kalangan the have, tetap termasuk konglomerat, jadi ingat di tahun 1990an tante saya pernah bilang bisnisnya jatuh dllsb, padahal yang dia bilang "jatuh" itu- asetnya masih puluhan milyar, pegawai banyak masih bisa digaji, uang cashnya masih milyaran di tahun 1990 dimana uang 100 ribu aja udah banyak banget, saya andai jadi tante saya waktu itu- udah merasa Sultan padahal dia bilang "jatuh" wkwkwk, so. jangan percaya definisi hidup susah ala Grace Tahir dkk selevel dia
@ImanH662 жыл бұрын
Setuju
@kalecichannel2 жыл бұрын
29:30
@jennybravelin31092 жыл бұрын
🥰🥰🥰
@aelwiqpr41902 жыл бұрын
❤️❤️❤️
@Williammcgowan14092 жыл бұрын
It would be great not always talking about poor and rich …krn itu hanya ukuran yg di buat oleh manusia…banyak yg lebih meaningful than that