I worked for her father and she was so right about his ability to dump people despite the fact the man went through work camps during Hitlers time. . I got injured working for him. This injury had been hitting Computer companies like Apple and IBM due to the change to graphical design. I have an MRI proving my injury. I had Australian experts proving I was injured at work. I found the evidence warning of the injury in the Workcover Department files. Even Standards Australia warned it was going to be an issue ie a tool injury like so many others where you do the same movement over and over. What was really upsetting was the sign near the lift leaving the office that said your health was the most valuable thing in your life. That use to really upset me when I was going home after another 24 hours of neuropathic pain, which is the same as cancer pain. I had worked since I was 16 with no time off and loved my career. It cost me the rest of my life suffering neuropathic pain, my career and a major drop of income into poverty. You only have to see how the men who cut kitchen bench tops have been treated to know nothing has changed in nearly 30 years. I am so glad she is living her life not submitting to living it for others and that her interests are something unique. I am glad she was not sent permanently out to the cold and that she can use the money to help others. I wish she had that power when I was there to help me . Like she said her father taught her about her ability to survive and gave her a greater compassion to relate to many people and be a good team leader. People treat you strangely when you are very very rich, it is hard not to let it corrupt or isolate you from real life. Karma comes from kindness and compassion like the Dali Lama says every day.
@scwps23 Жыл бұрын
Perhaps anyone could be a success if a billionaire adopted them.
@louminarty Жыл бұрын
Amazing what you can do when you're adopted by billionaire 😅
@allahsnackbar2757 Жыл бұрын
Stippers last week. Poor little rich girl this week. Next week: George Pell
@yonayehezkel3150 Жыл бұрын
How Human Nature Works Human nature is the desire to receive, also called “desire to enjoy,” and it functions by receiving what is beneficial to itself and rejecting what is harmful. Everything in our lives is built upon this calculation where we first try to distance ourselves from harm, and then seek how to draw ourselves closer to what is beneficial. Human nature also includes a multilayering of systems that work simultaneously on still, vegetative, animate and human levels. One of those systems is our bodily one, which operates involuntarily. If our bodies are healthy, then they know what is good for them and draw that goodness to themselves. After the bodily system, there is the emotional system, which also functions relatively according to instinct. From the emotional system, we move to the mind, and from the mind to the intellect, and so on. That is, we have systems over systems that concurrently work on receiving what is beneficial and rejecting what is harmful. Such is human nature and the essence of our lives. Our every desire, thought and action operates according to the calculation, “How can we receive what is most beneficial to us and reject what is harmful?”