A short-tempered mom? A money-grubbing dad? A humorous trio of women were sent to the 1960s by a leaky electric kettle, bringing with them a kitchen that could infinitely replicate food and a space...
But Zhao Hongmei refused to accept this. She scolded the man who had broken the door, which made everyone in the Jiang family have a new impression of her for the first time. What does it mean to curse someone without using dirty words? What does it mean to insult someone without being timid? This is Zhao Hongmei at this moment.
The man who said that almost knelt down to Zhao Hongmei, not to mention looking up. Later, Brother Zuo called the original factory and said that no one knew that the door was made of such good wood. They definitely couldn't afford to pay for it, but after all, the incident was caused by them, so they wouldn't not pay at all. They could only do their best.
Then, at Zhao Hongmei's insistence, both parties wrote a certificate and signed it. Jiang Huashu felt that Zhao Hongmei was a talented person. She was a little girl and could live a good life with her two younger sisters. She was indeed capable and good.
I asked Zhao Hongmei how she met Zuo Ge, and she sighed deeply when she spoke of him. It turned out that Zuo Ge had a wife who had been ill for years. She had nearly died during childbirth from an amniotic fluid clot, and since then, she's been paralyzed in bed, unable to care for herself. Now that their child is in elementary school, Zuo Ge has been working all these years while caring for his paralyzed wife and child, never abandoning her.
Someone advised him to divorce, but Brother Zuo hadn't considered it at all. She was in this situation just to have children for him. If he abandoned his wife, would he still be considered a man? From then on, Brother Zuo stopped hanging out with the person who advised him, and he thought she was trash.
Later, the business struggled, and the management was full of incompetents. The firecracker industry was lucrative, but these bloated bosses were left with debts that forced the factory to collapse. They might have made money, but the finance department was overflowing with IOUs. Even though the various units were happy to issue them when they came to buy firecrackers, if you wanted to ask for money, you'd be in trouble!
Later, the higher-ups ordered the factory to close, leaving Brother Zuo homeless. Although he received a basic living allowance every month, it wasn't enough for his family! A single medicine bottle was too expensive. Forced to do so, Brother Zuo secretly started a business in the city.
At that time, self-employed people were looked down upon, while workers were considered honorable. No matter what job you did, as long as you had a formal job, you were superior. Even if you were unattractive, you could still be very selective in finding a partner. That was how popular workers were.
Therefore, being a self-employed business owner is considered the lowest class of work and is looked down upon by people. Even when Zuo Ge goes out to earn money, he does so in secret, leaving early and returning late. If anyone at work finds out, he will be looked down upon.
Brother Zuo had only been doing business in the city for a short time when he met Zhao Hongmei. Because she was trustworthy and straightforward, and never had to bother getting goods from the market, she was known to many small vendors, and she herself had a large customer base.
When Zuo Ge first met Zhao Hongmei, she was secretly selling roasted sunflower seeds and tea-tea eggs at the train station. Later, she was constantly being caught by the red-armbanded soldiers. She would go directly to the red-armband soldier's mother's house and have the old lady fry 50 kilograms of roasted sunflower seeds and 50 tea-tea eggs every day to sell at the train station. Later, the red-armband soldiers could only turn a blind eye and pretend not to see her.
After more than two months, Zhao Hongmei saved enough capital and transferred the purchasing and sales rights of the station. Then Zhao Hongmei turned to the cinema. At that time, period films were extremely popular. Zhao Hongmei was optimistic about this market and started reselling postcards.