My classmate, Mr. Wu got a job in his uncle's company right after graduation and of course he was well paid. At that time, he made a bunch of classmates including me, who were worried about finding jobs every day, envious for quite a long period of time. Who would have thought that a few years later, Mr. Wu's uncle's company was forced to close down in the tide when the world was swept by the financial crisis, and Mr. Wu became unemployed since then. After unemployment, Mr. Wu did not stay idle and began to look for a job like we used to, getting up early and coming home late. However, it was not easy to find a job in the era of crisis. There were very few recruiting enterprises and the competition was extraordinarily fierce. Besides, in these years, Mr. Wu did all sorts of things in his uncle's company and even forgot his professional knowledge. For his uncle's company, Mr. Wu might be a talent, but without that company, Mr. Wu was probably good for nothing. That's reality. It is as difficult for people from one trade to understand those from another as it is for them to climb over a mountain.