The Survival Strategy of a Professional: What “No Such Thing as a Myth” Teaches Us About the Essence of Work

Have you ever had that fantasy while at work? The dream that a single, massive innovation or one stroke of genius will suddenly save your career—as if there’s a secret formula for success that everyone knows except you. But as you squeeze into a crowded subway car every morning and battle an overflowing inbox, those … 더 읽기

Interpretation of “Sapiens”: The Real Reason You Go to Work—The “Imagined Reality” of Humanity

Did you find yourself swayed by the fluctuating numbers on your smartphone during your commute today? Or perhaps you sat at your office desk, overwhelmed by a sudden sense of emptiness, wondering, “What exactly am I doing here?” We live intensely—hitting targets, earning money, and building networks—but we rarely have the luxury to question the … 더 읽기

The Essence of Wealth Found on the Streets, Not in Numbers: A Review of “The Unfair Trade” (Around the World in 80 Trades)

Hello! I am a book reviewer dedicated to building a personal brand through a life of reading and writing. Today, I’ve brought a special book for investment beginners who might be so buried in “money” as a number that they are missing the actual flow of the economy. The book is “Around the World in … 더 읽기

Living Without Surrender: The Unsettling Power of The Vegetarian

Hello, fellow seekers of meaningful literature. Today, I want to reflect on The Vegetarian by Han Kang, the internationally acclaimed novelist and Nobel Prize laureate. This is not merely a story about a woman who stops eating meat. It is a disturbing meditation on human dignity, internal violence, and the radical act of refusal. The … 더 읽기

Han Kang’s Human Acts: A Haunting Question About Human Dignity

Hello, I am a blogger dedicated to deepening our reading experiences. Today, I want to reflect on a novel that reaches into the most vulnerable corners of the human heart—Human Acts by Han Kang.

Through this powerful work, we explore themes of human dignity, suffering, and the solidarity we so often choose to ignore