It has been more than a month since I came to the photosynthetic crab industry for internship, and about half of the time has passed. If you want to say that the changes are not completely absent, if you want to count them down, you can probably say ten lines and a thousand words.
Arrived at the cafeteria at noon on April 13. At that time, I didn't know that it was the least people I saw during dinner in the next two months. At first, Tenth lived on the first floor of the second floor, which was not much different from what I expected. Later, when my classmates from Henan and Shenyang came over, they were always amazed at the good environment of the newly built women's dormitory. The male dormitory is far from the female dorm. I also mentioned that I also lived on the second floor of the male dormitory. At that time, the water pipes in the corridor were still running with hot spring water, and the thermal appliances that were brought were stuffed in the bottom of the box and could not be used.
After get off work, I occasionally glanced out from the bedroom window, and the newly planted trees were standing in the fields. The Red Beach Corridor is on the west side of the sky, and the most beautiful bonfire I have ever seen in the sunset. Looking east, there are endless golden-brown reeds, which are just the right mix of softness and toughness. This is the most special place I've stayed in the past twenty years. The quaint and heavy scenery is here, and you can't hide it just by looking up. Dawa is the homeland of ancient times. Qin, Han, Three Kingdoms, Sui, Tang and Five Dynasties have seen the homeland of three thousand years of dry prosperity and sea. How fortunate to live here. The sun is setting, the spring rain is swaying, the west wind is howling, and the galaxy is thousands of miles away. But it is only a glimpse of its thousands of years of life. Day after day, the sun and the moon are shining brightly, and all the beautiful scenery that has never been seen is poured out without hesitation. It is just at the border of Panjin and Haihe, in the factory of the photosynthetic crab industry.
I applied for an internship in the hydration laboratory of the R&D center, and gradually mastered the skills of measuring water quality. It turns out that we need to do far more than that. Experiment, water quality, workshop. Deal with different projects and company employees every day. Everyone divides labor and cooperates to jointly manage dozens of large and small laboratories on the second and third floors of the R&D center. There are countless water samples delivered from our factory and delivered every day. Sometimes, because of work, I miss a good place to line up for dinner. Although I have no ambitions, it is not a gift from Photosynthesis to me from being a student who has not yet been deeply involved in the world to now being reluctant to be on my own. Within a month, students from Shenyang, Henan, and our school joined one after another. I can’t remember how it felt when only a dozen students from our school lived together in the first ten days. I just remember that the night light was not on at that time. The patrol car cast a white light that pierced the night sky of the star river behind it.
Later, due to work, I occasionally interacted with the American redfish and river crab and prawn workshops, and I also met some close friends and relatives. I have my own experiments to do. Time is like this. If you sleep every day in addition to going to work, it will pass quickly; if you have to do experiments, read books, and study in addition to going to work and sleep, it will pass very slowly. Growing up every day in torment and hardship. Getting up at six o'clock for forty days in a row has never occurred to me, and it's normal to sleep until eleven o'clock every day. Although I did not come here for farming, I also integrated into the rhythm of photosynthesis. The care of technicians, the condolences of leaders, and the guidance of teachers filled the entire Guyu Lixia. I did not see the city tree in Dalian covered with imprisoned greetings overnight, but I saw the most majestic birthday of the northern Liaodong Peninsula.
This internship was the end of my university life and aquaculture career, as well as a wormhole for planning the future. I can't remember how many years I haven't picked a time to calm down. Because of my work, I briefly fantasized about the satisfaction of having something to do in the future. Because of being busy, I have found the capital and confidence to surpass others. The difference between being a pillar and doing nothing may be only today, I have something to do today, so I have something to talk about tomorrow.
Maybe this is what I feel now, but the roots of this trip will one day be like an umbrella. An orderly company, with internal operations and external publicity flourishing under the sun just as the name suggests. Photosynthesis is an oasis. I hope that under the witness of the Red Beach, all ordinary people here and now who are busy with their livelihoods will one day be green and shady.