南灣水巷生
南灣水巷生

哲學博士生,專長為意識哲學。有鑒追求靈性生活的香港人愈來愈多,惜坊間謬說流行,學院又鮮予重視,誠覺一憾。遂立志融會靈性與知性,助人探索精神世界之各處幽微。

Road is difficult

[Shuixiang Xiansi] A friend married and had children in Germany, and her husband was Swiss. Both of them decided to move back to Hong Kong because of their love for Hong Kong. The Swiss gentleman was occasionally interrogated by the police on the street for holding a foreigner's face. I met again yesterday. After looking at the ID card, I did not forget to leave a sentence: "Don't encourage people to leave Hong Kong." And I don't know what bad records this handsome young Swiss father who loves Hong Kong has left. The other party actually regarded it as a pirate.

At the same time, a Hong Kong wife living in Germany had a bad time in Berlin. It is said that when he went to a chain coffee shop to order iced coffee, the clerk used to write the customer's name on the plastic cup for easy identification, but mistakenly wrote "Hung" as "Hure". The wife didn't care at first, and sent a photo to her German husband to see, only to realize that "Hure" is a common name for a prostitute. Unwilling to be humiliated, he questioned the clerk, who responded perfunctorily. Unexpectedly, there was another male customer who helped the clerk next to him. He urged his wife to accept the clerk's apology and asked him to write his own name next time to avoid misunderstanding. The matter was circulated on the Internet, and those who heard it all felt injustice.

The two incidents seem to be unrelated, and the place where the incident happened is different, but I think of two situations that Hong Kong people must face. Discrete, twists and turns are inevitable. Even if you stay in Hong Kong, how many warm homes are left? No road is particularly easy to take, but fortunately, there are still fellow travelers with justice in mind.

CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

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