Interpretation of Lao Yueliang: a metaphor for a person who is experienced in dealing with the world and is oily.
Lao Yueliang is a Chinese word, pinyin reading lǎo yóu tiáo, one refers to the northern colloquialism, describing a person who is worldly and smooth; the second refers to the Internet term; and the third refers to the food fritter, which is a kind of long, hollow, deep-fried noodle, with a crunchy and tough taste, and is one of the traditional Chinese morning snacks. It is also known as fried ghost or fried noodles in Guangdong and Fujian, and fried fruit in the dialects of Chaoshan and other places, while it is also known as fruit in the north.
Workplace perspective
Doughnut, not fried, will not mature; always suffer, will become an old doughnut. In any unit, you can see so many and everyone is very familiar, familiar with all kinds of company insider gossip, as if mixed in the jungle for many years, seemingly leisurely and easy role, so that the newcomers envy and awe. However, such a workplace "old grease", in fact, is the "workplace fatigue" of the population, not careful, passion and power quietly gone.
The retired or nearly retired generation of people in the workplace, most of them in their positions to do a lifetime, rarely move nest. The same position to stay on at least a decade or eight years to be considered senior enough to dare to call the master. Nowadays, frequent job-hopping to change employers is no longer new. In a unit to stay to three years, up to five years, can already be considered a real "old oil".