The salt of the earth, silence
Yesterday was the long service award ceremony for a corporation in Tokyo.
A social welfare corporation established 13 years ago.
The development in Tokyo after its opening was swift and furious.
Some employees have been with the company for 25 years, but this is because they were transferred from other corporations when the company was established.
Joined as a new graduate, experienced two corporations of Koyama G, and now became an executive in Tokyo.
Looking at his face, I can tell that the reason why he looks so reliable now is because he worked so hard.
Hired mid-career, the 2015 commendation executive settled in Koyama G and experienced the facility manager four times at the time of its opening.
He is a person who has made meritorious contributions by digging wells four times.
All of you are the people who worked hard to raise Koyama.
Now I attend the long service commendation ceremony with the highest priority.
For me, it’s the family that has shared the tears and smiles of my life.
I often look back on the past.
I also want you to forgive me.
I’m old enough to understand nostalgia and nostalgia.
There are times when I feel that Koyama is my hometown and my family.
That is the long service award ceremony.
Today, I’m going to have dinner at the Sky Tree with Yamagata’s long service commendator.
Award winners will go to Ginza for a complete medical check-up and see the Kabukiza theater in Tokyo.
I’m looking forward to the dinner party in between.
At the morning meeting in Ginza yesterday, I could see Mt. Fuji in the distance between the buildings.
Today, I look down on Tokyo from the Skytree.
Under every sky in Japan is Koyama.
War, earthquakes, and the collapse of the medical system are terrifying, but I always want to be with my friends.
Think about how you spend your holidays.
Pulse oximeter 97/97/97
Body temperature 36.5 Blood sugar 297
Late-night candy is scary
CEO Yasunari Koyama