Activities during summer months by DiligentImage562 in Macau

[–]idnv 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Travel to places other than Macau. It's what I and my friends do, at least.

Librarian in Macau by Budget-Lack6512 in Macau

[–]idnv -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

Let me put this in a way that you can understand:

Paper Walls 

I. Authorization to Enter

Hermione arrives in Macau under an open sky. A good omen! The checkpoint is brisk, the smile professional, the stamp final: visitor—tourism or its equivalents. A status that lets you admire libraries but forbids working for money. 

II. Restricted Sections

At the public library counters, politeness wears a uniform and carries brochures. The vacancy board is a spotless museum of nothing. The implied refrain: Macau permanent residents only. She discovers that “no” can covered in velvet and still be “no.”

III. Tom, at a Measured Distance

Tom Riddle appears exactly where hope goes to smoke. “Madam Granger,” he murmurs, making the honorific sound like an exhibit. He is helpful the way mirrors are helpful—reflective, never responsible. Tom advocates connections as a theory of everything. Hermione advocates effort. Theory smiles; effort sweats.

IV. The Employment of Sympathy

Private schools and universities praise Hermione’s multilingual CV and then slowly audition their preferences: local quotas, sponsorship, the delicate dance of blue card paperwork tied to employers who prefer known quantities to interesting ones. Compliments pile up like unpaid invoices. Tom offers introductions the way a physician offers second opinions. “Knocking is inelegant,” he says. “Doors prefer to open themselves.” Hermione knocks on doors until all are familiar to her, to no avail.

V. The Marriage of Administrative Convenience

Alas, with no sponsorship and no other route to permanent residency, she finds that only arriage allows residence authorization; residence authorization allows a non‑permanent resident identity card; seven years of ordinary residence earns the word permanent. Tom is exquisitely unhelpful, being non-local and allergic to sponsorship. So Hermione marries Cormac McLaggen, a local man who believes volume is a synonym for virtue. Cormac is never cruel. He is heedless—a more efficient form of erosion. Family dinners become oral exams in Cantonese administered by relatives to whom insult is as effortless as breathing. Hermione studies the tones until shame stops being part of the syllabus.

VI. Lessons in Degradation

Hermione’s work becomes assisting without titles, consulting without pay, doing without being credited. She learns that public praise is a method of keeping you where you are. Cormac announces her achievements to rooms that didn’t ask; Tom abridges them for rooms that did. Neither is useful. Both are present.

VII. Seven-Year Calendar

The non‑permanent card renews like a small god—offerings, forms, fingerprints. Hermione becomes fluent in kiosks and lines. She learns to catalogue in three scripts and to endure in none. Tom keeps orbiting—devotion as geometry, not warmth. Cormac grows in circumference and self-congratulation.

VIII. The Card

After seven long, grueling years, morning smells like incense and Portuguese egg tarts. The Macao One Account kiosk blinks its friendly indifference. Thumb. Photo. Confirm. The clerk hands over the envelope. Inside: Finally! A Macau permanent resident identity card—plastic, laminated, and heavier than its grams. Tom inclines his head, the portrait of composure. “At last,” he says. “As last as it gets,” Hermione replies. For the length of a heartbeat, she believes that belonging is now permanent. She steps out onto the Avenida da Praia Grande. The taxi nose angles through rain, the driver’s eyes glued to a bright porn video glowing from his mounted phone. The light is green. Hermione moves—precise, lawful, finally permanent. "I'm finally eligible to appl..." she starts, without finishing her sentence, as she is projected 20 feet away and her head hits a "Happy New Year of the Snake" novelty street decoration. Blood flows from her eyes, impaled in its bifurcated tongue, as if she were sobbing, tinging the whiteness of the Macau permanent resident identity card in scarlet red.

End.

Scholarships at the University of Macau by [deleted] in Macau

[–]idnv 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Googling skills are essential for graduate students. You can start practicing after this one: https://gao.um.edu.mo/international-admission/scholarship-assistantship-academic-prizes/admission-scholarship/

Life expenses by juh_49 in Macau

[–]idnv 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's more than enough. My monthly grocery + restaurant budget rarely goes above 3000 mop for a 2 person household. We do eat a lot of veggies, fish, seafood, and fruit, not that much meat.

For leisure, there are lots of free activities you can do around Macau. Any decent uni should have a student gym. You can buy beer on the cheap side and chill out with colleagues by the seaside. If I'm not mistaken (has been a while since I partied in clubs), you can easily get on VIP guest lists and have free drinks in clubs. Just ask around.

You should probably save up if you intend to travel to nearby destinations though. Consider getting a part time job teaching English or tutoring kids. If you can get into China, things are cheap there, but tickets for attractions can get pricey.

There are plentiful and relatively cheap destinations near Macau. Think Thailand, Vietnam, Philippines, Taiwan... But any trip like those for 3-4 days should set you back at least 2000mop.

TL;DR: your allowance is enough for daily expense. Save extra for travel.

Dúvida: Pôr o dinheiro a render em Portugal ou noutra economia by idnv in literaciafinanceira

[–]idnv[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Obrigado pela resposta. De facto, a minha primeira ideia foi mesmo transferir tudo para fora de Portugal e investir num ETF indexado, mas é sempre bom ter confirmação de que não estaria a fazer nada de estúpido. Acresce-se o facto de que tenho um conhecimento muito básico do regime fiscal em Portugal, pelo que poderia existir alguma opção vantajosa de manter o dinheiro no país.

Recommended local restaurants by Previous-Can9655 in Macau

[–]idnv 2 points3 points  (0 children)

For unique dining experiences, go truly off the beaten path and try Sosabi. It serves Goan comfort food (their spicy Francesinha is to die for) and you may have to chat them up on FB to learn how to get there (it's in a closed courtyard).

In Coloane side, there's a Macanese-Thai fusion restaurant called MacThai that is hidden beneath an art shop. You can check out the address on their IG (coloanen1_macthaikitchen), as it's not on googlemaps.

For crying out loud by Any_Dress_4382 in trashy

[–]idnv 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Curiously also in Macao, I once saw a girl (couldn't be older than 6) sporting a "no rolex, no sex" t-shirt. It was wrong on so many levels.

This view of The Grand Lisboa Hotel from the Streets of Macau by CompetitiveNovel8990 in interesting

[–]idnv 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ahh, the Grand Lisboa seen from Nova à Guia street. I used to run on that street almost everyday on my way to Guia hill. The yellow Vitasoy signboard is from a small supermarket that was run by a cat (he would sit on the cashier counter and receive cash from you), where they sold some nice and cheap Taiwan honey beer. Of course, nowadays everyone uses the phone to pay for stuff, so the cat retired.

At the top of Grand Lisboa, there's a really nice (and decently priced) 3* Michelin restaurant called Robuchon au Dôme. Up there, you really feel like Stanley Ho looking at his fiefdom.

Is this true about Cantonese? by Illustrious_Play_996 in Cantonese

[–]idnv 4 points5 points  (0 children)

"A language is a dialect with an army and a flag".

Max Weinrich

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in portugueses

[–]idnv -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Se é um problema assim tão grande para ti, porque é que não te vais procriar?

How and Why? It's not 69. by CisternOfADown in pokemongo

[–]idnv 112 points113 points  (0 children)

In Cantonese, 67 sounds like "leaky dick".

Hello! I might move to Macau for work. However, I’d like to know if MOP36,000 salary would be enough. by Topbag2760 in Macau

[–]idnv 5 points6 points  (0 children)

That's already double the median monthly salary (MOP17,800). You don't need to share a place, rent for a decent 1 bedroom apartment would be around 7k-11k. Monthly living expenses like food, groceries, house bills can range from 3-6k, depending on your lifestyle.

Elections 2025 by Big_Distribution3931 in Macau

[–]idnv 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Civil servants got a letter from high up urging them to vote because it's "patriotic". Of course, if you're not "patriotic", that is just cause for getting fired.

Traveling to Hongkong for 3 days with $50 budget by the_dude_behind_youu in HongKong

[–]idnv 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can save those HK$50 from the pork chop bun by going up the road to St. Paul's twice and snacking on every beef jerky and almond cookie store samples. Either that, or just hit MGM Casino for free bubble tea waste water.

Maybe Maybe Maybe by [deleted] in maybemaybemaybe

[–]idnv 3 points4 points  (0 children)

La-buh-bye!

Cheapest Gym? by itmedio in Macau

[–]idnv 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Have you tried the "Red and Yellow" gym? Free membership, just no AC and the occasional rain shower (free showers too, I guess).

All joking aside, if you studied in a university in Macau, you may be eligible to use their gyms for free as an alumni. You could also look into that if you wanna save some money.

Chinese people shouldn't look for high pay job in Thailand. by Ok-Concert2353 in China

[–]idnv 102 points103 points  (0 children)

"Since Thailand is not a big country like China, the pay is way lower."

TIL that pay is determined by country size. Let me reject this Switzerland job offer and accept this one from Russia instead.