1. Flying geese. Wild geese have a cooperative instinct, and they all form a V-shape when flying. These geese change leaders regularly as they fly, because the leading goose clears the path in front and helps create a partial vacuum for the geese on either side of it. Scientists have found that geese flying in this form can cover 12% further than flying alone. Cooperation can produce a multiplier effect of one plus one which is greater than two. According to statistics, more than two-thirds of Nobel-winning projects were awarded for collaboration. In the first 25 years of the Nobel Prize's establishment, collaboration awards accounted for 41%, but now it has jumped to 80%. Enlightenment: Division of labor and cooperation are becoming a trend of working methods in enterprises and are advocated by more managers. If we can make easy things simple and make simple things very easy, the efficiency of our work will be improved. Multiplying cooperation is a key to simplification, specialization, and standardization. The world is gradually developing towards simplification, specialization, and standardization, so the method of cooperation has naturally become a product of this era. 2. The story of crabs, ants and teamwork. People who live by the sea often see such an interesting phenomenon: several crabs swim from the sea to the shore. One of them may want to experience life in the world outside the aquarium on the shore. I saw it trying hard to climb up the embankment, but no matter how persistent and determined it was, it could never climb up the shore. This is not because the crab cannot choose a route or because it moves clumsily, but because its companions do not allow it to climb up. You see, every time a crab tries to climb out of the water and climbs onto the embankment, other crabs will scramble to grab its hind legs and drag it back into the sea. People occasionally see some sea crabs climbing ashore, but needless to say, they must have come up alone. On the grasslands of South America, there is an animal that tells a completely different story: In the hot weather, the grass on the hillside suddenly caught fire. Countless ants were forced back by the raging fire, and the circle of fire became smaller and smaller. The ants seemed to have nowhere to go. However, something unexpected happened at this moment: the ants quickly gathered together, hugged tightly, and soon rolled into a big black ant ball. The ant ball rolled towards the sea of ????fire. Although the ant ball was quickly burned into a fireball, and some ants living on the periphery of the fireball were burned to death amidst the crackling sound, more ants survived. Enlightenment: These two stories about teamwork among animals complement each other and illustrate the truth: things are easy and hard to do if you are limited; hard things can be accomplished if you work together. Crab's "holding back" is very similar to the behavior of some humans, caused by jealousy, "pink eye" and selfishness. They are afraid of competition and even hate competition. Once you see that others are better than you, you will take down steps and stumbling blocks, and do everything you can to exclude them. Its purpose is nothing more than one: If I can't do it, you can't do it either; if I can't get it, you can't get it either. As a result, how many inventive and creative talents were wasted in silence; how many talents were buried in obscurity; how many "thousand-mile horses" died of illness in stables. The "hug-up" of ants is quite different from this. This hug is a struggle of fate, a gathering of strength, and a necessary effort to overcome difficulties and gain new life through unity and cooperation. Without this hug, the ants will surely perish in the sea of ??fire; sincere unity allows their group to continue.