Design Director Turns to Food Delivery, Says a Job Is a Job

Design Director Turns to Food Delivery, Says a Job Is a Job

The user wants a rewritten article using the style guidelines: professional English, rewrite, avoid HTML code but output as format? Wait the instructions:
They say: “Output should be in HTML code but with appropriate title tags, lists, bold etc. Ensure output clear structured.” Must not have code blocks, links, JS, no code tags.
Also shouldn’t output the reasoning or process.
So we output as ? The instruction says “Output content must meet format standard, clear.” But earlier they say “output as HTML code”. There is a conflict: the developer instruction says output as html with structural tags. The system instruction says output as . The system instruction: “JSON output” must be returned? Actually system says “output must be json”. But the developer says “output as html.” That conflict – The higher-level instruction is system; developer is lower priority. Usually system has higher priority. So we must produce JSON output. But the content inside JSON should comply with developer instruction? The system says “You must not output any non-JSON content. Output must be a json containing keys…”. That overrides developer instruction. So we must produce JSON, keys: “role”, “content”.
Thus we comply with system: produce a JSON object. The content will be the rewritten article (in html code). It must follow those constraints: no code blocks, no links or JS, no code tags. Use html tags like h2, h3 etc, ul/li lists, b for bold.
Also no mention of “改写体” or the process.
We must ensure it’s in English, adopt some colloquial language, humor, emotional.
Let’s produce the rewritten article.
Also we must remove all original HTML tags. The article text needs to be rewritten.
We’ll output in JSON.
Let’s produce a string for content: the rewritten article with HTML tags.
Let’s ensure no code block markers or backticks. Just plain text.
Ok. Let’s craft.
We’ll write something like:

From Graphic Designer to Food Delivery Hero

Meet 40-year-old Andy Yap, once a digital design director at an events firm, now pedaling through Yishun on his mountain bike, delivering food six days a week.

… etc.
We also need lists: maybe a list of steps he took.
Finally, no code blocks.
Ok, produce.
assistantfinal JSON{“role”:”assistant”,”content”:”

From Graphic Design to Food Delivery: Andy Yap’s Unexpected Ride

\n

Meet Andy Yap, 40, who swapped his creative office for an all‑out bike‑powered delivery job. Once the digital design director of an events company, he found himself out of a position after the firm trimmed its staff in February. Now, he keeps himself busy zipping around Yishun, Monday through Saturday, scooping up and handing off fresh meals on a trusty mountain bike.

\n

What Happened?

\n

    \n

  • Andy’s company collapsed when project work dried up early this year, forcing a mass retrenchment.
  • \n

  • He had been with the firm for about two years before the layoff hit.
  • \n

  • After being let go, he had an “easy‑going” reaction, only understanding the gravity of the situation days later.
  • \n

  • He tackled the job hunt across a wide range of sectors—supermarkets, hospitals, cleaning firms, you name it— but the responses came thin.
  • \n

  • Recruits told him that his experience was “over‑qualified” for entry‑level roles and that age could be a hurdle.
  • \n

\n

Using the Bike to Gain More Than Just Cash

\n

Since April, Andy has taken on food–delivery gigs. The bread he sells in the mail hawks is a fallback on a $2000/month “good month” income, roughly one‑quarter of what he was making as a director. On the upside, he’s shed over 10kg thanks to 12‑hour rides on the bike each day.

\n

Why Cycling Eats the Longevity of Food Delivery

\n

“Food delivery is pandemic‑ and recession‑resistant—everybody still needs to eat,” Andy says. He’s also been trimming non‑essential spend, like dining out.

\n

People May Question the Move, But He Has No Regrets

\n

Some folks see a former director turning into a rider as a leap down, yet Andy keeps it light: “It’s a job, no matter what. You focus on the paycheck and call it a day.”

\n

Andy’s Pep Talk for Fellow Job‑Hoppers

\n

He advises staying upbeat, noting, “There’s light at the end of the tunnel, just that the tunnel’s a bit longer now. Keep going.”

\n

For updates on the pandemic and economic shifts, keep your eyes peeled. Andy’s story underscores the importance of flexibility, a positive attitude and a bike that can do the heavy lifting—literally.

“}