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友情之花

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If good friends fell from the sky like raindrops,I’d turn my umbrella upside down and have all that I need.若是伴侣象雨点一样由天而降,我会反转我的雨伞,接住我所需要的一切。But friends do not come to us that way,instead they shoot up through the ground from a tiny seed of common interest, are cultivated with good times and grow into a beautiful flower to enjoy that continues to bloom as long as it is cared for.但伴侣不是以这类编制到来的,他们是从地上,由一粒很小的,有趣的通俗种子,在你精心耕种,培养下,成长为一朵斑斓的花朵且享受着它的不竭繁华富强。These flowers of friendship are gathered into a fragrant bouquet that enhances the world around us and are meant to be enjoyed by ourselves as well as to bring cheer or comfort to others.这些友情的花朵堆积一路,变成一束芳喷鼻的花束,令我们周边世界栩栩生辉,带给我们欢愉也令他人感应安慰。Like flowers, friendships also go through changes,sometimes they are allowed to die, but if you care for them well and tend them with a gentle touch, they will continue to build roots in new places and bloom for years of enjoyment.象花朵一样,友情也会生变,有时它们也充许死往,但只要你精心顾问,他们将会在新的处所生根,开花,且带给我们欢愉幸福光阴。When you have found a friend such as this,you will know by the beauty and fragrance that surrounds your life and it will spread like beautiful wildflowers to enrich all of us.当你找到了这类友情,你就会知道,这类芳喷鼻斑斓将环绕你的人生,象艳丽的野花一样传播,漫延,丰富我们的人生。

Abundance 充足

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Abundance is a life style, a way of living your life. It isn’t something you buy now and then(偶尔,有时) or pull down from the cupboard, dust off(抹往尘埃) and use once or twice, and then return to the cupboard.Abundance is a philosophy(哲学,人生不雅) ; it appears in your physiology(心理学,心理机能) , your value system, and carries its own set of beliefs. You walk with it, sleep with it, bath with it, feel with it, and need to maintain and take care of it as well.Abundance doesn’t always require money. Many people live with all that money can buy yet live empty inside. Abundance begins inside with some main self-ingredients(材料) , like love, care, kindness and gentleness, thoughtfulness and compassion. Abundance is a state of being. It radiates(传播,辐射) outward. It shines like the sun among the many moons in the world.Being from the brightness of abundance doesn’t allow the darkness to appear or be in the path unless a choice to allow it to. The true state of abundance doesn’t have room for lies or games normally played. The space is too full of abundance. This may be a challenge because we still need to shine for other to see.Abundance is seeing people for their gifts and not what they lack or could be. Seeing all things for their gifts and not what they lack.Start by knowing what your abundances are, fill that space with you, and be fully present from that state of being. Your profession of choice is telling you of knowing and possibilities. That is their gift. Consultants(咨询参谋) and customer service professionals have the ministrative assistants and virtual assistants have an abundance of coordination and time management. Abundance is all around you, and all within. See what it is; love yourself for what it is, not what you’re missing, or what that can be better, but for what it is at this present moment.Learning to trust in your own abundance is required. When you begin to be within your own space of abundance, whatever you need will appear whenever you need it. That’s just the way the higher powers set this universe up to work. Trust the universal energy. The knowing of it all will humble(使谦恭) you to its power yet let the brightness of you shine everywhere it needs to. Just by being from a state of abundance, it is being you.

Waiting for the Breeze

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Waiting for the Breeze 祈盼清风Lying in bed, by an open window, and listen…..窗边静躺,细心聆听······”No air-conditioning, how can you sleep?” my fiend asks, horrified. I’ve just revealed that my family had decided to shut the air-conditioner off and trim our electric bill.“不开空调?能睡得着吗?”传闻家人要为了节流电费而把家里的空调关掉落时,我的伴侣一脸惊诧。On its first night of our cost-cutting adventure, it’s only eighty-five degrees. We’re not going to suffer, but the three kids grumble anyway.在大胆测验测验节电的第一天晚上,气温不过华氏85°罢了,我们实在不感觉难熬难过,但三个孩子却怨声连天。”It’s too hot to sleep.” my thirteen-year-old daught moans. “I’m about to die from this heat!” her brother hollers down the hall. “Just try it tonight.” I tell them. In truth, I’m too tired to argue for long. My face is sweaty, but I lie quietly, listening to the criket choirs outside. That remind me of childhood.“太热了!如何睡啊!”我十三岁的女儿不断嘀咕着。“热死我啦!”他弟弟的牢骚声也从客堂的另外一头传来。我只好说:“今晚就试着忍一忍,好吗?”实在我底子没有余力多做诠释。脸上也出汗了。我静静地躺着,聆听着窗外蟋蟀的合奏曲,思路被牵回到了童年光阴。I think about my grandma, who lived to ninety-two and still supervised my mom’s garden until just few weeks before she died. And then I’m back there in her house in the summer heat of my child hood. I moved my pillow to the foot of grandma’s bed and angled my face toward the open window. I flipped the pillow, hunting for the cooller side.这是我禁不住想起了外婆,她活到了92岁,直到回天前的几个礼拜,她一向都帮忙妈妈顾问开花圃。回到童年酷热的夏天,回到了外婆的小屋,我把枕头移到外婆的床位,脸朝着窗。以后我又把枕头翻了过来,让比较风凉的一头朝上。Grandma sees me thrashing, “if you just watch for the breeze,” she says, “you’ll cool off and fall asleep.” She cranks up the Vanetian Blinds. I stare at the filmy white curtain, willing it to flutter. Lying still and waiting, I suddenly notice that life outside the window, the bug chorus. Neighbours, porch-sitting late, speaking in hazy words with sanded edges that soothe me.看到我翻来翻往地睡不着,外婆说:“只要专心往感受和祈盼,风会来的,如许你便可以一身清冷地进梦境了。”她把百叶窗拉了起来,因而我就一向谛视着昏黄的白窗帘,等候它的飞舞。静静地躺着,祈盼着,这是我俄然找到,窗外世界的生命。小虫的清唱;门廊外闲谈着的邻居,他们恍惚不清的喋喋细语开端催我进眠······”Mom, did you heat that?” my seven-year-old blurts, “I think it was an owl family.”“妈妈,您听到了吗?”我7岁的孩子囔道,“我感觉那是一头猫头鹰一家子在叫。””Probably.” I tell him, “Just keep listening!”“很有可能!”我跟他说,“再仔谛听!”Without the droning air-conditioner, the house is oddly peaceful, and the unfiltered noise seems close enough to touch. I hope I’m awake tonight that the first breeze sneaks in.没有了空调机的嗡嗡声,房间超脱着一种奇特的平和蔼氛,还有未颠末滤的、亲近的伸手便可触及的夜声。真的但愿,当第一缕清风悄但是至的时辰,我仍然可以或许迎接她的到来。

Girls of summer 夏季女孩

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We lived on the banks of the Tennessee River, and we owned the summers when we were girls. We ran wild through humid(潮湿的,潮湿的) summer days that never ended but only melted one into the other. We floated down rivers of weekdays with no school, no rules , no parents, and no constructs(构图,建筑物) other than our fantasies. We were good girls, my sister and I. We had nothing to rebel against. This was just life as we knew it, and we knew the summers to be long and to be ours.The road that ran past our house was a one-lane rural route. Every morning, after our parents had gone to work, I’d wait for the mail lady to pull up to(追上) our box. Some days I would put enough change for a few stamps into a mason jar(玻璃瓶) lid and leave it in the mailbox. I hated bothering mail lady with this transaction(生意,打点) , which made her job take longer. But I liked that she knew that someone in our house sent letters into the outside world.I liked walking to the mailbox in my bare feet and leaving footprints on the dewy(带露水的) grass. I imagined that feeling the wetness on the bottom of my feet made me a poet. I had never read poetry, outside of some Emily Dickinson. But I imagined that people who knew of such things would walk to their mailboxes through the morning dew(晨露) in their bare feet.We planned our weddings with the help of Barbie dolls and the tiny purple wild flowers growing in our side yard. We became scientists and tested concoctions(调和,同化) of milk, orange juice, and mouthwash(漱口水) . We ate handfuls of bittersweet(苦乐参半的) chocolate chips and licked peanut butter(花生酱) off spoons. When we ran out of sweets to eat, we snitched sugary Flintstones vitamins out of the medicine cabinet. We became masters of the Kraft macaroni(通心面条) and cheese lunch, and we dutifully called our mother at work three times a day to give her updates on our adventures. But don’t call too often or speak too loudly or whine too much, we told ourselves, or else they’ll get annoyed and she’ll get fired and the summers will end.We shaped our days the way we chose, far from the prying(爱探听的,窥测的) eyes of adults. We found our dad’s Playboys and charged the neighborhood boys money to look at them. We made crank(易怒的) calls around the county, telling people they had won a new car. “What kind?” they’d ask. “Red,” we’d always say. We put on our mom’s old prom(舞会) dresses, complete with gloves and hats, and sang backup to the C.W. McCall song convoy, ” which we’d found on our dad’s turntable.We went on hikes into the woods behind our house, crawling under barbed wire fences and through tangled undergrowth. Heat and humidity(湿度,湿气) found their way throught he leaves to our flushed faces. We waded in streams that we were always surprised to come across. We walked past cars and auto parts that had been abandoned(丢弃) in the woods, far from any road. We’d reach the tree line and come out unexpectedly into a cow pasture(牧场,牧草) . We’d perch on the gate or stretch out on the large flat limes(鸿沟,边界) tone outcrop that marked the end of the Woods Behind Our House.One day a thunderstorm blew up along the Tennessee River. It was one of those storms that make the day go dark and the humidity disappear. First it was still and quiet. There was electricity in the air and then the sharp crispness(易碎,酥脆) of a summer day being blown wide open as the winds rushed in. We threw open all the doors and windows. We found the classical radio station from two towns away and turned up the bass and cranked up(把声调子大,启动) the speakers. We let the wind blow in and churn(搅动,搅拌) our summer day around. We let the music we were only vaguely(含混地,含混地) familiar with roar(吼叫,吼怒) through the house. And we twirled(转动,扭转) . We twirled in the living room in the wind and in the music. We twirled and we imagined that we were poets and dancers and scientists and spring brides.We twirled and imagined that if we could let everything — the thunder, the storm, the wind , the world — into that house in the banks of the Tennessee River, we could live in our summer dreams forever. When we were girls.

Wake up your life

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Years ago, when I started looking for my first job, wise advisers urged, “Barbara, be enthusiastic热情的,热忱的! Enthusiasm will take you further than any amount of experience.” How right they were. Enthusiastic people can turn a boring drive into an adventure, extra work into opportunity and strangers into friends. “Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm,” wrote Ralph Waldo Emerson. It is the paste糊状物,浆糊 that helps you hang on there when the going gets tough. It is the inner voice that whispers, “I can do it!” when others shout, “No, you can’t!” It took years and years for the early work of Barbara McClintock, a geneticist遗传学者 who won the 1983 Nobel Prize in medicine, to be generally accepted. Yet she didn’t let up on her experiments. Work was such a deep pleasure for her that she never thought of stopping. We are all born with wide-eyed, enthusiastic wonder — as anyone knows who has ever seen an infant’s delight at the jingle叮当声 of keys or the scurrying急跑,短间隔竞走 of a beetle甲虫. It is this childlike wonder that gives enthusiastic people such a youthful air, whatever their age. At 90, cellist Pablo Casals would start his day by playing Bach. As the music flowed through his fingers, his stooped shoulders would straighten and joy would reappear in his eyes. Music, for Casals, was an elixir全能药,不老长生药 that made life a never-ending adventure. As author and poet Samuel Ullman once wrote, “Years wrinkle the skin, but to give up enthusiasm wrinkles the soul.” How do you rediscover the enthusiasm of your childhood? The answer, I believe, lies in the word itself. Enthusiasm comes from the Greek and means “God within.” And what is God within is but an abiding sense of love — proper love of self and, from that, love of others. Enthusiastic people also love what they do, regardless of money or title or power. Patricia McIlrath, retired director of the Missouri Repertory Theater in Kansas City, was once asked where she got her enthusiasm. She replied, “My father, a lawyer, long ago told me, `I never made a dime一角硬币 until I stopped working for money.’” If we cannot do what we love as a full-time career, we can as a part-time avocation癖好,业余欢愉爱好: like the head of state who paints, the nun who runs marathons. Elizabeth Layton of Wellsville, Kan., was 68 before she began to draw. This activity ended bouts of depression that had plagued熬煎,困扰 her for at least 30 years, and the quality of her work led one critic to say, “I am tempted to call Layton a genius.” Elizabeth has rediscovered her enthusiasm. We can’t afford to waste tears on “might-have-beens.” We need to turn the tears into sweat as we go after “what-can-be”. We need to live each moment wholeheartedly经心全意地, with all our senses — finding pleasure in the fragrance喷鼻味,芳喷鼻 of a back-yard garden, the crayoned以蜡笔作画 picture of a six-year-old, the enchanting beauty of a rainbow. It is such enthusiastic love of life that puts a sparkle in our eyes, a lilt in our steps and smooths the wrinkles from our souls.

Chilly Today, Hot Tamale

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圣诞前的一个酷冷的夜里,他满心等候地列队等着买热腾腾的墨西哥玉米粉蒸肉时,发现前面有一名母亲因为把外套披在孩子身上而本身冻得瑟瑟颤栗,游移半晌以后,他把本身的夹克脱下递给了那位母亲。十分坚苦轮到本身,他却被奉告这一屉玉米粉蒸肉已卖完,要比及下一屉蒸熟还要等上两个钟头,可是他必须得走了。这时候那位母亲拉住他,请他留下地址。因而,在圣诞前夕那天,他不单收到了本身的夹克,还收到了喷鼻甜甘旨的玉米粉蒸肉……”It’s my own fault.” Carl Fenter tugged his jacket closer against the abnormal bite of cold morning wind. “The rest of the family is home, where it’s warm.”Just another one of his brilliant ideas – a big tamale玉米粉蒸肉 feast after tonight’s Christmas Eve service at church – and look where it landed him: waiting in a line 50 people deep.Who would’ve guessed that every tamale shop in the city would be sold out the day before Christmas? But they were, as Carl knew. He’d been driving all over El Paso that morning. Determined to bring home the tamales, Carl tried one last tienda商展, an old favorite out in Canutillo.When he arrived, a fresh batch一批,一炉 was due off the steamer in 45 minutes. Taking his place at the end of the snaking line of tamale-seekers, he watched the woman in front of him remove her jacket to drape用布帘覆盖 around her shivering颤抖的 youngster. It wasn’t long before she, too, shuddered in the chilly wind. After only a moment’s hesitation, Carl shed his own jacket and offered it to the grateful mother.Together, they cheered when the line crept蒲伏爬行 forward at last, and smiling people exited the shop toting steamy bags. Finally, Carl got inside the door and inched his way closer to the counter, the woman now first in line.”Sorry folks,” the clerk announced, “that’s the last of the tamales.”"No way!” Carl groaned with everyone else lined up behind him.”But,” stressed the man at the counter, “we’ll have a final batch ready in, oh, about two hours.”Defeated, Carl backed away, but the young mother grabbed his arm.”You’re leaving?”"I have to,” Carl glanced at his watch. “I promised to put up luminarias圣诞装潢灯 at my church.”"I’ll get your order of tamales and bring them to your house.”Carl’s brow furrowed. “I couldn’t ask you to do that.”"But it’s the least I can do. You lent me your coat.” Her smile overrode踩踏,超越 his objections. “Just give me your address.” She and her little girl settled in for the long wait.And at exactly noon on Christmas Eve, they delivered four dozen fragrant tamales – along with Carl’s brown jacket – to his home.

Luck hat 荣幸帽

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荣幸的是,我们在储物柜里找到了这顶丢掉的“荣幸帽”。一样荣幸的是,我发现戴不戴这顶风趣的帽子,我都能交到好运。“所以,完美的表演实在不是因为帽子,”玛瑞娅说,“那只是瞎猜罢了,或许这是你畴昔一个月里几次操练的成果。”你可以说荣幸的启事有很多,包含做好筹办,相信本身……或许还有那么一点点魔法。换句话说,好运正向你走来,但在它降姑且,你要做好筹办。Dear Arizona,My brother is so lucky. Good stuff is always happening to him. Do you believe in luck? And if so, how can I get more of it?— Looking for luck in Louisiana(路易斯安那州)Dear Looking,I was eating breakfast with one hand, petting my cat, Cow, with the other, and reading the back of the cereal(谷类食品) box, when— “YOUCH!” I screamed. “Why’d you pinch me?”"You’re not wearing green,” said my little brother, Tex. “Everyone knows you get pinched if you don’t wear green on Saint Patrick’s Day!”"It’s true,” said my little sister, Indi.I was mostly mad about getting pinched, but also a tiny bit glad about being reminded that it was Saint Patrick’s Day.I panicked(发急) . “What am I going to do? I don’t have time to change. I’ll get pinched all day long!”"Well,” Tex said, taking the old green baseball cap off his head, “you could borrow my lucky hat.”"But it’s your favorite!” I said.”I know,” said Tex. “Just promise to give it back after school.”"No problem,” I said, glancing in the mirror on my way out the door. “I look like a goofball(傻瓜,平静剂) in this thing!”"A lucky goofball!” said Tex.”Humm.” I grabbed my backpack. “Thanks, I think.”Now, before I go on, you should know that I’m not an overly superstitious(迷信的) person. I don’t believe that thirteen is an unlucky number or that breaking a mirror brings seven years of bad luck.I definitely don’t freak out(解体) if a black cat crosses my path. And when it comes to things like lucky four-leaf clovers(荣幸草,三叶草) and lucky pennies, I just never believed in them.Anyway, I was racing to catch the school bus, and I saw a dollar on the sidewalk(人行道) ! I looked around to see if anyone was looking for it, but people just kept stepping on the poor thing, so I decided to rescue it. I’d found pennies and nickels(镍币) before, but never a dollar!Then, I didn’t miss the bus, because the bus was even later than me— — which never happens!My luck didn’t stop there. Carlos and Jackson were sitting behind me, quizzing each other on spelling words. I turned around and said, “You guys know that test isn’t till tomorrow, right?”"It got switched to this morning,” said Jackson. “Remember? There’s some assembly tomorrow.”"That’s right-I totally forgot!” I said. “I’m so lucky that I sat in front of you. If I hadn’t , I wouldn’t have found out till it was too late!”I got out my spelling words, studied all the way to school. And ended up acing the test!The minute I got home, I gave Tex a gigantic hug.”This is the luckiest hat in the world,” I said. “I’m never taking it off!”"But you promised to give it back!” said Tex.”I know, but…” I pretended to try to pull the hat off my head. “I think it’s stuck.”"It is not!” said Tex.”Please-oh-please let me borrow your lucky hat for one more day!” I begged. “Tomorrow I’m auditioning for(口试,试演) the school play, and I need every bit of help I can get.”"OK,” said Tex. “One more day. But you’d better be really nice to me.”"I will,” I agreed. “In fact-here you can have my lucky dollar!”Tex let out a whoop, then started dancing around and waving his gift in the air.The next day turned out to be super lucky. My audition couldn’t have gone better.”Wow, Arizona!” said my friend Mareya. “I can’t believe how amazingly you just did! You are so getting a major part in this play!”"Thanks! You did really great, too!” I said. “But honestly, the only reason I did OK is because I had my lucky hat.”"What lucky hat?” asked Mareya.”This one,” I said, reaching into my backpack, where I thought I’d put Tex’s hat since I couldn’t wear it for the audition. But it wasn’t there! “Oh no!” I cried. “It’s gone! What am I going to tell Tex?”Mareya helped me look for it. Luckily, we found Tex’s hat in my locker. Also luckily, I discovered that I could be lucky with or without a goofy-looking cap in my possession.”So it wasn’t the hat,” said Mareya. “This is just a wild guess, but maybe it was all those hours you spent practicing over the past month.”"Hmm,” I said. “It’s possible.”So, dear Looking, I guess you could say that luck is a combination of being prepared, believing in yourself, … and maybe just a tiny bit of magic! In other words, luck may come your way, but you have to be ready for it when it does!Ciao(你好,再会) for nowArizona

Miracle happens

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“There’s a new student waiting in your room,” my principal announced, hurrying past me on the stairs. “Name’s Mary. I need to talk to you about her. Stop in the office later.”I nodded and glanced down(仓促浏览) at the packs of pink, red and white paper, and the jars of paste(糊状物) and boxes of scissors I held in my arms. “Fine,” I said. “I’ve just come from the supply room. We’re making valentine envelopes this morning. It’ll be a good way for her to get acquainted(使体味) .”This was my third year of teaching fourth-graders, but I was already aware how much they loved Valentine’s Day (now just a week away), and making these bright containers to tape to the fronts of their desks was a favorite activity. Mary would surely be caught up in the excitement and be chatting cheerfully with new friends before the project was finished. Humming to myself, I continued up the stairs.I didn’t see her at first. She was sitting in the back of the room with her hands folded in her lap. Her head was down and long, light-brown hair fell forward, caressing the softly shadowed cheeks.”Welcome, Mary,” I said. “I’m so glad you’ll be in our room. And this morning you can make an envelope to hold your valentines for our party on Valentine’s Day.”No response. Had she heard me?”Mary,” I said again, slowly and distinctly.She raised her head and looked into my eyes. The smile on my face froze. A chill went through me and I stood motionless. The eyes in that sweet, little-girl face were strangely empty – as if the owner of a house had drawn the blinds and gone away. Once before I had seen such eyes: They had belonged to an inmate of a mental institution, one I’d visited as a college student. “She’s found life unendurable(没法忍耐的) ,” the resident psychiatrist(精力病学家) had explained, “so she’s retreated from the world.” She had, he went on, killed her husband in a fit of insane jealousy.But this child – she could have been my own small, lovable niece except for those blank, desolate(萧瑟的) eyes. Dear God, I thought, what horror has entered the life of this innocent little girl?I longed to take her in my arms and hug the hurt away. Instead, I pulled books from the shelf behind her and placed them in her lap. “Here are texts you’ll be using, Mary. Would you like to look at them?” Mechanically, she opened each book, closed it and resumed her former position.The bell rang then, and the children burst in on a wave of cold, snowy air. When they saw the valentine materials on my desk, they bubbled with excitement.There was little time to worry about Mary that first hour. I took attendance, settled Mary into her new desk and introduced her. The children seemed subdued(被礼服的,减弱的) and confused when she failed to acknowledge the introduction or even raise her head.Quickly, in order to divert them, I distributed materials for the envelopes and suggested ways to construct and decorate(装潢,安插) them. I placed materials on Mary’s desk, too, and asked Kristie, her nearest neighbor, to offer help.With the children happily engrossed(全神灌输的) , I escaped to the office. “Sit down,” my principal said, “and I’ll fill you in.” The child, she said, had been very close to her mother, living alone with her in a Detroit suburb. One night, several weeks ago, someone had broken into their home and shot and killed the mother in Mary’s presence. Mary escaped, screaming, to a neighbor’s. Then the child went into shock. She hadn’t cried or mentioned her mother since.The principal sighed and then went on. “Authorities sent her here to live with her only relative – a married sister. The sister enrolled Mary this morning. I’m afraid we’ll get little help from her. She’s divorced, with three small children to support. Mary is just one more responsibility.”"But what can I do?” I stammered(口吃,结巴) . “I’ve never known a child like this before.” I felt so inadequate.”Give her love,” she suggested, “lots and lots of love. She’s lost so much. There’s prayer, too – and faith, faith that will make her a normal little girl again if you just don’t lose hope.”I returned to my room to discover that the children were already shunning(躲避) this “different” child. Not that Mary noticed. Even kindly little Kristie looked affronted(被冲犯的) . “She won’t even try,” she told me.I sent a note to the principal to remove Mary from the room for a short time. I needed to enlist the children’s help before recess, before they could taunt(逗弄,挖苦) her about being “different.”"Mary’s been hurt badly,” I explained gently, “and she’s so quiet because she’s afraid she’ll be hurt again. You see, her mother just died, and there’s no one else who loves her. You must be very patient and understanding. It may be a long time before she’s ready to laugh and join in your games, but you can do a lot to help her.”Bless all children. How loving they can be once they understand. On Valentine’s Day, Mary’s envelope overflowed. She looked at each card without comment and replaced it in her container. She didn’t take them home, but at least she looked at them.She arrived at school insufficiently dressed for the bitterly cold weather. Her raw, chapped hands – without mittens(手套) – cracked and bled. Although she seemed oblivious to sore hands and the cold, I sewed buttons on her thin coat, and the children brought caps, scarves(领巾) , sweaters and mittens. Kristie, like a little mother, helped Mary bundle up before she went outdoors, and she insisted on walking to and from school with her.In spite of our efforts, we seemed to be getting no closer to Mary as the cold, dreary(沉闷的,古板的) March days dragged by. Even my faith was wearing thin. My heart ached so desperately, wanting this child to come alive, to be aware of the beauty the wonder, the fun – and, yes – even the pain of living.Dear God, I prayed, please let one small miracle happen. She needs it so desperately.Then on a late March day, one of the boys excitedly reported a robin(知更鸟) in the schoolyard. We flocked to the window to see it. “Spring’s here!” the children cried. “Let’s make a flower border for the room!”Why not? I thought. Anything to lift our spirits. This time the papers we selected were beautiful pastel(蜡笔,颜料) colors – with brown strips to weave into baskets. I showed the children how to weave the baskets and how to fashion all the flowers we welcome in early spring. Remembering the valentine incident, I expected nothing from Mary; nevertheless, I placed the beautifully colored papers on her desk and encouraged her to try. Then I left the children to do their own creating, and I spent the next half-hour sorting scraps of paper at the back of the room.Suddenly, Kristie came hurrying to me, her face aglow(通红的) . “Come see Mary’s basket,” she exclaimed. “It’s so pretty! You’ll never believe it!”I caught my breath at its beauty. The gently curled petals(花瓣,翼瓣) of hyacinths(风信子) , the daffodils’(水仙花) fluted(有凹槽的) cups, skillfully fashioned crocuses(番红花) and violets – work one would expect from a child much older.”Mary,” I said. “This is beautiful. How did you ever manage?”She looked at me with the shining eyes of any normal little girl. “My mother loved flowers,” she said simply. “She had all of these growing in our garden.”Thank you, God, I said silently. You’ve given us the miracle. I knelt and put my arms around the child. Then the tears came, slowly at first, but soon she was sobbing her heart out against my shoulder. The other children had tears in their eyes, too, but theirs – like mine – were tears of joy.We fastened her basket in the very center of the border at the front of the room. It remained there until school ended in June. On the last day, Mary held it carefully as she carried it out the door. Then she came running back, pulled a crocus from her basket and handed it to me. “This is for you,” she said, and she gave me a hug and a Mary moved away that summer. I lost track of her, but I’ll never forget her. And I know God is caring for her.I’ve kept the crocus in my desk ever since – just to remind me of Mary and of the enduring power of love and faith.

Friends forever

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固然伊丽莎白远在千里以外,我只能偶尔见到她,可是我们所具有的“永久是伴侣”的相框和挂盒能帮忙我们弥补彼此的忖量之情。所以,亲爱的孤单者,与伴侣分隔并没有那么糟,照片、信件、德律风、电子邮件和夸姣的记忆都能拉近伴侣之间的友情。Dear Arizona,My friend is moving in a month— and not just to a different neighborhood, but to a whole different country! I’m so sad, I can hardly think about anything else. I know you can’t make my friend’s family stay, but I’m hoping you’ll at least have some helpful ideas. — Already Lonely in LondonDear Already Lonely,The first thing I want to say is— I’m so sorry your friend is moving!The second thing I want to say is-are you from London, as in London, England? That is so exciting! Have you ever seen the Queen? Is it true that people there drive on the left side of the road? How big is Big Ben, really?OK,I guess I should stop asking questions and get back to your letter-which reminds me of how beyond and I was when my friend Elizabeth had to move.I met Elizabeth in my very first karate白手道 class. I was the only new kid in the class. Everyone else knew a lot of the moves already and had yellow or orange belts.I had a total beginner’s white belt and felt unbearably nervous the whole way through the class. I tried my hardest to follow along, but everything was way harder than I thought it would be.Afterward, as I was putting on my shoes, I was thinking, There is no way I am ever coming back to karate!And that’s when I met Elizabeth.”You did great!” I laughed. “I was so clueless无线索的,笨拙的!”"That’s how I felt at first, too,” she said. “If you want, I can help you practice.”"Really?” I said.”Sure. By the way, I’m Elizabeth.” She scribbled on the back of a karate schedule. “Here’s my number.”"Wow, that’s so nice of you!” I said.She smiled. “No problem.”Anyway, to make a long story short, I called her a few days later, and we’ve been amazing friends ever since.Now for the sad part. Not very long ago, Elizabeth had to move. Her family still lives in California, but if you know anything about my state, then you know it’s gigantic. And I’m not positive about the exact geographic details, but the distance Elizabeth moved was about the same as if she had moved from London to Paris!”You can’t move!” I screamed when she told me the terrible news.”I know. That’s what I told my parents,”she said. “But they said we don’ have a choice. We’e moving in with my grandparents, and I guess it’ll be way cheaper than where we live now.”"Wait! I have the perfect solution,”I said. “You and your parents can move in with my family! We can share my room, and it’ll be like having a sleepover在外过夜 every single night! I’ sure my parents will be totally cool with it.”"That would be so great!” said Elizabeth, then she sighed. “I wish we could do that. But there’s no way. My parents also want to be closer to my grandparents, so I think we’re definitely going.”So Elizabeth and I had to come up with a Plan B. A would have been, we were actually pretty happy about our solution. Here’s what we did.First, we asked my mom to take a picture of us together and help us print it out regular size and teeny-tiny size .We put the regular photos in special frames that we decorated Forever. I gave me the frame she decorated.Then, we cut the teeny-tiny picture of us in half. I put the half with Elizabeth’s face in my locket小盒式吊坠 necklace, and she put the half with my face in her locket necklace.So even though Elizabeth lives miles away and I only get to see her once in a while, our Friends Forever picture frames and lockets really do help with the “missing-you” part.Besides that, our parents let us e-mail sometimes, and we still get to talk and crack up together on the phone now and then偶尔,有时. Also, we love sending each other funny letters and packages filled with goofy傻瓜的,笨拙的 surprises.So, dear Already Lonely, being separated from your friend doesn’t have to be as bad as it seems right now. Photos, letters, phone calls, e-mails, and great memories can really and truly make a friend seem closer than he or she is.I hope these ideas help. As they say in London, “cheers” to you and your friend! And as I like to say…Ciao for now,Arizona