1 . As you work to develop your career (事业), whether you are applying for a job right now or planning what you will do in the future, three things are vital: your passion (激情), your value and your goals. These are three obvious but related beliefs that you need to both know for yourself and be able to communicate to others.
Passion is what drives you. Your passion is what brings a smile to your face, what lights your creative engine and what makes you approach a problem with passion. Your passion could be for a specific field, profession, industry, customer, type of problem, or some combination.
Goals are what you want to do.
Knowing your passion can help you better define (界定) your value and clarify your goals. And understanding your goals can help you go better to your passion and pronounce your value.
A.But what are they exactly. |
B.Thus how can we behave properly. |
C.Value is what you offer to a partner. |
D.Your goals may be personal or professional, a big picture or otherwise. |
E.When your work performs your passion, it’s no need rewarding yourself. |
F.Whatever your career is, you are to learn cooperation and communication. |
G.The more you know about these three, the better you can build your career. |
2 . Nearly five years ago, I booked a retreat (僻静处) to work on my book, Tracking Wonder. I knew I worked best with limited distraction, but when I finally was able to carve time away from the world to do this creative work, I found it very difficult to focus.
Ⅰ. Reboot(重启) your mental health.
Just as our muscles need rest days between workouts to grow stronger, our minds need periods of idleness to process the world around us.
Innovators in times of crisis and adversity actually grant themselves space to be bored and daydream deliberately. This kind of daydreaming can lead to positive mental feelings of hope, renewal, and forward motion, but it requires boredom and space.
Ⅱ.
The capacity to be bored and the capacity to be creative go hand in hand. Want to increase your creativity?
Ⅲ. Reconnect with what matters to you.
These days, current events—and the resulting analysis, opinions, and Twitter hot takes—come at us so quickly that it’s difficult to process one issue before the next takes its place.
A.Become more creative. |
B.I completely lacked creativity. |
C.Here are three ways to release your creativity. |
D.The answer may not be more stimulation, but less. |
E.Reach for our phones to check a fact during a conversation. |
F.Learning to let yourself be bored can have three surprising benefits. |
G.But to truly be an informed citizen, you need to allow time for idleness. |
Failures result in mental and emotional g
4 . I grew up in the 1950s with very practical parents. My mother washed aluminum foil (铝箔纸) after she cooked in it, and then she reused it.She was the earliest recycle (回收利用) queen before people had a name for it.
My father was no different.He preferred getting old shoes fixed to buying new ones.Their marriage was good and their dreams were focused (集中).Their best friends lived just a wave away.Though my parents have passed away,I can see them now-Dad in trousers,a T-shirt and a hat and Mom in a house dress,lawnmower (割草机) in one hand and dishtowel in the other.
It was the time to fix things-a curtain rod (挂帘杆) the kitchen radio, the screen door, the oven door, and so on. They fixed all things we had.It was a way of life,and sometimes it made me crazy.All that re-fixing and renewing made me want to scream.I wanted just once to be wasteful.Waste meant being rich.Throwing things away meant you knew there’d always be more.I often thought like that.
But then my mother died,and on that clear summer night,in the warmth of the hospital room,I learnt that sometimes there isn’t any more.Sometimes,what we care about most gets all used up and goes away and it will never return. So, while we have it, it is the best that we love it,care for it,fix it when it’s broken and cure it when it’s sick.
This is true for marriage,old cars,children with bad report cards,dogs with bad hips and aging parents and grandparents.We keep them because they are worth it and because we are worth it.
1. We can learn that when the writer was young, she________.A.thought highly of her parents’ habits |
B.often helped her parents fix old things |
C.often threw things away without being noticed |
D.at times hated it when her parents fixed old things |
A.Her mother truly loved her. |
B.She had wasted a lot of money. |
C.Things may never return once they are gone. |
D.She had hurt her parents for many times. |
A.To advise us to love what we have. |
B.To encourage us to recycle old things. |
C.To explain why her parents recycled. |
D.To help us know about life in the past. |