narration
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高考英语作文写作指导一、记叙文(narration)【含义】①记叙文→记人叙事+写景状物②一般具有的六要素:时间(time)、地点(place)、人物(character)、事件(event)、原因(cause)和结果(outcome)【结构】①顺叙型→按时间发生的先后顺序“开端→发展→高潮→结局”★使人物、事件的叙述更清晰★时空层次性较强②倒叙型→先写结局或发展过程中的某一重要内容,后写事件经过★产生悬念,吸引读者③合叙型→顺叙+倒叙在顺叙某事的过程中,插入另一件事的叙述,再回到原来的事件上。
【写作应用】小说+非小说体(回忆录、游记、日记)①引言(introduction)背景(setting)=时间、地点、人物等②正文(body)→冲突+情节发展+高潮◆冲突→两种不同思想或力量的矛盾、纠葛、撞击或对抗,它不但存在于不同人物、不同性格之间,而且存在于同一个人物的内心世界里。
三种类型的冲突:不同人物之间的冲突,人与环境之间的冲突,个人心灵深处不同思想的冲突◆情节的内容由人物性格的矛盾和冲突构成。
情节常常表现为一系列故事,可以说,凡情节都包含某种故事或故事性。
◆高潮→情节发展到达顶点矛盾双方已剑拔弩张,斗争达到白热化程度。
人物命运即将决定,主题思想得到集中表现。
③结尾(conclusion)故事的结局→矛盾冲突的最后解决、人物命运的最后归宿一个好的结尾往往能提供一个完满的答案,或答案已明确,却留下一些令人深省、回味的东西。
二、描写文(description)【含义】对客观世界加以艺术和主观的描绘。
它把对某一物体、人物、地方或景色的印象和了解细腻地表达出来,在读者面前再现它们的形象。
【特点】具体性、生动性和创造性描写的细节要能表达主题【描写顺序】空间位置顺序、时间顺序,一般到特殊或特殊到一般顺序,递升到递降或递降到递升顺序【写作应用】①人物描写(description of a person)对人物形象外部特征进行描绘,刻画人物性格特征,表现人物精神面貌,披露人物内心活动,揭示人物身份境遇,显示人物性格变化,突出作品主题思想。
Narration1.What is narration1.1 definitionTo narrate is to give an account of an event or a series of events. In other words, a narrative recreates an event or gives a sense of it by helping the audience visualize that event.1.2classification2.Strategies for using narration2.1 Include the key elements of narrationIn order to make a narrative easier to follow, you should often take the following elements into consideration:1) a setting, or some background information2) a goal, or the ultimate purpose of the writing3)an initiating event4)simple reaction5)an attempt6)an outcome7)the endingIn some cases, some of them may be absent. In any sense, a narrative should at least contain a setting, a theme, a plot, and an ending.Eg.It happened that a fox was ambling(溜达) along a country lane when he spied a bunch of ripe grapes hanging from a vine(葡萄树)high above his head. Hungry as he was, the fox determined to have those grapes for his dinner. He stood tall on his hind legs, but could not reach the grapes. He leapt high in the air, but missed the grapes and fell painfully onto his back. He was too sore to make a further attempt at the grapes, so he sighed and turned away down the road. “Well,” he said to himself. “The grapes were probably sour anyway.”2.2 Select significant details for narrationSix Ws: Who? What? When? Where? How? Why?◇In selecting significant details, you should avoid those details which are not pertinent to the above six questions.◇For different subjects and different purposes, you can lay different amount of emphasis on each aspect. Sometimes one or two of the six Ws can even be omitted.Eg.I was standing right across the road there by my car getting ready to change a flat tire when I heard the train coming. Just as the engine reached the crossing, there was a loud grinding sound. And the noise did not stop either, the way it would in a car wreck; it kept going on, thundering and crashing. All of a sudden, the coal cars started to jackknife, falling off the tracks like toys, with coal pouring out all over the ground. Coal dust and dirt were flying everywhere. Then, in a minute or two, everything was still; the only thing moving was the coal, sliding out of the car in piles. I just stood there and watched. It was like something you’d see in the movies.2.3Determine a purpose2.4Choose a point of viewWhat are the advantages and limitations of the first person?2.5 Use dialogues cautiously1)Where it is possible, avoid unnecessary repetition of the speakers’ namesor unnecessary description of the way they speak, so far as the reader can make out who is talking and who will follow in turn.A tiresome dialogue:“ I see you in the corner,” whispered Baker softly.“ How did you find me?” inquired Charles curiously.“ I smelled the pipe you’ve been smoking,” purred Baker evilly.“Oh!” exclaimed Charles alarmedly.2)Present dialogues in a simple and brief way. Don’t overload your writing with lengthy dialogues that have vague or little bearing on the point you want to make. Don’t extend dialogues in such a way as to turn the narrative into a play. Eg.I’ll not forget my first---and last---meeting with that old T exan. He came striding down the line I had just surveyed on his property(地产),pulling up my line stakes(线路桩)and tossing(猛举)them over his shoulder as he came. When he got up to my surveying truck, he wasn’t even out of breath:“ Get off my land.”“OK. I will----in just a minute. If you’ll just---”“Get off now.”“Y es, sir, right now, just like you say.”And I did leave, as fast as possible.3.How to organize a narrative essay3.1 how to introduce a narrative essayIn narrative introductions, the best plan is to hint at your main point, preparing your reader psychologically for what is to come.1)The most obvious way is to give background the reader will need tounderstand the story.Eg.After several months’jail in my university, I was so mentally tired that I embarked on a trip to Shanghai on the very first day of the summer vacation in 1997. Though I did not expect much from that trip except freedom, it finally turned out to be my most unforgettable trip just because of a girl.2)Another way to begin a narrative is to go directly into the story itself.3.2How to develop the body of a narrative essayEpisodeChronological orderFlashback3.3how to end a narrative essayA frequently used way to end a narrative is to further point out the significance of the event.Eg.That incident happened more than fifteen years ago. My parents and my sister might have forgotten it by now. But Father’s words are still ringing in my ears.Another way to end a narrative is to have the significance implied and leave it to the reader to make it out.A SampleIf OnlyPaul MonahanHaving worked at a 7-Eleven store for two years, I thought I had become successful at what our manager called “customer relations”. I firmly believed that a friendly smile and an automatic “sir”, “ma’am”, and “thank you” would see me through any situation that might arise, from soothing impatient or unpleasant people to apologizing for giving out the wrong change. But the other night an old woman shattered my belief that a glib(口齿伶俐的)response could smooth over the rough spots of dealing with othe human beings.The moment she entered, the woman presented a sharp contrast to our shiny store with its bright lighting and neatly arranged shelves. Walking as if each step were painful, she slowly pushed open the glass door and hobbled(步履蹒跚)down the nearest aisle(走廊). She coughed dryly, wheezing(困难地呼吸)with each breath. On a forty-degree night, she was wearing only a faded print dress, a thin, light-beige sweater too small to button, and black vinyl(乙烯基)slippers with the backs cut out to expose calloused(起老茧的)heels. There were no stockings or socks on her splotchy(脏兮兮的), blue-veined legs.After strolling around the store for several minutes, the old woman stopped in front of the rows of canned vegetables. She picked up some corn niblets and stared with a strange intensity at the label. At that point, I decided to be a good, courteous employee and asked her if she needed help. As I stood close to her, my smile became harder to maintain; her red-rimmed eyes were patially closed by yellowish crusts(硬皮);her hands were covered with layer upon layer of grime(尘垢), and the stale smell of sweat rose in a thick vaporous cloud from her clothes.“I need some food,”she muttered in reply to my bright “Can I help you?”“Are you looking for corn, ma’am?”“I need some food,” she repeated. “Any kind.”“Well, the corn’s night-five cents,” I said in my most helpful voice. “Or, if you like, we have a special on bologna(大腊肠)today.”“I can’t pay,” she said.For a second, I was tempted to say, “T ake the corn.” But the employee rules flooded into my mind: Remain polite, but do not let customers get the best of you. Let them know you are in control. For a moment, I even entertained the idea that this was some sort of test, and that this woman was someone from the head office, testing my loyalty. I responded dutifully, “I’m sorry, ma’am, but I can’t give away anything for free.”The old woman’s face collapsed a bit more, if that were possible, and her hands trembled as she put the can back on the shelf. She shuffled(慢慢吞吞地走)past me toward the door, her torn and duty clothing barely covering her bent back.Moments after she left, I rushed out the door with the can of corn, but she was nowhere in sight. For the rest of my shift, the image of the woman haunted me. I had been young, healthy, and smug. She had been old, sick, and desperate. Whishing with all my heart that I had acted like a human being rather than a robot, I was saddened to realize how fragile a hold we have on our better instincts.。
discourse的词汇辨析题Discourse是一个广泛使用的英语词汇,它可以被用来描述口头或书面的交流方式、对话或讨论的方式,以及特定社会或文化环境中的言论。
然而,有时候我们可能会对discourse的不同含义感到困惑。
在本文中,我将讨论discourse的几个常见词汇辨析题,以帮助我们更好地理解它们的含义和用法。
1. Discourse vs. ConversationDiscourse和conversation都可以用来描述人们之间的交流方式,但它们在含义和用法上有一些细微的差别。
Conversation通常指的是两个或多个人之间的面对面的对话,它更侧重于日常对话和交流的简单性。
Discourse则更广泛,不仅可以指对话,还可以包括更正式和专业的讨论,例如学术讨论或辩论。
Discourse更加注重言论的结构和组织,以及言辞的表达方式。
2. Discourse vs. DialogueDiscourse和dialogue都指的是交流方式,但它们在用法上有一些区别。
Discourse通常用来描述更大规模的交流活动,可能包括多个人或更广泛的社会范围。
它更加注重言论的结构和组织,以及对话的整体框架。
Dialogue则更侧重于两个或多个人之间的对话,强调彼此之间的交流和理解。
它更注重交流的双向性和相互影响,强调合作和共识的建立。
3. Discourse vs. NarrationDiscourse和narration都与交流方式有关,但它们侧重的方面不同。
Discourse 通常强调言辞的表达方式和交流的结构,注重语言的使用和表达的方式。
它更加关注对话的整体组织和结构,以及对话的目的和效果。
Narration则更侧重于叙述和故事的讲述,强调事件和情节的发展,注重时间顺序和情节的连贯性。
4. Discourse vs. RhetoricDiscourse和rhetoric都与言辞和表达方式有关,但它们的重点略有不同。
NARRATION writing skill (1)1. What is narration?Narration means telling a single story or several related stories. The story can be a means to an end, a way to support a main idea or thesis.Narration is powerful. Every public speaker, from politician to classroom teacher, knows that stories capture the attention of listeners as nothing else can. We want to know what happened to others, not simply because we're curious, but also because their experiences shed light on our own lives. Narration lends force to opinion, triggers the flow of memory, and evokes places, times, and people in ways that are compelling and affecting.2. How narration fits your purpose and audience;Narration can also appear in essays, sometimes as a supplemental pattern of development.In addition to providing effective support in one section of your paper, narration can also serve as an essay's dominant pattern of development. In fact, we can use a single extended narrative to convey a central point and share with readers your view of what happened.Although some narratives relate unusual experiences, most tread familiar ground, telling tales of joy, love, loss, frustration, fear--- all common emotions experienced during life. Narratives can take the ordinary and transmute it into something significant, even extraordinary. As Willa Cather, the American novelist wrote: “There are only two or three human stories and they go on repeating themselves as fiercely as if they had never happened before." The challenge lies in applying your own vision to tale, thereby making it unique.3. Prewriting strategies for narration;•What event evokes strong emotion in you and is likely to have a powerful effect on your readers?•Does your journal suggest any promising subjects?•Does anything point to an event worth writing about?•Will you focus on a personal experience, an incident in someone else's life, or a public event?•If you write about an event in someone else's life, will you have time to interview the person?•What is the source of tension in the event: one person's internal dilemma, a conflict between characters, or a struggle between a character and a socialinstitution or natural phenomenon?•Will the conflict create enough tension to "hook" readers and keep them interested?•What tone is appropriate for recounting the conflict?4. Strategies for using narration in an essay;a. Identify the point of the narrative conflict;•Most narratives center on a conflict.•When you relate a story, it's up to you to convey the significance or meaning of the event's conflict.•When recounting your narrative, be sure readers are clear about your narrative point, or thesis.b. Develop only those details that advance the narrative point;Nothing is more boring than a storyteller who gets sidetracked and drags out a story with nonessential details. When telling a story, you maintain an effective narrative pace by focusing on your point and eliminating any details that don't support it. A good narrative depends not only on what is included, but also on what has been left out. •Having a clear sense of your narrative point and knowing your audience are crucial.•How do you determine which specifics to omit, which to treat briefly, and which to emphasize?•You can't lead away from the point so you should leave out some details.•You also need to keep your audience in mind when selecting narrative details.•Is this detail or character of conversation essential? Does my audience need this detail to understand the conflict in the situation? Does this detail advance orintensify the narrative action?•You should feel free to add or reshape details to suit your narrative point.c. Organize the narrative sequence;Every narrative begins somewhere, presents a span of time, and ends at a certain point. Frequently, you will want to use a straightforward time order, following the event chronologically from beginning to end.But sometimes a strict chronological recounting may not be effective -- especially if the high point of the narrative gets lost somewhere in the middle of the time sequence. To avoid that possibility, you may want to disrupt chronology, plunge the reader into the middle of the story, and then return in a flashback to the tale's beginning.Narratives can also use flashforward -- you give readers a glimpse of the future before the story continues in the present. these techniques shift the story onto severalplanes and keep it from becoming a step-by-step, predictable account.Whether or not you choose to include flashbacks or flash-forwards in an essay, remember to limit the time span covered by the narrative. Otherwise, you'll have trouble generating the details needed to give the story depth and meaning. Also regardless of the time sequence you select, organize the tale so it drives toward a strong finish. Be careful that your story doesn't trail off minor, anticlimactic details.d. Make the narrative easy to follow.Describing each distinct action in a separate paragraph helps readers grasp the flow of events. Although narrative essays don't always have conventional topic sentences, each narrative paragraph should have a clear focus. Often this focus is indicated by a sentence early in the paragraph that directs attention to the action taking place. Such a sentence functions as a kind of informal topic sentence; the rest of the paragraph then develops that topic sentence. You should also be sure to use time signals when narrating a story.e. Make the narrative vigorous and immediate;A compelling narrative provides an abundance of specific details, making readers feel as if they're experiencing the story being told. Readers must be able to see, hear, touch, smell, and taste the event you're narrating. Vivid sensory description is, therefore, an essential part of an effective native. Not only do specific sensory details make writing a pleasure to read -- we all enjoy learning the particulars about people, places, and things -- but they also give the narrative the stamp of reality. The specifics convince the reader the event being described actually did, or could, occur.Another way to create narrative immediacy is to use dialogue while telling a story. Our sense of other people comes, in part, from what they say and the way they sound. Conversational exchanges allow the reader to experience characters directly. The challenge in writing dialogue is to make each character'sspeech distinctive and convincing.Another way to enliven narratives is to use varied sentence structure. Sentences that plod along with the same predictable pattern put readers to sleep. Experiment with your sentences by varying their length and type; mix long and short sentences, simple and complex.Finally, vigorous verbs lend energy to narratives. Use active verb forms rather than passive ones, and try to replace anemic to be verbs with dynamic constructions.f. Keep your point of view and verb tense consistent;If you, as narrator, tell a story as you experienced it, the story is written in thefirst-person point of view. But if you observed the event and want to tell how someone else experienced the incident, you would use the third-person point of view. Each point of view has advantages and limitations. The first person allows you to express ordinarily private thoughts and to re-create an event as you actually experienced it. This point ofview is limited, though, in its ability to depict the inner thoughts of other people involved in the event. By way of contrast, the third person makes it easier to provide insight into the thoughts of all the participants. However, its objective, broad perspective may undercut some of the subjective immediacy typical of the "I was there" point of view.Knowing whether to use the past or present tense is important. In most narration, the past tense predominates, enabling the writer to span a considerable period of time. Although more rarely used, the present tense can be powerful for events of short duration.A narrative in the present tense prolongs each moments, intensifying the reader's sense of participation. Be careful, though, unless the event is intense and fast paced, the present tense can seem contrived. Whichever tense you choose, avoid shifting midstream --- starting, let's say, in the past tense and switching to present.Two readingsThe Movie HouseIt was two blocks from my home; I began to go alone from the age of six. My mother, so strict about my kissing girls, was strangely indulgent about this. The theatre ran three shows a week, for two days each, and was closed on Sundays. Many weeks I went three times. I remember a summer evening in our yard. Supper is over; the walnut tree throws a heavy shadow. The fireflies are not out yet. My father is off, my mother and her parents are turning the earth in our garden. Some burning sticks and paper on our ash heap fill the damp air with low smoke; I express a wish to go to the movies, expecting to be told no. instead, my mother tells me to go into the house and clean up; I come into the yard again in clean shorts, the shadows slightly heavier, the dew a little wetter; the dime and the penny in my hand. I always ran to the movies. If it was not a movie with Adolphe Menjou, it was a horror picture. People turning into cats—fingers going stubby into paws and hair being blurred in with double exposure—and Egyptian tombs and English houses where doors creak and wind disturbs the curtains and dogs refuse to go into certain rooms because they sense something supersensory. I used to crouch down into the seat and hold my coat in front of my face when I sensed a frightening scene coming, peeking through the buttonhole to find out when it was over. Through the buttonhole Frankenstein’s monster glowered; lightning flashed; sweat poured over the bolts that held his face together. On the way home, I ran again, in terror now. Darkness had come; the first show was from seven to nine, buy nine even the longest summer day was ending. Each porch along the street seemed to be a tomb crammed with shadows; each shrub seemed to shelter a grasping arm. I ran with a frantic high step, trying to keep my ankles away from the reaching hands. The last and worst terror was our own porch; low brick walls on either side concealed possible cat people. Leaping high, I launched myself at the door and, if no one was in the front of the house, fled through suffocating halls past gaping doorways to the kitchen, where there was always someone working, and a light bulb burning. The icebox. The rickety worn table, oilcloth-covered, where we ate. The windows solid black and fortified by the interior brightness. But even then I kept my legs away from the dark space beneath the table.Questions:1 .Is the main idea of the paragraph directly stated? If so, in which sentence(s)? If not,state the main idea in a sentence of your own.2. What is the point of view in the narrative? Could another point of view be used? Using the first two sentences of the paragraph as an example, explain how you could change the point of view?3. In what ways is this paragraph subjective? In what ways is it objective?Learning to WriteRussell BakerWhen our class was assigned to Mr. Fleagle for third-year English, I anticipated another grim year in that dreariest of subjects. Mr. Fleagle was notorious among City students for dullness and inability to inspire. He was said to stuffy, dull, and hopelessly out of date. To me he looked to be sixty or seventy and prim to a fault. He wore primly severe eyeglasses; his wavy hair was primly cut and primly combed. He wore prom vested suits with neckties blocked primly against the collar buttons of his primly starched white shirts. He had a primly pointed jaw, a primly straight nose, and a prim manner of speaking that was so correct, so gentlemanly, that he seemed a comic antique.I anticipated a listless, unfruitful year with Mr. FleagleAnd for a long time was not disappointed. We read Mecbeth. Mr. Fleagle loved Mecbeth and wanted us to love it too, but he lacked the gift of infecting others with his own passion. He tried to convey the murderous ferocity of Lady Mecbeth one day by reading aloud the passage that concludes…I have given suck, and knowHow tender ‘tis to love the babe that milks meI would, while it was smiling in my face,Have plucked my nipple from his boneless gums….The idea of prim Mr. Fleagle plucking his nipple from boneless gums was too much for the class. We burst into gasps of irrepressible snickering. Mr. Fleagle stopped.“There is nothing funny, about giving suck to a babe. It is the—the very essence of motherhood, don’t you see.”He constantly sprinkled his sentences with “don’t you see.” It wasn’t a question but exclamation of mild surprise at our ignorance. “Your pronoun needs an antecedent, don’t you see,’ he would say, very primly. “The purpose of the Porter’s scene, boys, is to provide comic relief from the horror, don’t you see.”Later in the year we tackled the informal essay. “The essay, don’t you see, is the…” my mind went numb. Of all forms of writing, none seemed so boring as the essay. Naturally we would have to write informal essays. Mr. Fleagle distributed a homework sheet offering us a choice of topics. None was quite so simpleminded as “What I Did on My Summer Vacation,” but most seemed to be almost as dull. I took the list home and dawdled until the night before the essay was due. Sprawled on the sofa, I finally faced up to the grim task, took the list out my notebook, and scanned it. The topic on which my eye stopped was “The Art of Eating Spaghetti.”This title produced an extraordinary sequence of mental images. Surging up out of the depths of memory came a vivid recollection of a night in Belleville when all of us wereseated around the supper table—Uncle Allen, my mother, Uncle Charlie, Doris, Uncle Hal—and Aunt Pat served spaghetti for supper. Spaghetti was an exotic treat in those days. Neither Doris nor I had ever eaten spaghetti, and none of the adults had enough experience to be good at it. All the good humor of Uncle Allen’s house reawoke in my mind as I recalled the laughing arguments we had that night about the socially respectable method for moving spaghetti from plate to mouth.Suddenly I wanted to write about that, about the warmth and good feeling of it, but I wanted to put it down simply for my own joy, not for Mr. Fleagle. It was a moment to relive the pleasure of an evening at New Street. To write it as I wanted, however, would violate all the rules of formal composition I’d learned in school, and Mr. Fleagle would surely give it a failing grade. Never mind. I would write something else for Mr. Fleagle after I had written this thing for myself.When I finished it the night was half gone and there was no time left to compose a proper, respectable essay for Mr. Fleagle. There was no choice next morning but to turn in my private reminiscence of Belleville. Two days padded before Mr. Fleagle returned the graded papers, and he returned everyone’s but mine. I was bracing myself for a command to report to Mr. Fleagle immediately after school for discipline when I saw him lift my paper from his desk and rap for the class’s attention.“Now, boys,”he said, “I want to read you an essay. This is titled ‘the Art of Eating Spaghetti.’”And he started to read. My words! He was reading my words out loud to the entire class. What’s more, the entire class was listening. Listening attentively. Then somebody laughed, then the entire class was laughing, and not in contempt and ridicule, but with openhearted enjoyment. Even Mr. Fleagle stopped two or three times to repress a small prime smile.I did my best to avoid showing pleasure, but what I was feeling was pure ecstasy at this startling demonstration that my words had the power to make people laugh. In the eleventh hour as it were, I had discovered a calling. It was the happiest moment of my entire school career. When Mr. Fleagle finished he put the final seal on my happiness by saying, “Now that, boys, is an essay, don’t you see. It’s –don’t you see—it’s of the very essence of the essay, don’t you see. Congratulations, Mr. Baker.”Questions:1. What is the main idea of the essay?2. What order does the writer use in describing the incidents in his narrative?3. Is the essay written objectively or subjectively? Cite examples from the essay to help explain your answer?。
narrative的名词和动词名词:narrative动词:narratenarrative的意思是一个连续发展的事件、故事或情节;narrate 的意思是讲述或描述连续发展的事件、故事或情节。
1. She told a fascinating narrative about her adventures in the jungle.她讲述了一个关于她在丛林中冒险的迷人故事。
2. I love to listen to her narrate her experiences while traveling the world.我喜欢听她讲述她在世界各地旅行的经历。
3. The book is a first-person narrative told from the perspective of the main character.这本书是以第一人称讲述的,从主角的角度讲述。
4. He has a talent for narrative and always keeps his audience engaged.他有叙事的天赋,总是能让他的听众投入其中。
5. The documentary narrates the history of the ancient civilization in a captivating way.这部纪录片以一种迷人的方式讲述了古代文明的历史。
6. The narrative of the movie was compelling and kept me on the edge of my seat.电影的叙事非常吸引人,让我提心吊胆。
7. The novel is written in a narrative style that draws the reader in from the first page.这本小说以一种叙事风格写成,从第一页就吸引了读者。
Teaching volunteer gives me……
Name: Ryan Student Number: 100111129 This summer, a group of college students braved the heat, set foot on the journey to become teaching volunteers at a small village in Gansu Province. I am one of them. Although only a half month, we sowed the seeds of love, brought knowledge and hope for rural children, we enjoy the happiness. Standing on the podium, we also accept the baptism of growth.
The passion brought by stoves’ burning
As one of the volunteers, I taught for 15 days at a primary school in Gansu Province. The local infrastructure condition is poor. Under the scorching sun, we have to go to the pond to wash clothes, and wash vegetables. Without the electric fan, mosquitos also exceptionally animate. However, I never complained. At the first day, I wrote in my diary:” standing on the podium, I hope to give them a dream they can touch. I want them to know, I’m from rural place too, I've also learn in such an environment. If I can go to the college, they can do it too.” When encountered power failure, we must use the stove to cook. So we have to prepare firewood every two or three days. In hot weather, facing the stove cooking, we were roasted totally sweating. However, I wrote this in my dairy “we have to motivate ourselves just like the burning flames, because there is passion inside of us.”
Emotionality brought by Instant noodles
Every day I was moved by different things and different people. At the fifth day, I wrote this in my dairy. "In the past, I always complaining about the little things I did
not like in our life, but I guess when I come back from the teaching, I will learn the meaning of happiness and thanksgiving." Before departure, I bought a new pair of sandals. At the end of teaching, the sandals have been worn out. Most of the local children live in the mountain area. At 5:00 every morning, they have to climb over several hills to the school. To send the kids home, I have to climb several mountains too, and I often get lost in the mountains. Most of the pupils bring their lunch, usually steamed bun. Those whose home conditions are better, they can afford instant noodles. Once lunch time, I learned that a little boy did not bring lunch and drink someone else's soup of instant noodles. I felt incomparable sorrow and grief. Immediately, I hold his hand to buy instant noodles. The boy smiled shyly, while I cried secretly. On that night, I wrote this: “the simple instant noodles make a child feel satisfied. Although the living condition of the rural is worse than the city, still the children are more appreciative. They still keep a pure space in their heart.”
These two stories are only small part of my memory as the teaching volunteer. There are more which I cannot describe with words and language. However, I will always treasure them.
Many people asked me: “is it worth to be a teaching volunteer? Especially, in such an impoverished area.” I laughed and did not answer it. But I knew the answer is “yes”. Because these kids touch the softest part of my heart and let me find the purest space of my heart. This experience will become a lifelong memory.。