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| How did you do it, Dad? How have you managed not to take a drink for almost 20 years? It took me almost 20 years to have the 1 to even ask my father this very personal question. When Dad first 2 drinking, the whole family was on pins and needles every time he got into a 3 that, in the past, would have started him 4 again. For a few years we were 5 to bring it up for fear that the drinking would begin again. "I had this little poem that I would recite to myself at least four to five times a day," was Dad's 6 to my 18-year-old unasked question. "The words were a constant (经常的) 7 to me that things were 8 so hard that I could not deal with them," Dad said. Then he 9 the poem with me. The poem's 10 , yet profound (深刻的) words immediately became 11 of my daily routine as well. About a month after this 12 with my father, I received a gift in the mail from a friend of mine. It was a book of daily sayings of wisdom with one 13 for each day of the year. It has been my 14 that when you get something with days of the year on it, you naturally turn to the page that lists your own 15 . I 16 opened the book to November 10 to see 17 words of wisdom this book had in store for me. I was 18 when I looked at the page, and then tears of disbelief and appreciation 19 down my face. There, on my birthday, was the exact same poem that had 20 my father for all these years! It is called the Serenity (平静) Prayer: God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change; the courage to change the things I can; and the wisdom to know the difference. | ||||
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1-5: BACDC 6-10: ADABC 11-15: DAABB 16-20: BCBCD
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| Outside our hotel in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, an old woman waited beside door with her hand outstretched. Every day I put my hand in hers as our eyes met. She never failed to 1 smile, my grasp, and my greeting. On the last day of our visit, I found myself 2 on a busy corner across the street from our hotel. Bicycles and motorbikes rushed in front of me. We had been advised to walk 3 through the crowded traffic without looking right or left. Let them 4 us. 5 tonight I was by myself and felt uncertain to 6 the flood of vehicles. As I 7 on the roadside. I felt a hand on my elbow and looked 8 to see the smile of my small beggar friend looking up at me. She nodded her head toward the street 9 that she would take me across. Together, we moved slowly into the disorder. When we 10 the corner of the crossing, I looked down at her again, and couldn't help saying, "You have the most beautiful smile in the world." She 11 knew little English, but must have 12 the tone, for she threw both arms around me in a big hug while the 13 streamed by us on both sides. Then we 14 moved on toward the sidewalk, where she pulled my face down to hers, kissed me on both cheeks, and then walked away, 15 smiling and waving back to me. I had not given her a single 16 . But we had 17 something much more important-a warming of hearts in friendship. This 18 reminded me of something Mother Teresa once said, "If you cannot do great things, you can do small things with great 19 ." I will always remember this 20 . | ||||
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