Pursuit of taste
Han Yu (1 1), Class 3, Middle School Affiliated to Qufu Normal University, Shandong Province
I want that thing.
I waded through mountains and rivers and finally came to the foot of that mountain. After that, I stayed up all night. Every day, I get up at dawn, trudge on the narrow mountain road, and sometimes follow Gong Yu's example and draw a slender white line between the mountains. The mountain is so steep that even the yellow crane can't cross it. I pity those monkeys who only have claws to use, and the competition has abruptly opened up a plank road for me. The residents at the foot of the mountain watched my every move curiously. After hundreds of days and nights, finally, I got that thing. When I carefully carried it back to the village along the narrow path, every 100 steps, we had to turn nine turns in the middle of its mound, and the villagers sighed-I only had an ordinary stone in my hand, which can be seen everywhere along the road in the fields.
"You are so worthless that it is not worth your efforts." The villagers said to me.
I laughed without a word. Many times, when you have something, others often lament it and think it is not as valuable as you thought. Even sometimes, we will regret ourselves and regret that we have paid too much effort and sweat.
Of course, before each pursuit, we should make a detailed investigation and make a valuable goal and a practical plan. This will get twice the result with half the effort.
However, if the result is not satisfactory, will our previous efforts be worthless?
Maybe what I've been working hard for is only worth a little in the end, but so what? Is it only the material actually obtained that has value? Didn't I get a lot in the process of struggle? In the process of pursuing, I learned to persist; In the step by step hardships and twists and turns, I learned to persist and struggle. In the hundreds of days and nights of the mountain, even if nothing was obtained in the end, it opened up a mountain road for others. How can these gains and contributions and spiritual satisfaction be measured by simple material wealth?
There is no value without pursuit. We always appreciate success and failure in pursuit again and again, and always sharpen ourselves in pursuit again and again in order to grow slowly. In the process of pursuing, we also helped others. Maybe we didn't get the material wealth to boast about in the end, but we left the sweat and the struggle. In the end, you will gain more spiritual wealth.
When you have something, you may find that it is not as valuable as you think, but should we give up the pursuit? No, this does not prevent us from pursuing new things and gaining new values. Perhaps the countless small values you have gained through hard work will accumulate together and become real values, helping us realize new pursuits and move towards success.
The real value lies not in the object, but in the pursuit. In repeated efforts, we may fail, but we still have to pursue. We have been pursuing it.
Besides ... I look at the stone in my hand, and some efforts are not worthless returns. It's just that more often, our eyes are confused by the world of mortals and we can't see the glittering gold particles on the beach. Perhaps only when we are mature enough can we really see the hidden value of Didi sweat.
Picking up a small hammer, I gently knocked off the shell of the stone, stripped off the dark gray coat, and gradually a green light emerged, dyeing a piece of land green. Brilliant and beautiful.
That is a piece of jade.
(Instructor: Ge,)
Teacher's comments
The author incarnates as a jade picker and pursues jade, but in the author's eyes, the real value lies not in the result, but in the process. The process of pursuing beauty is hard. In the eyes of many people, if there is no ideal result, hard sweat will lose its meaning, but the author makes us understand that "there is no value without pursuit", which also reminds us of our own life, as Nobel said: "Life is a gem that nature pays human beings to carve." As long as we keep going, attach importance to the process and underestimate the gains and losses, perhaps it is at the moment when we suddenly look back that life has given us a fair answer and a happy mood.
(Xing Yang)