"Everything comes to him who waits" is a famous saying, which tells people that nothing is impossible as long as they are diligent.
For example, Sun Jing, a person from the Jin Dynasty, tied a rope to his hair and tied the other end to the beam every night in order not to doze off. Whenever his head drooped, the rope would wake him up and continue reading after waking up. In this way, he became a celebrity who used a hanging beam to prevent himself from falling asleep. Su Qin, who is also a spy, has always been looked down upon by others because he can't get an official in Qin. So he decided to fight for breath. From then on, he studied hard and forgot to eat and sleep. Whenever it is late at night and it is quiet all around, Su Qin is already dizzy and always wants to sleep. He immediately pricks his thigh with an awl, feeling pain, and people wake up. This is Su Qin, a celebrity who woke himself up by stabbing stocks.
Another example is Kuang Heng in the Western Han Dynasty. His family is poor, but he likes reading very much. However, there was no oil to light a lamp in his house at night, and a lamp was lit in his neighbor's room, so Kuang Heng dug a hole in the wall to read with the light coming from the hole. This is the story of "digging a wall to borrow light".
There is also the modern Xu Beihong, whose paintings are famous at home and abroad. When he was young, he inspired himself to learn painting, and with his hard work, he won glory for our country and prevented foreigners from looking down on us China people.
From these celebrity stories, everyone must have learned a truth: Only by sticking to the end and persevering can we make a difference.
you can't be half-hearted and half-hearted, but you must finish what you started and persevere. Only in this way can we make a difference and make due contributions to the people and society.
Lincoln, the 16th president of the United States, is a world-famous great speaker. His success lies in his hard practice of speech eloquence since his youth, and he has seen and listened more. When he was young, he worked as a farmer, a lumberjack, a shop assistant, a postman, a land surveyor and so on. In order to become a lawyer, he often walks 3 miles to a court to listen to lawyers' arguments and see how they argue and gesture. While listening to those politicians and speakers' impassioned speeches, he imitated them. He listened to the preaching of evangelists who traveled everywhere, waving their arms and shaking their voices in the sky. When he came back, he followed their example and practiced his speech repeatedly in the Woods and cornfields. The success of the speech made Lincoln finally become an eloquent lawyer and finally stepped into politics.