Like most people, I was brought up to look upon life as a process of getting. It was not until in my late thirties that I made this important     : giving-away makes life so much more exciting. You needn¡¯t worry if you       money.
This is how I     with giving-away. If an idea for improving the window display of a neighborhood store     in my mind, I step in and make the     to the storekeeper. If an accident takes place, the     of which I think the local police could use, I     him up and tell him about it, though I am not in    here. I found a rule about this world is to give     getting something back, though the    often comes in an unexpected form.
One Sunday morning the local post office delivered an important special letter to my home, though it was     to me at my office. I wrote the postmaster a note of     . More than a year later I needed a post-office box for a new business I was     . I was told at the window that there were     boxes left, and that my name would have to go on a long     list. As I was about to be      , the postmaster appeared in the    . ¡°Wasn¡¯t it you that wrote us that letter a year ago about delivering an  __  delivery to your home?¡± I said it was. ¡°Well, you certainly are going to have a box in this post office      we make one specifically for you. You don¡¯t know what a letter like that means to us. We usually get     but complaints.¡±

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People on a college campus were more likely to give money to the March of Dimes if they were asked for a donation by a disabled woman in a wheelchair than if asked by a nondisabled woman. In another        , subway riders in New York saw a man carrying a stick stumble£¨°í½Å£© and fall to the floor. Sometimes the victim had a large red birthmark on his      ; sometimes he did not. In this situation, the victim was more likely to         aid if his face was spotless than if he had an unattractive birthmark. In         these and other research findings, two themes are         : we are more willing to help people we like for some reason and people we think     assistance.
In some situations, those who are physically attractive are more likely to receive aid.       , in a field study researchers placed a completed application to graduate school in a telephone box at the airport. The application was ready to be        , but had apparently been "lost". The photo attached to the application was sometimes that of a very          person and sometimes that of a less attractive person. The measure of helping was whether the individual who found the envelope actually mailed it or not. Results showed that people were more likely to        the application if the person in the photo was physically attractive.
The degree of      between the potential helper and the person in need is also important. For example, people are more likely to help a stranger who is from the same country rather than a foreigner. In one study, shoppers on a busy street in Scotland were more likely to help a person wearing a(n)           T-shirt than a person wearing a T-shirt printed with offensive words.
Whether a person receives help depends in part on the "worth" of the case. For example, shoppers in a supermarket were more likely to give someone.        to buy milk rather than to buy cookies, probably because milk is thought more essential for        than cookies. Passengers on a New York subway were more likely to help a man who fell to the ground if he appeared to be         rather than drunk.

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I used to be ashamed of my grandma. I know that's a¡¡   ¡¡ thing to say, but it was true until today, so I have to¡¡    it.
The¡¡    started when my friend Katy found Grandma's false teeth floating in a glass on the bathroom sink. I was so used to seeing them that I¡¡     took notice of them. But Katy shouted, laughing and¡¡   ¡¡ to tell everyone about it. I had to get down on my knees and¡¡     her to shut up so my grandma wouldn't¡¡    and get hurt.
After that happened, I¡¡    there were a million things about Grandma that were embarrassing.
Once she took Jill and me out to Burger King.¡¡    ordering our hamburgers well-done, she told the person behind the counter, "They'll have two Whoppers (¾ÞÎÞ°Ô) well-to-do. " Jill burst out laughing, but I almost¡¡   .
After a while, I started wishing I could¡¡    Grandma in a closet. I even complained to my parents. Both my parents said I had to be careful not to make Grandma feel¡¡    in our home.
Then last Wednesday, something happened that¡¡    everything completely. My teacher told us to help find interesting old people and¡¡    them about their¡¡    for a big Oral History project. I was trying to think of someone when Angie pushed me gently.
"Volunteer your grandmother," she whispered. "She's¡¡    and rich in experience."
That was the last thing I ever thought Angie would say about my grandma.
This is how I ended up on¡¡     today interviewing my own grandmother before the whole school assembly (¼¯ºÏ). All my friends and teachers were listening to her¡¡     she was a great heroine. I was¡¡     of my grandma and hoped she would¡¡     know that I had been ashamed of her.

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Living one¡¯s life is really like driving on a highway. First, to make a good driving, the driver must carefully examine the       of his car, just as he cares for his health for a good life.           he enters into the highway, he must       certain rules for his own safety. It also can be said that he must obey certain rules of society when living as a decent (ÌåÃæµÄ) adult. For example, on the highway, he is       to keep a constant (²»¶ÏµÄ)      , which can be compared with his                activities through his life. Neither driving nor living must be taken at too       a speed nor at too slow a speed. If he drives too       the police will give him a      , just as he will be arrested when he breaks the law.       too conservatively (±£ÊصØ), he will be called an out-of-date person       the others driving at a(an)       speed.
When he wants to change his lanes, he must give careful       to every direction of his car. It is sometimes dangerous to change the way of life       he can be sure of completion by doing so. He       not make any unnecessary changing of lanes which gives him only danger. Finally, he must       where he is now by recognizing some       appearing now and then. If he takes the wrong way, he must return to the right as soon as he can. But he may thus lose       and energy both on the road and in life. On the whole, driving on a highway and living one¡¯s life are both hard work.       if he is careful and serious enough,       will provide him with much pleasure.

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Recently, we went on a vacation for a week that involved visiting four different ports in the sunny and warm climate of the Caribbean. There were         of laughter, fun and great food. It¡¯s a        thing when you go away that each day of the vacation also        to the end and a return to work.
It was twelve years since we went on a vacation, so this vacation was viewed with        of a great break away from my daily routine. And we weren¡¯t        .
But there was something very different about this vacation compared to those when we worked in a corporative environment. The main       was that when we returned, when the vacation was rapidly drawing to a close, we didn¡¯t have the same feeling of     stress, anxiety and fear.
In this recent vacation, it wasn¡¯t that we        enjoyed the various fun and new activities, the break away from routine, the pleasure of touring different countries and cultures, the         to do what we wanted when we wanted or the leisurely      of each day that was significant. What was significant was that we didn¡¯t       fear the last day of vacation. You see, we know that we were        what we love to do not what we had to do.
The feelings experienced in the last couple of days of vacation were viewed with the same joy as the very first days. In the previous times, the last days of vacation were terrible. We experience an increasing        of stress      we knew that a return to our field of employment was ¡°work¡± and not        that we loved and thoroughly enjoyed.
The        is this: If you do what you love, it doesn¡¯t matter       that a vacation has to end. If you love what you do you will not        yourself wishing for even a few more days of vacation, or wishing that you could      enjoying this vacation for much, much longer. A love of what you do        you back like a magnet.

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Tears slid down Ken's cheeks. Their newbom baby        was removed from life supprt, taken back to her and her  , Charlie. who held their baby. Austin was bom at 12:17 p.m. three months  than he should have been. The length of a school ruler. he weighed one pound. nine ounces. Doctors tried   that technology and medicine could offer at the     baby, but Austin did not respond well. Austin's lung tissue (×éÖ¯) had probably   ¡¡ developing four weeks before. even still    . his mother, because of an accident Zero chance of    . It was time to let him go, and let him leave in his mother's arms £­ at peace and in no pain.
In the next few hours, Charlie's parents, and Ken's mother came to meet and say    Austin. Charlie and Keri       their eyes on the baby as he snuggled(ÒÀÙË) into Keri's chest. The end, they believed. was coming ¡¡ . Nurse Melissa walked in every so often to check Austin's        . If it was time for him t0      . his heart rate would begin to slow. After four hours,    , Austin was still breathing. His heart thumped(Ìø¶¯) at a healthy 120 beats per       . He moved his head and wrapped his fingers and toes around the fingers of his         . Four hours became five, then six. Austin and his parents remained still     . Word about this baby had spread out. Everyone was talking about him. As the minutes and hours ticked away, Austin was going strong The tests showed a(n)      level of carbon dioxide in his blood. which meant he was       enough oxygen into his body. The clock passed midnight. Austin had       the next day. Miracle. a life miracle!

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I used to live selfishly, I should admit. But one moment changed me.
I was on my lunch break and had ___ the office to get something to eat. On the way£¬I __a busker(½ÖÍ·ÒÕÈË)£¬with a hat in front of him. I had some ___ in my pocket£¬but I would not give them to him, thinking to myself he would __ use the money to feed his addiction to drugs or alcohol. He___ like that type¡ª young and ragged. ___ what was I going to spend the money on? Only to feed my addiction to Coca-Cola or chocolate! I then ___ I had no right to place myself above ___ just because he was busking.
I ___ and dropped all the coins into his __£¬and he smiled at me. I watched for a while. As ___ as it sounds£¬I expected something more to come from that moment¡ªa feeling of ___ or satisfaction, for example. But nothing happened.  ___ ,I walked off. ¡°It proved to be a waste of __  .¡±I thought.
On my way home at the end of the ___ , I saw the busker again and he was __ .I watched him pick up the hat and walk __ a cafe counter. There he poured the ___ contents into a tin collecting __ an earthquake fund­raising(ļ¾è) event. He was busking for charity!
Now I donate any ___ I have to charity tins and enjoy the feeling of giving.

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