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I went shopping in the center of the city yesterday afternoon. It was six o¡¯clock before I was going home by bus. The bus was full of passenger, all of whom kept silent. A mother with her little son were sitting nearby. All of a sudden, the son cried loudly. The mother tries to do what she could make him stop crying. However, the son went on crying. After a long time, a man seating next to the mother said angrily, ¡°Why don¡¯t you give the child what she wants.¡± The mother answered quiet, ¡°I would if I could, and what he wants is your hat.¡± Hearing of this, all the passengers burst into laughter.

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Jack London was born in San Francisco in 1876£®He was abandoned by his father£¬¡°Professor¡± William Henry Chaney£¬a fortune telling person£¬and raised in Oakland by his mother Flora Wellman£¬a music teacher£®London¡¯s stepfather£¬John London£¬whose surname he took£¬was a failed storekeeper. London¡¯ youth marked by poverty. At the age of the he became a crazy reader, and borrowed books from the Oakland Public Library, where Ina Coolbirth told him to read the works of Flaubert, Tolstoy and other major novelists.
After leaving school at the age of 14£¬London worked as a seaman£¬rode in trains as a wanderer and adopted socialistic views as a member of the protest armies of the unemployed£®In 1894 he was arrested in Niagara Fails and put into prison for wandering£®These years made him determined to raise himself out of poverty but they also gave later materials for such works as The Sea Wolf£¨1 904£©£¬which partly came from his horrible experiences as a sailor in the Pacific Ocean£®
Without having much formal education£¬London spent much time in public libraries reading fiction£¬philosophy£¬poetry£¬political science£¬and at the age of 19 got admittance to the University of California in Berkeley£®During this period he had already started to write£®London left the school before the year was over and went to seek his fortune in the Klondike gold rush of 1 89 7£®His attempt was unsuccessful£®London spent the winter near Dawson City£¬suffering from illness£®In the spring he returned to San Francisco with his notebook full of plans for stories£®For the remainder of 1 89 8 London again tried to earn his living by writing£®London¡¯s first novel£¬The Son of the Wolf£¬appeared¡¯in 1900£®By 1904 Jack London was the author of 10 books£®The Son of the Wolf got a wide audience as did his other Alaska stories£¬The Call of the Wild£¨1903£©£¬White Fang£¨1906£©£¬and Burning Daylight£¨1910£©£®Jack London died on November 22£¬1916£®
СÌâ1:What did Ina Coolbirth tell London in the Oakland Public Library?£¨Within 15 words£©
СÌâ2:Why were London's horrible experiences as a sailor good for him?£¨Within 12 words£©
СÌâ3:What was wrong with London near Dawson City?£¨Within 5 words£©
СÌâ4:What is London¡¯s first novel?£¨Within 5 words£©
СÌâ5:How is the text developed?£¨Within 5 words£©

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Ryan Howes, a clinical psychologist from California, says "Forgiveness is a sensitive act that can feel like it opens us up to more pain£® But we need to have a way to process and let go of the effects of injury, or we risk serious physical and emotional consequences£®"
People who forgive tend to have better relationships, feel happier and more optimistic, and overall, enjoy better psychological well-being£®  Ð¡Ìâ1:  It's a difficult process£®
There's no single guidebook for forgiveness, though several experts sell their own methods£®
Howes suggests focusing on four elements:
Express the emotion£® Let yourself feel hurt and angry£® Express it to the person who made you feel that way£®  Ð¡Ìâ2:  Write a letter; you don't need to send it£® Shout your emotions at the top of your lungs while you're in the car, alone, with the windows down£®
__СÌâ3:  We want explanations ?even if we don't agree with them£® "Was it a misunderstanding? Were you mad at me? Some sort of cognitive framework £¨ÈÏÖª¿ò¼Ü£© is necessary, even if you don't like the reason£®"
Rebuild safety£®Ð¡Ìâ4:  That might mean an apology, reassurance from the person in question, distance or stronger boundaries£®
Let go£® Perhaps it's the hardest part: making a conscious decision not to hold a grudge £¨Ô¹ºÞ£©£®
If you're in a relationship, this means not bringing up past wrongs£® By letting go, you give up
your role as the victim and become equals again£®  Ð¡Ìâ5:
A£®Otherwise, talk to a friend or even an empty chair
B£®Control your feelings
C£®Understand why
D£®Before you forgive, you need to feel reasonably sure that the act won't reoccur
E£®Still, no one ever said forgiveness was easy
F£®It's a promise to yourself to stop feeling hurt and to fully move on
G£®You may feel helpless, or like life is meaningless

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