Essay sample library > A Time You’ve Felt Lucky…

A Time You’ve Felt Lucky…

2023-03-16 16:16:54

Since St. Patrick's Day will come, this theme of Thursday will tell you when I experience luck in Ireland. When you have time, do you think it is particularly lucky? I look forward to hearing from you.

Jonathan: The moment I thought it was lucky, I entered a bookstore and saw a book. When I received ARC [Advanced Reader Copy], I did not feel that, but when I entered the store and saw it there, my entire experience felt real.

Flange: I felt very lucky that I married my wife Kara. She is not only strong but also very smart, but I can not ask two children for a better wife or mother. I am very fortunate to have her great heart on this journey.

Stacie: On 27th June 2014, I was looking for it because I am not an agent. One of my friends, Marjetta Geerling, invited the agent I met her to talk to me. I sent a message about Marjetta to Nicole Resciniti by e - mail. The next day, Nicole asked me to provide the complete manuscript. A month later, she sold it. It was a very fortunable day for me.

Joanne: I graduated from a nurse school in the summer but my boyfriend said he could use the Kawasaki 650 bike in the summer as he is about to depart. When the dump truck in front of my eyes spread gravel on the road, I was in downtown street in the middle of a 90 degree turn. The rear wheel of the motorcycle slides through the gravel. Behind me, there is traffic on the brick side of the 12-foot building in front of me. I tilted the bicycle from the corner, skipped the curb, and ran to the walls several feet in parallel until it stopped at the sidewalk. I remembered seeing the clover on the lawn on the other side of the street, I thought that there must be a four leaf clover so I was lucky.

Cathy: I have tried many times to leave home or to lose my job. I have to deal with something I forget or forgot sunglasses. I finally entered my car and walked along this road, and the accident happened. At that moment, I felt that the obstacles I encountered could not make me worse. For me, that is very lucky. Of course, this does not mean I am not surprised.

Melody: Whenever I see my book on a shelf not my book, I am very lucky. Publishing requires great effort, skill, and perseverance. But that also needs some luck again

"Look at the penny and pick it up, please do your best all day!" You probably have heard this before, maybe you may have stopped picking up a fortunate penny from the sidewalk. But sometimes the penny you see on the ground looks lucky. They look brown and black, sometimes they look dirty, you can not even tell if they are pennies or not! The answer is simple. Copper is a shiny metal, but it also has reactivity. Negatively charged oxygen atoms in our air are attracted to positively charged copper atoms in the pennies. When oxygen combines with copper, they form a new molecule called copper oxide. Copper oxide is brown or sometimes black (depending on others in the penny environment). That's why most of the coins you see are dirty or discolored - it's not really dirty, but copper oxide makes them look very dull

If you are interested in this news recently, I think I've heard about it in central US. In the past five years the Central America earthquake has experienced unprecedented growth and this area was previously considered one of the most stable areas on Earth. Extracting petroleum and natural gas from shale involves the use of high pressure mixtures of water, sand and chemicals to destroy or destroy the layers of the underground rock. These injections and brine also occur with release of oil and natural gas. Afterwards, wastewater is processed in so-called injection wells or sometimes processing wells