About a year ago, I started to teach my nephew to read before reading. Please tell him the title of the book.
Through years of school education, if you can explain something accurately in words, it is taught that you "know" it. This is a very limited understanding. It is the same as reading someone's surfing experience and knowing exactly what it is. Or, I read the flight manual of the airplane and assume that I know "how to fly" in order to "know" the contents of the book. The best thing we can do to explain enlightenment in our daily lives is to provide words exactly for our experiences. Perhaps for some people these statements stimulate their imagination and let them experience themselves to themselves. It seems like a good flight story to urge others to reach the sky.
You can not explain millions of experiences to anyone. In words, it is impossible to accurately communicate the constant micro - prejudice ham and become a soundtrack of your life. Some things are very constant, very few, so under the radar are just ... there. No matter where you go, no matter what you do it's part of what you feel you can not escape. Occasionally its homeostasis will affect you, and you will fall into a slight recession. Or, if you concentrate too much on topics, you become heavy metal in your head and are destroyed, you can not sleep at night.
NEW writes a story about what you teach something to someone. What you teach may be songs, activities, games, methods of solving homework problems, or something else. Be sure to convey one event or series of events and include specific details so that readers can follow your story. Reading the poem by Naomichi Hubunai of Sea Hubnai "Our son swears that he has 102 gallons of water." In the article, discuss the relationship between son and parent and explain the last section. To support your idea, please include a concrete example in the text. Remember, your answer will be evaluated in two ways - understanding of your poetry and quality of your writing