Essay sample library > The Gift: Lies in Nature’s Lessons

The Gift: Lies in Nature’s Lessons

2023-10-16 11:53:48

Albert Einstein says: "Humans are part of the universe we call the whole and are part of limited time and space, we experience ourselves and our Thoughts and emotions are separated from others "This delusion is a prison for us, we are limiting our personal desires and feelings for some of us recently." Our mission It is to get rid of the prison by expanding the circle of our sympathy. It incorporates all the living things and nature into its beauty.

There is little free time (at least compared to mass education) structure, autonomous learning, personalized curriculum, pursuit of your interests. Politicians and, of course, the school itself, again and again, this form of education should be a tragic failure (young people spend time on video games and Facebook, not learning I have never happened in a public school.)

We all know the story of "emperor's new clothes". The very short story of Hans Christian Andersen should be classical. It provides us with important lessons about human nature, obviously not for children only lessons. The problem is that it is just a fairy tale. Many of these stories are trying to attract higher morals than Lincoln calls "a better angel in our nature." In most fairy tales, the development of things depends mainly on goodness, courage, loyalty, and so on. In the story of Andersen, for the boy who tells the truth things should be beneficial, and everyone can be on the scene.

A childhood fairy tale is a foothold to life, leading a dilemma and a trial. The value of a fairy tale is not in a short literature that escapes from reality, but I hope that kindness is really stronger than evil, and even the darkest reality will lead forever to happiness. Please do not easily accept the gift of hope. It overcomes despair in sorrow, lights the darkness of the Valley of Life, and has the power to whisper "to come again" when it fails. I hope to bring dreams to life and make fairy tales a reality. - L.R. Knost