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There is an interesting experiment: dace is the natural enemy of minnows. Biologists put dace and minnows into the same glassware, and then separated them with glass plates. At the beginning, the dace attacked the minnows excitedly, eager to eat their favorite delicious food, but every time it "bang" against the glass plate, not only did it not catch the minnows, but also knocked itself dizzy. After touching the wall dozens of times, the dace was depressed. When biologists quietly removed the glass plate, the dace turned a blind eye to the minnows that were close at hand. Even if the fat minnow wiped its labial gills again and again and swam leisurely, even if the tail of the minnow swept its hungry and agile body again and again, the dace behind the wall no longer had the desire and confidence to attack. A few days later, the minnows were still swimming freely because of the feed provided by biologists, while the minnows had turned up their snow-white bellies and floated on the water. Dace gave up its efforts just because it ran into a wall several times. Even though the delicious food was available later, it gave up trying, and finally died of hunger. Dace is sad and ridiculous, but have we ever been that "dace" in life? A little wind and waves made us abandon the ship and go ashore, a small bump against the wall made us stagnate, and a small blow made us give up all our dreams and efforts... Many times, the real reason for our failure is that we didn't "try again" in the face of the "minnows" whose "glass plates" had been removed in front of us This reminds me of another story. A man was trapped on a cliff, leaving only a little food and a hook rope in his backpack. The man thought to himself, "now you must hook the rope in the stone crack, and then climb up, so as to get out of trouble." So he threw the rope up, but it was not hooked. He tried again, but failed. He continued to try many times, but still did not hook the stone. It was getting dark, and he thought, "try again, maybe you can succeed." But it still failed. At this time, he was exhausted and hungry. He picked up the little food left and wolfed it down. After eating, he fell asleep tired. When he woke up the next day, he summoned up the courage to continue throwing, but he failed as he did yesterday. He sat on the ground, depressed, and even thought about giving up, but he struggled with a voice in his heart: "try again, try again." It is this sentence that makes him stand up and keep trying. Sure enough, "the emperor is worthy of his heart". This time, the rope caught the stone. He pulled hard to make sure it was tight enough, and climbed up along the rope. Finally, he escaped the fate of death. There are often such laws in life: the difficulty of mountaineering lies not in the first few kilometers under your feet, but in the tens of meters or even a few meters before you reach the top; The person who walks out of the desert of death is not necessarily the fastest runner, but the one who firmly believes that he can walk out alive and unswervingly in one direction. Therefore, the road of life cannot be plain sailing, setbacks and difficulties are inevitable, but the key is whether you can continue to adhere to it and try again when you fail to succeed after many efforts? In fact, try again, success will shake hands with you and enjoy the beauty of life.
There is an interesting experiment: dace is the natural enemy of minnows. Biologists put dace and minnows into the same glassware, and then separated them with glass plates. At the beginning, the dace attacked the minnows excitedly, eager to eat their favorite delicious food, but every time it "bang" against the glass plate, not only did it not catch the minnows, but also knocked itself dizzy. After touching the wall dozens of times, the dace was depressed. When biologists quietly removed the glass plate, the dace turned a blind eye to the minnows that were close at hand. Even if the fat minnow wiped its labial gills again and again and swam leisurely, even if the tail of the minnow swept its hungry and agile body again and again, the dace behind the wall no longer had the desire and confidence to attack. A few days later, the minnows were still swimming freely because of the feed provided by biologists, while the minnows had turned up their snow-white bellies and floated on the water. Dace gave up its efforts just because it ran into a wall several times. Even though the delicious food was available later, it gave up trying, and finally died of hunger. Dace is sad and ridiculous, but have we ever been that "dace" in life? A little wind and waves made us abandon the ship and go ashore, a small bump against the wall made us stagnate, and a small blow made us give up all our dreams and efforts... Many times, the real reason for our failure is that we didn't "try again" in the face of the "minnows" whose "glass plates" had been removed in front of us This reminds me of another story. A man was trapped on a cliff, leaving only a little food and a hook rope in his backpack. The man thought to himself, "now you must hook the rope in the stone crack, and then climb up, so as to get out of trouble." So he threw the rope up, but it was not hooked. He tried again, but failed. He continued to try many times, but still did not hook the stone. It was getting dark, and he thought, "try again, maybe you can succeed." But it still failed. At this time, he was exhausted and hungry. He picked up the little food left and wolfed it down. After eating, he fell asleep tired. When he woke up the next day, he summoned up the courage to continue throwing, but he failed as he did yesterday. He sat on the ground, depressed, and even thought about giving up, but he struggled with a voice in his heart: "try again, try again." It is this sentence that makes him stand up and keep trying. Sure enough, "the emperor is worthy of his heart". This time, the rope caught the stone. He pulled hard to make sure it was tight enough, and climbed up along the rope. Finally, he escaped the fate of death. There are often such laws in life: the difficulty of mountaineering lies not in the first few kilometers under your feet, but in the tens of meters or even a few meters before you reach the top; The person who walks out of the desert of death is not necessarily the fastest runner, but the one who firmly believes that he can walk out alive and unswervingly in one direction. Therefore, the road of life cannot be plain sailing, setbacks and difficulties are inevitable, but the key is whether you can continue to adhere to it and try again when you fail to succeed after many efforts? In fact, try again, success will shake hands with you and enjoy the beauty of life.
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