My childhood, like
everybody's, is full of events worth remembering. It is the pillar-stone on
which stands my whole being-imagination, memory, fancy, and the historical
foundation of the self. Childhood—be it pleasurable or sorrowful—is always very
attractive, as though an addiction.
And the one with a rich memory is more
attractive. Consequently, I, who have
lost my parents, love and affection, and the carefree life in my very
childhood, feel an inevitable nostalgia when I think about it. Standing on the
threshold of the alien world of adulthood,
when I look back through my puerile imagination at my by gone days I get
benumbed by the charm of what I have lost but yet am proud of; I feel through
thinking, and think through feeling, my eyes filled with tears, Oh. How nice
those days where! A wholeness of freedom within a limits carefree pastime with brothers and sisters
and parents and nature and pets, sensing the pleasure of love and affection.
Sometimes, now. t cannot but wonder why ever I had to lose that childhood. But
alas, nature works her own way.
Physical exercise means
the deliberate movement of various parts of the body in a systematic way to
help the body function properly.
It, taken regularly and according to rule,
helps the blood circulation work naturally and well, prevents many fatal
diseases which, once having attacked by, is difficult to get cured, gives the
exercise-taker mental briskness and work stamina, and, as is widely believed,
ensures longevity. It is of various forms, each suiting specific purpose,
sometimes specific age, sex, and season. Walking, jogging, swimming,
weight-lifting—these are some popular forms of exercise. Yoga is a very
specialized and fruitful branch of the art of physical exercise. In fact, all
types of games, played regularly, serve as best forms of exercise. Exercise
should be taken by people of all ages, by both men and women. There is, so to
say, life in it, if not livelihood.
1 Comments
good writing
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