Life has its ups and downs, and only true friends always stay around. Like anyone else, I have got many friends. They often help me when I’m in trouble. Especially, when I fail in an examination, they always care for me and encourage me to study harder. Last year, when I was hurt in a basketball game, my friends took me to the nearby hospital at once and look after me by turns. In my eyes, friends are the most precious wealth that one should treasure all his life.
Long, long ago, there were two brothers, the one rich and the other poor. When Christmas Eve came, the poor one had not a bite in the house, either of meat or bread; so he went to his brother, and begged him, in God's name, to give him something for Christmas Day. It was by no means the first time that the brother had been forced to give something to him, and he was not better pleased at being asked now than he generally was.
"If you will do what I ask you, you shall have a whole ham," said he. The poor one immediately thanked him, and promised this.
"Well, here is the ham, and now you must go straight to Dead Man's Hall," said the rich brother, throwing the ham to him.
"Well, I will do what I have promised," said the other, and he took the ham and set off. He went on and on for the livelong day, and at nightfall he came to a place where there was a bright light.
"I have no doubt this is the place," thought the man with the ham.
An old man with a long white beard was standing in the outhouse, chopping Yule logs.
"Good-evening," said the man with the ham.
"Good-evening to you. Where are you going at this late hour?" said the man.
"I am going to Dead Man's Hall, if only I am on the right track," answered the poor man.
"Oh! yes, you are right enough, for it is here," said the old man. "When you get inside they will all want to buy your ham, for they don't get much meat to eat there; but you must not sell it unless you can get the hand-mill which stands behind the door for it. When you come out again I will teach you how to stop the hand-mill, which is useful for almost everything."
So the man with the ham thanked the other for his good advice, and rapped at the door.
五岁时的风帆——当个温柔的妈妈。虽然我对这段经历已经很陌生了,但是还 模模糊糊地记得点儿。那时,我是一个小跟屁虫,妈妈一有空,我就钻在她怀里撒娇。妈妈常常怜爱地抚摸我的脸颊,我心里乐得开了花,比喝了蜜还 甜。总这么想:“我是个超级幸福的小孩!我以后当了妈妈,绝不责罚我的孩子,我一定温柔地……”一想到这些,我就小脸通红,兴奋至极,恨不得自己穿越时空,马上长大。所以,有一次,妈妈亲切地问我:“宝贝,你长大了要干什么呀?”我毫不犹豫地大声说:“我想当妈妈!”妈妈听了,先是一愣,然后随即哈哈大笑,快乐地直搓手,一脸的灿烂。我也不知道她到底怎么了。
入学后的风帆——当个威风的老师。终于我入学了,每天在学校里,看着老师和善的面容,听着老师甜美动听的嗓音,如饥似渴地吸收着老师传授的知识!由于妈妈也是老师,我经常跟着去她的班里写字,看着妈妈威风地指挥学生们时,我都特别地羡慕、崇拜她,渴望能跟她一样,大声地指挥自己的学生,让他们上课认真听讲,让他们干这干那……我立刻收起了以前当妈妈的念头,换上了一面崭新的风帆——当个威风的老师。
而现在的风帆——当个快乐的`艺术家。最近,我和爸爸妈妈一起观看了G20杭州峰会的《最忆是杭州》的演出,里面有个弹琵琶琴的艺术家叫赵聪,她弹出的天籁之音,使我完全着了迷。她的每个音符,每个深情的动作,每个优雅的表情,都让我如痴如醉。我正好也在练琵琶,已经坚持四年多了,考到七级了。而且,我还 有一个小骄傲,那就是在20xx年“雁荡山杯”浙江省民族器乐大赛中获得小学A组金奖。过去,我总觉得练琵琶很苦、很枯燥,而现在看了她的表演,我完全变了。当个弹琵琶的艺术家,多好啊!既能每天享受音乐带给自己的快乐,又能给更多的人带来快乐。听说,天天听音乐还 能长寿哩!因此,我立刻又换了个风帆——当个快乐的艺术家。
有人问:“为什么你的梦想一直变来变去?”后来啊!我在《筑梦路上》这本书中找到了答案。航天员景海鹏叔叔说:“我感觉人的这一辈子,是由各个时期各个阶段不同的梦想串联起来的,因为每个阶段每个时期都有各种各样大小不同的梦想,把各种梦想串联起来,就形成这一生。”呵呵!所以,我会继续逐梦的。
我感觉我一直在逐梦,我逐梦的脚步,永不停息。
“如果有下辈子,你想当什么?”突然间这么一句话在我脑海里徘徊网 ,我有些茫然地问着自己。
如果有下辈子,我想当一只蝴蝶。因为蝴蝶在从蛹破茧而出的瞬间,是撕破一层皮的痛苦,撕心裂肺的痛苦,很多蝴蝶就是在破茧的一刻被痛得死掉了,卡在那儿,死在羽化的途中,死在展翅飞翔的前一步。 我吓着了,我不想要为了羽化之美,就终结了自己的生命,终结自己还未展翅飞翔的生命。于是,我告诉自己要坚强,即使是要面对种种不如意突如其来,我也愿意,只因我渴望,渴望曾经的痛苦在阳光下化作身后有着美妙色彩的翅膀,渴望在疾风暴雨面前挑战自己超乎寻常的坚忍。 没有人可以决定上帝手指的指向,就像一颗松子、一只鹦鹉、一粒沙子无从决定生命的方式。但我希望我就是被命运手指选中的幸运儿,做一只毛毛虫,面对着异常坚硬的茧和破茧时异常的.痛,是做一只默默无闻的茧,还是羽化成翩翩起舞的蝶,所需的,都是一点点的坚强。在深邃的未知面前,我们或许无能为力,但重要的是我们自己的选择。
如果有下辈子,我选择当一只蝴蝶,一只经历过破茧之痛的毛毛虫。如果有下辈子,我想当一只蝴蝶,不是为了羽化之美,而是为了经历破茧之痛。如果有下辈子,我会抓住每一次挑战命运的机会,做一个翩然起舞的小精灵。
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