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but because of who they are.
So you see that wonderful things can come out of problems. You just have to remember to look
for the positive things and not focus on the negative.
Sample "3" essay
The word "problem" is a negative word but its just an opportunity as Mr. Bob Maynard has said.
It can be teaching tool besides.
For example, I had a problem with my son last year when he wanted a bigger allowance. I said no
and he had to earn it. He mowed the lawn and in the fall he raked leaves. In the winter he
shovelled the walk. After that he apreciated it more.
Its not the problem but the sollution that matters. My son learning the value of work and earning
money. (It taught me the value of money to when I had to give him a bigger allowance!) After
that he could get what he wanted at Toys Are Us and not have to beg. Which was better for me
too. Sometimes we forget that both children and there parents can learn a lot from problems and
we can teach our children the value of overcoming trouble. Which is as important as keeping
them out of trouble. As well we can teach them the value of money. That is one aspect of a
problem that we manytimes forget.
So problems are a good teaching tool as well as a good way to let you're children learn, to look at
the silver lining behind every cloud.
Sample "1" essay
I agree with the quote that problems are opportunities in disguise. Sometimes problems are
opportunities, too.
I have a lot of problems like anyone else does. Sometimes there very difficult and I don't no how
to handle them. When I have a really big problem, I sometimes ask my parents or freinds for
advise. Sometimes they help, sometimes they don't, then I have to figure out how to handle it
myself.
One time I had a big problem. Where someone stole my wallet and I had to get to a job interview.
But I had no money and no ID. This happen in school. So I went to the principles office and
reported it. He called the man I was supposed to interview with. Who rescheduled the interview
for me. So I still had the opportunity to interview and I'm proud to say I got the job. In fact I'm
still working there!
Problems can be opportunities if you just look at them that way. Instead of the other way around.
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SAMPLE ESSAYS, SET 40 (Page 117)
480.
Sample "6" essay
Courage and cowardice seem like absolutes. We are often quick to label other people, or
ourselves, either "brave" or "timid" "courageous'' or "cowardly." However, one bright afternoon
on a river deep in the wilds of the Ozark mountains, I learned that these qualities are as
changeable as mercury.
During a cross-country drive, my friend Nina and I decided to stop at a campsite in Missouri and
spend the afternoon on a float trip down Big Piney River, 14 miles through the wilderness. We
rented a canoe and paddled happily off.
Things went fine for me first seven or eight miles. We gazed at the overhanging bluffs,
commented on the wonderful variety of trees (it was spring, and the dogwood was in bloom), and
marveled at the clarity of the water. Then, in approaching a bend in the river (which we later
learned was called "Devil's Elbow") the current suddenly swept us in toward the bank,
underneath the low-hanging branches of a weeping willow. The canoe tipped over and I was
pulled under, my foot caught for just a few seconds on the submerged roots of the willow. Just as
I surfaced, taking my first frantic gulp of air, I saw the canoe sweeping out, upright again, but
empty, and Nina frantically swimming after it.
I knew I should help but I was petrified and hung my head in shame as I let my friend brave the
treacherous rapids and haul the canoe back onto the gravel bar, while I stood by cravenly.
Then came the scream. Startled, I glanced up to see Nina, both hands over her eyes, dash off the
gravel bar and back into the water. I gazed down into the canoe to see, coiled in the bottom of it,
the unmistakable, black-and-brown, checkerboard-pattered form of a copperhead snake. It had
evidently been sunning itself peacefully on the weeping willow branch when we passed by
underneath.
I don't know exactly why, but the supposedly inborn terror of snakes is something that has passed
me by completely. I actually find them rather charming in a scaly sort of way.
Nina was still screaming, near hysterics: "Kill it!" But I was calm in a way that must have
seemed smug. "We're it its home, it's not in ours," I informed her. And gently I prodded it with
the oar until it reared up, slithered over the side of the canoe, and raced away terrified,
itself into the underbrush.
Later that night, in our cozy, safe motel room, we agreed that we each had cold chills thinking
about what might have happened. Still, I learned something important from the ordeal. I know
that, had we encountered only the rapids, I might have come away ashamed, labeling myself a
coward, and had we encountered only the snake, Nina might have done the same. And I also
know that neither of us will ever again be quite so apt to brand another person as lacking
courage. Because we will always know that, just around the corner, may be the snake or the bend
in the river or the figure in the shadows or something else as yet unanticipated, that will cause
our own blood to freeze.
Sample "4" essay
Courage can be shown in many ways and by many kinds of people. One does not have to be rich,
or educated, or even an adult to show true courage.
For example, a very heartbreaking thing happened in our family. It turned out all right but at the
time it almost made us lose our faith. However, it also taught us a lesson regarding courage. In
spite of his father's and my repeated warnings, my son Matt went ice-fishing with some friends
and fell through the ice
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into the frigid water beneath. He is prone to do things that are dangerous no matter how many
times he's told. Fortunately there were grown-ups near and they were able to throw him a life line
and pull him to safety. However, when they got him onto shore they discovered he was
unconscious. There were vital signs but they were weak, the paramedics pronounced him in
grave danger.
He is his little sisters (Nans) hero. He is 16 and she is 13, just at the age where she admires [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]

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