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阅读下面的文字,按要求作文。

       2017年春节,《中国诗词大会》第二季第九场,许多人被一位40多岁的农民白茹云所打动。白茹云的一生充满了坎坷:年幼时,弟弟身患重病,全靠她一手看护:7年前,她查出淋巴癌,独自住院化疗。如今她带瘤生存,面对残酷的生活,她始终乐观。她站在《诗词大会》的现场,笑着说:“我现在已经不觉得有什么了,每个人都要经历一-些波折,这都不算什么。”

       这段话引发了你怎样的联想、感悟或思考?请自选角度,写一篇作文。

       要求:(1)可以写自己的经历、感受,可以讲述身边的故事,也可以发表议论;(2)题目自拟,文体不限(诗歌除外);(3)文中不得出现真实的姓名、校名和地名;(4)不得抄袭;(5)写6字数不少于600字。

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【参考例文】中国诗词 春节期间,很多朋友都在谈论央视的《中国诗词大会》。借此契机,诗词文化再一次引起了全社会的极大关注。人大附中校长翟小宁先生说:“《中国诗词大会》是一个窗口,让人们看到了美好的诗词世界;是一座桥梁,架起了人们与中国文化的情感联系;是一支火把,点燃了人们心中对诗词的热爱之情。”翟先生的话,引起我颇多共鸣。《中国诗词大会》开得确实很红火,这个节目所唤起的文化共鸣,也是热烈而真挚的。 前两天,一家媒体的记者也就诗词大会的话题来采访我,出的题目是诗词大会热播的深层原因以及中国优秀传统文化如何现代

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    A 17-year-old boy, caught sending text messages in class, was recently sent to the vice principal's office at Millwood High School in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The vice principal, Steve Gallagher, told the boy he needed to focus on the teacher, not his cellphone. The boy listened politely and nodded, and that's when Mr. Gallagher noticed the student's fingers moving on his lap. He was texting while being scolded for texting. “It was a subconscious act,” says Mr. Gallagher, who took the phone away. “Young people today are connected socially from the moment they open their eyes in the morning until they close their eyes at night. It's compulsive.”

    A study this year by psychology students at Covenant College in Lookout Mountain, Ga., found that the more time young people spend on Facebook, the more likely they are to have lower grades and weaker study habits. Heavy Facebook users show signs of being more sociable, but they are also more likely to be anxious, hostile or depressed. (Doctors, meanwhile, are now blaming addictions to 'night texting' for disturbing the sleep patterns of teens.)

    Almost a quarter of today's teens check Facebook more than 10 times a day, according to a 2009 survey by Common Sense Media, a nonprofit group that monitors media's impact on families. Will these young people get rid of this habit once they enter the work force, or will employers come to see texting and 'social-network checking' as accepted parts of the workday?

    Think back. When today's older workers were in their 20s, they might have taken a break on the job to call friends and make after-work plans. In those earlier eras, companies discouraged non-business-related calls, and someone who made personal calls all day risked being fired. It was impossible to imagine the constant back-and-forth texting that defines interactions among young people today.

    Educators are also being asked by parents, students and educational strategists to reconsider their rules. “In past generations, students got in trouble for passing notes in class. Now students are skilled at texting with their phones still in their pockets,” says 40-year-old Mr. Gallagher, the vice principal, “and they're able to communicate with someone one floor down and three rows over. Students are just fundamentally different today. They will take suspensions rather than give up their phones.”