题干

阅读理解

    I remember my childhood summers fondly, as many of us do. Those golden days in which I would leave the house after a still sleepy, leisurely breakfast and come home only for lunch in the middle of a day spent entirely outdoors. We did not live in town and, thus, playmates were limited to siblings (兄弟姐妹) and the cousins who lived down the road.

    Our backyard became the playground in which our imaginations would run wild—turning those few acres into magical forests, the creek (小溪) into a violent river and our trusty dog, Rex, into the many roles of horse, monster and any other creature that we children did not want to play. By the end of the three months of summer break we were sunburned from our hours in the sun, full of the memories of a thousand magical moments and bonded to our siblings in a way that winter's forced hibernation (冬眠) never seemed to connect us.

    Today, I live on the same acreage that I did as a child. My children have the blessing of having the same grassy patches to scratch their bare feet as they run through it, the same creek to stomp(跺脚)through, and not the same dog—but their very own energetic pup to imagine away the days with.

    However, this is not the same world as it was twenty, thirty years ago. There are screens everywhere in the house to demand attention—televisions with hundreds of channels, computers with access to a thousand entertaining sites, tablets stocked with apps. There is also no longer the expectation of a stretch of an unscheduled three months. Their school friends tell competitive stories of carefully planned vacations, spending time traveling to all of the local attractions—various parks, the zoo, the science center, all of the festivals which come breezing through town. On the very first day of school they will be asked to list their favorite activities of the summer and no longer are these lists filled with things like finding wood to make a bridge over a creek or a day spent in imaginative play with their siblings. The lists are now full of trips, overscheduled days and “camps” that no longer offer a stay in nature.

    Our children have become used to being entertained every minute. In our house, we have limits on electronics and kick the kids outside on a nice day. Even as we try as parents to set limits and get our children out in nature, the new cry of childhood seems to be “I'm bored,” which is not really just meaning “I'm bored,” “but “Please find something to entertain me, as I no longer can entertain myself even for a short period of time.” Our children no longer know how to sit in silence, entertain themselves while even waiting for a few minutes and have lost the awe of nature as they have become addicted to screen time.

    We have made a choice in this household to do what is no longer expected of children in many households—we will ensure that there are days of “boredom.” We refuse to spend our days scheduling our children's every hour. There will be many days with no plans at all, when they will be sent outside with only the grass and the trees and their own imaginations to entertain them.

    The screens will be turned off and our children will find that times of quiet can be just as or even more entertaining. They will bond with their brother and sister, making memories that they will replay in their minds well into adulthood. Even though sunscreen will be religiously applied, they will leave summer with sunburned and scratches coming from climbing trees, stomping through creeks and chasing the dog in the field.

    This summer I will be giving my children the greatest gift of all—boredom. For inside boredom is the gift of getting to know your own mind, of finding comfort and joy in nature and in the realization that the greatest gifts are experience, not things.

上一题 下一题 0.0难度 选择题 更新时间:2019-09-22 05:53:09

答案(点此获取答案解析)

同类题3

阅读下文,回答相关问题。

                                                                                                             枫  叶
        我爱枫叶,因为它红得深浓,红得艳丽。
        多少年来,一想到秋,我首先就会想到枫叶;想到枫叶,就会想到杜牧的诗句"停车坐爱枫林晚,霜叶红于二月花",就会引发许多联想和感慨。在萧瑟的秋天,枫叶红得那么动人,不能不使我心驰神往。
        在北京,重阳节过后到香山看枫叶,正是很好的时节。过去的文人骚客,在这样的时候,往往骑一头小毛驴儿,慢慢地出了西直门,一步一颠直往西边走去。到了碧云寺一带,就渐入佳境,像喝了一杯花雕酒一样,陶醉于枫叶那鲜艳的色彩,流连忘返。有时,他们还会即景遣兴,吟诗作赋。我虽没有这样闲散的雅兴,但我也爱枫叶。没有别的,爽直一点儿说,就是因为她红!
        秋冬之交,正是吃萝卜的时候。夜晚的街头,常常传来“萝卜赛梨”的清脆叫卖声,引诱你不得不去买一个尝尝。萝卜有“红到心”的别称,可是它的内心是不是红的,还得等到剖开之后才见分晓。这哪里赶得上枫叶。枫叶是那么直接、那么毫不遮掩地展现自己的色彩。枫叶敢于红,红得有气魄。
         枫叶之可爱,还在于当别的叶儿经秋枯落时,她偏偏红得艳丽。她耐得住风霜交加,经得起秋之摧残,战西风而不怯,披严霜而愈丽,显露出无畏无惧的神采。单凭这一点,就值得我们赞美。
        有人说,枫叶虽红,可毕竟是到了肃杀的秋天。《董西厢》中有一警句:“君不见满川红叶,尽是离人眼中血!”以枫叶吟离别,把枫叶比作血,这是随人的心情而生发的。但在我看来,说肃杀也好,比作血也好,都还是在于秋,而不在于枫叶;把枫叶之红比作血,这是因为她抗得住肃杀之气啊!
         枫叶也并不因为红而孤独。你看,去香山看红叶的人那么多;而且,东篱黄菊,山涧青松,挺拔的竹,清香的梅,或跟她同时,或相继绽放,都与枫叶相伴,在耐寒抗冷中各显风采。
        一想到秋,我就想到枫叶,想到枫叶,往往使我又联想到那些在各个岗位上勇于克服困难、敢于展示自我的劳动者。他们抗严寒,战酷暑,奋战在各条战线上;他们不畏艰难,勇于奉献,弘扬了时代的精神。他们尽管很普通,却是我们时代的英雄。我觉得,用枫叶来比喻这样的英雄人物是再恰当不过了。
        我礼赞枫叶,我爱她斗西风血点儿红!
                                                                                                                                                                                                        (选自《名家咏物100篇》,有改动)