范文健康探索娱乐情感热点
投稿投诉
热点动态
科技财经
情感日志
励志美文
娱乐时尚
游戏搞笑
探索旅游
历史星座
健康养生
美丽育儿
范文作文
教案论文
国学影视

片刻的欢乐中英对照美文

  A Moment of Joy
  Twenty years ago, I drove a cab for a living. It was a cowboy's life, a life for someone who wanted no boss.
  What I did not realize was that it was also a ministry. Because I drove the night shift, my cab became a moving confessional. Passengers climbed in, sat behind me in total anonymity, and told me about their lives. I encountered people whose lives amazed me, ennobled me, made me laugh and weep.
  But none touched me more than a woman I picked up late one August night.
  I was responding to a call from a small brick fourplex in a quiet part of town. I assumed I was being sent to pick up some people who had been partying, or someone who had just had a fight with a lover, or a worker heading to an early shift at some factory for the industrial part of town.
  When I arrived at 2:30 a.m., the building was dark except for a single light in a ground floor window. Under such circumstances, many drivers just honk once or twice, wait a minute, then drive away. But I had seen too many impoverished people who depended on taxis as their only means of transpor- tation.
  Unless a situation smelled of danger, I always went to the door.
  This passenger might be someone who needs my assistance, I reasoned to myself. So I walked to the door and knocked. "Just a minute," answered a frail, elderly voice. I could hear something being dragged across the floor. After a long pause, the door opened. A small woman in her 80s stood before me. She was wearing a print dress and a pillbox hat with a veil pinned on it, like somebody out of a 1940s movie. By her side was a small nylon suitcase.
  The apartment looked as if no one had lived in it for years. All the furniture was covered with sheets. There were no clocks on the walls, no knickknacks or utensils on the counters. In the corner was a cardboard box filled with photos and glassware.
  "Would you carry my bag out to the car?" she said. I took the suitcase to the cab, then returned to assist the woman. She took my arm, and we walked slowly toward the curb.
  She kept thanking me for my kindness. "It's nothing," I told her. "I just try to treat my passengers the way I would want my mother treated." "Oh, you're such a good boy," she said.
  When we got in the cab, she gave me an address, then asked, "Can you drive through downtown?" "It's not the shortest way," I answered quickly. "Oh, I don't mind," she said. "I'm in no hurry. I'm on my way to a hospice." I looked in the rearview mirror. Her eyes were glistening. "I don't have any family left," she continued. "The doctor says I don't have very long."
  I quietly reached over and shut off the meter. "What route would you like me to take?" I asked.
  For the next two hours, we drove through the city. She showed me the building where she had once worked as an elevator operator. We drove through the neighborhood where she and her husband had lived when they were newlyweds. She had me pull up in front of a furniture warehouse that had once been a ballroom where she had gone dancing as a girl.
  Sometimes she'd ask me to slow in front of a particular building or corner and would sit staring into the darkness, saying nothing.
  As the first hint of sun was creasing the horizon, she suddenly said, "I'm tired. Let's go now."
  We drove in silence to the address she had given me.
  It was a low building, like a small convalescent home, with a driveway that passed under a portico. Two orderlies came out to the cab as soon as we pulled up. They were solicitous and intent, watching her every move. They must have been expecting her.
  I opened the trunk and took the small suitcase to the door. The woman was already seated in a wheelchair.
  "How much do I owe you?" she asked, reaching into her purse.
  "Nothing," I said.
  "You have to make a living," she answered.
  "There are other passengers," I responded.
  Almost without thinking, I bent and gave her a hug. She held onto me tightly.
  "You gave an old woman a little moment of joy," she said. "Thank you."
  I squeezed her hand, then walked into the dim morning light. Behind me, a door shut. It was the sound of the closing of a life.
  I didn't pick up any more passengers that shift. I drove aimlessly, lost in thought. For the rest of that day, I could hardly talk.
  What if that woman had gotten an angry driver, or one who was impatient to end his shift? What if I had refused to take the run, or had honked once, then driven away?
  On a quick review, I don't think that I have done anything more important in my life.
  We're conditioned to think that our lives revolve around great moments. But great moments often catch us unaware - beautifully wrapped in what others may consider a small one. People may not remember exactly what you did, or what you said… but they will always remember how you made them feel.
  Take a moment to stop and appre- ciate the memories you have made, the memory making opportunies around you and make someone feel special today.
  二十年前,我以开出租车为生。这是一种富有冒险精神的生活,适合那些不想受老板管制的人。
  开始我没有意识到它也是一种牧师职业。由于我上夜班,我的出租车就成为一辆流动的忏悔室。乘客们爬进车里,坐在我后面,素不相识,然后给我讲述他们的生活。我遇到过很多人,有些人的生活让我感到惊奇,有些人的生活让我肃然起敬,有些人带给我欢笑和哭泣。
  然而最使我感动的,是在八月的一个晚上乘车的一位老妇人。
  我正在接电话,是从一座砖造的四套公寓住宅小楼打来的,位于城镇一个安静的区域。我想可能是我让去那里接一些参加舞会的人,或者刚与爱人打过架的人,或者要去城镇工业区的某个工厂赶早班的工人。
  凌晨两点半我赶到的时候,楼里除了第一层窗户那儿亮着一盏孤灯外,漆黑一片。在这种情况下,很多司机都是按一两下喇叭,等一会儿,然而就开车离开了。但我见过太多穷困的人们,他们把出租车作为唯一的交通工具。
  除非嗅到危险的气氛,我总是走到门前。
  乘客也许需要我的帮助,我这样为自己找理由。因此我走到门前,敲门。"请等一下。"回答的是一个虚弱而苍老的声音。我能听到在地板上拖着东西的声音,过了好一会,门开了。一位80多岁的弱小老妇人站在我面前。她穿着印花外套,戴着别有面纱的筒状女帽,就像从四十年代的电影里走出来的人。她身旁是一个小型的"尼龙手提箱。
  这座公寓看上去好像很多年没人住过了,所有的家具都用布蒙着,墙上没有挂钟,柜台上也没有任何装饰物或家用器具。墙角放着一个纸箱,里面堆满了照片和玻璃器皿。
  "你能帮我把包拿到车上吗?"她说。我把箱子放到车上,又回来搀扶老妇人。她挽住我的胳膊,我们慢慢走到车旁。
  她不停地感谢我的好心。"没什么,"我说,"我想要别人这样对待我的母亲,我就得尽力这样对待我的乘客。""哦,你真是个好孩子。"她说。
  当我们坐进车里,她递给我一个地址,然后又问道:"你能从城镇中心穿过去吗?""那不是最近的路。"我很快回答。"哦,没关系,"她说,"我不急着赶路,我就要去救济院了。" 我从后视镜看了看,她的眼睛在闪着光。她继续说着:"我没有任何家人了,医生说我活不长了。"
  我轻轻地伸手关掉了计量表。"您想让我走哪条路线?"我问。
  接下来的两个小时,我们开车穿过了整个城市。她指给我看当年她作电梯操作员的那座大厦,她和她的新婚丈夫当年生活过的小区,她让我在一家家具商店前面停车,那儿以前是个舞厅,她还是个小姑娘时常去那儿跳舞。
  有时经过一个特殊的大楼或角落时她会让我放慢车速,她会坐在那里瞪着夜空,默默无言。
  当第一缕阳光打破了地平线,她突然说:"我累了,咱们现在就走吧。"
  我们默默地驱车向她给我的那个地址驶去。
  那是一座低矮的楼房,就像一个小疗养院,在门廊的下面有一条车道。我们刚停车,就有两个护理员出来向我们走来。她们关切而热心地注视着她的举动,看样子一定是在等着她的到来。
  我打开车尾的行李箱,把她的手提箱提到门口。老妇人已经坐进轮椅里。
  "我该给你多少钱?"她边说边把手伸进钱包。
  "不用了,"我说。
  "你得谋生呢,"她说。
  "还有其他的乘客,"我回答。
  几乎想也没想,我弯下腰来给了她一个拥抱。她也紧紧地抱着我。
  "你给了一个老妇人片刻的欢乐,"她说,"谢谢你。"
  我轻轻地握了握她的手,便走进了微弱的晨光中。门在我身后关上了。这也是生命关闭的声音。
  那晚我没有拉其他的乘客。我漫无方向地开着车,陷入沉思中。那天其余的时间,我几乎说不出话。
  如果那位老妇人碰到一位狂暴的司机,或者急着结束晚班的司机,那会怎么样呢?如果我拒绝跑这趟车,或者只是按一声喇叭,便开车离开,那又会怎么样呢?
  匆忙回顾了一下,我认为我做了一件生命中再重要不过的事情。
  我们习惯性地认为我们的生命中有一些重大的时刻,然而重大的时刻往往在不经意时降临到我们身上--也许在别人眼中是小事,但它有着美丽的包装。人们可能不会完全记住你所做的事,或者你所说的话……但他们却会永远记住你带给他们的感觉。
  花上片刻的时间,静静地欣赏一下你的回忆,那些为周围的人创造了机会的回忆,那些使他人今天仍然感觉特别的回忆。

当你坚持不住时,请你看看这3人的经历,会使你凤凰涅槃浴火重生我曾经在那里生活了一些年头,但是有很多人说我是在那里生活时间最久的人了。我也不知道我是怎么度过来的,只知道很难有人会顶过那么长的时间。如果能顶得过去的人,那绝对会成为疯子了,南方人一个人最大的清醒停止精神内耗这是我为你写的第96篇文章2021。12。11你有没有这样的体验总担心自己,无法胜任领导布置的任务。恋人说了一句嗯,就想是不是自己做错了什么。朋友聚会不想去,碍于友情,还是去了。焦与人打交道,如何说话,才不会被欺负,学会这五招,招招到位社会很单纯,复杂的是人心,人的社会,社会的人,在生活中,工作中,在外与人打交道中,有些人时常会被人欺负,那么,怎么做才能不被别人欺负呢?教给你五招,招招到位,特别是第五招,觉得有用能把人骂醒的励志文案欢迎搜索公众号文学粉,第一时间获取更多优美的句子。1在彻夜灯火的北上广深面前,你佯装的努力不足为道。2看似是在消磨时间,实则是在消磨自己。3你一边讨厌着你现在的生活状态,可还是一边如何保持每天精力充沛?你有没有过这样的感受每天下班,总觉得疲惫不堪,什么都不想干,就想瘫着不动明明每天都坐在办公室里,也没干什么,但就是觉得身心俱疲经常觉得脑子像生了锈一样,转不动,遇到很多问题都不愿意女性最美的样子自由之上,万丈光芒图片来自网络作为女性,活成什么样子才是最美的,答案并不统一,但却富有共性。正如有段话所言活得漂亮的女性应该拥有四样东西扬在脸上的自信,长在心里的善良,融进血液的骨气和刻在生命里的坚当你45岁之后,无论多有本事,都要给自己留4条后路,以求安稳01hr在江湖中,有这么一句话,无论你现阶段多有本事,都要给自己做好最坏的打算。居安思危,一直是生存的主题。顺畅的时候忘乎所以,就容易给自己招惹祸患。唯有无时无刻做好最坏的打算,方散文生活作者诗和远方。其实,生活很美,它淡淡的,安静的,就这么在时间里流淌着,你听不见,摸不着,但你总觉得,或者,总希望,它再慢一点,再慢一点,慢到你可以重新来过,一点点填补时间的空缺,好断舍离,是人生最好的修行在这个物欲横流的社会,最好的修行,就是断舍离。王阳明说减得一分人欲,便是复得一分天理。王阳明所谓减人欲,并不是要求我们做一个无欲无求超凡脱俗的人。人有七情六欲,这是天理。朱熹曾说饮人生成功的秘诀厚脸皮文七月长安厚脸皮并不等于无耻,同样也不是脸皮真的有城墙那么厚。在很多时候,厚脸皮逆袭成为一种褒义词,它代表着一个人的心理素质十分过硬,不会因害怕丢了面子而瞻前顾后,缩头缩尾,也不因品茶中微苦,尝人生百味独处时,我爱泡一杯清茶,一片片盈绿,舞动翩翩,茗香阵阵,享受顷刻的慵懒,茶香飘逸,看茶芽在水中慢慢舒展看书,放飞心灵,看茶在水中缓缓漫延,展露出窈窕多姿,在我看来一如江南的水乡,恬
童年的,故乡生活了几十年的小村庄,在不经意间变成了社区,你,有没有感觉自己从此像一叶无根的浮萍,没有了自己的家乡?有没有后悔没给曾经的家乡多拍几张照片?作者原创有人说,怀旧是对过去的一种依恋,古人云仗义每多屠狗辈,下半句才是精华,老祖宗道尽了人性古人云仗义每多屠狗辈,下半句才是精华,老祖宗道尽了人性每个人一生中都会遇到各种各样的人,正直善良的人乐观友善的人,还有那些小肚鸡肠心眼多只顾自己利益的人,可以说平时生活着什么样的人早上5点起床,坚持14年,会怎样?梁爽理性天蝎女治拎不清玻璃心拧巴症点燃你自律的心一台灯,一电脑,一水杯,早上时光静谧而奢华,每天早上5点左右起床,今年已经是第14个年头了。我发了这条微博后,收到不少点赞,其中有人村里,那个走丢的傻子文凭栏听雨不知为什么,每一个村子里总有一两个傻子,而傻子,常常是村里人嘲笑的靶子。同时,也因着这个特殊人群的存在,村庄的故事才变得更加丰富而充盈。俺村的富顺就是一个总让人寻开心的傻适合长期不发朋友圈的你1有时候很累,不想说话也不想动,不需要安慰和陪伴,只想要一个人呆着。2有毒的草开迷人的花,害你的人说骗你的话。3。。越长大越觉得,比起诉说自己的委屈与不甘,沉默最好。反正,你信你的人生最好的投资1hr人生最好的投资是什么?一个高赞的回答是投资你自己。没有人能夺走你内在的东西,在自己身上的投资,会让你保持活力,不断进步。一是,投资自己的健康。人生就像是一场马拉松,看似在拼财60岁之后,年轻且外貌漂亮的人,一般都有这些习惯,你有几个?前言很多人到60岁之后,都已经进入老年状态,我们会发现在现实生活当中,有些人过了60岁,而且还非常年轻,外貌也特别漂亮,当这些人走在别人面前的时候,别人都觉得年纪没有60岁,而且还送给温柔的你干净文案1。有预感,都明白,都知道。2。喜欢就争取,得到就珍惜,错过就忘记。3。开场不经意突如其来,散场不得己人山人海。4。后来每个和你长得很像的人我都会多看几眼。5。友情会淡爱情会散,其梦里与梦外一昨夜暴雨,今日到来。预报失误,见怪不怪。狂风冰雹,马路看海。树栽三月,倒成一排。二(八。一五别奉天)同砚相聚奉天城,酒足饭饱将欲行。惟玩未尽兴泪目,期盼何时再相逢。弦歌慢舞叙人生人生的意义是什么?人生的意义是什么?我忘了自己什么时候开始有这问题了。有了这个问题后,我开始了自己的思索和探索,看了些相关的书。知道为什么而活的人,便能生存。尼采生命本没有意义,你要能给他什么意义,夜读丨年龄只是符号,快乐才是王道。文字丨郝银主播丨燕子千年古松,万年银杏。人生匆匆,百年而已。不同的年龄段,有不同的风采。你看那一张张面孔,犹如百花,童年如嫩芽初绽,少年如花朵含苞,青年如春花怒放,中年如雨后海棠