第一篇:演講【感覺、失敗及尋找幸?!?/a>
Feelings, Failure and Finding Happiness 感覺、失敗及尋找幸?!獖W普拉·溫弗瑞
Not a small topic this is, finding happiness.But in some ways I think it's the simplest of all.Gwendolyn Brooks wrote a poem for her children.It's called “Speech to the Young : Speech to the Progress-Toward.” And she says at the end, “Live not for battles won./ Live not for the-end-of-the-song./ Live in the along.” She's saying, like Eckhart Tolle, that you have to live for the present.You have to be in the moment.Whatever has happened to you in your past has no power over this present moment, because life is now.追求幸福并不是一個(gè)小話題。但在某種程度上來說它又是最簡(jiǎn)單的話題。Gwendolyn Brooks為她的孩子寫了一首詩,詩名是Speech to the Young : Speech to the Progress-Toward.在詩的最后她說到,不要為了戰(zhàn)勝而生活,不要為了歌曲的結(jié)尾而生活,要享受生活。她說,你應(yīng)當(dāng)為了現(xiàn)在而生活,無論過去發(fā)生了什么都不應(yīng)該影響到現(xiàn)在,因?yàn)樯罹褪沁^好現(xiàn)在。But I think she's also saying, be a part of something.Don't live for yourself alone.This is what I know for sure: In order to be truly happy, you must live along with and you have to stand for something larger than yourself.Because life is a reciprocal exchange.To move forward you have to give back.And to me, that is the greatest lesson of life.To be happy, you have to give something back.我想她還說過,去參與一些事。不要僅僅為了自己而生活。我可以非??隙ǖ氖菫榱俗非笳嬲目鞓?,你必須為了一些更有意義的事而生活。生活是互動(dòng)的。為了前進(jìn),你必須后退。對(duì)于我而言,這是人生中最重要的經(jīng)驗(yàn)。想要獲得快樂你必須付出。
I know you know that, because that's a lesson that's woven into the very fabric of this university.It's a lesson that Jane and Leland Stanford got and one they've bequeathed to you.Because all of you know the story of how this great school came to be, how the Stanfords lost their only child to typhoid at the age of 15.They had every right and they had every reason to turn their backs against the world at that time, but instead, they channeled their grief and their pain into an act of grace.Within a year of their son's death, they had made the founding grant for this great school, pledging to do for other people's children what they were not able to do for their own boy.我知道你們已經(jīng)很了解了,因?yàn)檫@個(gè)經(jīng)驗(yàn)已經(jīng)深深的融入了斯坦福。這個(gè)經(jīng)驗(yàn)是Jane and Leland傳承給你們的。因?yàn)槟銈兯械娜硕贾肋@座偉大的大學(xué)是如何建成的。斯坦福夫婦的獨(dú)子在15歲時(shí)得了傷寒離開了他們。他們有權(quán)利和理由去恨這個(gè)世界,但是他們卻用優(yōu)雅的行動(dòng)疏導(dǎo)了心中的悲傷。在他們兒子死后不到一年內(nèi),他們已經(jīng)這所偉大的大學(xué)籌集了建設(shè)經(jīng)費(fèi),并發(fā)誓要為別人的孩子做一些他們自己的孩子不能得到事。
The lesson here is clear, and that is, if you're hurting, you need to help somebody ease their hurt.If you're in pain, help somebody else's pain.And when you're in a mess, you get yourself out of the mess helping somebody out of theirs.And in the process, you get to become a member of what I call the greatest fellowship of all, the sorority of compassion and the fraternity of service.這個(gè)經(jīng)驗(yàn)非常明顯,那就是,如果你受了傷,你需要幫助他人減輕傷痛。如果你感到痛苦,幫助他人減輕痛苦。如果你的生活一團(tuán)糟,去幫助其他處在困難中的人擺脫困境。這樣一來,你就變成了婦女聯(lián)誼會(huì)或是互助會(huì)中最偉大的一個(gè)員。
The Stanfords had suffered the worst thing any mom and dad can ever endure, yet they understood that helping others is the way we help ourselves.And this wisdom is increasingly supported by scientific and sociological research.It's no longer just woo-woo soft-skills talk.There's actually a helper's high, a spiritual surge you gain from serving others.So, if you want to feel good, you have to go out and do some good.斯坦福夫婦遭受了世上父母所能遭受的最大痛苦,然而他們懂得通過幫助他人來幫助自己。這種智慧漸漸的被科學(xué)和社會(huì)學(xué)研究所證實(shí)。這不僅僅是某種軟技能的談話。這事實(shí)上是在幫助者的高度,一種從幫助別人而獲得的精神大爆發(fā)。所以如果你想快樂,去幫助別人吧。But when you do good, I hope you strive for more than just the good feeling that service provides, because I know this for sure, that doing good actually makes you better.So, whatever field you choose, if you operate from the paradigm of service, I know your life will have more value and you will be happy.但是當(dāng)你做好事時(shí),我希望你不僅僅是為了獲得的快樂,因?yàn)槲疑钪龊檬驴梢宰屇阕兊酶?。所以無論你怎樣選擇,若你能以服務(wù)他人為榜樣,我相信你的生活會(huì)更有價(jià)值,你也會(huì)更快樂。
第二篇:奧普拉·溫弗瑞斯坦福大學(xué)畢業(yè)典禮演講:感覺、失敗及尋找幸福
Feelings, Failure and Finding Happiness Thank you, President Hennessy, and to thetrustees and the faculty, to all of the parents and grandparents, to you, the Stanford graduates.Thank you for letting me share this amazing day with you.I need to begin by letting everyone in on a little secret.The secret is that Kirby Bumpus, Stanford Class of '08, is my goddaughter.So, I was thrilled when President Hennessy asked me to be your Commencement speaker, because this is the first time I've been allowed on campus since Kirby's been here.You see, Kirby's a very smart girl.She wants people to get to know her on her own terms, she says.Not in terms of who she knows.So, she never wants anyone who's first meeting her to know that I know her and she knows me.So, when she first came to Stanford for new student orientation with her mom, I hear that they arrived and everybody was so welcoming, and somebody came up to Kirby and they said, “Ohmy god, that's Gayle King!” Because a lot of people know Gayle King as my BFF [best friend forever].And so somebody comes up to Kirby, and they say, “Oh my god, is that Gayle King?” And Kirby's like, “Uh-huh.She's my mom.”And so the person says, “Oh my god, does it mean, like, you know Oprah Winfrey?”And Kirby says, “Sort of.” I said, “Sort of? You sort of know me?” Well, I have photographic proof.I have pictures which I can e-mail to you all of Kirby riding horsey with me on all fours.So, I more than sort-of know Kirby Bumpus.And I'm so happy to be here, just happy that I finally, after four years, get to see her room.There's really nowhere else I'd rather be, because I'm so proud of Kirby, who graduates today with two degrees, one in human bio and the other in psychology.Love you, Kirby Cakes!That's how well I know her.I can call her Cakes.And so proud of her mother and father, who helped her get through this time, and her brother, Will.I really had nothing to do with her graduating from Stanford, but every time anybody's asked me in the past couple of weeks what I was doing, I would say, “I'm getting ready to go to Stanford.” I just love saying “Stanford.” Because the truth is, I know I would have never gotten my degree at all, 'cause I didn't go to Stanford.I went to Tennessee State University.But I never would have gotten my diploma at all, because I was supposed to graduate back in 1975, but I was short one credit.And I figured, I'm just going to forget it, 'cause, you know, I'm not going to march with my class.Because by that point, I was already on television.I'd been in television since I was 19 and a sophomore.Granted, I was the only television anchor person that had an 11 o'clock curfew doing the 10 o'clock news.Seriously, my dad was like, “Well, that news is over at 10:30.Be home by 11.” And I'd say, “But, Dad, now I'm a talk show host.” He'd say, “I don't know how you're going to get another job without that degree.” So, in 1987, Tennessee State University invited me back to speak at their commencement.By then, I had my own show, was nationally syndicated.I'd made a movie, had been nominated for an Oscar and founded my company, Harpo.But I told them, I cannot come and give a speech unless I can earn one more credit, because my dad's still saying I'm not going to get anywhere without that degree.So, I finished my coursework, I turned in my final paper and I got the degree.And my dad was very proud.And I know that, if anything happens, that one credit will be my salvation.But I also know why my dad was insisting on that diploma, because, as B.B.King put it, “The beautiful thing about learning is that nobody can take that away from you.” And learning is really in the broadest sense what I want to talk about today, because your education, of course, isn't ending here.In many ways, it's only just begun.The world has so many lessons to teach you.I consider the world, this Earth, to be like a school and our life the classrooms.And sometimes here in this Planet Earth school the lessons often come dressed up as detours or roadblocks.And sometimes as full-blown crises.And the secret I've learned to getting ahead is being open to the lessons, lessons from the grandest university of all, that is, the universe itself.It's being able to walk through life eager and open to self-improvement and that which is going to best help you evolve, 'cause that's really why we're here, to evolve as human beings.To grow into more of ourselves, always moving to the next level of understanding, the next level of compassion and growth.I think about one of the greatest compliments I've ever received: I interviewed with a reporter when I was first starting out in Chicago.And then many years later, I saw the same reporter.And she said to me, “You know what? You really haven't changed.You've just become more of yourself.” And that is really what we're all trying to do, become more of ourselves.And I believe that there's a lesson in almost everything that you do and every experience, and getting the lesson is how you move forward.It's how you enrich your spirit.And, trust me, I know that inner wisdom is more precious than wealth.The more you spend it, the more you gain.So, today, I just want to share a few lessons—meaning three—that I've learned in my journey so far.And aren't you glad? Don't you hate it when somebody says, “I'm going to share a few,” and it's 10 lessons later? And, you're like, “Listen, this is my graduation.This is not about you.” So, it's only going to be three.The three lessons that have had the greatest impact on my life have to do with feelings, with failure and with finding happiness.A year after I left college, I was given the opportunity to co-anchor the 6 o'clock news in Baltimore, because the whole goal in the media at the time I was coming up was you try to move to larger markets.And Baltimore was a much larger market than Nashville.So, getting the 6 o'clock news co-anchor job at 22 was such a big deal.It felt like the biggest deal in the world at the time.And I was so proud, because I was finally going to have my chance to be like Barbara Walters, which is who I had been trying to emulate since the start of my TV career.So, I was 22 years old, making $22,000 a year.And it's where I met my best friend, Gayle, who was an intern at the same TV station.And once we became friends, we'd say, “Oh my god, I can't believe it!You're making $22,000 and you're only 22.Imagine when you're 40 and you're making $40,000!” When I turned 40, I was so glad that didn't happen.So, here I am, 22, making $22,000 a year and, yet, it didn't feel right.It didn't feel right.The first sign, as President Hennessy was saying, was when they tried to change my name.The news director said to me at the time, “Nobody's going to remember Oprah.So, we want to change your name.We've come up with a name we think that people will remember and people will like.It's a friendly name: Suzie.” Hi, Suzie.Very friendly.You can't be angry with Suzie.Remember Suzie.But my name wasn't Suzie.And, you know, I'd grown up not really loving my name, because when you're looking for your little name on the lunch boxes and the license plate tags, you're never going to find Oprah.So, I grew up not loving the name, but once I was asked to change it, I thought, well, it is my name and do I look like a Suzie to you? So, I thought, no, it doesn't feel right.I'm not going to change my name.And if people remember it or not, that's OK.And then they said they didn't like the way I looked.This was in 1976, when your boss could call you in and say, “I don't like the way you look.” Now that would be called a lawsuit, but back then they could just say, “I don't like the way you look.” Which, in case some of you in the back, if you can't tell, is nothing like Barbara Walters.So, they sent me to a salon where they gave me a perm, and after a few days all my hair fell out and I had to shave my head.And then they really didn't like the way I looked.Because now I am black and bald and sitting on TV.Not a pretty picture.But even worse than being bald, I really hated, hated, hated being sent to report on other people's tragedies as a part of my daily duty, knowing that I was just expected to observe, when everything in my instinct told me that I should be doing something, I should be lending a hand.So, as President Hennessy said, I'd cover a fire and then I'd go back and I'd try to give the victims blankets.And I wouldn't be able to sleep at night because of all the things I was covering during the day.And, meanwhile, I was trying to sit gracefully like Barbara and make myself talk like Barbara.And I thought, well, I could make a pretty goofy Barbara.And if I could figure out how to be myself, I could be a pretty good Oprah.I was trying to sound elegant like Barbara.And sometimes I didn't read my copy, because something inside me said, this should be spontaneous.So, I wanted to get the news as I was giving it to the people.So, sometimes, I wouldn't read my copy and it would be, like, six people on a pileup on I-40.Oh, my goodness.And sometimes I wouldn't read the copy—because I wanted to be spontaneous—and I'd come across a list of words I didn't know and I'd mispronounce.And one day I was reading copy and I called Canada “ca nada.” And I decided, this Barbara thing's not going too well.I should try being myself.But at the same time, my dad was saying, “Oprah Gail, this is an opportunity of a lifetime.You better keep that job.” And my boss was saying, “This is the nightly news.You're an anchor, not a social worker.Just do your job.” So, I was juggling these messages of expectation and obligation and feeling really miserable with myself.I'd go home at night and fill up my journals, 'cause I've kept a journal since I was 15—so I now have volumes of journals.So, I'd go home at night and fill up my journals about how miserable I was and frustrated.Then I'd eat my anxiety.That's where I learned that habit.And after eight months, I lost that job.They said I was too emotional.I was too much.But since they didn't want to pay out the contract, they put me on a talk show in Baltimore.And the moment I sat down on that show, the moment I did, I felt like I'd come home.I realized that TV could be more than just a playground, but a platform for service, for helping other people lift their lives.And the moment I sat down, doing that talk show, it felt like breathing.It felt right.And that's where everything that followed for me began.And I got that lesson.When you're doing the work you're meant to do, it feels right and every day is a bonus, regardless of what you're getting paid.It's true.And how do you know when you're doing something right? How do you know that? It feels so.What I know now is that feelings are really your GPS system for life.When you're supposed to do something or not supposed to do something, your emotional guidance system lets you know.The trick is to learn to check your ego at the door and start checking your gut instead.Every right decision I've made—every right decision I've ever made—has come from my gut.And every wrong decision I've ever made was a result of me not listening to the greater voice of myself.If it doesn't feel right, don't do it.That's the lesson.And that lesson alone will save you, my friends, a lot of grief.Even doubt means don't.This is what I've learned.There are many times when you don't know what to do.When you don't know what to do, get still, get very still, until you do know what to do.And when you do get still and let your internal motivation be the driver, not only will your personal life improve, but you will gain a competitive edge in the working world as well.Because, as Daniel Pink writes in his best-seller, A Whole New Mind, we're entering a whole new age.And he calls it the Conceptual Age, where traits that set people apart today are going to come from our hearts—right brain—as well as our heads.It's no longer just the logical, linear, rules-based thinking that matters, he says.It's also empathy and joyfulness and purpose, inner traits that have transcendent worth.These qualities bloom when we're doing what we love, when we're involving the wholeness of ourselves in our work, both our expertise and our emotion.So, I say to you, forget about the fast lane.If you really want to fly, just harness your power to your passion.Honor your calling.Everybody has one.Trust your heart and success will come to you.So, how do I define success? Let me tell you, money's pretty nice.I'm not going to stand up here and tell you that it's not about money, 'cause money is very nice.I like money.It's good for buying things.But having a lot of money does not automatically make you a successful person.What you want is money and meaning.You want your work to be meaningful.Because meaning is what brings the real richness to your life.What you really want is to be surrounded by people you trust and treasure and by people who cherish you.That's when you're really rich.So, lesson one, follow your feelings.If it feels right, move forward.If it doesn't feel right, don't do it.Now I want to talk a little bit about failings, because nobody's journey is seamless or smooth.We all stumble.We all have setbacks.If things go wrong, you hit a dead end—as you will—it's just life's way of saying time to change course.So, ask every failure—this is what I do with every failure, every crisis, every difficult time—I say, what is this here to teach me? And as soon as you get the lesson, you get to move on.If you really get the lesson, you pass and you don't have to repeat the class.If you don't get the lesson, it shows up wearing another pair of pants—or skirt—to give you some remedial work.And what I've found is that difficulties come when you don't pay attention to life's whisper, because life always whispers to you first.And if you ignore the whisper, sooner or later you'll get a scream.Whatever you resist persists.But, if you ask the right question—not why is this happening, but what is this here to teach me?—it puts you in the place and space to get the lesson you need.My friend Eckhart Tolle, who's written this wonderful book called A New Earth that's all about letting the awareness of who you are stimulate everything that you do, he puts it like this: He says, don't react against a bad situation;merge with that situation instead.And the solution will arise from the challenge.Because surrendering yourself doesn't mean giving up;it means acting with responsibility.Many of you know that, as President Hennessy said, I started this school in Africa.And I founded the school, where I'm trying to give South African girls a shot at a future like yours—Stanford.And I spent five years making sure that school would be as beautiful as the students.I wanted every girl to feel her worth reflected in her surroundings.So, I checked every blueprint, I picked every pillow.I was looking at the grout in between the bricks.I knew every thread count of the sheets.I chose every girl from the villages, from nine provinces.And yet, last fall, I was faced with a crisis I had never anticipated.I was told that one of the dorm matrons was suspected of sexual abuse.That was, as you can imagine, devastating news.First, I cried—actually, I sobbed—for about half an hour.And then I said, let's get to it;that's all you get, a half an hour.You need to focus on the now, what you need to do now.So, I contacted a child trauma specialist.I put together a team of investigators.I made sure the girls had counseling and support.And Gayle and I got on a plane and flew to South Africa.And the whole time I kept asking that question: What is this here to teach me? And, as difficult as that experience has been, I got a lot of lessons.I understand now the mistakes I made, because I had been paying attention to all of the wrong things.I'd built that school from the outside in, when what really mattered was the inside out.So, it's a lesson that applies to all of our lives as a whole.What matters most is what's inside.What matters most is the sense of integrity, of quality and beauty.I got that lesson.And what I know is that the girls came away with something, too.They have emerged from this more resilient and knowing that their voices have power.And their resilience and spirit have given me more than I could ever give to them, which leads me to my final lesson—the one about finding happiness—which we could talk about all day, but I know you have other wacky things to do.Not a small topic this is, finding happiness.But in some ways I think it's the simplest of all.Gwendolyn Brooks wrote a poem for her children.It's called “Speech to the Young : Speech to the Progress-Toward.” And she says at the end, “Live not for battles won./ Live not for the-end-of-the-song./ Live in the along.” She's saying, like Eckhart Tolle, that you have to live for the present.You have to be in the moment.Whatever has happened to you in your past has no power over this present moment, because life is now.But I think she's also saying, be a part of something.Don't live for yourself alone.This is what I know for sure: In order to be truly happy, you must live along with and you have to stand for something larger than yourself.Because life is a reciprocal exchange.To move forward you have to give back.And to me, that is the greatest lesson of life.To be happy, you have to give something back.I know you know that, because that's a lesson that's woven into the very fabric of this university.It's a lesson that Jane and Leland Stanford got and one they've bequeathed to you.Because all of you know the story of how this great school came to be, how the Stanfords lost their only child to typhoid at the age of 15.They had every right and they had every reason to turn their backs against the world at that time, but instead, they channeled their grief and their pain into an act of grace.Within a year of their son's death, they had made the founding grant for this great school, pledging to do for other people's children what they were not able to do for their own boy.The lesson here is clear, and that is, if you're hurting, you need to help somebody ease their hurt.If you're in pain, help somebody else's pain.And when you're in a mess, you get yourself out of the mess helping somebody out of theirs.And in the process, you get to become a member of what I call the greatest fellowship of all, the sorority of compassion and the fraternity of service.The Stanfords had suffered the worst thing any mom and dad can ever endure, yet they understood that helping others is the way we help ourselves.And this wisdom is increasingly supported by scientific and sociological research.It's no longer just woo-woo soft-skills talk.There's actually a helper's high, a spiritual surge you gain from serving others.So, if you want to feel good, you have to go out and do some good.But when you do good, I hope you strive for more than just the good feeling that service provides, because I know this for sure, that doing good actually makes you better.So, whatever field you choose, if you operate from the paradigm of service, I know your life will have more value and you will be happy.I was always happy doing my talk show, but that happiness reached a depth of fulfillment, of joy, that I really can't describe to you or measure when I stopped just being on TV and looking at TV as a job and decided to use television, to use it and not have it use me, to use it as a platform to serve my viewers.That alone changed the trajectory of my success.So, I know this—that whether you're an actor, you offer your talent in the way that most inspires art.If you're an anatomist, you look at your gift as knowledge and service to healing.Whether you've been called, as so many of you here today getting doctorates and other degrees, to the professions of business, law, engineering, humanities, science, medicine, if you choose to offer your skills and talent in service, when you choose the paradigm of service, looking at life through that paradigm, it turns everything you do from a job into a gift.And I know you haven't spent all this time at Stanford just to go out and get a job.You've been enriched in countless ways.There's no better way to make your mark on the world and to share that abundance with others.My constant prayer for myself is to be used in service for the greater good.So, let me end with one of my favorite quotes from Martin Luther King.Dr.King said, “Not everybody can be famous.” And I don't know, but everybody today seems to want to be famous.But fame is a trip.People follow you to the bathroom, listen to you pee.It's just—try to pee quietly.It doesn't matter, they come out and say, “Oh my god, it's you.You peed.” That's the fame trip, so I don't know if you want that.So, Dr.King said, “Not everybody can be famous.But everybody can be great, because greatness is determined by service.” Those of you who are history scholars may know the rest of that passage.He said, “You don't have to have a college degree to serve.You don't have to make your subject and verb agree to serve.You don't have to know about Plato or Aristotle to serve.You don't have to know Einstein's theory of relativity to serve.You don't have to know the second theory of thermodynamics in physics to serve.You only need a heart full of grace and a soul generated by love.” In a few moments, you'll all be officially Stanford's '08.You have the heart and the smarts to go with it.And it's up to you to decide, really, where will you now use those gifts? You've got the diploma, so go out and get the lessons, 'cause I know great things are sure to come.You know, I've always believed that everything is better when you share it, so before I go, I wanted to share a graduation gift with you.Underneath your seats you'll find two of my favorite books.Eckhart Tolle's A New Earth is my current book club selection.Our New Earth webcast has been downloaded 30 million times with that book.And Daniel Pink's A Whole New Mind: Why Right-Brainers Will Rule the Future has reassured me I'm in the right direction.I really wanted to give you cars but I just couldn't pull that off!Congratulations, '08!
第三篇:短篇演講 尋找幸福的人
尋找幸福的人,有兩類。
一類像在登山,他們以為人生最大的幸福在山頂,于是氣喘吁吁、窮盡一生去攀登。
另一類也像在登山,但他們并不刻意登到哪里。一路上走走停停,看看山嵐、賞賞虹霓、吹吹清風(fēng),心靈在放松中得到某種滿足。盡管不得大愉悅,然而,這些瑣碎而細(xì)微的小自在,縈繞于心扉,一樣芬芳身心、恬靜自我。
第一類人是在窮盡一生去追求幸福。古往今來,無數(shù)人執(zhí)著地追求著各自心目中的幸福,嫦娥懷抱著幸福的夢(mèng)想,吞下了長生不老丹,飛上九天,成了月中仙子??瑟?dú)守著寒冷的廣寒宮,她是否會(huì)感到做神仙的幸福呢。對(duì)嗜財(cái)如命的葛朗臺(tái)來說,擁有如山的金幣大概就是他最大的幸福。但當(dāng)他年老力衰地坐在輪椅上盯著他的密室,甚至在他生命的最后一刻仍念念不忘他的金子時(shí),這樣的幸福是多么的可悲。
而第二類人更在乎的是身邊點(diǎn)點(diǎn)滴滴的幸福。這種點(diǎn)滴幸??梢允窃缟媳犻_眼睛,看到陽光灑滿了房間,用力嗅嗅陽光和早晨的味道; 是陽光明媚的上午,抱著本自己喜歡的書,坐在露天的陽臺(tái)上,享受風(fēng)吹過,文字劃過; 是小雨淅瀝的午后,靜靜走在雨中,望望在雨中舞蹈的小草,聽聽雨滴落在世界的聲音; 是華燈初上的傍晚,閑散的走在路上聽到一首熟悉的老歌,駐足,讓回憶在腦海里逐漸清晰; 是繁星漫天的夜晚,坐在田野旁邊看星星眨眼,看螢火蟲飛舞,看遠(yuǎn)處的霓紅閃爍。
幸福其實(shí)很簡(jiǎn)單,它就在舉手投足之間,就在嘮叨寒暄里突現(xiàn),其實(shí)就是用心采集生活中的點(diǎn)點(diǎn)滴滴。無論是苦還是甜,都當(dāng)作人生的風(fēng)景一一收入行囊,然后以更輕松瀟灑的心態(tài)繼續(xù)前行。
第四篇:尋找幸福
幸福是什么?
我開始沉默,開始尋找答案。
迷茫里,我彷徨……
無奈地休憩;
無奈地幻想;
或許等待著明天能得到答案,或許就只能憑著空想。
幸福是什么?
是自由,是富貴嗎?
自由的人生是快樂的人生嗎?
難道富貴的人生才是沒有煩惱的人生嗎?
沉默而又無奈,無奈而又消沉。
這時(shí),靜謐的星空劃過一顆流星,原來……
不要抱怨幸福的遙遠(yuǎn); 不要抱怨幸福的短暫; 其實(shí)它的璀璨奪目,它的轉(zhuǎn)瞬即逝,便上它無聲的本質(zhì)。
滴水不成河,滴露不成雨。
而幸福就是這樣:
點(diǎn)點(diǎn)滴滴……
無處不在!
孩子,幸福就是小熊貓嘗過了黃連的苦澀,又吃到密糖時(shí)咂著嘴巴品呀品出的滋味;
幸福就是“久旱逢甘霖”的禾苗.晃動(dòng)著稚嫩的身軀,昂首向著天際發(fā)出的無聲的訴說;
幸福就是蠶寶寶咀嚼著香翠的桑葉奏出的“沙沙沙沙”的樂曲;
幸福就是雛燕展翼穿過鵝黃的柳梢剪出一片春色朝向母親的回眸;
幸福就是密蜂結(jié)伴飛入花海匆忙地采蜜,滿載而歸時(shí)的歡悅;
幸福就是啄木鳥穿行林間尋覓蛀蟲的蛛絲馬跡,一旦發(fā)現(xiàn)奮力啄啄啄,然后飄然而去;
幸福就是一片片樹葉在秋風(fēng)里簌簌飄落,飄向樹的根部,落下腐化成泥,只為來年春曉;
幸福就是梅花,“己是懸崖百丈冰,猶有花枝俏,俏也不爭(zhēng)春,只是春來技.待到山花爛縵時(shí),她在叢中笑”;幸福就是喜鵲歷盡艱幸做好了窩巢卻被鳩占了,而且所產(chǎn)下的卵也被取而代之,喜鵲卻從無怨言,只為整個(gè)鳥類的繁榮.幸福就是一份比較,更是一份比較后的滿足;幸福是一串了汗滴,更是揩干汗滴的愜意;幸福是一種奉獻(xiàn),更是奉獻(xiàn)后的欣慰;幸福是“忘我”后的體味.媽媽,媽媽,幸福是什么,我懂了!懂了!媽媽,你生我,養(yǎng)我,呵護(hù)我,關(guān)照我.你是世界上最好的媽媽!最偉大的媽媽!
作文課上,老師對(duì)我們說:“你們知道幸福是什么嗎?”我們一個(gè)個(gè)的都眨巴著眼睛,似乎都在尋求老師給我們的答案。
老師很溫和的告訴我們,幸福,并不是一件簡(jiǎn)單的東西,也不是一件很復(fù)雜的東西,它在于人們擁有它的心態(tài)?。?
心態(tài)???我不懂,幸福不是人的感受嗎???不是心靈的承接嗎?怎么會(huì)和心態(tài)聯(lián)系?
胖子首先發(fā)言:“我知道了,幸福就是我吃東西時(shí)的快樂,現(xiàn)在的人都追求苗條,擔(dān)心自己會(huì)一不小心吃胖,但是我不同,我對(duì)持已經(jīng)產(chǎn)生了興趣,無論別人怎樣看我,我都擁有好的心態(tài),所以我沒有憂愁!”話語完畢,班級(jí)里響起了雷鳴般的掌聲。
老師微笑著看著我們,似乎在說:“對(duì)啊,這個(gè)同學(xué)說的很有道理,想一想你們還有別的幸福嗎?”
我的大腦開始工作,努力的搜尋著以前的“幸?!薄?/p>
我是個(gè)不擅于表達(dá)自己感情的人,即使有了困難也不見得會(huì)說,所以別人可能有時(shí)會(huì)誤解我,但是我不懂得怎樣解釋,因?yàn)槟菢釉谖铱磥碇皇窃矫柙胶冢?
記得有一次,我的老表們?cè)谝粔K開我的批判會(huì),我聽了心里很不是滋味,很傷心,雖然她們說的有些事是對(duì)的,但也有一些事與現(xiàn)實(shí)不符的。這些錯(cuò)誤我已經(jīng)在努力改正了,為什么還要這樣說我呢?知識(shí)的我真的很傷心,很無助……。
以前總是抱怨,為什么我不可以有這么多的好朋友?為什么自己一個(gè)人總會(huì)那么孤單?可是,到現(xiàn)在才發(fā)現(xiàn)一切都不是別人的問題,而是自己!不是別人不肯接受,而是自己在心里從來沒有接受過別人,這樣的自己是自私的,別人也不會(huì)接受。
這時(shí),我不由自主的舉起了手,老師讓我站起來講述,我很泰然的站起來講述了我很想找人訴說卻沒有勇氣說的事,我不知道當(dāng)我講起我的經(jīng)歷時(shí)我的同學(xué)們是怎樣的表情,但是我感覺到了當(dāng)我講出自己的真實(shí)感情后有很多的友誼之手牽著我,噓寒問暖,談天說地!!我講完了,這一刻我感到從未有過的幸福,因?yàn)槲矣辛苏曈颜x的心態(tài),它助我找到了真正的朋友!
當(dāng)你的作文寫得不如別人的優(yōu)美生動(dòng)時(shí),你也許會(huì)感到沮喪,但是我要告訴你,作文有時(shí)也并不需要許多華麗的辭藻,只要你用心去寫,那也是一篇佳作,也是一篇值得借鑒的文章;當(dāng)有人在創(chuàng)業(yè)的旅途上遇到大風(fēng)暴時(shí),也許你會(huì)因此而停滯不前,但我要告訴你,只要你有正視挫折的正確心態(tài),向著自己的目標(biāo)前進(jìn),你一定會(huì)到達(dá)成功的彼岸!
一位哲人說過這樣一句話 :“一個(gè)向著他目標(biāo)前進(jìn)的人,整個(gè)世界都會(huì)為他讓路!”有時(shí)候,有夢(mèng)想也是一種刻骨銘心的幸福!
在每一個(gè)角落,也許你都會(huì)找到幸福,但是每個(gè)人的心態(tài)不同,所體會(huì)到的幸福的程度也會(huì)有所不同,所以朋友們,相信自己,只要擁有一個(gè)好心態(tài),無論你處在什么環(huán)境里,都一定會(huì)成功!!
記住:失敗的彼岸就是成功!好的心態(tài)的對(duì)岸就是成功!!
第五篇:尋找幸福
尋找幸福
時(shí)間總是太快太快,令我們措手不及,為什么我們?cè)跁r(shí)間面前總顯得那么渺小呢?時(shí)間撫平了我們的傷疤,時(shí)間帶走了我們美好的回憶。時(shí)間!時(shí)間?去年的6月還在為中考準(zhǔn)備,去年9月我開始我的高中生活??墒乾F(xiàn)在轉(zhuǎn)眼就要上高二了,不禁的有些感慨。這一年覺得自己張大了不少,學(xué)會(huì)了冷靜,學(xué)會(huì)了思考,學(xué)會(huì)了等待。遇到了幾個(gè)好朋友,遇到了一個(gè)團(tuán)結(jié)的班級(jí),遇到了優(yōu)秀的班主任。緊張的學(xué)習(xí)讓生活更加充實(shí)。朋友陪在身邊總是那么幸福。去年北方的冬天真的很冷,那個(gè)冬天我哭了,眼淚是干了,可是淚痕沒有消失,昏昏沉沉的就這么晃了幾個(gè)月。最后我終于明白人要現(xiàn)實(shí)。真的,要現(xiàn)實(shí)!分班了,我毫不猶豫的填了文科。很堅(jiān)定的那種。開學(xué)后就會(huì)坐在新的班級(jí)里,呵呵,突然舍不得放開這過去的一年,這個(gè)包容了我點(diǎn)點(diǎn)滴滴的班級(jí)??墒俏抑廊艘F(xiàn)實(shí)!新的一切即將開始,我心里明白我應(yīng)該做什么。人生沒有彩排,每一天都是現(xiàn)場(chǎng)直播,所以我必須認(rèn)真過好每一天!相信幸福就在不遠(yuǎn)的前方!