求一篇能讲2——3分钟的故事

作者&投稿:政嵇 (若有异议请与网页底部的电邮联系)
求一个比较有趣的小故事,大概要念2-3分钟的!~

下面是我整理收藏的一些哲理小故事。这些小故事给我不少启迪,希望对你有所帮助:)

1.心态

父子二人看到一辆十分豪华的进口轿车。儿子不屑地对他的父亲说:“坐这种车的人,肚子里一定没有学问!”父亲则轻描淡写地回答:“说这种话的人,口袋里一定没有钱!

--你对事情的看法,是不是也反映出你内心真正的态度?

2.情况不同

一只小猪、一只绵羊和一头乳牛,被关在同一个畜栏里。有一次,牧人捉住小猪,小猪大声号叫,猛烈地抗拒。绵羊和乳牛讨厌小猪的号叫,便说:「他常常捉我们,我们并不大呼小叫。」小猪听了回答道:「捉你们和捉我完全是两回事,他捉你们,只是要你们的毛和乳汁,但是捉住我,却是要我的命!」

--立场不同、所处环境不同的人,很难了解对方的感受;因此对别人的失意、挫折、伤痛,不宜幸灾乐祸,而应要有关怀、了解的心情。

3.靠自己

小蜗牛问妈妈:为什么我们从生下来,就要背负这个又硬又重的壳呢?
妈妈:因为我们的身体没有骨骼的支撑,只能爬,又爬不快。所以要这个壳的保护!
小蜗牛:毛虫姊姊没有骨头,也爬不快,为什么她却不用背这个又硬又重的壳呢?
妈妈:因为毛虫姊姊能变成蝴蝶,天空会保护她啊。
小蜗牛:可是蚯蚓弟弟也没骨头爬不快,也不会变成蝴蝶他什么不背这个又硬又重的壳呢?
妈妈:因为蚯蚓弟弟会钻土, 大地会保护他啊。
小蜗牛哭了起来:我们好可怜,天空不保护,大地也不保护。
蜗牛妈妈安慰他:「所以我们有壳啊!」我们不靠天,也不靠地,我们靠自己。

4.鲨鱼与鱼

曾有人做过实验,将一只最凶猛的鲨鱼和一群热带鱼放在同一个池子,然后用强化玻璃隔开,最初,鲨鱼每天不断冲撞那块看不到的玻璃,耐何这只是徒劳,它始终不能过到对面去,而实验人员每天都有放一些鲫鱼在池子里,所以鲨鱼也没缺少猎物,只是它仍想到对面去,想尝试那美丽的滋味,每天仍是不断的冲撞那块玻璃,它试了每个角落,每次都是用尽全力,但每次也总是弄的伤痕累累,有好几次都浑身破裂出血,持续了好一些日子,每当玻璃一出现裂痕,实验人员马上加上一块更厚的玻璃。后来,鲨鱼不再冲撞那块玻璃了,对那些斑斓的热带鱼也不再在意,好像他们只是墙上会动的壁画,它开始等着每天固定会出现的鲫鱼,然后用他敏捷的本能进行狩猎,好像回到海中不可一世的凶狠霸气,但这一切只不过是假像罢了,实验到了最后的阶段,实验人员将玻璃取走,但鲨鱼却没有反应,每天仍是在固定的区域游着它不但对那些热带鱼视若无睹,甚至于当那些鲫鱼逃到那边去,他就立刻放弃追逐,说什么也不愿再过去,实验结束了,实验人员讥笑它是海里最懦弱的鱼。

--可是失恋过的人都知道为什么,它怕痛。

5.神迹

法国一个偏僻的小镇,据传有一个特别灵验的水泉,常会出现神迹,可以医治各种疾病。有一天,一个拄着拐杖,少了一条腿的退伍军人,一跛一跛的走过镇上的马路,旁边的镇民带着同情的回吻说:「可怜的家伙,难道他要向上帝祈求再有一条腿吗??」这一句话被退伍的军人听到了,他转过身对他们说:「我不是要向上帝祈求有一条新的腿,而是要祈求?帮助我,叫我没有一条腿后,也知道如何过日子。」

--试想:学习为所失去的感恩,也接纳失去的事实,不管人生的得与失,总是要让自已的生命充满了亮丽与光彩,不再为过去掉泪,努力的活出自己的生命。

6.钓竿

有个老人在河边钓鱼,一个小孩走过去看他钓鱼,老人技巧纯熟,所以没多久就钓上了满篓的鱼,老人见小孩很可爱,要把整篓的鱼送给他,小孩摇摇头,老人惊异的问道:「你为何不要?」小孩回答:「我想要你手中的钓竿。」老人问:「你要钓竿做什么?」小孩说:「这篓鱼没多久就吃完了,要是我有钓竿,我就可以自己钓,一辈子也吃不完。」我想你一定会说:好聪明的小孩。错了,他如果只要钓竿,那他一条鱼也吃不到。因为,他不懂钓鱼的技巧,光有鱼竿是没用的,因为钓鱼重要的不在<钓竿>,而在<钓技>有太多人认为自己拥有了人生道上的钓竿,再也无惧于路上的风雨,如此,难免会跌倒于泥泞地上。就如小孩看老人,以为只要有钓竿就有吃不完的鱼,像职员看老板,以为只要坐在办公室,就有滚进的财源。


7.用人之道

去过庙的人都知道,一进庙门,首先是弥陀佛,笑脸迎客,而在他的北面,则是黑口黑脸的韦陀。但相传在很久以前,他们并不在同一个庙里,而是分别掌管不同的庙。弥乐佛热情快乐,所以来的人非常多,但他什么都不在乎,丢三拉四,没有好好的管理账务,所以依然入不敷出。而韦陀虽然管账是一把好手,但成天阴着个脸,太过严肃,搞得人越来越少,最后香火断绝。
佛祖在查香火的时候发现了这个问题,就将他们俩放在同一个庙里,由弥乐佛负责公关,笑迎八方客,于是香火大旺。而韦陀铁面无私,锱珠必较,则让他负责财务,严格把关。在两人的分工合作中,庙里一派欣欣向荣景象。

--其实在用人大师的眼里,没有废人,正如武功高手,不需名贵宝剑,摘花飞叶即可伤人,关键看如何运用。

8.鹦鹉

一个人去买鹦鹉,看到一只鹦鹉前标:此鹦鹉会两门语言,售价二百元。
另一只鹦鹉前则标道:此鹦鹉会四门语言,售价四百元。
该买哪只呢?两只都毛色光鲜,非常灵活可爱。这人转啊转,拿不定主意。
结果突然发现一只老掉了牙的鹦鹉,毛色暗淡散乱,标价八百元。
这人赶紧将老板叫来:这只鹦鹉是不是会说八门语言?
店主说:不。
这人奇怪了:那为什么又老又丑,又没有能力,会值这个数呢?
店主回答:因为另外两只鹦鹉叫这只鹦鹉老板。

--这故事告诉我们,真正的领导人,不一定自己能力有多强,只要懂信任,懂放权,懂珍惜,就能团结比自己更强的力量,从而提升自己的身价。
相反许多能力非常强的人却因为过于完美主义,事必躬亲,什么人都不如自己,最后只能做最好的攻关人员,销售代表,成不了优秀的领导人。

9.袋鼠与笼子

一天动物园管理员发现袋鼠从笼子里跑出来了,于是开会讨论,一致认为是笼子的高度过低。所以他们决定将笼子的高度由原来的10米加高到20米。结果第二天他们发现袋鼠还是跑到外面来,所以他们又决定再将高度加高到30米。
没想到隔天居然又看到袋鼠全跑到外面,于是管理员们大为紧张,决定一不做二不休,将笼子的高度加高到100米。一天长颈鹿和几只袋鼠们在闲聊,“你们看,这些人会不会再继续加高你们的笼子?”长颈鹿问。“很难说。”袋鼠说∶“如果他们再继续忘记关门的话!”

--管理心得:事有“本末”、“轻重”、“缓急”,关门是本,加高笼子是末,舍本而逐末,当然就不得要领了。管理是什么?管理就是先分析事情的主要矛盾和次要矛盾,认清事情的“本末”、“轻重”、“缓急”,然后从重要的方面下手。

10.扁鹊的医术

魏文王问名医扁鹊说:“你们家兄弟三人,都精于医术,到底哪一位最好呢?”
扁鹊答:“长兄最好,中兄次之,我最差。”
文王再问:“那么为什么你最出名呢?”
扁鹊答:“长兄治病,是治病于病情发作之前。由于一般人不知道他事先能铲除病因,所以他的名气无法传出去;中兄治病,是治病于病情初起时。一般人以为他只能治轻微的小病,所以他的名气只及本乡里。而我是治病于病情严重之时。一般人都看到我在经脉上穿针管放血、在皮肤上敷药等大手术,所以以为我的医术高明,名气因此响遍全国。”

--管理心得:事后控制不如事中控制,事中控制不如事前控制,可惜大多数的事业经营者均未能体会到这一点,等到错误的决策造成了重大的损失才寻求弥补。而往往是即使请来了名气很大的“空降兵”,结果于事无补。

11.曲突徒薪

有位客人到某人家里做客,看见主人家的灶上烟囱是直的,旁边又有很多木材。客人告诉主人说,烟囱要改曲,木材须移去,否则将来可能会有火灾,主人听了没有作任何表示。
不久主人家里果然失火,四周的邻居赶紧跑来救火,最后火被扑灭了,于是主人烹羊宰牛,宴请四邻,以酬谢他们救火的功劳,但并没有请当初建议他将木材移走,烟囱改曲的人。
有人对主人说:“如果当初听了那位先生的话,今天也不用准备筵席,而且没有火灾的损失,现在论功行赏,原先给你建议的人没有被感恩,而救火的人却是座上客,真是很奇怪的事呢!”主人顿时省悟,赶紧去邀请当初给予建议的那个客人来吃酒。

--管理心得:一般人认为,足以摆平或解决企业经营过程中的各种棘手问题的人,就是优秀的管理者,其实这是有待商榷的,俗话说:“预防重于治疗”,能防患于未然之前,更胜于治乱于已成之后,由此观之,企业问题的预防者,其实是优于企业问题的解决者

12.救人

在一场激烈的战斗中,上尉忽然发现一架敌机向阵地俯冲下来。照常理,发现敌机俯冲时要毫不犹豫地卧倒。可上尉并没有立刻卧倒,他发现离他四五米远处有一个小战士还站在哪儿。他顾不上多想 ,一个鱼跃飞身将小战士紧紧地压在了身下。此时一声巨响,飞溅起来的泥土纷纷落在他们的身上。上尉拍拍身上的尘土,回头一看,顿时惊呆了:刚才自己所处的那个位置被炸成了一个大坑。

13.出门

古时候,有两个兄弟各自带着一只行李箱出远门。一路上,重重的行李箱将兄弟俩都压得 喘不过气来。他们只好左手累了换右手,右手累了又换左手。忽然,大哥停了下来,在路边买了一根扁担,将两个行李箱一左一右挂在扁担上。他挑起两个箱子上路,反倒觉得轻松了很多。

--把这两个故事联系在一起也许有些牵强,但他们确实有着惊人的相似之处:故事中的小战士和弟弟是幸运的,但更加幸运的是故事中的上尉和大哥,因为他们在帮助别人的同时也帮助了自己!

--管理心得:在我们人生的大道上,肯定会遇到许许多多的困难。但我们是不是都知道,在前进的道路上,搬开别人脚下的绊脚石,有时恰恰是为自己铺路?

14.鱼王的儿子

有个渔人有着一流的捕鱼技术,被人们尊称为‘渔王’。然而‘渔王’年老的时候非常苦恼,因为他的三个儿子的渔技都很平庸。
于是经常向人诉说心中的苦恼:“我真不明白,我捕鱼的技术这么好,我的儿子们为什么这么差?我从他们懂事起就传授捕鱼技术给他们,从最基本的东西教起,告诉他们怎样织网最容易捕捉到鱼,怎样划船最不会惊动鱼,怎样下网最容易请鱼入瓮。他们长大了,我又教他们怎样识潮汐,辨鱼汛。。。凡是我长年辛辛苦苦总结出来的经验,我都毫无保留地传授给了他们,可他们的捕鱼技术竟然赶不上技术比我差的渔民的儿子!”
一位路人听了他的诉说后,问:“你一直手把手地教他们吗?”
“是的,为了让他们得到一流的捕鱼技术,我教得很仔细很耐心。”
“他们一直跟随着你吗?”
“是的,为了让他们少走弯路,我一直让他们跟着我学。”
路人说:“这样说来,你的错误就很明显了。你只传授给了他们技术,却没传授给他们教训,对于才能来说,没有教训与没有经验一样,都不能使人成大器!”

15.河边的苹果

一位老和尚,他身边聚拢着一帮虔诚的弟子。这一天,他嘱咐弟子每人去南山打一担柴回来。弟子们匆匆行至离山不远的河边,人人目瞪口呆。只见洪水从山上奔泻而下,无论如何也休想渡河打柴了。无功而返,弟子们都有些垂头丧气。唯独一个小和尚与师傅坦然相对。师傅问其故,小和尚从怀中掏出一个苹果,递给师傅说,过不了河,打不了柴,见河边有棵苹果树,我就顺手把树上唯一的一个苹果摘来了。后来,这位小和尚成了师傅的衣钵传人。

--世上有走不完的路,也有过不了的河。过不了的河掉头而回,也是一种智慧。但真正的智慧还要在河边做一件事情:放飞思想的风筝,摘下一个“苹果”。历览古今,抱定这样一种生活信念的人,最终都实现了人生的突围和超越。

16.右手握左手

桌上流行一首顺口溜:握着老婆的手,好像右手握左手。
每当有人念出:熟悉的或不熟悉的一桌子人便会意地放声笑起来,气氛立刻就轻松了。当然,这是基于人家对该顺口溜的一致理解--感觉准确,描述到位。
有一天在餐桌上有人又念起这段顺口溜,男人们照例笑得起劲。后来发现餐桌上的一位女人没笑。男人们忙说闹着玩别当真。没想到女人认真地说:最妙的就是这“右手握左手”。第一,左手是最可以被右手信赖的;第二,左手和右手彼此都是自己的;第三,别的手任怎么叫你愉悦兴奋魂飞魄散,过后都是可以甩手的,只有左手,甩开了你就残缺了,是不是?一桌子男人都佩服,称赞女人的理解深刻而独到,妇人淡淡地说 :有什么深刻而独到,不妨回去念给你们各自的老婆听听,看她们说些什么。
男人当中有胆子大的果然回去试探老婆,果然老婆们的理解均与餐桌上的女士相同。
她们都是左手,男人们当然要以左手计。
而他们都是右手,他们当然作右手想

17.抉择

一个农民从洪水中救起了他的妻子,他的孩子却被淹死了。
事后,人们议论纷纷。有的说他做得对,因为孩子可以再生一个,妻子却不能死而复活。有的说他做错了,因为妻子可以另娶一个,孩子却不能死而复活。
我听了人们的议论,也感到疑惑难决:如果只能救活一人,究竟应该救妻子呢,还是救孩子?于是我去拜访那个农民,问他当时是怎么想的。
他答道:“我什么也没想。洪水袭来,妻子在我身过,我抓住她就往附近的山坡游。
当我返回时,孩子已经被洪水冲走了。”
归途上,我琢磨着农民的话,对自己说:所谓人生的抉择不少便是如此。

18.简单道理

从前,有两个饥饿的人得到了一位长者的恩赐:一根鱼竿和一篓鲜活硕大的鱼。其中,一个人要了一篓鱼,另一个人要了一根鱼竿,于是他们分道扬镳了。得到鱼的人原地就用干柴搭起篝火煮起了鱼,他 狼吞虎咽,还没有品出鲜鱼的肉香,转瞬间,连鱼带汤就被他吃了个精光,不久,他便饿死在空空的鱼篓 旁。另一个人则提着鱼竿继续忍饥挨饿,一步步艰难地向海边走去,可当他已经看到不远处那片蔚蓝色的 海洋时,他浑身的最后一点力气也使完了,他也只能眼巴巴地带着无尽的遗憾撒手人间。
有两个饥饿的人,他们同样得到了长者恩赐的一根鱼竿和一篓鱼。只是他们并没有各奔东西,而 是商定共同去找寻大海,他俩每次只煮一条鱼,他们经过遥远的跋涉,来到了海边,从此,两人开始了捕 鱼为生的日子,几年后,他们盖起了房子,有了各自的家庭、子女,有了自己建造的渔船,过上了幸福安康的生活。

--一个人只顾眼前的利益,得到的终将是短暂的欢愉;一个人目标高远,但也要面对现实的生活。只有把理想和现实有机结合起来,才有可能成为一个成功之人。有时候,一个简单的道理,却足以 给人意味深长的生命启示。

19.并不是你想象中那样

两个旅行中的天使到一个富有的家庭借宿。这家人对他们并不友好,并且拒绝让他们在舒适的客人卧室过夜,而是在冰冷的地下室给他们找了一个角落。当他们铺床时,较老的天使发现墙上有一个洞,就顺手把它修补好了。年轻的天使问为什么,老天使答到:“有些事并不象它看上去那样。”
第二晚,两人又到了一个非常贫穷的农家借宿。主人夫妇俩对他们非常热情,把仅有的一点点食物拿出来款待客人,然后又让出自己的床铺给两个天使。第二天一早,两个天使发现农夫和他的妻子在哭泣,他们唯一的生活来源--一头奶牛死了。年轻的天使非常愤怒,他质问老天使为什么会这样,第一个家庭什么都有,老天使还帮助他们修补墙洞,第二个家庭尽管如此贫穷还是热情款待客人,而老天使却没有阻止奶牛的死亡。
“有些事并不象它看上去那样。”老天使答道,“当我们在地下室过夜时,我从墙洞看到墙里面堆满了金块。因为主人被贪欲所迷惑,不愿意分享他的财富,所以我把墙洞填上了。昨天晚上,死亡之神来召唤农夫的妻子,我让奶牛代替了她。所以有些事并不象它看上去那样。”

--有些时候事情的表面并不是它实际应该的样子。如果你有信念,你只需要坚信付出总会得到回报。你可能不会发现,直到后来……



20.养牛之道

我们旅行到乡间,看到一位老农把喂牛的草料铲到一间小茅屋的屋檐上,不免感到奇怪,于是就问道:
“老公公,你为什么不把喂牛的草放在地上,让它吃?”
老农说:“这种草草质不好,我要是放在地上它就不屑一顾;但是我放到让它勉强可够得着的屋檐上,它会努力去吃,直到把全部草料吃个精光。”

21.爱人之心

这是发生在英国的一个真实故事。
有位孤独的老人,无儿无女,又体弱多病。他决定搬到养老院去。老人宣布出售他漂亮的住宅。购买者闻讯蜂拥而至。住宅底价8万英镑,但人们很快就将它炒到了10万英镑。价钱还在不断攀升。老人深陷在沙发里,满目忧郁,是的,要不是健康情形不行,他是不会卖掉这栋陪他度过大半生的住宅的。
一个衣着朴素的青年来到老人眼前,弯下腰,低声说:“先生,我也好想买这栋住宅,可我只有1万英镑。可是,如果您把住宅卖给我,我保证会让您依旧生活在这里,和我一起喝茶,读报,散步,天天都快快乐乐的--相信我,我会用整颗心来照顾您!”
老人颔首微笑,把住宅以1万英镑的价钱卖给了他。

--完成梦想,不一定非得要冷酷地厮杀和欺诈,有时,只要你拥有一颗爱人之心就可以了。

22.给予

有个老木匠准备退休,他告诉老板,说要离开建筑行业,回家与妻子儿女享受天伦之乐。老板舍不得他的好工人走,问他是否能帮忙再建一座房子,老木匠说可以。但是大家后来都看得出来,他的心已不在工作上,他用的是软料,出的是粗活。房子建好的时候,老板把大门的钥匙递给他。
“这是你的房子,”他说,“我送给你的礼物。”
他震惊得目瞪口呆,羞愧得无地自容。如果他早知道是在给自己建房子,他怎么会这样呢?现在他得住在一幢粗制滥造的房子里!我们又何尝不是这样。我们漫不经心地“建造”自己的生活,不是积极行动,而是消极应付,凡事不肯精益求精,在关键时刻不能尽最大努力。等我们惊觉自己的处境,早已深困在自己建造的“房子”里了。把你当成那个木匠吧,想想你的房子,每天你敲进去一颗钉,加上去一块板,或者竖起一面墙,用你的智慧好好建造吧!你的生活是你一生唯一的创造,不能抹平重建,即使只有一天可活,那一天也要活得优美、高贵,墙上的铭牌上写着:“生活是自己创造的。”

23.提醒自我

有个老太太坐在马路边望着不远处的一堵高墙,总觉得它马上就会倒塌,见有人向媾走过去,她就善意地提醒道:“那堵墙要倒了,远着点走吧。”被提醒的人不解地看着她大模大样地顺着墙根走过去了--那堵墙没有倒。老太太很生气:“怎么不听我的话呢?!”又有人走来,老太太又予以劝告。三天过去了,许多人在墙边走过去,并没有遇上危险。第四天,老太太感到有些奇怪,又有些失望,不由自主便走到墙根下仔细观看,然而就在此时,墙缍倒了,老太太被掩埋在灰尘砖石中,气绝身亡。

--提醒别人时往往很容易,很清醒,但能做到时刻清醒地提醒自己却很难。所以说,许多危险来源于自身,老太太的悲哀便因此而生

24.窗

有个太太多年来不断抱怨对面的太太很懒惰,“那个女人的衣服永远洗不干净,看,她晾在外院子里的衣服,总是有斑点,我真的不知道,她怎么连洗衣服都洗成那个样子......”
直到有一天,有个明察秋毫的朋友到她家,才发现不是对面的太太衣服洗不干净。细心的朋友拿了一块抹布,把这个太太的窗户上的灰渍抹掉,说:“看,这不就干净了吗?” 原来,是自己家的窗户脏了。

25.留个缺口给别人

一位著名企业家在作报告,一位听众问:“你在事业上取得了巨大的成功,请问,对你来说,最重要的是什么?”
企业家没有直接回答,他拿起粉笔在黑板上画了一个圈,只是并没有画圆满,留下一个缺口。他反问道:“这是什么?”“零”。“圈”/“未完成的事业”/“成功”,台下的听众七嘴八舌地答道。
他对这些回答未置可否:“其实,这只是一个未画完整的句号。你们问我为什么会取得辉煌的业绩,道理很简单:我不会把事情做得很圆满,就像画个句号,一定要留个缺口,让我的下属去填满它。”

--留个缺口给他人,并不说明自己的能力不强。实际上,这是一种管理的智慧,是一种更高层次上带有全局性的圆满。给猴子一棵树,让它不停地攀登;给老虎一座山,让它自由纵横。也许,这就是企业管理用人的最高境界。

26.马

马,本来自由自在的在山间撒野,渴了喝点山泉,累了就睡在地上晒太阳,无忧无虑。可是自从有了伯乐,马的命运就改变了,给它的头戴上笼辔,在它的背上置放鞍具,栓着它,马的死亡率已经是十之二三了,然后再逼着它运输东西,强迫它日行千里,在它的脚上钉上铁掌,马的死亡率就过半了。马本来就是毫无规矩毫无用处的动物,让它吸取日月之精化,天地之灵气,无用无为,还得以享尽天年,教化它,让它懂得礼法,反而害了它的生命。

--人何尝不是如此呢?在规矩的约束下我们是否也丧失了本我,成天遵循别人制定的礼义,逼迫自己去做不愿意做的事情,有限的生命还剩下多少呢?

27.所长无用

有个鲁国人擅长编草鞋,他妻子擅长织白绢。他想迁到越国去。友人对他说:“你到越国去,一定会贫穷的。”“为什么?”“草鞋,是用来穿着走路的,但越国人习惯于赤足走路;白绢,是用来做帽子的,但越国人习惯于披头散发。凭着你的长处,到用不到你的地方去,这样,要使自己不贫穷,难道可能吗?”

--这个故事告诉人们:一个人要发挥其专长,就必须适合社会环境需要。如果脱离社会环境的需要,其专长也就失去了价值。因此,我们要根据社会得需要,决定自己的行动,更好去发挥自己的专长。

28.佛塔上的老鼠

一只四处漂泊的老鼠在佛塔顶上安了家。佛塔里的生活实在是幸福极了,它既可以在各层之间随意穿越,又可以享受到丰富的供品。它甚至还享有别人所无法想象的特权,那些不为人知的秘笈,它可以随意咀嚼;人们不敢正视的佛像,它可以自由休闲,兴起之时,甚至还可以在佛像头上留些排泄物。
每当善男信女们烧香叩头的时候,这只老鼠总是看着那令人陶醉的烟气,慢慢升起,它猛抽着鼻子,心中暗笑:“可笑的人类,膝盖竟然这样柔软,说跪就跪下了!”有一天,一只饿极了的野猫闯了进来,它一把将老鼠抓住。“你不能吃我!你应该向我跪拜!我代表着佛!”这位高贵的俘虏抗议道。“人们向你跪拜,只是因为你所占的位置,不是因为你!”野猫讥讽道,然后,它像掰开一个汉堡包那样把老鼠掰成了两半。

29.机会

A在合资公司做白领,觉得自己满腔抱负没有得到上级的赏识,经常想:如果有一天能见到老总,有机会展示一下自己的才干就好了!! A的同事B,也有同样的想法,他更进一步,去打听老总上下班的时间,算好他大概会在何时进电梯,他也在这个时候去坐电梯,希望能遇到老总,有机会可以打个招呼。 他们的同事C更进一步。他详细了解老总的奋斗历程,弄清老总毕业的学校,人际风格,关心的问题,精心设计了几句简单却有份量的开场白,在算好的时间去乘坐电梯,跟老总打过几次招呼后,终于有一天跟老总长谈了一次,不久就争取到了更好的职位。

--愚者错失机会,智者善抓机会,成功者创造机会。机会只给准备好的人,这准备二字,并非说说而已。

January 1988: A 56-year-old woman from Spokane, washington, feels something bite her on the thigh. She soon becomes nauseated and develops a migrainelike headache. Her thinking becomes addled. In the days that follow, a patch of dead tissue sloughs from the spot where she was bitten. It is at least two weeks before she seeks help, and by then it is too late. She is bleeding from the orifices, even from the ears. Doctors find her blood deficient in several basic components. Her marrow stops making red blood cells. After lingering in the hospital for several weeks, the woman dies of internal bleeding.
There are other cases.
October 1992: A 42-year-old woman from Bingham County, Idaho, feels the burning bite of a spider on her ankle. She, too, develops a headache and nausea, as well as dizziness. The bite blisters and bursts, leaving an open wound that continues to grow. After 10 weeks, the crater, still growing, is big enough to accommodate two thumbs and is ringed with black flesh. More than two years after the bite, the wound heals as a sizable scar, beneath which veins are clotted. The woman’s ability to walk and stand remains impaired. The spider she found crushed within her clothing was a hobo spider, Tegenaria agrestis, a member of the family Agelenidae.
Agelenids are found in temperate places all over the world, in about 38 genera and 500 species. The hobo spider first appeared in the United States sometime before the 1930s. It spread across the Pacific Northwest and adjacent areas of Canada by attaching its egg sacs to shipping crates that were loaded on trains, hence its name. Its genus name, Tegenaria, means “mat weaver”; its species name, agrestis, suggests the agrarian life it leads in Europe. But in North America the hobo spider can often be found in cities and has made its presence known in ways its European experience never suggested. Hobo spiders, like this young female, have never been known to cause medically significant injuries in Europe. But in North America, hoboes have been blamed for serious symptoms and a few deaths.The hobo, clad in brown herringbone, has a body about half an inch long and a leg span exceeding an inch. Others in its family are hairy or gray and often big enough to straddle the face of a pocket watch. They build flat webs with a sort of billiard pocket at one corner, in which they lie awaiting prey. In Europe and parts of North America, a type of agelenid, the lesser house spider (Tegenaria domestica), is found behind books on shelves, its thick web tearing when a volume is consulted. In the American Southwest, I’ve seen a gray agelenid with long black stripes. Its abdomen is typically an ovoid, tight and ripe as a September plum. This species has eyes that gleam like emeralds in the dark and webs that lie on ground cover like silk handkerchiefs—crisply white at first, but dirtier with time and use. I have seen these spiders rush out when an insect lands on the web and deliver what looks like a kiss to the prey’s head, whereupon it ceases to struggle with shocking suddenness.Soon the spider drags its prey into the funnel of the web, where it is hard for a nosy biped to watch. Usually all I can see are dark masses and an occasional shadowy scrabbling of legs, but I know that the spider injects a venom into the prey that turns its innards into a soup the spider can suck down. The next day I often find a few insect legs littering the edge of the web.
In the upper Midwest, where the outdoors is coldly inhospitable to spiders several months a year, I have often noted another species of agelenid residing in basements, in what looks like a frayed handful of cotton balls. In one such web I noticed a hummock shaped like a human grave formed over the body of some black creature. This carcass was apparently too much trouble to drag over the web’s edge. The spider had simply built over it. These northern agelenids are brown and rapid. I’ve found in their webs creatures as diverse as millipedes and mosquitoes. I touched one web, as delicately as I could, and saw the spider heave itself out of its funnel-shaped retreat and immediately collapse back into it, so fast I could have hardly told what it was if I hadn’t already known. It reminded me of horror stories I’ve heard about spiders emerging from bathtub drains. I withdrew my finger with considerable haste.
The web felt like cloth made of human hair. It didn’t stick to me. This is typical of members of the Agelenidae family, including the hobo spider—their webs aren’t gluey but depend on their deceptive surface to snare insects. What seems a solid, smooth place to land is actually a layered network of filaments. Most insects lack the footgear to negotiate this snare. Their feet fall between the strands, their claws snagging and delaying their escape long enough for the spider to seize them. The spider itself walks on the strands by clasping them between opposing claws.
It’s hard to say how many people have been hurt by hobo spiders because spider bites are remarkably difficult to diagnose. Part of the problem is that they often don’t hurt enough at first to draw any notice. Even when victims develop serious symptoms, they rarely bring the physician the guilty spider. A spider bite is easily classified as a wound or sore of unknown origin. Moreover, 80 percent of the so-called spider bites treated by physicians are estimated to be something else entirely—the bites of lice, fleas, or ticks; symptoms of diseases like Lyme disease and tularemia; or strep or staph infections developing around minor scratches. Even eczema or a vigorously scratched mosquito bite may cast suspicion on some innocent arachnid. When several Americans exposed to anthrax developed skin lesions in 2001, the symptoms were first attributed to brown recluse spiders.
Why do spiders so often get the blame? Part of the answer lies in arachnophobia. People who notice a sore and a spider in the house independently of each other may jump to the wrong conclusion. Serious arachnophobes often report the feeling, which they themselves may recognize as irrational, that spiders are malicious, bent on frightening and harming human victims. Even people without a full-blown phobia can fall into this way of thinking. Yet most spiders, if they’re capable of biting people at all, only bite in defense of self, territory, or eggs.
Another source of confusion is folklore. Stories of venomous arthropods circulate so frequently that scientists tend to dismiss them out of hand. A few years ago, after I wrote an essay on black widow spiders, I received e-mails warning of blush spiders—tiny but deadly red spiders that hide under the seats of toilets on airplanes ready to bite the unwary traveler’s most sensitive parts. There’s no such thing as a blush spider. It’s an urban legend based on a hoax. Its “scientific name,” Arachnius gluteus, which translates into something like “buttocks spider,” is an easy tip-off.
Last year, I received anxious queries about camel spiders, accompanied by a shocking photo of a massively fanged monster as long as a man’s leg. The camel spider, it was said, habitually runs along under camels, leaping up to feast on the flesh of their bellies. Its venom was said to dissolve flesh rapidly. It was claimed that these creatures represented a deadly menace to soldiers at war in Iraq. In fact, camel spiders are harmless, though scary looking. They are known variously as sun spiders and wind scorpions but are really a little-known arachnid order unto themselves, the solifugids. The largest solifugids in the world are about the size of a woman’s hand, which is certainly awe inspiring, but a mere fraction of the size suggested by a photo placed on the Internet. Solifugids rarely if ever bite people—their mouthparts aren’t hinged the right way for it—and they don’t carry toxin. Because their fangs are so massive for their size (proportionally the largest in the animal kingdom), they can rely on mechanical injury to kill their prey.
With such drivel perpetually circulating, it’s not surprising that many scientists and doctors have dismissed more credible spider lore. It used to be said that no spider in the United States is really dangerous, and this view held sway well into the 1920s, despite reports of deaths from the bites of the black widow. The prevailing opinion gradually changed after the experiments of William Baerg at the University of Arkansas in 1922 and Allan Blair at the University of Alabama in 1933. Both men subjected themselves to black widow bites in the lab and suffered horribly. After that, scientists blamed black widows for two sets of symptoms: extravagant pain that spreads rapidly throughout the body and the slow death of the flesh around the bite. We’ve since learned that the second set of symptoms is instead caused by the brown recluse spider.
That ought to have cleared everything up, but bogus new spider facts crop up routinely—that the average person inhales four spiders a year in his sleep, for instance, or that brown recluse bites can be cured with an electrical blast from a Taser. Many myths mix in a pinch of reality. The blush spider, for example, must have been inspired by the black widow, which used to infest outdoor toilets and bite people on the genitals. And the false reports of camel spider venom read like an exaggerated account of the true effects of brown recluse venom.

The truth behind hobo spider bites has been especially hard to determine. Hobo venom produces symptoms similar to those caused by brown recluse venom. When the brown recluse was first identified as dangerous in the 1950s, doctors in the Pacific Northwest began to attribute certain lesions to them. But the brown recluse lives in the Midwest and the South, with a few close relatives in the Southwest; no member of its genus is regularly found in the northern United States.

Graphic by Don Foley
VENOMOUS AMERICAN ARACHNIDSThe United States has five groups of spiders that can cause serious injury. The black widow and yellow sac spider are found throughout the country, although the latter’s range has yet to be mapped precisely. The hobo spider has expanded its range in the Pacific Northwest, while the brown recluse is found in the South and lower Midwest. Other recluses are found in the Southwest. (Legend: Purple, black widow; yellow, yellow sac; red, hobo spider; green, brown recluse; blue, other recluses)
In the late 1970s and early 1980s this mystery came to the attention of toxinologist Darwin Vest, an autodidact whose work on cobras, rattlesnakes, and other venomous creatures had won him respect. While working at Washington State University in Pullman, Vest learned that the local zoology department often received queries about necrotic arachnidism—flesh-killing lesions apparently caused by spider bites. Vest looked into the cases of 75 patients in the Pacific Northwest. He blamed most of the injuries on insect bites, cigarette burns, and other causes. But that left 22 cases. Vest and his team surveyed the homes of these patients, collecting thousands of specimens by hand and with sticky traps. None of the homes yielded brown recluses, but 16 of them revealed healthy populations of hobo spiders. Sometimes a single sticky trap would fill with hoboes in a week’s time.
The presence of hoboes in such numbers was suggestive, but it proved nothing. The average home in any temperate region is likely to host several dozen species of spiders. So Vest decided to bring hobo spiders, and several other suspect species, into the lab for tests. He and his team milked live spiders, using a mild anesthetic and micropipettes, under a dissecting microscope, working carefully so that the spiders could be released unharmed. The spiders were so small that the capillary action of the pipettes was often enough to draw venom from the fangs. When that didn’t work, the researchers sometimes resorted to mild electric shock, using a nine-volt battery to make the venom glands contract and prompt the release of a droplet or two. Since each spider produced only a minuscule amount, the researchers had to milk a great many to obtain a workable sample. Their result: The hobo spider venom produced necrotic lesions in rabbits. To confirm this result, Vest shaved the backs of rabbits and held a hobo spider down on each bald patch, forcing a bite. The lesions that formed were similar to those found in human victims.
The hobo spider is now widely recognized as dangerous. The Centers for Disease Control lists it as such, as do medical textbooks and publications like the The Journal of the American Medical Association. Doctors know the signs of hobo venom—a blistering wound ringed with yellow, like the moon in a halo of smog, often accompanied by headaches and, in rare cases, disturbed thinking.


SPIDER’S MILK Researchers at Lewis and Clark College in Portland, Oregon, draw the venom from an immature female hobo spider using electrical stimulation. The venom is drawn into a thin glass tube (bottom right). Female hoboes produce more venom than males. But the venom of the males is more toxic. The hobo spider is now widely recognized as dangerous. The Centers for Disease Control lists it as such, as do medical textbooks and publications like the The Journal of the American Medical Association. Doctors know the signs of hobo venom—a blistering wound ringed with yellow, like the moon in a halo of smog, often accompanied by headaches and, in rare cases, disturbed thinking.But skeptics remain. In 1998 evolutionary biologist Greta Binford of Lewis and Clark College and some of her colleagues at the University of Michigan tried to replicate Vest’s experiment. When they injected hobo spider venom into rabbits, however, the rabbits developed nothing worse than a red bump. Like several other prominent skeptics, Binford notes that the hobo spider is rarely caught in the act of biting and then taken to a competent specialist for identification. Its appearance is unremarkable, so its supposed victims can’t be expected to distinguish it from dozens of other spiders. In Europe the hobo has never been implicated in human injuries, although its venom is nearly identical to that of North American hoboes.
In four of the cases that Darwin Vest investigated, a hobo spider was captured or crushed near the victim. But Vest noted that one of these victims—the 42-year-old woman mentioned at the beginning of this story—had a history of phlebitis, a circulatory problem. According to Rick Vetter, an arachnologist at the University of California at Riverside, phlebitis sometimes causes necrotic lesions. Vetter also notes that the Australian white-tailed spider, once widely accepted by doctors as a source of necrotic arachnidism, has recently been exonerated. Researchers studied 130 cases of confirmed white-tailed spider bites and found not a single necrosis. Vetter would like to see hobo bites subjected to a similarly rigorous study. He points out that a mistaken diagnosis can have serious consequences: Certain skin cancers, for instance, look like necrotic arachnidism and can be fatal if left untreated.
Even if hobo spiders are responsible for the lesions, their bites may not always be venomous. It has long been known that black widow spiders, like some venomous snakes, can deliver “dry bites” to warn off larger animals without wasting venom on them. Typically, these are followed by a dose of venom if the harassment persists. Vest’s sister, Rebecca, who worked with him in his investigations, reports that hoboes often give dry bites. Widows vary in their toxicity with age, health, and gender, and these factors seem to come into play with hobo spiders as well. For example, male hoboes pack a more potent venom than females. It is typically the male hobo, wandering away from its web in search of a mate at the end of summer, that bites people.
People vary considerably in their reactions to venom. I have been bitten by brown recluses a number of times. Though the stinging sensation that developed after a short delay made it clear that I’d received venom, I never developed a sore or any systemic symptoms, and the same is true of most bite victims. The whole experience was less painful than a mosquito bite—and, taking into account the possibility of mosquito-borne disease, less dangerous. It may be that hobo venom is similarly selective. After all, its function is to subdue insects. It would be comforting to think that a few hundred million years of evolution have put considerable distance between us and our insect kin, but only some of us are immune to insect-killing venoms.
Although hundreds of medically significant cases are diagnosed as spider bites in the Pacific Northwest each year, hard evidence is elusive. Rod Crawford, curator of arachnids at the Burke Museum of the University of Washington, notes that a handful of human deaths have been attributed to the hobo spider but that even a physician’s diagnosis is shaky evidence in the absence of the culprit. Like the recluse before it, the hobo has become what Binford calls “a medical dumping ground”—a default diagnosis when a better one can’t be found.
Agelenids are remarkably tolerant of one another, as spiders go. I have seen a spindly male living on the fringes of a female’s web, suffering no abuse from its larger mate. Perhaps he was helping to guard the eggs. I have seen, too, a bed of wandering Jew covered with 20 or so funnel webs, the inhabitants apparently unconcerned about the proximity of neighbors. But I’ve also seen what happens when two come into conflict: a flurry of legs, then the sudden collapse of one spider, which folds up in the grasp of its enemy. The effect is something like a child’s hand crushed in an adult’s.
As it happens, this tendency for some agelenids to eat others may help explain why the hobo has apparently harmed people in North America but not in Europe. Darwin Vest, who considered pesticides an irresponsible way to control spiders, examined the question of what predators might naturally control hobo populations. The most effective predators proved to be other spider species, like the false black widow (Steatoda grossa) and the American house spider (Achaearanea tepidariorum). Most effective of all was the giant house spider, an agelenid with a leg span as broad as a human palm.
The giant is so closely related to the hobo that the two may interbreed, and it not only preys on the smaller species but also competes with it for food. Vest suspected it was the giant that kept the hobo out of European houses all along. In the past 25 years, the giant house spider has established itself in the Pacific Northwest. Rebecca Vest reports that hobo populations in southern Idaho have shrunk noticeably in that same period. It may be that the hobo, though equally venomous wherever it turns up, simply has fewer chances to bite in Europe. And perhaps the same situation will eventually prevail here as the giant house spider, an unrecognized ally long ago suspected of spreading the Black Death, expands its range across America.

参考资料:www.en8848.com

革命故事两则

《水缸的秘密 》

瑞金沙洲坝的杨大娘是红军家属。大儿子参加红军以后,家里少了一个劳动力,里里外外什么事都要她自己操心。

1933年7月的一个傍晚,杨大娘浇完菜园,回家准备挑水做饭。她刚拿起扁担,却发现水缸里的水满满的。大娘奇怪了:前天水缸满,昨天水缸满,今天水缸又满了。这是怎么回事?她问小儿子:“小发仔,下午你挑水了吗?”

11岁的小发仔把头摇得拨浪鼓似的,说:“我没挑。”

杨大娘越想越觉得奇怪,就跑到田头问代耕队长:“我屋里那口水缸,天天都满满的。是你派人给我家挑水了吧?”

“没有啊,”代耕队长也感到奇怪,将信将疑地问,“真有这样的事?”

正说着,上屋的二婶也提着菜蓝子走过来搭话:“是啊,我屋里的水缸也是干了又会满,满得都快要溢出来 了,不知道是谁在做好事。”

代耕队长把斗笠往头上一扣,笑笑说:“毛主席主张调查研究,你们该去调查调查呀!”

杨大娘和二婶觉得这话有理,俩人商量了一阵,就各自回家了。

第二天,杨大娘擦桌子、洗衣服,不到下午,满满一缸水就用完了。她故意不去挑,也不下地干活,早早拿起一双鞋底,坐在门口,和二婶你一针我一线地纳起鞋底来。她俩鞋线扯得嗦嗦响,纳好鞋底又上鞋帮,四只耳朵听动静,两双眼睛观八方,边做针线活,边搞起“调查”来。但是等了半天,也没有半点儿动静,她俩心里纳闷极了。

太阳离西山只有两竿高的时候,杨大娘忽然听见屋里的后门响了,接着又听到水桶铁钩碰撞的声音。她俩惊喜地互相丢了个眼色,不约而同地喊了出来:“这回捉到了!”说着站起身就往屋里跑。

杨大娘刚进门,差点跟一个挑着水桶的人撞个满怀。她抬头一看,见这人身材高大魁梧,穿一身红军制服,正冲着她和二婶笑。望着他那双明亮的大眼睛,她觉得很面熟,但是又记不起在什么地方见过。二婶一下就认出来了:“呀,这不是毛主席吗!”

二婶拉着毛主席坐下,杨大娘赶忙端上一碗茶,说:“毛主席,你来沙洲坝不久,可处处爱护体贴老百姓,叫我们怎么感谢你呀!”

毛主席喝着茶,和两位红军家属聊起家常来,问她们:生活有没有困难?代耕队耕的田满意不满意?房子漏雨不漏雨?小孩子在列宁小学的功课好不好?一直谈到天擦黑,毛主席又要去挑水,非要把水缸挑满不可。杨大娘拗不过,只好答应了。

毛主席为杨大娘和二婶家挑水的事,很快就在村里传开了。

《一块银元 》

三千多名战士驻扎一个村,吃饭吃菜成了一件大事。刚开始,由于地主老财造谣惑众,加上村民对红军并不了解,许多人弃家躲避,来不及逃的人关门闭户,筹集粮菜一时陷入了困境。朱德军长严明纪律,让战士挨家挨户做思想工作。一天,两名战士到村南一户人家,大门紧锁,听说已逃到外村亲戚家中。只见其家门口有一个南瓜大架棚,十分旺盛,棚上挂着两个黄艳艳的大南瓜,小战士心想:人家又不在,怎么个买呢?太个子战士说:“把两个南瓜割下,我写一张纸条,钱以后送来。”说完割下南瓜,写了一张字条“买两个南瓜,以后付钱。一~红军”.放在架上回去了。有一天晚饭,朱德吃到香酥的南瓜饭后,询问谁买的瓜真是好吃时,他才知道南瓜没有付钱。他让人叫来那二位战士,从背包里带出一块银元,语气严肃地说:“人不在,也不能白吃呀。”说完要二位战士去还钱,两位战士原以为办了一件好事,却受到首长的批评,顿时面面相觑,等他们回过神来时,早已站在身旁的排长对他们耳语了一番,这时他俩才兴冲冲地走了。
再说红军进村后,帮助村民打扫庭院、挑水劈柴。一位大爷病了,还派医生为他诊治……一桩桩军爱民的好事在村里传颂着。村民们消除了误解,事实戳穿了地主们造谣中伤的阴谋,外逃的村民回来了,村子里家家户户敞开大门,争相帮红军做事,有送粮送菜的,有送儿子来帮丁当兵的,真是军民鱼水一家亲啊。又说村南那户种南瓜的村民叫陈亮,他携妻带儿回到家里,一切依然如故,十分高兴。只是棚上两个南瓜不见,他心里想:家在就好,两个南瓜算是让贼偷了罢,也不把它当回事,在村民会上他无意说了这事,没想到那二个战士又狠狠挨了一顿批,可他们心里不服气哪。
一天,陈亮的妻子上棚割南瓜叶准备煮了喂猪,不经意间看见被割走的一个南瓜蒂上用红布扎着一个小包,他拿下来一看,里面包着一个金闪闪的银元,还有一张小纸条,可他不识字,急忙拿到村里给丈夫看,只见字条写着:“老乡:买2个瓜送上一块银元。一一红军’’村里人顿时都聚拢过来,有的窃窃私语。陈亮顿时面红耳赤,捶胸顿足,大声说:“我好糊涂啊,原以为南瓜被贼偷了,没想到红军大哥纪律严明,买东西付钱,一银元可买好多南瓜呀。”说完他拉着郭夫爷一起找朱军长,一是把银元还了,二是要向两位战士赔罪。朱德军长激动地对他们说:“这是红军应该做的。银元你留着,至于赔罪由我来吧。”回到家里,陈亮倾其所有,把鸡蛋、鸭蛋和鸡鸭装满箩筐,上面用红纸写着“拥军爱民”,一家三口人高高兴兴担着慰问品走向美魁堂,听说红军走的前一天,他还特地屠杀大肥猪前去慰劳。
一石激起千层浪。陈亮的“银元故事”在村里传遍了,拥军爱民在福鼎在横口成了时尚,蔚然成风。后来,一位诗人以此为题材写了一首《南瓜蒂上长白银》的诗还在省里获奖,而一位画家以此为题材的国画也得了奖。从此,拥军爱民的优良风尚在福鼎在横口在永春代代相传,永远相传。

你可以选择一篇~~~

  一个改变爱因斯坦的故事
  爱因斯坦小时候十分贪玩。他的母亲常常为此忧心忡忡,再三告诫他应该怎样怎样,然而对他来讲如同耳边风。这样,一直到16岁的那年秋天,一天上午,父亲将正要去河边钓鱼的爱因斯坦拦住,并给他讲了一个故事,正是这个故事改变了爱因斯坦的一生。故事是这样的:

  “昨天,”爱因斯坦父亲说,“我和咱们的邻居杰克大叔清扫南边工厂的一个大烟囱。那烟囱只有踩着里边的钢筋踏梯才能上去。你杰克大叔在前面,我在后面。我们抓着扶手,一阶一阶地终于爬上去了。下来时,你杰克大叔依旧走在前面,我还是跟在他的后面。后来,钻出烟囱,我发现一个奇怪的事情:你杰克大叔的后背、脸上全都被烟囱里的烟灰蹭黑了,而我身上竟连一点烟灰也没有。”爱因斯坦的父亲继续微笑着说:“我看见你杰克大叔的模样,心想我肯定和他一样,脸脏得像个小丑,于是我就到附近的小河里去洗了又洗。而你杰克大叔呢,他看见我钻出烟囱时干干净净的,就以为他也和我一样干净呢,于是就只草草洗了洗手就大模大样上街了。结果,街上的人都笑痛了肚子,还以为你杰克大叔是个疯子呢。”

  爱因斯坦听罢,忍不住和父亲一起大笑起来。父亲笑完了,郑重地对他说,“其实,别人谁也不能做你的镜子,只有自己才是自己的镜子。拿别人做镜子,白痴或许会把自己照成天才的。”

  爱因斯坦听了,顿时满脸愧色。

  爱因斯坦从此离开了那群顽皮的孩子们。他时时用自己做镜子来审视和映照自己,终于映照出生命中的熠熠光辉。

不知道你有没有听过《钉子和篱笆》的故事呢,
非常好的故事

从前有对住在乡下的父子,相依着过日子。
有一天,儿子气极败坏的回家,愤怒的诉说自己遇到的不公平,甚至有动手摔东西撒气的冲动。父亲看着儿子,没有安慰,只是对他说:你去花园的篱笆上钉上一颗钉子吧。儿子不是太明白但还是来到院子,拿上榔头,使劲的把钉子往篱笆里敲,似乎每锤一下都会把怒气冲消一份。最后,他吃力的坐在地上,为得到发泄而放松。。。
这时,父亲走过来,告诉儿子:以后你每次生气的时候就去院子钉上一颗钉子。
以后,篱笆上的钉子迅速变多,但是后来钉子增长的速度明显慢了。因为儿子发现,控制住自己的脾气要比在篱笆上钉进一颗钉子来的容易的多。。。
几年后,父亲又告诉儿子,以后生气的时候就去篱笆上拔出一颗钉子。
慢慢的,钉子被拔掉,但是篱笆上却遗留了无数的洞。儿子望着这些自己年幼时留在篱笆上的痕迹,感慨的告诉父亲,他已经可以冷静的思考问题,控制自己的脾气,不再会轻易发怒了。因为他已发现,一时的愤怒宣泄会留下永远抹不去的伤痕,就像那篱笆上的密密麻麻的空洞一样——永远的伤害。。。

1931年的一个夏日,一位头戴草帽、脚穿草鞋的年轻人在火辣辣的太阳下大步朝前走着。他就是刚刚被任命为中共瑞金县委书记的邓小平。“只有经济发展了,才能改善人民的生活,调动他们的积极性,真正使瑞金成为牢不可破的铁壁铜墙。”邓小平说。

  当时的瑞金已经完成了土改工作,可是分到土地的农民究竟生活得怎么样呢?邓小平决定亲自去看一看。一天中午,邓小平来到了村子里。当他走进农民黄木生家时,看到他们一家人正在吃着野菜红薯拌饭。

  “老黄,秋粮刚刚收下来,你们怎么吃野菜红薯呢?”邓小平疑惑地问。黄木生好不容易才开了口。邓小平这才知道,黄木生家里虽然分得了三亩地,但都是山田,土质差,又缺水,根本不能种水稻,只能种红薯。然而,即使种红薯,也收不了多少。

  邓小平一听就明白了,这里面肯定有人在捣鬼。于是,第二天,邓小平就挨家挨户地调查,惩办了暗中捣乱的地主土豪。随后,他又发动大家重新丈量土地,并按照好坏均分、远近搭配的原则合理分地。这样一来,贫苦农民都乐了。

  有一段时间,前线用粮紧张,为了让前方的战士们吃饱,邓小平规定干部们每人节省8到15斤粮食,支援前线。邓小平带头执行规定,经常煮稀饭充饥,等到收红薯时,便常用红薯来填肚子。“心里装着老百姓,吃苦在前,享受在后”,这一原则伴随着邓小平的一生。


3分钟的小故事:
一个建筑工人不知自己何时受了伤,小指头突然肿了起来,他以为只是被蚊虫叮咬到或是因工作过久所结的茧而已,因此并不放在
心上。
过了数日,小指头肿得比拇指还大,他心想反正不碍事,对工作也没多大影响,所以也不在意。又过了几天,小指头隐隐作痛并且肿瘤有些溃烂,他才惊觉事态严重,赶紧去找医生。医生检查后对他说:“幸好你及时来找我,如果再拖下去,这根小指头就要被切除,更严重一点儿可能还会影响整只手!”“一己应为之事,勿求他人;今日应为之事,勿待明日。”及时修补小破洞,可避免以后修理大漏洞。
看似不重要的事也应该马上处理,该做的事就马上去做,千万不能一拖再拖。很多时候都需要我们严格掌握时效性,绝不能拖延到明天,以免付出更多的代价。
1分钟的绕口令:
《糊灯笼》

红红糊红粉灯笼,

给军属送光荣灯;

芬芬糊粉红灯笼,

给军属送灯光荣;

红红糊完红粉灯笼,

糊粉红灯笼;

芬芬糊完粉红灯笼,

糊红粉灯笼。

《灰损肥》

一堆肥,

一堆灰,

肥混灰,

灰损肥,

不要肥混灰,

防止灰损肥。

《算算看》

老杜和老顾,

齐走富裕路。

老杜养了兔,

老顾养了鹿。

老顾给老杜十只兔,

两家平等同只数;

老顾给老杜十只鹿,

顾家是杜家一半数。

请问老杜养了多少兔,

再问老顾养了多少鹿。


历史小故事 2—3分钟
2、《东周列国志》载:公子宋食指自动,自测必有美食,但郑灵公为了戏弄公子宋,令人分鼋羹时,到公子宋正好分完,然后笑着说公子宋食指动能吃异味的事没有应验。公子宋于是用指头从鼎内蘸一点汤而吮。故事至此,李逵并不输于公子宋,然而公子宋因未吃到鼋羹,竟恨不能平,于是乘灵公秋祭斋宿,夜半潜入祭宫,以土囊...

你知道成语故事吗?大约2~3分钟就能讲完的
使者走进宫殿向镜面王禀报说:“大王,您吩咐找的盲人现已带到殿前。”镜面王说:“你明天一早带领盲人们到象苑去,让他们每人只能触摸大象身体的一个部位,然后马上带他们来王宫前广场。” 第二天上午,镜面王召集所有的大臣和数万平民聚集在王宫前的广场上,沸沸扬扬的人们交头接耳,谁也不知道国王将要宣布什么重大的...

求一篇哲理小故事,可讲时间2-3分钟左右,不要爱情的,急!
一天,他对老板说:“我要回家了。”老板说:“好吧,不过我有个建议,要么我给你钱,你走人;要么我给你三条忠告,不给你钱,然后你走人。”他说:“我想要那3条忠告。”老板对他说:“第一,永远不要走捷径,捷径而陌生的道路可能要了你的命;第二,永远不要对可能是坏事的事情好奇,否则...

国旗下讲话2—3分钟,字数多少?
500

求一篇能讲2——3分钟的故事
”说完他拉着郭夫爷一起找朱军长,一是把银元还了,二是要向两位战士赔罪。朱德军长激动地对他们说:“这是红军应该做的。银元你留着,至于赔罪由我来吧。”回到家里,陈亮倾其所有,把鸡蛋、鸭蛋和鸡鸭装满箩筐,上面用红纸写着“拥军爱民”,一家三口人高高兴兴担着慰问品走向美魁堂,听说红军...

急需一篇现代抒情散文诗,长篇的,2、3分钟,朗诵用的,最好是对口的_百度...
1艾青的《雪落在中国的土地上》雪落在中国的土地上,寒冷在封锁着中国呀……风,像一个太悲哀了的老妇,紧紧地跟随着 伸出寒冷的指爪 拉扯着行人的衣襟,用着像土地一样古老的话 一刻也不停地絮聒着……那从林 间出现的,赶着马车的 你中国的农夫 戴着皮帽 冒着大雪 你要到哪儿去呢?告诉你...

革命英雄故事,要2至3分钟能讲完的。(最好是王二小的)?
王二小是一名儿童团的成员,在一次放羊的过程中发现了日本侵略者,他不顾个人安危,带领敌人进入我军的伏击圈,英勇的显出了生命。

急啊!!求一篇2至3分钟的初二英语迎奥运演讲稿(最好带翻译)
Who whole life come down will walk, while having a problem the tube stand up speech, even not definitely right, also the nobody will laugh at you even you say stammer classmates would also in mind applause for you oh, don't say you don't go, a life of is a warrior, ...

跪求一篇2—3分钟的剧本,最好带场景的,跪求了,谢了。。
第三场 场景:一间小房子(用凳子代替) 旁白:森林里住着三个可爱的小矮人,一天他们遇到了迷路的白雪公主。 (音乐《天鹅湖》起,三个矮人排一队跳天鹅湖上,《天鹅湖》停) 三个矮人:(齐唱《爱情三十六计》) 是谁说的帅气男生没大脑,只懂得爱美和睡觉。(一起背对观众摆个POSS)耶! 矮人A:反了反了。 三个...

需要一篇2~3分钟的演讲稿,关于学习的。急急急急急急
学而时习之,不亦说乎!古代先哲的言语,此刻正在我耳边萦绕。在当今这个知识经济时代,获得知识的主要和最佳的途径就是学习。活到老,学到老,这已经成了许多人的人生理念。但遗憾的是,我们对于学习往往存在狭隘的理解,不少人的观点是,学习就是读书,上大学,直至考上研究生。不久之前,研究生跳楼...

仙桃市18091585071: 二三分钟的神话故事 -
泰褚十味: 神话传说--嫦娥奔月 2007-05-22 嫦娥原来是一个美丽善良的村姑,她勤劳朴实活泼可爱,尤其有着一颗金子般闪亮的心,她总是千方百计地为百姓做好事.嫦娥有个恋人叫后羿,是个神箭手,也是个好后生. 有一天,嫦娥与几个要好的女伴在...

仙桃市18091585071: 我想找一个短的故事,要三四分钟就能讲完 -
泰褚十味: 如果是童话故事的话,我有一个.是豌豆上的公主.故事如下:从前,有一位王子,他长得很英俊.他想找一位公主结婚.他走遍世界,见到过不少公主,可他总不能作出决定,因为他不知道怎么才能断定哪位公主是真的.王子回到王宫,心里...

仙桃市18091585071: 求一个三分钟左右可以讲完的哲理小故事?`(*∩ - ∩*)′ -
泰褚十味: 珍珠与沙子 有一个自以为是全才的年轻人,毕业后屡次碰壁,一直找不到理想的工作,他觉得自己怀才不遇,对社会感到非常失望.多次的碰壁经历,让他伤心绝望,感到没有伯乐来赏识他这匹“千里马”.痛苦绝望之下,有一天,他来到大海...

仙桃市18091585071: 找一个三分钟的儿童故事 -
泰褚十味: 1、《袋鼠与笼子》 该故事讲述了有一天动物园里的袋鼠偷跑了出来,惹得管理员非常苦恼,决定增加笼子的高度,防止袋鼠再次32313133353236313431303231363533e59b9ee7ad9431333365646264偷跑出来.可是,袋鼠们还是再次偷跑...

仙桃市18091585071: 求小故事,两三分钟可以讲完的那种 -
泰褚十味: 时间可以改变年轮,可以沉淀梦想,可以淡忘苦难,也可以创造奇迹!因为沟通创造的“奇迹”很多,记忆中印象最深的是与一位晚期喉癌患者的沟通.他50多岁,眼角刻划着岁月的印记,来到病房的时候很安静,好像他的世界只剩下他一个...

仙桃市18091585071: 2至3分钟的少数人听过的民间故事有哪些? -
泰褚十味: 鲁班是我国古代著名的能工巧匠,他收了许多徒弟.有一天,他把徒弟们一起叫来,说:“明天我要考考你们,你们一清早上我家来吧.”第二天,众徒弟一早就到鲁班家,但见师傅的门关得死死的,门上写着五个字:“今日可不见.”徒弟...

仙桃市18091585071: 求感人的读起来2分钟左右的小故事 -
泰褚十味: 母亲三十岁那年才生下个宝贝儿子;儿子出生第二年,丈夫就因为车祸离开了人间. 母亲怕儿子受委屈,誓不嫁人,在一间小平房过起了苦日子. 母亲在一家医院药房工作,由于常常惦记着锁在家里的儿子,脸上总是心不在焉的样子.终于有...

仙桃市18091585071: 神话传说故事大全比赛2 - 3分钟 -
泰褚十味: 1、精卫填海 据说中原北边,有一座发鸠山,它在山西省东南部的长治市长子县,漳河就是从发鸠山流出来的. 发鸠山上有一种柘树,样子像桑.柘树林里生活着一种小鸟,叫“精卫”. 精卫鸟的身子黑黑的,有点像小乌鸦....

仙桃市18091585071: 2分钟以上3分钟以下的的童话故事 -
泰褚十味: 冥王哈迪斯是宙斯的哥哥,负责掌管下界冥王,他同时是掌管财富的神祗,也掌管地下理藏的所有宝藏和财富.珀耳塞福涅是希腊神话中冥界的王后,她是得墨忒尔和宙斯的女儿,被哈迪斯绑架到冥界与哈迪斯成婚,为冥界的王后. 一天,珀耳...

仙桃市18091585071: 求一个3分钟的小故事演讲 -
泰褚十味: 有一个博士分到一家研究所里,成为了这个所里学历最高的一个人.有一天他到单位后面的小池塘去钓鱼,正好正副所长在他的一左一右,也在钓鱼.“听说他俩也就是本科生学历,有啥好聊的呢?”这么想着,他只是朝两人微微点了点头. ...

本站内容来自于网友发表,不代表本站立场,仅表示其个人看法,不对其真实性、正确性、有效性作任何的担保
相关事宜请发邮件给我们
© 星空见康网