锤子英文Essay Writing (60 points)
In the article Ehrenreichinclude是什么意思 has given her point of view on busyness. Now plea write an essay about 400 words refute it. Begin by jotting down a list of the author’s points. And then choo the most controversial points to focus on and u proper logical pattern you have learnt to develop your argumentation. You need to include the hook, thesis restatement, topic ntences, supporting ntences, and concluding ntences in your article.
panickedThe Cult of Busyness
------------ Barbara Ehrenreich
Not too long ago a former friend and soon-to-be acquaintance called me up to tell me how busy she was. A major report, upon which her professional future depended, was due in three days; her cretary was on strike; her houkeeper had fallen into the hands of the Immigration Department; she had two hours to prepare dinner party for eight; and she was late for her time-management class. Stress was taking its toll, she told me: her children res
托福口语评分标准ented the fact that she sometimes got their names mixed up, and she had taken to abusing white wine.
All this put me at a distinct disadvantage, since the only thing I was doing at the time was holding the phone with one hand and attempting to touch the opposite toe with the other hand, a pastime that I had perfected during previous telephone monologues. Not that I'm not busy too: as I listened to her, I was on the alert for the moment the dryer would shut itlf off and I would have to rush to fold the clothes before they ttled into a mass of incorrigible wrinkles. But if I mentioned this little deadline of mine, she might think I wasn't busy enough to need a houkeeper, so I just kept on patiently saying "Hmm" until she got to her parting line: "Look, this isn't a good time for me to talk. I've got to go now."
I don't know when the cult of conspicuous busyness began, but it has swept up almost all the upwardly mobile, professional women I know. Already, it is getting hard to recall the days when, for example "Let's have lunch" meant something other than "I've got more important things to do than talk to you right now.'' There was even a time when people usguerny
ed to get together without the excu of needing something to eat -- when, in fact, it was considered rude to talk with your mouth full. In the old days, hardly anybody had an appointment book, and when people wanted to know what the day held in store for them, they consulted a horoscope.ey
It's not only women, of cour; for both xes, busyness has become an important insignia of upper-middle-class status. Nobody, the days, admits to having a hobby, although two or more careers -- say, neurosurgery and an art dealership -- is not uncommon, and I am sure we will soon be heating more about the tribulations of the four-pay-check couple. Even tho who can manage only one occupation at a time would be embarrasd to be caught doing only one thing at a time. Tho young men who jog with their headts on are not, as you might innocently guess, rocking out, but are absorbing the principles of international finance law or a lecture on one-minute management. Even eating, I read recently, is giving way to "grazing" -- the conscious ingestion of unidentified foods while drafting a legal brief, cajoling a client on the phone, and, in ambitious cas, doing calf-toning exercis under the desk. All the bustle, my busy friends would explain --
they want to succeed.
But if success is the goal, it ems clear to me that the fast track is headed the wrong way. Think of the people who are genuinely successful: path-breaking scientists, best-lling novelists, and designers of major new software. They are not, on the whole, the kind of people who keep glancing shiftily at their watches or making small lists entitled "To Do." On the contrary, many of the people appear to be in a daze, like the distinguished professor I once had who, in the middle of a lecture on electron spin, became so fascinated by the dispersion properties of chalk dust that he could not go on. The truly successful people are childlike, easily distractible, fey sorts, who usual demeanor rembles that of a recently fed hobo on a warm summer evening.packaging
爱酷英语
炫迪传奇动画片The cret of the truly successful, I believe, is that they learned very early in life how not to be busy. They saw through that adage, repeated to me so often in childhood, that anything worth doing is worth doing well. The truth is, many things are worth doing only in the most slovenly, halfhearted fashion possible, and many other things are not worth doin
关于母亲节的英语作文
g at all. Balancing a checkbook, for example. For some reason, in our culture, this dreary exerci is regarded as the supreme test of personal maturity, business acumen, and the ability to cope with math anxiety. Yet it is a form of busyness which is exceeded in futility only by going to the additional trouble of computerizing one's checking account -- and that, in turn, is only slightly less silly than taking the time to discuss, with anyone, what brand of personal computer one owns, or is thinking of buying, or has heard of others using.
If the truly successful manage never to be busy, it is also true that many of the busiest people will never be successful. I know this firsthand from my experience, many years ago, as a waitress. Any executive who thinks the ultimate in busyness consists of having two important phone calls on hold and a major deadline in twenty minutes, should try facing six tablefuls of clients simultaneously demanding that you give them their checks, fresh coffee, a baby at, and a warm, spontaneous smile. Even when she's not busy, a waitress has to look busy -- refilling the salt shakers and polishing all the chrome in sight -- but the only reward is the minimum wage and any change that gets left on the tables.
Much the same is true of other high-stress jobs, like working as a telephone operator, or doing data entry on one of the new machines that monitors your speed as you work: "success" means surviving the shift.