The way to get things done is to make every minute count. ——Darwin
Arranging time reasonably is equivalent to saving time. - Bacon
We should observe carefully in order to understand; we should work hard to understand in order to act. ——Romain Rolland
Every bit of progress is slow and arduous. A person can only solve a limited goal at a time. ——Beveridge
Success = hard work + correct method + less empty words. ——Einstein
Time is like running water, fleeting; life is like a laser, passing by in a flash. Pavlov said in "A Letter to Youth": Even if a person has two lives, this is not enough for us young people. Comrade Dong Biwu's poem to "Middle School Students": "Sail against the current with all your strength, and a pole of loose energy will retreat a thousand miles away. The ancients said that this is a pity, and we should cherish the seconds." All remind us that we should cherish time. Today, on the road we are moving forward, there are still two mountains of "Taihang" and "Wangwu" - difficulties and ignorance. To move away from these two mountains, we should speed up the pace of time and seize the horse of "time". The reins of the fierce horse, and put the belated "future" on the horse's back, let it put on wings, four hooves and wind, come to our feet! You have to believe that the future is belatedly arriving, the present flies by like an arrow, and the past will always stand still. "An inch of time is worth an inch of gold, and an inch of gold cannot buy an inch of time." Time is equal to everyone. It will not give you more because you are a diligent person, nor will it give you less because you are a lazy person. But within this limited time, people with different ideas will get different results.
Most contemporary teenagers are envious of the affluent life in the United States and Japan, as well as their cars and electrical appliances. However, do you know how much they cherish their time? As early as 200 years ago, before the United States became independent, Franklin, the founder of the American Enlightenment, scientist, industrialist and leader of the independence movement, included two sentences in his book "The Road to Wealth": There is a widely circulated and resonant motto in the United States: "Time is life" and "Time is money." In the early 1990s, a Chinese youth delegation from Liaoning attended a conference in Japan. Before going abroad, the leader prepared a thick stack of speeches. However, the meeting program handed over by Japanese officials read: "The time for China's speech: 10:17:20 to 18:20 "The speech time is only one minute. This may seem unbelievable to those who "have a cup of tea, a cigarette, and a newspaper to read for a long time," but in Japan it is extremely common. From workers to scholars, Japanese people all have a very strong sense of time. Their basic criterion for assessing the incompetence of workers in a position is the amount of labor per unit time while ensuring quality. The time is usually accurate to the second.