〈〈Helen Keller〉〉This book is a true and touching story. I read this book in one sitting and learned a lot from it. This book tells the story of Helen Keller, an American blind and deaf female writer and educator. When Helen was one and a half years old, she lost her vision and hearing due to illness. This is unimaginable and unbearable pain for ordinary people. However, Helen did not succumb to her fate. With the help of her teacher's education, she overcame her illness and learned to speak. She used her fingers to "listen" to what others said and mastered five languages. At the age of twenty-four, she graduated with honors from the famous Radcliffe Women's College of Harvard University. Since then, she has devoted her energy to benefiting the world's blind and deaf people, and has been praised and awarded by governments, people and institutions of higher learning in many countries. How amazing it is that a blind and deaf person can achieve such great achievements! If Helen stubbornly succumbs to her unfortunate fate, she will become a pitiful, ignorant, and ignorant parasite. However, she did not bow to fate. With amazing perseverance and tenacious spirit, she completed her life and made contributions to mankind, becoming a knowledgeable and respectable person.
After reading the book, I deeply realized that whether a person can achieve success does not depend on the quality of the conditions, but on whether he has the spirit of struggle. Usually, some people always use poor conditions and many difficulties as the reasons for not achieving success. But how insignificant these difficulties are compared with Helen! As long as a person has lofty ideals and goals, he will have endless power and will not be bound by objective conditions. He will be able to exert his subjective initiative, create conditions, and control his own destiny.
Isn’t that what Helen is like? Isn’t she a persistent person?