English, asked by faizan2553, 10 months ago

Essay on Taking a ride on santa's sleigh​

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Answered by abhi1824
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Answer:

Is Santa Claus real? Come on now! Santa Claus is much, much, much more than real.

He’s true.

Real is facts and figures — degrees on the thermometer, seats on the school bus, days off for the holidays. You can’t meaningfully doubt what’s real. Or, at least, it’s dangerous to test it. Go on, try as hard as you can to be skeptical of gravity — G is not a constant! It’s bonkers! — and you still won’t fly into the stratosphere when you zoom off a ski jump.

Put it this way: people who doubt gravity don’t tend to return from their experiments to tell the tale.

Truth is something more. Truth is our whole reason for being. It’s the massive, broad force that blows the heart open. That crystal-clarity of the night sky in late December, when it’s hard to tell mental space from outer space. Truth contains powers we can’t see or measure: spontaneous generosity, weird surges of joy and love without conditions. And — most remarkably of all — truth welcomes doubt.

You know that moment when it seems absolutely not possible that you can get up with that newborn once more? Or stay awake another second to finish a midterm essay, or fall in love after a heartbreak, or do another terrifying thing with kettlebells in Crossfit? And then…you do? That’s when you’ve hit truth — that scientifically, physically, measurably impossible things can be suddenly possible.

In The Power of Habit, the writer Charles Duhigg shows how it takes two things to absolutely change a life: hard work, and faith in a great truth. Yes, faith. But that doesn’t mean Duhigg dives into the life of St. Theresa. Instead, he talks about football, and an NFL coach named Tony Dungy.

Answered by luckyverma28
0

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