English, asked by priyasahani985, 2 months ago

who is the author of what's your dream​

Answers

Answered by shubhams6139
0

Answer:

Heena Vijayvergiya

follo me this is correct ans

Answered by SanviNavodayan
3

\huge\mathcal\colorbox{pink}{{\color{b}{Your answer (◕ᴗ◕✿)}}}

\green{\textbf{Ruskin Bond}} is the writer of \pink{\textbf{What's your dream}}.

\huge\mathcal\colorbox{pink}{{\color{b}{About the author and the book}}}

Ruskin Bond goes philosophical with dreams. We belong to a world that teaches “human wants are unlimited” and “desire is the root cause of all evils.” The end of desire is ultimate disaster. In the rat-race after achievements, men seldom care for his doom. The more we win, the more do we lose; the maximum we conquer, the least we keep. The best choice is, dream, but work for it; win but not more than you need.

A beggar asks a wandering boy, a dreamer, about his dream. The boy tells him he dreamt of owning a room of his own.

The beggar warns him – after owning the room, you will dream for a house of your own, then a territory of your own.

It is all possible but in most cases this ends up in tragedy – you lose all your achievements one day and become a beggar.

It was then that the boy noticed that the beggar was not an ordinary beggar. He was once a king who owned his territory and later lost it! Was he?

The boy asks him of it but the beggar evades his questions. He gives him another advice – do not take away someone’s dreams.

\blue{\texttt{Bit/Bits}}

What’s Your Dream? asked an old man. The boy said he wanted a room of his own. The old man looked like a beggar but there was something peculiar about his talking and asking.

The old man repeated his question so did the boy repeat his answer. I need a room of my own which I do not have to share with another boy.

“What if you got a room?” asked the old man. The boy had not thought of that so the old man went on telling the story of a man who owned many things in life.

First he owned a room, then a house, then land and then he owned almost everything in his country.

“Wow! And then?” asked the boy. “And then he lost all that he owned,” said the old man. The boy felt disappointed. The end of selfish gain is disaster and loss.

If you own less, you loss will be bearable but the more you own, the more you lose.

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