Argumentative essay on the topic "My heart has a master"
Although there is no light in the heart, there is light in the heart. I remember last summer vacation, my mother and I went to Japan to play. Shibuya can be said to be one of the most famous places in Tokyo, which is most obvious at the famous Wuchakou. Although the bustling crowd is a little crowded, it gives people a glimpse of the elegance of an international city. It was a normal day, but there were some problems on the way across the valley-the traffic lights were broken. Pedestrians and drivers seem to be at a loss, and the road becomes more noisy. The chaos subsided in a few minutes. The vehicle consciously stopped there, waiting for pedestrians to pass. After a while, all the pedestrians gave way to the car ... I stood there, dumbfounded. Looking back at the traffic in Beijing, people who run red lights are everywhere. I believe this situation is unimaginable. Beijing is a big city with many people and cars, but Tokyo is not? Traffic lights should probably not be placed beside the road, but in your heart. When the lights on the road go out, the lights in our hearts should also be on-we are the masters of the lights and our own hearts. Goods have no owners, but people have them. Some time ago, a devastating earthquake and tsunami occurred in Japan, which caused widespread concern. People from all over the world extended a helping hand to them, and houses from all over the world were transported to the disaster area. Turn on the TV, there is a scene that makes me move. It's not the leaders' speeches, sensational interviews and floods, but their orders. Everyone lined up neatly, waiting for the goods to be delivered to them. No one took a look at the materials on the roadside, and no one secretly took them away. It seems that we have long been used to looting materials and driving up prices after disasters. This orderly situation is actually involuntarily moving. Those things were donated to them, and it is understandable that they were taken away. After all, they really need it. How long has it been since we met such a self-disciplined person? Maybe all this is just because they are the masters of their own hearts. Xu Heng was right, "Although the pear has no owner, the heart has a owner". Ownership and ownerless lie not in who pears belong to, not in what people around them do, but in themselves. Take your own and leave when it's your turn, not your own. Don't even think about it when you shouldn't leave by yourself We can't be the masters of others' hearts, let alone others' hearts, but we can manage our own. The French philosopher Descartes said, "I think, therefore I am." Can we also say, "I have a Lord in my heart, so I am?" ? As higher animals, we have the ability and necessity to manage our own hearts and be our own masters. Although the pear has no owner, my heart has a owner. The owner of that heart is ourselves.