A thousand people can have ten thousand answers to this question. But whatever his answer is, it must be what he wants. It is because of this distance that people have the motivation to succeed. It is because of Columbus' desire that the long distance between Europe and America was conquered. It is because of Armstrong's desire that the distance between the earth and the moon is connected in series. In the days when the senior high school entrance examination is approaching and the Olympic bid is approaching, time cards of all sizes are reminding us that the distance is getting closer and closer. Why does it give us pressure, motivation and passion? It is not the distance, not our impatience, but our desire for success behind the distance.
Old people sit in rocking chairs and hold grass fans, sighing at those years, which is the yearning for youth. Patients lie in bed, holding hot tea and receiving bright sunshine, which is a desire for health. We sit in this classroom, holding textbooks, reading books and studying, just to reduce the distance from the goal.
Our answers are all different, but each has its own reasons. In ancient times, there was a love of "I live at the head of the Yangtze River and you live at the end of the Yangtze River". There is a homesickness of "I am here and the mainland is there". For me now, the farthest distance is to become a biologist. This was my childhood dream, and I never gave up. Having said that, I can't help sighing that people always use their extensive knowledge to modify their goals because they feel that they can't reach that distance. When I was a child, everyone wanted to be a scientist, and everyone wanted to go to Tsinghua Peking University, but how many people persisted? In fact, there is no farthest distance. Don't scare yourself. The goal is very close and far away, but I firmly believe it is very close.
On the distant road, it is covered with hard-working bricks. As the younger generation, we have abundant physical strength, flexible mind, inexhaustible sweat and perseverance. The farthest distance, maybe … is at your feet!