Zhu, a great scholar in the Southern Song Dynasty, said: "There are three ways to read, namely, heart, eyes and mouth." At first, I couldn't fully understand this sentence. My understanding was always half-baked, so I wondered: Why should I say "heart" first, then "eyes" and finally "mouth"? What enlightenment can this sentence give us?
I am more interested in this problem. So I made up my mind to find out the true meaning of this sentence.
After consulting materials and asking classmates ... a series of "procedures", I have a preliminary understanding of this sentence: as long as my heart is here, my eyes will focus, and my eyes will focus, so that I can think, speak and express my views. But in my heart, I still feel unfinished.
Since the third grade of primary school, my father has been bringing back students' newspapers and magazines from the bookstore to read and study for me. I always swallow the date and then "solve" a book by dividing three times five by two. I bought some books in the bookstore with lucky money, and they were all "read" quickly. But I know little about what I have learned, what is a good word and what is a good sentence, and I have gained little. I am puzzled: I have read so many books and newspapers, but I still don't understand them. Don't you understand this sentence deeply?
Until one day, I noticed this famous saying of Zhu in a book. I began to reflect, but it was shallow, only knowing that I should study hard. But in the final analysis, I still don't understand. So I asked dad. Dad said a lot before I understood: first of all, you should know what you should do, pay attention to reading articles, and not be half-hearted; Secondly, we should pay attention to it, read the article, unify our thinking, think repeatedly, and try our best to answer it ourselves; Third, raise your hand to speak in class, carefully compare and analyze the answers of teachers and classmates, and finally seriously summarize and improve, so as to read the article thoroughly. This is the real meaning of reading "three to three".
Since then, I have always kept this sentence in mind, always comparing myself, always reminding myself and always urging myself. Under the spur and guidance of this sentence, I can read and write easily, and my Chinese performance is also like "sesame blossoms are rising day by day."