I think the answer is their
Answer:
The American poet Linda Pastan published "To a Daughter Leaving Home" in her 1998 collection Carnival Evening. The poem is addressed to the speaker's daughter and recounts a memory in which the speaker teaches the daughter how to ride a bike. At first, the daughter tries to find her balance while the speaker remains by her side. Soon enough, though, the daughter zooms away, terrifying the speaker in the process. The speaker quickly sees how happy and thrilled the daughter is to be riding a bike on her own, however, and in this way the poem spotlights both the anxieties and joys of parenthood
hope this help
Dear Romeo,
I never thought that my life wasn't being lived until I met you. I came to the realization that my life is now just beginning as we progress in a series of love festivities. I will never forget you, our souls are forever intertwined.
Love, Juliet
I believe that flashbacks could be used to slow the pace of a story. If you are telling one story, and then decide to introduce a flashback, that would only slow down the story you are already telling.
Stress is a <span>pressure or tension exerted on a material object.</span>