I believe the answer is felt<span> compassion for the woman because she was scared.
From the beginning, we can see that all the animals were determined to save the woman. When the woman began to panic and scared about her condition, the Animals still had compassion for her and keep trying their best to safe the woman</span>
The detail "And someone gave little Davy Hutchinson a few pebbles" contributes to the text because it stresses that everyone participates in the lottery, even Mrs Hutchinson's son.
To the people in the story, participating in the lottery is a necessary tradition that will ensure a good harvest. Winning the lottery (although no one really wants to "<em>win</em>") is seen as an honor.
The fact that they have Davy throw pebbles at his own mother proves that the townsfolk want every single person to share culpability for the stoning, even the smallest of children.
Jonas's community is founded on the idea of Sameness—the elimination of difference in its members. In order to achieve this Sameness, individualism is discouraged, and rules and discipline matter most. Jonas learns from an early age that both breaking rules and being different is considered shameful. By celebrating group birthdays, allowing only one kind of clothing and haircut, assigning spouses, jobs, children and names, and eliminating sexual relations, Jonas's society stifles the things that allow for individual differences. Without mirrors, there can be no vanity or jealousy. Without sex, vanity loses its importance, and competition and conflict are eliminated. In Sameness, no one knows the meaning of loneliness, but no one knows true happiness either. Also messenger was a absolutely good book as well.
Answer:
She could tell someone she is with often about her schedule because then they might be able to remind her about certain assignments...or she could tell someone about her struggles and exactly what she's struggling with and they might have a suggestion
Explanation: