Answer:
It felt like everything had turned into slow motion,
Hi I'm Youmi,I just want to tell you my story,I hope it will gets your attention.
On a night of winter nights,the weather is cold, Darkness overseas the area, I was alone , I felt scared , My family has left and I stayed with my patients, I entered the memories room , Where pictures and happy family messages , And I felt that everything was returned in time I returned to the family warmer , oooh how much this beautiful , But , And arrived for the images of the last incident , It felt like everything had turned into slow motion. This is a really painful incident When will I see them again? I missed my family ☁✨
In Greek mythology, Midas is a king obsessed with wealth. He asks the gods for the ability to turn anything he touches to gold. The gods grant his wish, and Midas soon realizes this gift is actually a curse. Chesterton uses the story of Midas as an analogy for chasing materialistic success. Much as the authors worship material wealth and pursue it as if it were attainable, Midas learns that his new ability doesn’t help him succeed because it prevents him from performing necessary tasks such as eating. Chesterton reminds readers of the obvious moral of Midas's story and shows that authors who write about success often misinterpret Midas's story—sometimes by using phrases such as "the Midas touch" in a positive light.
Chesterton emphasizes that King Midas is an example of foolishness and failure. He implies that, for the same reason, writers who encourage people to chase material success share Midas's foolishness:
We all know of such men. We are ever meeting or reading about such persons who turn everything they touch into gold. Success dogs their very footsteps. Their life's pathway leads unerringly upwards. They cannot fail.
Unfortunately, however, Midas could fail; he did. His path did not lead unerringly upward. He starved because whenever he touched a biscuit or a ham sandwich it turned to gold. That was the whole point of the story . . .
It is the very first line from the poem “Silver” by Walter de la Mare that best illustrates alliteration, mostly because in this line the author uses a variety of syllables.
Answer:
You should probably add a text so others can see the central idea so they can find the message .
A spendthrift (also profligate or prodigal) is a person who spends a lot of money and is excessive and wasteful, typically to the point where his or her spending exceeds his o.r her reso.urces..Spendthrift" comes from an outdated definition of the word "thrift" ?that refers to riches rather than frugality, hence a "spendthrift" is someone who has wasted their wealth.