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Do I have to go to the library or the postgraduate classroom?
Be sure to go! Be sure to go! Be sure to go!

Say the important things three times! ! ! I wanted to say it before.

19 postgraduate entrance examination, two undergraduate courses, ranking first in the initial test with a score of 4 18. I think the reason why I learned well is that the atmosphere in the postgraduate entrance examination classroom and library is good. Seeing that everyone is struggling around me, I am really encouraged every day, which can also be said to be an invisible sense of urgency, urging me not to be lazy.

I remember that in the next semester of junior year, that is, in March, when everyone began to review for the postgraduate entrance examination, many students in our class moved out to rent a house. Our dormitory changed from six rooms to two rooms, but in the end, only the two of us did well in the exam. The reason why I want to answer this question is because I met too many lazy people this year.

I live in the dormitory with another roommate. They have been monitoring each other every day since March. They get up at 7 o'clock in the morning to go to the postgraduate entrance examination classroom and go to bed before 12 in the evening. The kind that scolds anyone who is playful or lazy. It has become a habit to go to the postgraduate entrance examination building every day. There, few people play mobile phones or stare blankly. Everyone is working hard, racing against time, and naturally they will unconsciously integrate into it. Sometimes after six o'clock in the morning, the corridor is crowded with spokespersons. Under such circumstances, seeing so many hard-working people, I just feel that I haven't worked hard enough and want to work harder every day. Even if I take out my mobile phone and watch it for a while, I am full of endless guilt. I am also a person with poor self-control, but after studying in this atmosphere for nearly ten months, I can study without a mobile phone, and I can sit from 7 am to evening 1 1. The power of example is really infinite, and a good learning environment is too important. Only when you are around Xueba will you have a sense of crisis and feel how small you are. I have a research friend who rents a house at home to review. Whenever he talks about studying eight or nine hours a day, he is still complacent. I smiled and said nothing. The research friends in the postgraduate entrance examination building start every 13 or 14 hours, okay? You are still moving when you get up at 8 o'clock, but you can't see the library or the postgraduate classroom is full at 7 o'clock.

Let's talk about those people who never go to the library or the postgraduate entrance examination classroom and later become "enjoyable" (there are real examples around them). Roommate A, ambitious at first, applied for Southwest University of Political Science and Law, rented a neighborhood across the road from the school, and walked to the library 10 minutes at most. In March and April, I went to the library to study every day. Later, it was hot, and I said that the air conditioning in the school was not good and the sun was too bright outside. For various reasons, I review at home. Later, a World War II senior who lived with her told us that every time she came back from the library, she saw her roommate A brushing her mobile phone at home and drawing plays in various postures. Finally, she told us herself that she couldn't get up at home every day, groped around, and finally got in for a while, and it was time for dinner again, or her cell phone rang. Anyway, there is always something that attracts her attention. So much so that when she arrived at 1 1, she gave up the postgraduate entrance examination and went out to work part-time to earn rent ... The classmate B next door was too lazy to go out to study in the dormitory every day, and spent every day with her roommates who didn't take the postgraduate entrance examination. Every time I go back to the dormitory, I can hear the hearty laughter of her and her roommates ... classmate C goes to the coffee shop near the school to review every day, and learning has become a form of pretending to be B. Almost every day, I can see her beautiful selfies and drinking pictures in the circle of friends, as well as beautiful notes made in front of the mirror, accompanied by words saying how hard she worked today. On the day when the results came out, she sent a long circle of friends and lamented that she had worked hard, but she didn't do well in the exam. As we all know, everyone behind her thinks that her grades are quite matched with hers. ......

I don't mean anything to these people. What I want to say is that you must have twice as much self-control when studying outside the library or the postgraduate entrance examination class, otherwise you will be abandoned. If you are a person with poor self-control, you'd better stick to a place that can inspire you to learn. Imagine that you are in the library, there are no other people around except books and learners, and you will be distracted, let alone in other places?

It can be said that it is very difficult for everyone who wants to study hard. Therefore, if you want to ensure efficiency, it is suggested that you must try to go to a place with a learning atmosphere. You should let yourself stay with a group of hard-working people, and then find yourself behind and work harder. Instead of being complacent about studying in a comfortable environment for a few hours every day.

After receiving the proposed admission notice, the comprehensive scores of the initial test and the second test ranked first in the school. At the moment I saw it, my tears did not stretch. So is the second interview. I worked as an intern in our school in my senior year. I went back to school early and lived alone for nearly a month. I resumed my work and went to the library to concentrate on preparing for the second interview. I cried on many lonely nights, but fortunately, the final result didn't disappoint me.

Thank you for your praise. This year is really not easy, and a lot of feelings have suddenly ended. Countless memories of dusk and early morning, countless endorsements of entrance examination halls, and countless cold and silent nights are all medals for my efforts for youth.

Life goes on. I wish all dream catchers who choose to take the postgraduate entrance examination will not be disappointed in the end.

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