笔笔范文网 >汇报材料

ted演讲带演讲稿模板7篇

演讲稿是我们日常生活中接触较多的一种书面文体,我们写了一份优秀的演讲稿,是能够减轻自己演讲过程中的紧张感,笔笔范文网小编今天就为您带来了ted演讲带演讲稿模板7篇,相信一定会对你有所帮助。

ted演讲带演讲稿模板7篇

ted演讲带演讲稿篇1

尊敬的老师同学们:

大家下午好,我是来自电子商务的 !我平常没什么爱好,一般就喜欢看书看小说。

今天我站在这上面主要是想和大家谈一谈有关爱情的一些问题。因为前面有听过物流班同学无稿演讲过宿舍友情和我们班兆青同学讲过的父母亲情,都获得了同学们不少的掌声,所以我想延续他们两位的情感之谈,谈谈爱情,同时也希望不会丢了他们的脸。

爱情,也许某些人闭上眼睛就可以想到是两个人在那边卿卿我我,揉揉抱抱,然后旁人走过去,两眼一斜,嘴角一咧,oh,shit,眼不见为静。走为上计。(呵呵,开个玩笑。)

总是有很多事情让我矛盾,父母不让我谈恋爱的时候我总是傻不拉及地死了劲的去追小女生,结果大家看我这幅德行,当然是一个也没追到。呵呵。现在父母开始允许我恋爱了,并且说要偶尔也带带女朋友回去给他们看,我却觉得这事还得从长计议,不是一朝一夕可以解决的事。也可能我只是在等一个人,一个能真正了解,我风中的沉默。

(我就纳闷了,最后那句说得那么深情,居然没点掌声?)

前几天看了电影《山楂树之恋》,张艺谋导演的,据说张导本想把此片拍成一片最纯洁最纯真的爱情片,可看过这影片的人都知道,哎呀妈呀,里头的老三整一个泡妞高手,带静秋去河边游泳好方便脱衣,带静秋去医院,还开免费房间。你们说他高不高手?高手啊 令吾等自叹不如啊。

当然,凭良心话,这片影片的确是很纯洁的一片恋爱片。可生活不是山楂树之恋,大家都别装。底下这话是对女生说的:这个世界有两种男人,一种是把你放心上,目的是把你放床上;另一种是他想带你飞到天上,可往往还是掉回到了床上。。

当然当然,不排除有第三种男人的可能。

自己也长了这么大,时常在以前班上看到大多数男女的调情,女的嗔怪男的坏,在这里请允许我以唱歌的形式引用张韶涵的那歌的一句歌词:(唱)但亲爱的那并不是爱情,(正经地说出)是暧昧。。

其实时常想到这里的时候我也一度怀疑过自己的爱情观和价值观是否出了问题,因为前面说过了,我喜欢看书嘛,后来我不知道在哪本书上看到了一句话,好像是:任何世界的假象都不值得你怀疑你自己。于是我也释怀了。

但我们还是应该相信,在这个世界上的某一个地方有那么一个人,她是为你而存在的,而且她还会和你一起,无论是物欲横流的动荡社会,还是幸福美满的甜蜜生活,也就是无论这个世界变成什么样子,她都会和你一起面对。。

谢谢!

ted演讲带演讲稿篇2

when i was seven years old and my sister was just five years old, we wereplaying on top of a bunk bed. i was two years older than my sister at the time-- i mean, i'm two years older than her now -- but at the time it meant she hadto do everything that i wanted to do, and i wanted to play war. so we were up ontop of our bunk beds. and on one side of the bunk bed, i had put out all of myg.i. joe soldiers and weaponry. and on the other side were all my sister's mylittle ponies ready for a cavalry charge.

there are differing accounts of what actually happened that afternoon, butsince my sister is not here with us today, let me tell you the true story --(laughter) -- which is my sister's a little bit on the clumsy side. somehow,without any help or push from her older brother at all, suddenly amy disappearedoff of the top of the bunk bed and landed with this crash on the floor. now inervously peered over the side of the bed to see what had befallen my fallensister and saw that she had landed painfully on her hands and knees on all fourson the ground.

i was nervous because my parents had charged me with making sure that mysister and i played as safely and as quietly as possible. and seeing as how ihad accidentally broken amy's arm just one week before ... (laughter) ...heroically pushing her out of the way of an oncoming imaginary sniper bullet,(laughter) for which i have yet to be thanked, i was trying as hard as i could-- she didn't even see it coming -- i was trying as hard as i could to be on mybest behavior.

and i saw my sister's face, this wail of pain and suffering and surprisethreatening to erupt from her mouth and threatening to wake my parents from thelong winter's nap for which they had settled. so i did the only thing my littlefrantic seven year-old brain could think to do to avert this tragedy. and if youhave children, you've seen this hundreds of times before. i said, "amy, amy,wait. don't cry. don't cry. did you see how you landed? no human lands on allfours like that. amy, i think this means you're a unicorn."

(laughter)

now that was cheating, because there was nothing in the world my sisterwould want more than not to be amy the hurt five year-old little sister, but amythe special unicorn. of course, this was an option that was open to her brain atno point in the past. and you could see how my poor, manipulated sister facedconflict, as her little brain attempted to devote resources to feeling the painand suffering and surprise she just e_perienced, or contemplating her new-foundidentity as a unicorn. and the latter won out. instead of crying, instead ofceasing our play, instead of waking my parents, with all the negativeconsequences that would have ensued for me, instead a smile spread across herface and she scrambled right back up onto the bunk bed with all the grace of ababy unicorn ... (laughter) ... with one broken leg.

what we stumbled across at this tender age of just five and seven -- we hadno idea at the time -- was something that was going be at the vanguard of ascientific revolution occurring two decades later in the way that we look at thehuman brain. what we had stumbled across is something called positivepsychology, which is the reason that i'm here today and the reason that i wakeup every morning.

when i first started talking about this research outside of academia, outwith companies and schools, the very first thing they said to never do is tostart your talk with a graph. the very first thing i want to do is start my talkwith a graph. this graph looks boring, but this graph is the reason i gete_cited and wake up every morning. and this graph doesn't even mean anything;it's fake data. what we found is --

(laughter)

if i got this data back studying you here in the room, i would be thrilled,because there's very clearly a trend that's going on there, and that means thati can get published, which is all that really matters. the fact that there's oneweird red dot that's up above the curve, there's one weirdo in the room -- iknow who you are, i saw you earlier -- that's no problem. that's no problem, asmost of you know, because i can just delete that dot. i can delete that dotbecause that's clearly a measurement error. and we know that's a measurementerror because it's messing up my data.

so one of the very first things we teach people in economics and statisticsand business and psychology courses is how, in a statistically valid way, do weeliminate the weirdos. how do we eliminate the outliers so we can find the lineof best fit? which is fantastic if i'm trying to find out how many advil theaverage person should be taking -- two. but if i'm interested in potential, ifi'm interested in your potential, or for happiness or productivity or energy orcreativity, what we're doing is we're creating the cult of the average withscience.

if i asked a question like, "how fast can a child learn how to read in aclassroom?" scientists change the answer to "how fast does the average childlearn how to read in that classroom?" and then we tailor the class right towardsthe average. now if you fall below the average on this curve, then psychologistsget thrilled, because that means you're either depressed or you have a disorder,or hopefully both. we're hoping for both because our business model is, if youcome into a therapy session with one problem, we want to make sure you leaveknowing you have 10, so you keep coming back over and over again. we'll go backinto your childhood if necessary, but eventually what we want to do is make younormal again. but normal is merely average.

and what i posit and what positive psychology posits is that if we studywhat is merely average, we will remain merely average. then instead of deletingthose positive outliers, what i intentionally do is come into a population likethis one and say, why? why is it that some of you are so high above the curve interms of your intellectual ability, athletic ability, musical ability,creativity, energy levels, your resiliency in the face of challenge, your senseof humor? whatever it is, instead of deleting you, what i want to do is studyyou. because maybe we can glean information -- not just how to move people up tothe average, but how we can move the entire average up in our companies andschools worldwide.

the reason this graph is important to me is, when i turn on the news, itseems like the majority of the information is not positive, in fact it'snegative. most of it's about murder, corruption, diseases, natural disasters.and very quickly, my brain starts to think that's the accurate ratio of negativeto positive in the world. what that's doing is creating something called themedical school syndrome -- which, if you know people who've been to medicalschool, during the first year of medical training, as you read through a list ofall the symptoms and diseases that could happen, suddenly you realize you haveall of them.

i have a brother in-law named bobo -- which is a whole other story. bobomarried amy the unicorn. bobo called me on the phone from yale medical school,and bobo said, "shawn, i have leprosy." (laughter) which, even at yale, ise_traordinarily rare. but i had no idea how to console poor bobo because he hadjust gotten over an entire week of menopause.

(laughter)

see what we're finding is it's not necessarily the reality that shapes us,but the lens through which your brain views the world that shapes your reality.and if we can change the lens, not only can we change your happiness, we canchange every single educational and business outcome at the same time.

when i applied to harvard, i applied on a dare. i didn't e_pect to get in,and my family had no money for college. when i got a military scholarship twoweeks later, they allowed me to go. suddenly, something that wasn't even apossibility became a reality. when i went there, i assumed everyone else wouldsee it as a privilege as well, that they'd be e_cited to be there. even ifyou're in a classroom full of people smarter than you, you'd be happy just to bein that classroom, which is what i felt. but what i found there is, while somepeople e_perience that, when i graduated after my four years and then spent thene_t eight years living in the dorms with the students -- harvard asked me to; iwasn't that guy. (laughter) i was an officer of harvard to counsel studentsthrough the difficult four years. and what i found in my research and myteaching is that these students, no matter how happy they were with theiroriginal success of getting into the school, two weeks later their brains werefocused, not on the privilege of being there, nor on their philosophy or theirphysics. their brain was focused on the competition, the workload, the hassles,the stresses, the complaints.

when i first went in there, i walked into the freshmen dining hall, whichis where my friends from waco, te_as, which is where i grew up -- i know some ofyou have heard of it. when they'd come to visit me, they'd look around, they'dsay, "this freshman dining hall looks like something out of hogwart's from themovie "harry potter," which it does. this is hogwart's from the movie "harrypotter" and that's harvard. and when they see this, they say, "shawn, why do youwaste your time studying happiness at harvard? seriously, what does a harvardstudent possibly have to be unhappy about?"

embedded within that question is the key to understanding the science ofhappiness. because what that question assumes is that our e_ternal world ispredictive of our happiness levels, when in reality, if i know everything aboutyour e_ternal world, i can only predict 10 percent of your long-term happiness.90 percent of your long-term happiness is predicted not by the e_ternal world,but by the way your brain processes the world. and if we change it, if we changeour formula for happiness and success, what we can do is change the way that wecan then affect reality. what we found is that only 25 percent of job successesare predicted by i.q. 75 percent of job successes are predicted by your optimismlevels, your social support and your ability to see stress as a challengeinstead of as a threat.

i talked to a boarding school up in new england, probably the mostprestigious boarding school, and they said, "we already know that. so everyyear, instead of just teaching our students, we also have a wellness week. andwe're so e_cited. monday night we have the world's leading e_pert coming in tospeak about adolescent depression. tuesday night it's school violence andbullying. wednesday night is eating disorders. thursday night is elicit druguse. and friday night we're trying to decide between risky se_ or happiness."(laughter) i said, "that's most people's friday nights." (laughter) (applause)which i'm glad you liked, but they did not like that at all. silence on thephone. and into the silence, i said, "i'd be happy to speak at your school, butjust so you know, that's not a wellness week, that's a sickness week. whatyou've done is you've outlined all the negative things that can happen, but nottalked about the positive."

the absence of disease is not health. here's how we get to health: we needto reverse the formula for happiness and success. in the last three years, i'vetraveled to 45 different countries, working with schools and companies in themidst of an economic downturn. and what i found is that most companies andschools follow a formula for success, which is this: if i work harder, i'll bemore successful. and if i'm more successful, then i'll be happier. thatundergirds most of our parenting styles, our managing styles, the way that wemotivate our behavior.

and the problem is it's scientifically broken and backwards for tworeasons. first, every time your brain has a success, you just changed thegoalpost of what success looked like. you got good grades, now you have to getbetter grades, you got into a good school and after you get into a betterschool, you got a good job, now you have to get a better job, you hit your salestarget, we're going to change your sales target. and if happiness is on theopposite side of success, your brain never gets there. what we've done is we'vepushed happiness over the cognitive horizon as a society. and that's because wethink we have to be successful, then we'll be happier.

but the real problem is our brains work in the opposite order. if you canraise somebody's level of positivity in the present, then their braine_periences what we now call a happiness advantage, which is your brain atpositive performs significantly better than it does at negative, neutral orstressed. your intelligence rises, your creativity rises, your energy levelsrise. in fact, what we've found is that every single business outcome improves.your brain at positive is 31 percent more productive than your brain atnegative, neutral or stressed. you're 37 percent better at sales. doctors are 19percent faster, more accurate at coming up with the correct diagnosis whenpositive instead of negative, neutral or stressed. which means we can reversethe formula. if we can find a way of becoming positive in the present, then ourbrains work even more successfully as we're able to work harder, faster and moreintelligently.

what we need to be able to do is to reverse this formula so we can start tosee what our brains are actually capable of. because dopamine, which floods intoyour system when you're positive, has two functions. not only does it make youhappier, it turns on all of the learning centers in your brain allowing you toadapt to the world in a different way.

we've found that there are ways that you can train your brain to be able tobecome more positive. in just a two-minute span of time done for 21 days in arow, we can actually rewire your brain, allowing your brain to actually workmore optimistically and more successfully. we've done these things in researchnow in every single company that i've worked with, getting them to write downthree new things that they're grateful for for 21 days in a row, three newthings each day. and at the end of that, their brain starts to retain a patternof scanning the world, not for the negative, but for the positive first.

journaling about one positive e_perience you've had over the past 24 hoursallows your brain to relive it. e_ercise teaches your brain that your behaviormatters. we find that meditation allows your brain to get over the cultural adhdthat we've been creating by trying to do multiple tasks at once and allows ourbrains to focus on the task at hand. and finally, random acts of kindness areconscious acts of kindness. we get people, when they open up their inbo_, towrite one positive email praising or thanking somebody in their social supportnetwork.

and by doing these activities and by training your brain just like we trainour bodies, what we've found is we can reverse the formula for happiness andsuccess, and in doing so, not only create ripples of positivity, but create areal revolution.

thank you very much.

(applause)

ted演讲带演讲稿篇3

尊敬的各位评委老师,亲爱的同学们:

大家(下午)好。今天我的演讲主题是《幸福是奋斗出来的》。

幸福是什么呢。幸福,是一种感受良好的生活状态。它不等同于快乐、快感,不是短暂的,易逝的,获得并不简单。幸福包含着对现在的满足和对未来的希望。在饥饿者眼中,它是一块面包能填饱肚子;在流浪者心里,它是一顶帐篷能带来温暖;它既可以是物质上的满足。也可以是精神上的富足。决定我们幸福与否,不在于我们是谁,不在于我们身处何处,也不在于我们拥有什么,而在于我们怎么想,怎么做。物质上的幸福,相信大家都感受满满,所以今天我讲的是精神上的幸福,精神上的幸福是奋斗出来的。

有这样一个人:战乱时几次和死亡擦肩,中年时救助孤儿,75岁做背包客旅行海外,93岁做义工,95岁读硕士,100岁时书法作品被大英图书馆收藏,出自传,做畅销书作家……他叫赵慕鹤。虽然今年已经106岁高龄,但他仍然独自居住在老公寓的四楼,每天走路去市场买菜,餐餐自理,亲手做包子、水饺,粗茶淡饭甘之如饴。为了上网买车票,他开始自学电脑和英文。有朋友知道后笑他:“老赵,你都要死了,还学什么电脑呢?”他不介意,笑着回答:“可是,我现在还活着呀!”他是一位传奇的老人,也是一位对生活无比热爱的赤子。最可贵的是,他从不倚老卖老,享受别人馈赠的同时,也在尽力回报社会。他的人生旅程最好的为我们展示了:人生唯一的幸福,就是不断的奋斗,不断前进。

中建三局南方分公司党支部书记藩群波。08年毕业于哈工大土木工程专业,毕业后进入中建三局深圳分公司任技术员。同大多数人一样,在普通的项目上从事一线工作。如果说他有什么不同,那就是始终怀揣着一颗对建筑行业更为执着和滚烫的心。白天勤跑现场,晚上挑灯夜战学习管理知识。仅仅两年,藩群波就从一名技术员一路成长为技术总工、项目执行经理。但他并未因此满足,在公司的转型的道路上,带着员工不断创新,攻克一个又一个的难题。如今33岁的藩群波带领实施的华丽高速项目已成为中建三局南方公司转型升级极具价值的样本和示范工程。藩群波说:“其实基建转型还有很长的路要走,但是只要路对了,走再远也不怕。"藩群波为公司转型发展道路上做的努力奋斗,不仅锻炼了自己,也为人民谋取了幸福。

伟大革命导师列宁,没有巨额的家产,一生中很长时间是在贫困中度过的。尽管在这样艰难困难的条件下,他却在为工人、农民和一切贫苦大众谋取幸福。他靠自己一生的努力奋斗实践了精神的幸福。他就像雨果所说的:钱包空空时,心灵即丰满。

我们没有他们伟大,但是在获取幸福的路上,即使是矮小之人也能拥有。幸福从来不会从天而降,所有的幸福都需要靠双手去创造;幸福从来不会突如其来,所有的幸福只有历经风雨才能看见彩虹。青春是用来奋斗的。奋斗中的幸福,是青春在梦想中的坚守;奋斗中的幸福,是青春在拼搏中的精彩;奋斗中的幸福,是青春在奉献中的升华。

今天我的演讲到此结束,谢谢大家(鞠躬)!

ted演讲带演讲稿篇4

曾经在未涉爱河的时候,总是想像着爱的美丽和爱的甜蜜。终于有一天,我进入到了爱情的角色里

爱是有条件的,就算世上的确有无条件的爱,又能持续多久?不是你自己爱得精疲力竭,就是看到了对方的自私面目而大感失望,或者他/她轻描淡写地说声谢谢、对不起,便毫无眷恋地离开。

人和人是平等的,关心和爱护也应该是相互的,如果只有一方在任劳任怨地付出,另一方心安理得地享受,却没有任何回报,那不一定是真爱。如果当对方从没有将关心与爱护给予你,甚至对你所做的好不感激,你却仍是一味对他/她奉献,那不是奉献是什么?

爱一个能懂爱的人爱付出是会有结果的;而爱一个没有情感,不知道什么是爱的人,就犹如把自己心爱的宝石投入浑浊的河水。我不知道我是幸运的前者,还是不幸的后者。不过,这些对我都已经没有任何意义了。一个人自己把自己爱的火苗浇灭,那是一种什么感觉?那种火苗,一生中又会燃气几次呢?留住了历史的美丽与永恒,却永远换不回那份激情和热情了。

爱是相互的,有所付出,也有所要求。不珍爱自己,别人也不会来尊重你。当他/她习惯了接受你的付出,一切就变成了理所当然,太容易得到的东西自然就不会珍惜。真爱原来是双方的付出,犯贱之后,我们终于领悟。

两个人在一起要面对的东西是很多的,要生活的日子很长,所以更多是能为对方做什么,对方需要自己的时候是否能让他/她感受到你的温暖,成为彼此心灵的港湾,而不是年轻一起玩玩而已!

总之,爱一个人,不在于得到多少,而在于付出多少;爱一个人,不在于付出了多少,而在于还能付出多少;爱一个人,不在于为他/她付出了多少,而在于为他/她坚守了多少

ted演讲带演讲稿篇5

i think the cause is more complicated. i think, as a society, we put more pressure on our boys to succeedthan we do on our girls. i know men that stay home and work in the home to support wives with careers,and it's hard. when i go to the mommy-and-me stuff and i see the father there, i notice that the other mommies don't play with him. and that's a problem, because we have to make it as important a job,because it's the hardest job in the world to work inside the home, for people of both genders, if we're going to even things out and let women stay in the workforce. studies show that households with equal earning and equal responsibility also have half the divorce rate.and if that wasn't good enough motivation for everyone out there, they also have more — how shall i say this on this stage?

ted演讲带演讲稿篇6

卡耐基说:笑容能照亮所有看到它的人,像穿过乌云的太阳,带给人们温暖。因为,一个微笑可以打破僵局,一个微笑可以温暖人心,一个微笑可以淡化缺点,一个微笑可以树立信心。微笑就像一缕四月的清风,可以把你的愉悦吹拂到别人的脸上。当你向大家微笑的时候,你的微笑在感动着别人,也在感动着自己。可能你的微笑不一定是可爱的、漂亮的,但一定是美好的、温柔的,一定会让人得到心灵的宁静与平和。你的微笑可能让一些人感觉莫名其妙,可是更多的人会感觉很舒服,他们的嘴角一定也会不自觉地上扬。这个时候,世界是温暖的,天空是湛蓝的,人们是平等的。

因为微笑是一种宽容、一种接纳,它缩短了彼此的距离,使人与人之间心心相通。喜欢微笑着面对他人的人,往往更容易走入对方的心底。难怪有人说微笑是成功的先锋。对人微笑是一种文明的表现,它显示出一种力量、涵养和暗示。

一个刚刚学会保持微笑的年轻人说:当我开始坚持对同事微笑时,起初大家非常迷惑、惊异,后来就是欣喜、赞许,两个月来,我得到的快乐比过去一年中得到的满足感与成就感还要多。现在,我已养成了微笑的习惯,而且我发现人人都对我微笑,过去冷若冰霜的人,现在也热情友好起来。

微笑的力量多么地惊人。有微笑面孔的人,就会有希望。因为一个人的笑容就是他好意的信使,他的笑容可以照亮所有看到它的人。没有人喜欢帮助那些整天皱着眉头、愁容满面的人,更不会信任他们。而对于那些感受到上司、同事、客户或家庭压力的员工,一个笑容就能帮助他们了解:一切都是有希望的,世界是有欢乐的。只要忙着、工作着,你就不能不微笑。

微笑的女人最温柔微笑的女人有着平和的心态。她用平静的眼光观察世界,她用平常的心情感受万物,她用平正的思维考虑问题。喜从天降时,她不会手舞足蹈;厄运来临时,她不会捶胸顿足;取得成绩时,她不会得意忘形;面对挫折时,她不会一蹶不振;生活优裕时,她不会挥霍无度;处于困境时,她不会垂头丧气;宾朋满座时,她不会趾高气扬;门庭冷落时,她不会怨天尤人。面对这一切,她只是微微一笑。

微笑的女人有一颗宽容之心。在家里,面对丈夫乱扔烟头、随意摆放书本,她微微一笑,顺手捡起,举手摆好;面对孩子的无理取闹,她又微微一笑,摸摸孩子的后脑勺,拉着他的小手不停地抚弄,直到他安静下来;面对老人的喋喋不休,她还是微微一笑,然后坐下来,静静地听他们把话说完。微笑让女人有美丽的心情,微笑让女人有宽松的环境,微笑让女人有迷人的风采,微笑让女人有青春的容颜。

ted演讲带演讲稿篇7

亲爱的老师、同学们:

大家好!

爱是一种表现,而幸福是一种感受。幸福在哪里,怎样才能得到幸福?其实很简单,只需要一个字,那就是“爱”。

这几天,我和搭档特别忙,忙着准备衣服和编排节目,当然,还有很多同学也是这样忙碌,大家都是因为能在今天的活动中,给“敬老院”的爷爷奶奶们带来快乐和幸福。

今天我特别兴奋,好像老天爷也知道了我这是要到敬老院去“献爱心”,连续了几天的阴雨天气,今天一下子就转晴了,露出了红红的笑脸。我们上了车,向“金色阳光”老年公寓前进。

下了车,我们走进了“成都市武侯区金色阳光养生乐园”,那里所有的爷爷奶奶,都已经久久地坐在那摆放的整整齐齐椅子上,等着我们表演呢!看样子,他们生活得很不错,真得好好感谢在这里照顾他们的叔叔阿姨。就在此时,院长发话了:“尊敬的老年同志们,很荣幸,我们请到了来自‘电子科技大学附属实验小学’的老师和同学们,希望今天他们能给大家带来快乐。”话音刚落,老师便让我们发水果给老人们吃,并且要对老人们说上一句祝福的话。大家都这样做了,我也满怀深情地拿着苹果和香蕉递给了老人们。一句句的“身体健康,万事如意,”一句句的“福如东海,寿比南山”萦绕在耳边,构成了一支幸福的歌。我相信爷爷奶奶们感受到了,已真切的感受到了我们对他们的关怀和祝福。

表演节目的时候到了,首先,献给爷爷奶奶们的节目是由我和搭档带来的舞蹈表演——天路。伴随着动听的音乐,我们跳起了优美的舞蹈。老人们的微笑和掌声已给予了我们最大的支持和鼓励。有表演双簧、小品的、有唱歌的、有弹琴的……一个个的节目都是那样的令老人们开心和快乐!

表演结束了,一位93岁的老奶奶一定要给我们唱一首歌,她的歌声是那样的坚定有力,表达了对祖国和生活的无限热爱,这个老奶奶好可爱,相信她的心永远不会老。就在此时,我听到身边的一位老奶奶好像要哭了,原来,她和老师谈心,激动地说:“我非常的感谢大家给我带来的快乐,我好开心、好幸福,我在这里感受到了儿女从未给过我的爱,我在这里好幸福!”

将近尾声的时候,院长向我们介绍了一位102岁,耳不聋、眼不花,还经常打麻将的“魏婆婆”,听到这个消息,在场的老师同学都惊呆了,院长提议每个人都去握一握魏婆婆的手,希望所有的人都能长命百岁。同学们都排着长场对去跟魏婆婆握手,每个人都说了一段很长的祝福语,而我只说了一句,那就是:“魏婆婆,祝你幸福!”多么简单的一句话啊,但它的意义却很深很深……

在我们离开之前,院长给我们每人发了一个笔记本,上面写着:“关爱老人,从儿童做起!”是啊!不光是儿童,所有人都应该关爱老人,只有把最真诚的爱献给老人,他们才会感受到真正的幸福……

会计实习心得体会最新模板相关文章:

辩演讲稿模板7篇

车演讲稿模板7篇

带军训个人工作总结8篇

净演讲稿模板7篇

《我》演讲稿模板7篇

带班长培训心得体会6篇

飘演讲稿600字模板7篇

云阳演讲稿模板7篇

感恩课演讲稿模板7篇

秀演讲稿模板7篇

    相关推荐

    热门推荐

    点击加载更多
    32
    c
    30616

    联系客服

    微信号:fanwen9944
    点击此处复制微信号

    客服在线时间:
    星期一至星期五 8:30~12:30 14:00~18:00

    如有疑问,扫码添加客服微信,
    问题+截图进行提问,客服会第一时间答复。