Are you fun of Stargazing? Well me, I’m very happy when I would gape at stars every night together with my friends.
When we were little children, we would wish upon the first stars we see at dusk. We couldn’t help but get awed as tiny flickers in the infinite sky started to inhabit the cloudless dark space above us. As we grew older, we learned more about celestial bodies in residing in the universe-the Sun, the Moon, the planets, and the stars yet the mysteries of the cosmos continue to baffle us to this day.
Stars also are like people because stars are born and will eventually die like us. Stars have their own characteristics or personalities. Each star has different colors. People have different attitudes in their lives. Stars characterize the people.
Each human being is unique... In this world of duplicates, an individual remains to be original. People have differences in values so they behave differently.
Recent scientific findings, however, suggest that contrary to earlier belief-that the expansion of the universe slows down before it finally collapses the universe is in fact expanding at a faster rate. In quest for answers, scientist focused their attention to the stars and their environment.
The clues to our “accelerating universe” may just be in the thorough investigation of nearby galaxies, supernovas, and the neutron stars down to the minute quark-gluon plasmas and neutrons. But still scientists build upon these little findings to search the skies for even more clues.
Life is like that a continuous quest for illumination. We sometimes feel that we know so much. Other times, we feel that what we recently learned and discovered have actually unearthed another puzzle, an answer leading to another question. Even so, our little discoveries and experiments help enrich to as to become a better person. We can actually use our “little lessons” to encourage others overcome their own challenges?
If travelers and explorers seek for the lighthouse nearby or the brightest stars to guide their path, the little “lights” that researchers leave behind become the “guiding lights” for new exploration.
I’m also fun stargazing. Every night before I sleep I gape to the stars. If I would to choose a star I would choose Rigel cause it is young and I’m also developing adolescents so as young as me I would it.
Every night I wished to my favorite and if there would be a falling star I would more gladly to wish on it.
When I was child I used to sing “Twinkle-twinkle Little Star” while I’m staring the stars. I used to sleep 10:00 p.m because I’m fun of watching stars in the night.
When I was Grade 6 our teacher gave us a star map so that we can easily recognize that patterns of what the stars formed. Every night I’m very happy to gaze the skies.
And at times when life becomes gloomy, instead of bowing down in grief, try looking up-beacon of light may just be showing somewhere.
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