La semana pasada tuvimos una hora libre en Francés así que con el ViceCap. de CAS Nicolás, decidimos ir a primaria a "recolectar" cosas para la Misión a Yapeyu 2013, y tapitas para el hospital Garrahan.
Golpeamos en todos los salones de primaria y nos llamo la atención lo poco que conseguimos teniendo tantos grados. Les pedí a todos por favor que intentaran traer cosas que ya no usaran, porque para esos chicos de Yapeyu esas cosas que ya no usamos les son muy necesarias.
Llevamos todo lo destinado a la Misión a la oficina de primaria arriba. Y las tapitas las pusimos en sus respectivos contenedores.
Me gusto ir a pedir cosas a primaria, pero me sentí algo decepcionada por la poca colaboración que vi. Las profes igualmente muy amables nos dijeron que nos van ayudar en esto, y que en las próximas semanas comenzaran a traer mas!
Espero que así sea, me gustaría poder llevar a Yapeyu otro año más nuestro granito de arena, y esto va a ser posible si todo el San Marcos se une por la misma causa. Somos todos una gran familia, un mismo equipo!
Paula, igual hace un mes que empezamos las clases y ya logramos mucho. Si todos ustedes mantienen alta la vara de sus aspiraciones solidarias, van a contagiar el sentimiento a los demás.
ResponderEliminarNo decaigan!!
Paula Belén Rodríguez Durán
ResponderEliminarDear Paula,
It was a pleasure to read your blog entries. I found them so varied! I liked the phrase ‘While most are dreaming of success, winners wake up and work hard to achieve it.’ This phrase depicts your everyday attitude, which leads you to outstanding achievement, whatever effort you have to make.
It was endearing to read about your attitude to sports and physical effort, and how hard you try to find your balance. Here goes an anecdote for you about a famous cricketer: Basil D’Oliviera.
In all our activities it is great to be good at something, but better still to be better –and I believe you strive for this in everything you undertake. We might all thing that when a man has represented his country at a sport many times,, he would feel that he knew all there was to be known.
Not so Bail. Even when he was near the end of a long and successful career, he kept reading every book on the game and he said ‘I’m always learning something new.’
Isn’t that the recipe for a full life? However old we are, we can always be on the look-out for new and surprising things. If we keep learning we will never be bored.
This thought goes for everything we wish to attempt in life and I feel you are following this track in everything you attempt. And attempt everything with a kind heart, as this little poem expresses:
A little thing perhaps, on meeting
To give a friend a cheery greeting.
A little thing –but who can say?
Those words may brighten up her day.
All the best
Mrs Gabriela Martin