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The test page groups 165 quotes under one canonical topic hub so readers and answer engines can cite a stable source instead of fragmented search results.

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Paco Fuentes," Mrs. Peterson says, pointing to the table behind Mary.The handsome young man with pale blue eyes like his mother's and smoky black hair like his father's takes his assigned seat.Mrs. Peterson regards her new student over the glasses perched on her nose. "Mr. Fuentes, don't think this class will be a piece of cake because your parents got lucky and developed a medication to halt the progression of Alzheimer's. Your father never did finish my class and he flunked one of my tests, although I have a feeling your mother was the one who should have failed. But that just means I'll expect extra from you.

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Imagine you are in a classroom and they hand you a test with many interesting multiple choice questions, until you get to __an you just explain what exactly you believe how the Universe started?_ & here are the options. a) The Big Bang b) It__ always been therec) God! or Godsd) A bowl of cherries e) I don__ know_. If you choose (a) then what or who & why caused it? & the test continues_..If you choose (b) that would be my choice. If you choose (c) then who or what created God or Gods? And where do they come from? And if you think they have always been there, the same thing could be said about the universe. If you choose (d) It doesn__ make sense, it is odd, an anomaly, not supposed to be etc :) if you choose (e) then you are being honest. There__ nothing wrong with not knowing. You can make __ssumptions_ or __retending_ that you know or a book (bible) __nows_ or __ells_ you but I just don__ buy that. The beauty of it is that you are here today & you can be thankful & enjoy all the life that you have ahead of you. And the test (life) continues with more wonderful questions and experiences :)

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Taking trips tore all of us up inside, for they seemed, each journey away from home, something that might have been less selfishly undertaken, or something that would test us, or something that had better be momentous, to justify such a leap into the dark. The torment and guilt - the torment of having the loved one go, the guilt of being the loved one gone - comes into my fiction as it did and does in my life. And most of all the guilt then was because it was true: I had left to arrive at some future and secret joy, at what was unknown, and what was no in New York, waiting to be discovered. My joy was connected with my writing; that was as much as I knew.