When I was a little girl, my father loved to play the game of “catch the ball” with me. I wasn’t good at it 21 he didn’t mind at all. He was always telling me to 22 my eyes on the ball; otherwise I would not be able to 23 it when he threw it to me.
As I got older, we didn’t play the game as 24 as before. If I had a 25 , I would go to my father and 26 his advice. He would try to make a joke and say, “Keep your eyes on the ball.” We would both laugh 27 that advice was not usually able to 28 the problem, but he would just try to make me 29 .
My father became 30 in 1995 when I was 23. There were not any more conversations, as he was 31 from a terrible disease. He couldn’t 32 ; he could only move his 33 without making a sound, which was sometimes 34 to understand. I seemed to be 35 good at reading his lips after a while, even better than the nurses that were 36 him.
During one of our last 37 I was telling him about a difficulty I was 38 . Once again, I could read his lips. “Keep your eyes on the ball,” he said. We both smiled. That was the last time I saw my father 39 he passed away.
Sometimes now, all those years later when I get into a 40 situation, I just tell myself, “Keep your eyes on the ball.”
A.and B.but C.so D.or
A.keep B.leave C.find D.hold
A.watch B.feel C.move D.catch
A.quick B.much C.many D.little
A.surprise B.wound C.danger D.problem
A.pay for B.send for C.look for D.ask for
A.because B.unless C.if D.when
A.settle B.produce C.drop D.realize
A.worry B.smile C.study D.talk
A.advice B.ill C.busy D.wealthy
A.recovering B.thinking C.suffering D.preventing
A.eat B.see C.speak D.jump
A.lips B.face C.hands D.eyes
A.interesting B.boring C.easy D.hard
A.quite B.nearly C.hardly D.still
A.waiting for B.thinking about C.caring for D.worrying about
A.impressions B.experiences C.games D.conversations
A.looking through B.going through C.coming up D.getting along
A.before B.after C.until D.as
A.shocking B.puzzling C.frightening D.troubling