单选题
We may look at the world around us, but somehow we manage not to see it until whatever we"ve become used to suddenly disappears.
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, for example, the neatly-dressed woman I
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to see—or look at--on my way to work each morning.
For three years, no matter
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the weather was like, she was always waiting at the bus stop around 8:00 am. On
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days, she wore heavy clothes and a pair of woolen gloves. Summertime
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out neat, belted cotton dresses and a hat pulled low over her sunglasses.
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, she was an ordinary working woman. Of course, I
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all this only after she was seen no more. It was then that I realized how
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I expected to see her each morning. You might say l
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her. "Did she have an accident? Something
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?" I thought to myself about her
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Now that she was gone, I felt I had
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her. I began to realize that part of our
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life probably includes such chance meetings with familiar
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: the milkman you see at dawn, the woman who
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walks her dog along the street every morning, the twin brothers you see at the library. Such people are
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markers in our ey es. They add weight to our
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of place and belonging.
Think about it.
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, while walking to work, we mark Where we are by
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a certain building, why should we not mark where we are when we pass a familiar, though
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, person?