Passage 2
“Smiling doesn't win you gold medals," the gymnast Simone Biles famously retorted when a judge told her to smile more. While that may be true, few would deny that life without smiles would be diminished in ways we can scarcely imagine. Does the physical act of smiling create joy, or the other way around? What happens if you can't smile, even though you want to? These are questions that the distinguished American playwright Sarah Ruhl explores, with a winning combination of wisdom and knowledge.
Ruhl lost her smile for more than 10 years due to Bell's palsy (麻痹), which meant she could not move the left side of her face at all. The morning after she gave birth to twins (she already had an older daughter, aged three), she looked in the mirror, astonished to see that half her face had fallen. She couldn't move the left side at all. That moment marked a profound shift in her life. Bell's palsy can be brought on by childbirth, although the link is not well understood. While most sufferers recover in weeks or months, Ruhl was one of the unlucky few in whom it endures.
At the time, Ruhl was on a professional high; one of her plays had just transferred to Broadway, and was nominated for a Tony award. Soon after the twins were born, Vanity Fair asked her to do a Tony awards photo shoot. When she saw the photo, she couldn't bear her expression of pain, and resolved not to be photographed again. “I felt inside a paradox: I thought I could not truly re-enter the world again until I could smile; and yet, how could I be happy enough to smile, when I couldn't re-enter the world?"
The personal implications were more torturous still. What does it do to her babies, she wonders, to look into an unsmiling face every day? Will they know that their mother loves and delights in them? She reads that mothers teach children empathy by mirroring their facial expressions. Will her inability to do so mess her children up? And on it goes, Ruhl's ability to feel joy maddeningly limited by her inability to express it. She observes that joy is a profoundly embodied experience, and quotes Thich Nhat Hanh: “Sometimes your joy is the source of your smile, but sometimes your smile can be the source of your joy."
Ruhl makes many interesting observations on the wider significance of smiles, from strangers in the street demanding that women should smile, to the frozen statue of Hermione in The Winter's Tale. This is a book about far more than smiles: some of the most touching sections look back at Ruhl's childhood, and the experiences that propelled her into theatre. The tale of a health condition is, more interestingly, the tale of the person who suffers from ill health.
Like many people who live with chronic health conditions, Ruhl is forced to become part detective, part medical researcher, as she tracks down the people and therapies that work for her. But Smile is not just a patient's medical history; it's the story of a passionate and committed woman trying to forge a life that nourishes her creativity, her children, her health and joy. That's a journey many of us can relate to—and this book serves as a welcome invitation to worry about it all a little less, and smile a little more.
What does the author think of Ruhl's story?
A、It involves too much medical information.
B、It delivers a sincere and touching message.
C、It reveals the dark side of a working mother.
D、It is told in away as if a dream has come true.
【正确答案】:B
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