Lesson 22
Tell Us About Your Hobbies
Text A
| JOHN: |
What I like most, I suppose, is the fact that it's so unusual. I
mean, when I |
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tell people what I do,they just look at me usually as if
I'm mad.Maybe I am, |
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anyway what I do is this. I get up about a quarter past
six every morning. |
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I leave my wife in bed because she's not as mad as me - and I
put my trunks |
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on under under tracksuit and drive down to |
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the park with my clothes in a case. It only takes about five
minutes .because |
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there's no traffic of course at that time in the morning. So,
when I get there |
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I leave the car in the car park and run round a bit.I usually
run for about ten |
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minutes till I'm nice and warm, then comes the interesting bit.
I run over to |
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the car,get my case and then over to the pool. I take my
tracksuit off and -in |
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I jump. It's pretty cold I can tell you especially in the middle
of winter-but |
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I do a coupte of quick lengths and then I climb out, get changed
and drive |
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home, I just get back in time for breakfast - and I normally
feel I've earned |
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it too.
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| JACK: |
Well, it's very detailed work you see, but I find it very
relaxing. It's |
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strange I suppose that something like this where you have to
concentrate a |
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lot can be relaxing |
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ing, but you see in my job I'm always making decisions and
telling people what |
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to do but I never actuplly see what I've done. This is
completely different. |
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You see, here I'm actually making something myself. I start with
a kite, |
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usually it's got all the basic materials in it. Then you have to
cut out all |
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the shapes from the wood and stick them together. When you've
made the frame, |
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the wings and the fuselage, that is, you cover them with special
paper and |
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paint. Of course if it's going |
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to fly properly, everything has to be properly balanced, you
know.. I must say |
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really though. I think I enjoy actaually making them more than
flying them.
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| JANE: |
Well in a sense I suppose I do it to save money. I mean things
are so |
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incredibly .expensive in the shops nowadays days, aren't they?
But that's not |
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the only reason really |
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No, the beautiful thing is that you can make what you want when
you want-and in |
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material you've chosen. I mean you don't have to depend on some
paris designer |
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to say what is fashionable. If you like an idea you see then of
course you |
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can copy it , but it gives you much more independence to do it
yourself. |
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I mean obviously it takes time , but I enjoy it , and with a
sewing machine |
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it doesn't take all that long to make even quite complicated
things. And then |
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finally you know that you've got something really unique.
Especially if it's |
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something you've designed yourself.
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| HARRY: |
Well, it gives me the chance to be alone-and for me that's
really the most It |
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important thing I suppose,after being with crowds of people all
week. |
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gives you time to think, you know. And another thing is that it
gets me |
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out of doors. I suppose it isn't very energetic really after
all. I mean you |
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don't do very much except just sit there, but at least it's in
the fresh air. |
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And that's more than you can say for things like darts, isn't
it? No, |
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that's really what I like about it.I like having time to think
in the open air. |
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I'm not terribly keen on the man against animal bit, you know
man |
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the hunter against nature. No, actually I don t usually catch
very many you |
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know. And if I do, I always throw them straight back. |
Text B
| JEFF: |
What's on the telly this evening? I feel like relaxing. |
| MARY: |
Why ask me that? You know I never watch it. |
| JEFE: |
Too busy with the latest hobby, are you? What is it this time,
knitting socks |
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for your nephews? Or collecting buttons? I wish I had as much
free time as |
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you do. |
| MARY: |
Men! As a matter of fact, you probably have more than I do. But
you waste it |
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all watching your telly. |
| JEFF: |
That's not a waste of time. I've got to rest sometimes. |
| MARY: |
Sometimes , maybe , but not all the time. And anyway ,I relax
with my hobbies. |
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A change is as good as a rest. |
| JEFF: |
Well, the telly's my hobby, and I learn a lot from it. |
| MARY: |
But it doesn't teach you to do anything, does it? You ust sit
there and stare |
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at it. That's not lerning. |
| JEFF: |
But I do learn. There are lots of educational programmes. |
| MARY: |
But you don't watch them, do you? Whenever an educational |
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programme comes on, you eithes switch ove to the other channel
or go to sleep. |
| JEFF: |
When I come home from work. I need to put my feet up, at least
for a while. |
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Life's not all work, you know. |
| MARY: |
Hobbies aren't work, Jeff. I like putting my feet up, too, at
the end of the |
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day,but I like doing things while I rest. Life's too short for
us to waste time. |
| JEFF: |
Mary dear, as I've said many times, we're different. There are
two kinds of |
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people in the world. . . |
| MARY: |
I know, I know. Those who are never happy unless they're running
about doing |
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things. . . |
| JEFF: |
That's right, and those who are never happy unless they're doing
nothing. I'm |
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one of the latter and you. . . |
| MARY: |
I know, dear. I'm one of the former. And proud of it. |
| JEFF: |
So now we agree. Live, and let live. You can go peacefully back
to your -button |
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collection, and I can watch TV. |
| MARY: |
If only you organised yourself better, there's so much you could
do, really. |
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You're wasting your talents. And one last thing I'm not
collecting buttons. |
| JEFF: |
What are you doing then? Making sculptures from potatoes? |
| MARY: |
No, I'm learning how to make Turkish cakes, and the first ones
came out very well. |
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Of course, if you're too tired, I won't insist on you trying
them. |
Additional lnformation
A hobby can be almost anything a person likes to do in
his spare time. Hobbyists raise pets, build model ships, weave baskets, or
carve soap figures.They watch birds, hunt animals, climb mountains, raise
flowers, fish, ski, skate, and swim. Hobbyists also paint pictures, attend
concerts and plays, and perform on musical instruments. They collect
everything from books to butterflies, and from shells to stamps.
People take up hobbies because these activities offer
enjoyment, friendship, knowledge, and relaxation. Sometimes they even
yield financial profit. Hobbies help people relax after periods of hard
work, and provide a balance between work and play. Hobbies also offer
interesting activities for persons who have retired. Anyone, rich or poor,
old or young, sick or well, can follow a satisfying hobby, regardless of
his age, position, or income.
Hobbies can help a person's mental and physical health.
Doctors have found that hobbies are valuable in helping patients recover
from physical or mental illness. Hobbies give bedridden or wheel-chair
patients something to do, and provide interests that keep them from
thinking about themselves. Many hospitals treat patients by having them
take up interesting hobbies or pastimes.
In early times, most people were too busy making a
living to have many hobbies. But some persons who had leisure did enjoy
hobbies. The ancient Egyptians played games with balls made of wood,
pottery, and papyrus. some Greeks and Romans collected miniature soldiers.
People today have more time than ever before for
hobbies. Machines and automation have reduced the amount of time they must
spend on their jobs. Hobbies provide variety for workers who do the same
monotonous tasks all day long. More people are retiring than ever before,
and at an earlier age. Those who have developed hobbies never need to
worry about what to do with their newly-found leisure hours.
Sir William Osler, a famous Canadian doctor, expressed
the value of hobbies by saying, "No man is really happy or safe
without a hobb.y, and it makes precious little difference what the outsidc
interest may be-botany, bcetles, or butterflies; roses, tulips, or irises:
fishing, mountaimeering, or antiques - anything will do so long as he
straddles a hobby and rides it hard. "
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