Chelsea Fearce is seventeen years old. There are five members in her family. They are poor that they live in a Shelter (收容所). "Getting a shower, food and clean clothes was not easy for (I)," Fearce said. "I'm worried my family and my home life. I know I have to become stronger (offer) my family a good life."
When she was in high school, Fearce often stayed up late to study she wanted to have a (good) life than before. She just told herself to keep (work).
Fearce overcame (克服) all the (difficulty). She got high grades and she became a college student. "Never (give) up! Do what you have to do right now so that you can have bright future." Fearce told everyone.
Barbara Finch, from England, started a friendship with Elizabeth Martin from New Zealand when the two were just 14 years old. And they have been penfriends for the past seventy years.
"Seventy years is a long time and such a lot has happened," says Barbara. "I've lost my husband and my son, and she's lost her husband and her daughter. With things like that, her friendship means a lot to me."
The two started writing letters to each other in November 1947. At that time, Barbara was a pupil. In her school, there was an exchange teacher from New Zealand. She helped her students to find penfriends from her country. Among the many penfriends, Barbara and Elizabeth were the only pair to form a long-term friendship.
Now both 84, the pair continue to send weekly emails to tell each other about their daily lives. Barbara, who's a proud great-grandmother, has kept every single letter and card Elizabeth sent her over the years.
"We email each other now rather than write letters, partly because it's quicker but mostly because there's no cost," Barbara says.
The pair not only write to each other, but they also meet face to face. They have visited each other 15 times—Barbara flying to New Zealand 10 times and Elizabeth flying to England 5 times.
"Her family has become a second family to me. She says I am the sister she never had," Barbara says.