Wednesday, November 2, 2011

America Impression

Two white tents caught my attention.

 A medium-sized Red Cross patched on their left side, facing in front of me. Though ordinary the tents were, the location they appeared pointed their specialty and significance.

Sunday morning, on October 16, 2011, I showed in the Martin Luther King Memorial Dedication in National Mall of Washington, D.C. I didn’t shock by a huge quantity of crowds—over fifty thousand people spanning all ages and races—gathering together, sitting or standing, occupied every inch of grassland of West Potomac Park. Nor did I stagger that tons of policemen hanging around the different corners of venue for safeguarding.

I surprised that two white tents, set up parallel, about 16 feet intervasl, occupied a spacious room in the grassland, with twisted-rope fences separating them from the center area. Compared to crowds thronging around them, the tents stood quiet and distinctively, and a blood-red Cross showed people their duty was acted as an emergency room preventing injuries. 

That was the most awardable scenery that America impressed me. Whenever attending a big event, I will find the same white tents standing along. Psychologically, it soothed one’s nervousness if  unexpected accidents occurred; furthermore, it delivered a message—a humanitarian assistance will secure every individual traveling here.

My heart was full of appreciation. I feel hospitable. Even though it was a trivial detail of the event, it presented me a thoughtful consideration made by planners—they care about every life living in this land.

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