Endure hardship
After the holiday the school’s ** leadership informed us that this building would be moved to a prisoner-of-war-camp-level dormitory; they had disbanded the dormitory group before the holiday. Later we reformed the group to unify our stance, swearing we would never agree and started a chain to write a complaint letter to the provincial Department of Education. Afterwards the leaders passed a message through the class monitor saying they would not move us and told us not to write the complaint letter.
The school’s ** leadership organized a campus run, forcing us to use a running app called Sports World Campus that was full of advertisements, and they even had people on the playground catching runners-for-hire (ridiculous — a legitimate running app competing in the market would never have that many ads; who would believe the leaders took bribes? They also pretended to care about students’ health while supervising running, ***). I couldn’t stand it, so I stopped running; I failed PE. In the end the school arranged a retest: a 1,000-meter run in 4 minutes 30 seconds would pass.
I couldn’t tolerate spending half an hour getting to the gym, so I set up a gym for myself in the dormitory hallway and at home.
I couldn’t stand my time being wasted on ** courses, so I often skipped class, half-heartedly copied homework, and teachers never failed me for skipping class.
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