A When Mary Moore began her
high school in 1951, her mother told her, "Be sure and take a typing course so
when this show business thing doesn’t work out, you’ll have something to rely
on. " Mary responded in typical teenage fashion. From that moment on, "the very
last thing I ever thought about doing was taking a typing course," she
recalls. The show business thing worked out, of course. In her
career, Mary won many awards. Only recently, when she began to write Growing Up
Again, did she regret ignoring her mom, "I don’t know how to use a computer,"
she admits. Unlike her 1995 autobiography, after all, her
second book is less about life as an award-winning actress and more about living
with diabetes (糖尿病). All the money from the book is intended for the Juvenile
Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF), an organization she serves as international
chairman. "I felt there was a need for a book like this," she says. "I didn’t
want to lecture, but I wanted other diabetics to know that things get better
when we’re self-controlled and do our part in managing the disease. "
But she hasn’t always practiced what she teaches. In her book, she
describes that awful day, almost 40 years ago, when she received two pieces of
life-changing news. First, she had lost the baby she was carrying, and second,
tests showed that she had diabetes. In a childlike act, she left the hospital
and treated herself to a box of doughnuts (甜甜圈). Years would pass before she
realized she had to grow up again and take control of her diabetes, not let it
control her. Only then did she kick her three-pack-a-day cigarette habit,
overcome her addiction to alcohol, and begin to follow a balanced
diet. Although her disease has affected her eyesight and forced
her to the sidelines of the dance floor, she refuses to fall into self-pity.
"Everybody on earth can ask, why me about something or other," she insists. "It
doesn’t do any good. No one is immune (免疫的) to heartache, pain, and
disappointments. Sometimes we can make things better by helping others. I’ve
come to [realize] the importance of that as I’ve grown up this second
time. I want to speak out and be as helpful as I can be. " We can know that before 1995 Mary ______.
A.had two books published
B.received many career awards
C.knew how to use a computer
D.supported the JDRF by writing