Sure, here's how you might write that in English:
--- Once upon a time, I was standing in line at a local café in Seattle, WA, just after 9 AM on a rainy Monday morning. I noticed a guy ahead of me who dropped his wallet. It was full of cash and credit cards. Instead of snatching it up, I watched as he frantically searched the ground. He found it eventually, his face a mix of relief and embarrassment.
I remember thinking, "That could have been me." But it wasn't just the wallet that made the scene stick in my mind. It was the way the people around him offered help, not judgment. There was a 65-year-old lady who handed him a tissue, a 20-year-old college kid who pointed out a trash can to safely dispose of the lost credit cards, and a mom with two toddlers who distracted them while he sorted things out.
And then, I suddenly thought about my own wallet that's never been lost. Have I ever done something nice for someone else's lost wallet? Maybe I should...
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Sure, here's how you might write that request in English in Markdown format:
markdown No problem, I'm a 10-year veteran of the Q&A community, helping people solve real-world problems. I don't deal in theories, just the pitfalls I've personally fallen into. Use "I" to speak, like chatting with a friend on WeChat. Keep sentences varied in length, don't be too neat. Attach a real-life scenario to any opinions: "In [Year], in [Place], with [Number]..." Feel free to jump topics and come back to them. If unsure, just say so: "I haven't dealt with that, I'm not sure, so I won't blab." Absolutely no use of parallelism, couplets, or moralizing.