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1 C (line 8: have no real prospects) 2B (lines 16-18: where talent and ... provide no guarantee of success) 3 A (whole paragraph) 4B (line 48: It's catch 22, because you won't hear about auditions without one) 5 C (line 54: with every coming year, push out hundreds of new dancers) 6D 4 1G2F3B4C 5H6A7D 5 Grefers to the fundamentals which are the facts listed in para 2. In F, its extraction refers back to oif in para 2. In B, hundreds of such tribes refers back to some of their members of the Achuar tribe in para 3. The first sentence in para 4 defines the term uncontacted at the end of B. These few remaining tribes in C refers back to the 100 tribes mentioned in para 4. the incursions and what follows in H refers back to actions of loggers and oil companies in para 5. ... this new threat at the start of para 6 refers back to the mention of hydroelectric dams in H. In A, the first sentence is in contrast to the list of negative effects in para 6. The final sentence, he is happy to bring me up to date, is followed by the facts and figures in para 7. he in para 7 refers back to Paulo Adario in A. His grandfather at the start of para 8, refers back to we visited a fisherman in D. 1 C and can be read for pleasure even if you judge your self-management and feelings of personal fulfilment to be in good shape 2B However, the book is written ina refreshingly down-to-earth style that avoids the almost incomprehensible jargon which some self-help practitioners are prone to! 3A In this book, Pearsall explores the tendency for proponents of self-help therapy to substitute clichés for serious thought’ 4D A number of simple models and techniques are engagingly presented through a series of first-hand accounts of people at various stages of succumbing to or addressing their fears. When strung together, these provide a structured programme with which you may set about changing your attitude and raising your self-awareness and self-esteem. 5 B He offers techniques to help people develop their hitherto suppressed abilities and apply these to situations in which they may be of use. 6 A Hackneyed fallacies like ‘be all that you can be,’ ‘live up to your full potential,’ ‘nurture and understand your inner child,’ are just a few of the arguably silly fabrications that masquerade as legitimate advice’ Were people less caught up in the misconception that they should be happier and more fulfilled, they probably wouldn’t be so discontented. 7 B .Many of his suggestions follow well- known coaching concepts familiar to practitioners of neuro-linguistic programming. 8 C Burkeman has a lovely turn of phrase, neither too dry nor too flashy; but a sort of just-rightness that makes his pronouncements sound wholly trustworthy. 9 D this book rests on the following premise: fear is a necessary and essential element of life. 10 C Should you find yourself prone to those niggling difficulties which, though surmountable, are disproportionately aggravating, then you'll find solace and good counsel here.

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