Define summary and summarize the content of the following passage by Natalie Goldberg titled "One Plus One Equals a Mercedes-Benz":< I always tell my students, especially the sixth-graders, the ones who are becoming very worldlywise: Turn off your logical brain that says 1 + 1 = 2. Open up your mind to the possibility that 1 + 1 can equal 48, a Mercedes-Benz, an apple pie, a blue horse. Don't tell your autobiography with facts, such as "I am in sixth grade. I am a boy. I live in Owatonna. I have a mother and father." Tell me who you really are: "I am the frost on the window, the cry of a young wolf, the thin blade of grass." Forget yourself. Disappear into everything you look at-a street, a glass of water, a cornfield. Everything you feel, become totally that feeling, burn all of yourself with it. Don't worry-your ego will quickly become nervous and stop such ecstasy. But if you can catch that feeling or smell or sight the moment you are one with it, you probably will have a great poem. Then we fall back on the earth again. Only the writing stays with the great vision. That's why we have to go back again and again to books-good books, that is. And read again and again the visions of who we are, how we can be. The struggle we go through as human beings, so we can again and again have compassion for ourselves and treat each other kindly.< (This text has been reproduced from pages 75-76 of Conversations About Writing by M. Elizabeth Sargent and Cornelia C. Paraskevas, published by Thomson Nelson in 2005.)