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Story

The Long Walk

🏷 Journey 💡 Travel & Transport A1 A2 B1 B2
The Long Walk
Language focus: Present simple; basic movement verbs; feel + adjective

Before you read

  • Do you walk to school or work?
  • Is it far?
  • Do you get tired?

The story A1

Eva walks home from school.
It is a long walk.
She feels tired.
She sits and rests.
She gets home safely.

Key words

walk verb
to move on foot "Eva walks home every day."
tired adjective
needing rest "She feels very tired."
rest verb
to stop and relax for a time "She rests by the road."

Comprehension

  1. 1 Where is Eva walking?
  2. 2 How does she feel?
  3. 3 What does she do when tired?

Discussion

  1. 1 How far do you walk each day?

Personal reflection

  1. 1 Do you like walking? Why or why not?

Activities

  • Talk about how you travel to school or work
  • Draw a route between two places
  • Name 5 ways people travel

Writing task

Write 3 sentences: 'I walk to ___. It takes ___. When I am tired, I ___.'

The Long Walk
Language focus: Past simple; adverbs (slowly, carefully, eventually); expressing determination

Before you read

  • Have you ever had to walk a very long distance?
  • What helps you keep going when you are tired?
  • Is it important to finish things you start?

The story A2

Eva had a long walk home after a tiring day at school.
She felt exhausted halfway, and thought about stopping.
But she knew she had to keep going.
She rested briefly under a tree, then continued.
She arrived home late but proud of herself for finishing.

Key words

exhausted adjective
extremely tired "She felt exhausted by the middle of the walk."
determined adjective
having decided firmly to do something "She was determined to reach home."
proud adjective
feeling pleased with something you have achieved "She felt proud when she arrived."

Comprehension

  1. 1 When did Eva feel like stopping?
  2. 2 What did she do to recover?
  3. 3 How did she feel at the end?

Discussion

  1. 1 What motivates you when something is hard?

Personal reflection

  1. 1 Tell your partner about a time you completed something difficult.

Activities

  • Write about a challenge you completed
  • Discuss what helps people persevere
  • Share stories of difficult journeys — physical or other

Writing task

Write a short paragraph about a time you did something physically or mentally challenging. How did you feel at the end?

The Long Walk
Language focus: Past continuous and simple; internal monologue; endurance and motivation; contrast between difficulty and satisfaction

Before you read

  • What is the relationship between difficulty and satisfaction?
  • How do you motivate yourself when something feels too hard?
  • Is it always right to finish things?

The story B1

Eva had known it would be a long walk. What she had not fully anticipated was how long it would feel once she was in the middle of it — the way each section seemed to extend rather than reduce the remaining distance.
She was about halfway when she stopped. Not because she needed to, particularly, but because a low wall offered itself and she found herself sitting on it before she had quite decided to. She drank some water and watched the road ahead.
The temptation to call someone for a lift was real. Her phone had signal; someone would come. But she had started this walk with the intention of finishing it, and she found — somewhat to her own surprise — that she was not yet ready to give up on that intention.
She stood up and continued. The walk did not get shorter. But something shifted in her approach to it — she stopped measuring the distance ahead and started paying attention to what was immediately around her: the sound of the road, the colour of the light, the particular rhythm of her own footsteps.
She arrived home an hour later than expected, stiff and tired in a way that was also, undeniably, satisfying. She had done it not because it was necessary but because she had said she would. She found, somewhat to her surprise, that this distinction mattered.

Key words

anticipated verb
expected something in advance "She hadn't anticipated how long it would feel."
temptation noun
a strong desire to do something you know you perhaps shouldn't "The temptation to call for help was real."
rhythm noun
a regular repeated pattern of movement or sound "She noticed the rhythm of her footsteps."
undeniably adverb
clearly and certainly true "It was undeniably satisfying."

Comprehension

  1. 1 Why did Eva sit on the wall?
  2. 2 What kept her going?
  3. 3 What shift in thinking helped her manage the final section?

Discussion

  1. 1 Is finishing always better than stopping? Are there times when stopping is the right choice?

Personal reflection

  1. 1 Think of a time you kept going with something difficult. What kept you going?

Activities

  • Discuss perseverance versus stubbornness
  • Write about a time you wanted to give up but continued
  • Debate: quitting is sometimes the wisest choice

Writing task

Write a paragraph: Is it always important to finish what you start? When might it be better to stop?

The Long Walk
Language focus: Literary register; interior reflection; abstract vocabulary (resolve, endurance, intention); contrast between effort and meaning

Before you read

  • Why do people sometimes choose to do difficult things the hard way?
  • What is the relationship between effort and meaning?
  • Is there value in doing something the slow or hard way?

The story B2

Eva had been offered a lift. She had declined it, which she recognised, even as she said it, as the kind of decision that looked different depending on how things turned out. If she arrived refreshed and satisfied, it would seem like wisdom. If she arrived exhausted and behind schedule, it would seem like stubbornness. At the halfway point, the distinction felt academic.
The walk was longer than she had thought, and the middle section was harder than expected. She stopped twice, not because her body required it but because her mind was moving faster than her feet and she needed a moment to let them find the same pace.
There was something she was working out, she realised, though she could not have said precisely what. Not a problem, exactly — more a kind of settling. The movement helped. There is a quality of thought available during sustained physical effort that is not available any other way: less directed, less careful, more willing to sit with uncertainty rather than resolve it.
By the time she reached home, two hours after she had set out, she was tired in the specific way of someone who has used their body well. She made tea, sat by the window, and was aware — without quite being able to explain it — of feeling more organised in herself than she had when she left. The walk had done something she had not known she needed.
She thought, briefly, about the person who had offered the lift. She would thank them again. But she was glad she had said no.

Key words

gradient noun
the steepness of a slope "The gradient seemed gentle until she was on it."
sustained adjective
continuing for a long time without interruption "Sustained effort allows a different kind of thinking."
resolve verb
to bring to a conclusion; also: firm determination "She was willing to sit with uncertainty rather than resolve it."
academic adjective
theoretical; of no practical relevance "The distinction felt academic midway through."

Comprehension

  1. 1 What does Eva mean when she says the wisdom/stubbornness distinction 'felt academic'?
  2. 2 What kind of thinking does she suggest is available only during sustained effort?
  3. 3 What does the final line suggest about her decision?

Discussion

  1. 1 Does doing things the hard way sometimes produce value that cannot be achieved the easy way?

Personal reflection

  1. 1 Have you deliberately done something the harder way? Why, and what did you learn?

Activities

  • Discuss: what kinds of thinking are best done during physical activity?
  • Write a reflection on a difficult journey — physical or metaphorical
  • Debate: we undervalue physical effort in modern life

Writing task

Write a personal essay (200–250 words): 'Sometimes the longer route is the better one.' Explore this idea using examples from the story and your own experience.