However, these three or five sentences were quite difficult. Su Qingluan often shuffled the order and then checked randomly, or even maliciously read only half a sentence and asked Su Xuanhe to continue reciting.
Under the "encouragement" of Su Qingluan's random checking method, which was inspired by the "cloze test" in various exams in his previous life, Su Xuanhe never fell behind in memorizing - after all, if he couldn't memorize it, something like a slap on the palm was child's play.
Su Qingluan knew very well what her younger brother liked - climbing trees to catch cicadas, diving into the water to catch fish and shrimps, and he liked anything that could jump up and down.
So if he couldn't memorize the book, Su Qingluan didn't beat or scold him, but just made him stand in the corner - or "sit in the corner", anyway, she just watched - while she took her sister and other children in the village on outings, picnics, etc.
For a child with Su Xuanhe's temperament, this was far more painful than any beating or scolding—after all, he'd been beaten a lot since childhood, and the beatings had made him tougher. Furthermore, as he grew older, he ran like the wind. Not to mention Su Qingluan, even Su Guangfu, the fastest runner in the family, had a hard time beating Su Xuanhe.
However, some punishments hurt more than "beating and scolding". Su Qingluan only let Su Xuanhe "watch coldly" twice, and the child was afraid. From then on, whenever Su Qingluan asked him to memorize the book, he would have to memorize it even if he had to sleep a little later or get up a little earlier the first day.
Of course, in the past six months, Su Xuanhe has become more self-conscious and no longer needs "tough measures" to help correct his lazy behavior.
The people in the Su family are still the same, but they are all quietly changing.
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