Going back as far as I can remember as a child in an Indian area, I had no senses of knowing about the other people around me except that we were all somehow equal. There was only one class. __71__
You could see it in our games. __72__ There weren't any competitive sports. But we took part in lots of activities and we were organized, but not in the sense that there were wars of finding out who had won and who had lost. __73__ Even if we did formally take part in the games we played, no one was a winner though someone may have won. It was only at that moment. If you beat someone by pulling a bow and arrow and shooting the arrow further, it didn't mean you were better in any way. __74__ Maybe it was just the way you let the bow go. These kinds of things are very important to me and that is why I am talking about them.
One of the very important things was the relationship we had with our families. __75__ We lived wherever we happened to be at that particular time when it got dark. If you were two or three miles away from home, then that was where you slept.
A.It just meant that at that particular time the arrow went further.
B.Nobody organized them.
C.I should help it.
D.We played balls like everyone else, but no one kept scores.
E.Nobody was interested in getting on top of anybody else.
F.We didn't always live at home.
G.People had to return to their home to spend the night.