Question : Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow.
On the afternoon of her fortieth birthday, I called a friend to wish her well. I asked about her plans for the rest of the day and learned that a celebration had already taken place. In the morning, my friend, her two sisters and her husband had risen high into the Kentucky sky in a hot-air balloon. 'What was it like?' I asked. "Well, I don't know if I can explain it." she said. "I was so focused on the moment when it was actually happening."
What I learned from my friend that morning is that sometimes, to be in the moment, you must surrender to it completely. That's not to say you won't remember it later, though you may forfeit the chance to put the moment into words. And although I couldn't say exactly what my pal experienced that morning, I heard the thrill and awe in her voice.
To truly be present, one must live inside the moment and experience it for its own sake. If you live outside the moment - observing and explaining - you're no longer absorbing and feeling. The moment breaks apart and eventually disappears. Think of a movie. Sometimes it's impossible to explain what you've seen. On another level, though, one you can't necessarily pinpoint, you know that once you begin dissecting your experience, you take away from it as well.
Question:
Why couldn't the author's friend explain about the experience on her birthday?
Option 1: She was focused on flying
Option 2: She was in the hot-air balloon
Option 3: She was focused in the moment
Option 4: She was too busy focusing on her friends
Correct Answer:
She was focused in the moment
Solution : The correct option is 3
'She was focused in the moment.'
Explanation:
Let us look at the passage:
"Well, I don't know if I can explain it." she said. "I was so focused on the moment, when it was actually happening."
From the above statement we can deduce that option 3 is the correct statement.