Listen to the passage, and fill in the blanks. One of the most successful, __1__ and __2__ women in American history, Eleanor Roosevelt once said that she had one regret: she wished she had been __3__. Who hasn’t felt the same way? We are all too __4__ of our __5__ imperfections. To overcome them, we spend billions upon billions of dollars every year on __6__, diet products, fashion, and plastic __7__. Why do we care so much about how we look? Because it __8__. Because beauty is powerful. Because even when we learn to value people mostly for being kind and wise and funny, we are still __9__ by beauty. No matter how much we argue against it or pretend to be __10__, beauty __11__ its power over us. There is simply no escape. Our __12__ to physical beauty is not something we can control at __13__. We are born with it. Experiments __14__ by __15__ Judith J. Langlois showed that even small __16__ prefer to look at attractive faces. Before they have met a single supermodel, before they have watched a single TV show, before they have opened up a single fashion magazine, they are drawn to the same faces which adults have __17__ to be attractive. There are more important things in life than beauty. But as Etcoff says, “We have to understand beauty, or we will always be __18__ by it.” If you __19__ to be wise and kind and funny, it doesn’t mean that you can’t also try your best to look beautiful. There’s no reason to feel __20__about being moved by beauty’s power. It moves us all.