Preview

Personal Narrative: Typhens Have Changed My Life

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1091 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Personal Narrative: Typhens Have Changed My Life
Two words--three, depending on how you feel about hyphens--have changed my life and net financial worth: Mid-Century Modern. If you’re a fan of “Mad Men” or martinis you probably already know about Mid-Mod, this rekindling of love for all things Fifties—sunburst wall clocks, tail fins, Tang, and, most significantly, the suburban ranch house. This infatuation with the brawny, ebullient time following the war when America was in love with space travel and clam dip was not in play twenty years ago when we were house-hunting. I was pregnant and in the thrall of that state’s intractable cravings for salty food and real estate. Two seconds after the stick turned pink the walls of our once-cozy 800 square foot bungalow began closing in on …show more content…
This allowed a couple of sorry sub-primers like us to obey the realtor’s credo--Worst House, Best Neighborhood—and weasel our way into a top-flight school district. The house itself—a suburban ranchburger of dun-colored brick with trim the color of old coffee—was almost beside the point. Two distinguishing features barely saved her low-slung anonymity from total invisibility: She had been built by a Melville scholar in 1960 who’d equipped Ranchburger with nearly 150 linear feet of built-in bookshelves. And she was in our price range. I.e. insanely cheap. This helped us ignore the gold-flecked Formica counters, ancient Venetian blinds, and Sputnik-inspired light …show more content…
I needed not to feel trapped in a suburban neighborhood and she gave us patio doors across the entire back side of the house that faced a greenbelt where deer, squirrels, raccoons, armadillos, foxes, dove, blue jays, cardinals, waxwings, owls, and whippoorwills, capered amongst cedars fuzzy with shaggy bark and towering live oaks twisted into exquisite bonsai shapes. Our son and his friends needed a house that wasn’t cherished that they could colonize and slosh Big Red on and Ranchburger offered herself without reservation. My husband needed to never eat a weed and Ranchburger supplied an untendable thicket of scrub oak and herds of deer that would have gobbled

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    This home's exterior comes with terrible views of the dark gloomy skies. The house is isolated so you will always feel loneliness that will fill your bones with so much depression you will never feel happiness again. You’ll always feel safe with the metal barred windows, until you hear the high-pitched screams from your mentally insane roommates. You won’t ever be annoyed by visitors because they will be to scared to even come near you and your crazy house. Don’t you love the feeling of being sick to your stomach, because that’s the feeling you will get when you see the huge chain fence surrounding your property, so you can’t escape. This horrible home will be so bitterly horrible that you will have to spend the rest of your terrible life there.…

    • 619 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “WHOA WHOA WHOA THIS IS BALONEY MAN!” that is something I say whenever I am frustrated. People have always told me sometimes the best way to learn something is through failure. People value things they have accomplished differently. Often the people whom are naturally adept at things do not realize how much of a struggle it can be for others. Many times when people have told me that if you are going to fall, fall forward. Do not let your insecurities, doubts, and pride get in the way of improving yourself. In brief, there can always be a way to improve yourself.…

    • 733 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mencken, on the other hand, says the people are “sick”, and their “madness” of love for such ugly houses is unexplainable. He states that the people who “prefer that uremic yellow” and have the “most loathsome towns and villages ever seen by mortal eye”, “deserves a great deal more study than it has got”. “Indiana” answers this question, saying it is a “disconnect in the generations of family” that causes this “madness”.…

    • 470 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    With ever story of victory, comes a drowning idea of failure. Throughout our live, these battles are fought, taking not only mental strength, but physical as well. Some of these battles are chosen, while the rest flank from behind. With this in mind, a story of victory must be told, on behalf of my Aunt, Joenell. Her battle took place in April, of 2009, she went to the Suttee Delta hospital, in Antioch California for a doctor’s visit, for fear that something was wrong, during this visit she informed her doctor that she felt a not on her left breast. Soon after, she had a mammogram, and an ultrasound done, revealing three cancerous lumps. As the doctor went into detail, she started to realize the gravity of the situation. For the first time; at the age of 59, she was confronted with the most life threating event she had ever faced. So for a second opinion, she went to the Epic Cancer center, also in Antioch California. Certainly, the last thing anyone would like to hear during a doctor’s visit, she knew there would be some decisions to be made, time to study up.…

    • 603 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    High above the broad valley of the Mississippi reposes an expansive and indestructible mansion. The view it possesses is extraordinary. In autumn the valley blazes with gilded trees, swept with scarlet. The winter’s display is scarcely less lovely, for the valley’s forest is wrapped in the finest lace, while in the spring and summer, it alive with song. Along the brim of the valley lies Summit Avenue, lined with a collection of the stateliest homes in the Mid-west. But the grandest of them all is the wide, Romanesque style mansion. The owner of this manor was an “Empire Builder” of the American sort; James J. Hill, Emperor of the northern railroads.…

    • 997 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Park Slope Research Paper

    • 551 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In Park Slope, twenty minutes disappear in the blink of an eye, as the flitting shadows cast by trees and identical residencies erase all sense of time and direction. Park Slope is a congruous neighborhood to its core, where 9th and 4th looks no different from 4th and 9th. Google Maps swims in the back of my mind, but a bright pink arrow on the sidewalk interrupts that thought. It points down a residential street, and above it reads ‘STOOP SALE’ in bold lettering. I oblige.…

    • 551 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    suburbia

    • 988 Words
    • 4 Pages

    During this time, the so-called baby boom was in full effect. Due to this fact, the housing market soared and suburbia was well on its way. Communities were developed by companies such as The Irvine Company and American Nevada Corporation. Just like in the series “Weeds”, the suburbs are the product of this demand. The developers masterminded cookie cutter homes that looked alike in every aspect and catered to single family dwellers. These types of residences were “well-manicured developments…”(Guterson 158) that David Guterson talks about in his paper, "No Place Like Home.”…

    • 988 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The era of the 1920’s was perceived by many to be “roaring”. Exiting new inventions, entertainment, and social trends dominated the lives of people living in this decade. However, not everything was as glamorous as it seemed at the time, and hindsight has shed much light on the harsh realities of this period. Perhaps the 1920’s were not as “roaring” as people at the time perceived them. Examples of misconceptions in the 1920’s are: that the stock market was “roaring”, that everyone shared in the prosperity, and that society was making leaps forward.…

    • 703 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Essay On Levittown

    • 438 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Throughout the course of time, the contraction of Levittown reshaped the land of suburbia. Before Levittown even existed, people have been appealed to the characters of living beyond the noise, pollution, overcrowding and disease of the city, while still close enough to enjoy the benefits of its industrial and cultural vitality. After World War II, suburbia conjures visions of traditional family life, idyllic domesticity and stability. In 1947, as more houses within this planned community of Levittown were built, the less room people had. Through various changes to the American’s ideal style house, Levittown changed the landscape of suburbia to occupy more people.…

    • 438 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “There she is!” My mom said so exited. “She is so cute!” Says my dad. “She looks like a boy.” My brother Nick says. I sat there in my caregiver's arms in my little yellow outfit. My mom came over and picked me up and hugged me and kissed me. Then My dad swooped me up and hugged me and he swung me around. My brothers lit up like a flashlight when they first saw me. Both of my brothers were so excited to get a new baby sister! **Chongqing** We stayed at the White Swan Hotel in Guangzhou, China. At the White Swan Hotel when I got there was a whole bunch of goodies such as food, clothes, and toys. When I first got back to the hotel I cried because i didn’t know where I was and who I was with. When my parents got me my Nana and Papa came too because they always wanted to go China. when I first saw my Papa I cried because he was wearing a hat like fisherman wore and nobody wore a hat like that in China. They were all woven hats.…

    • 926 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The amount I have changed as a writer is unbelievable. The biggest change is that I no longer loathe writing a paper. I feel as though it comes more naturally than before, and I can now make complete sentences easier than ever before. Another thing that has changed is how quickly I can write a paragraph before I would struggle getting a cohesive thought on a page, but now writing a paragraph that relates all together in some way is easier. All of this brings me onto my next point.…

    • 304 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Throughout my life, I have faced a number of crucibles but one, in particular, is more prominent than the rest. About five years ago, my mom was diagnosed with breast cancer, a traumatic experience that affected my entire family. Each member of my immediate family chose to deal with the news in different ways, however, I am the only one that elected to live in denial. Sadly, the only way I knew how to cope with such devastating news was to continue living my life as if nothing was happening. Denial is simply unsustainable as you cannot escape the memories that the crucible has formed. Nevertheless, years after my mom was originally diagnosed I began to appreciate the experience for what it was rather than shy away from it; developing hardiness.…

    • 316 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    My mother, “Regina Hopkins,” has been a positive influence in my life. She has raised 6 kids all by herself as well as earned a Bachelor’s degree in nursing from a City College in Gainesville, Florida. My mother has been through pretty much everything a person can go through outside of war and was still able to be there and provide for all 6 of her kids. In high school, my mother wanted to play football and couldn't because she was a girl and back-in-the-day women were not allowed to play football with the guys. However, she remained strong by raising 6 kids and independently took care of all of us on her own. My mother has several qualities that I would love to develop. The first quality she has is balance; she certainly knows how to make…

    • 266 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Everyone in their lives overcomes adversity whether it is from work or disability it is never easy. About a year ago, I faced my own near fatal struggle with adversity. Life had become more of a burden than an adventure and nothing seemed to be looking up. Things progressed and events occurred that produced life changing results. After nearly losing my life I realized that things needed to change, mindsets needed to change. The one thing that had not changed was my stubbornness.…

    • 503 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Moving to America

    • 934 Words
    • 4 Pages

    We arrived in a town in Illinois called Rantoul. Dad said the business he was now working for found a place for us to live. We pulled into a parking spot in front of the apartment building. I got out of the car and looked around. Fancy condos and townhomes stood across the street. I turned and looked at where my family and I would be living. The building seemed dark and dingy. At least the lawn looked like it was taken care of.…

    • 934 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics