What would happen if your childhood was stolen? In some places children's childhoods have been stolen. Maybe because they have to make more money or their house was destroyed.Katherine Boo explain how a boy named Abdul, childhood was stolen. Author Katherine Boo did a better job Behind the Beautiful Forever, did a better job at describing the story better and she made the story easier to understand, using description, action, and foreshadowing.…
Brianna Gaebel Due Date: Wednesday 22nd Journal 9 I am reading Awake by Natasha Preston, and I am on page 100. The book is about a girl name Scarlett who losses her memory when she was four years old during a house fire and 12 years later she gets into a accident and starts to recall events that happened when she was younger. In this book I will be predicting. G…
In Julia Lawrinson’s ‘Bye, Beautiful’, Sandy Lansing is a character of many layers as she is portrayed as a victim, villain and a hero. At first she is timid and living in her sister Marianne’s shadow, but soon shows her bitterness and jealousy towards Marianne. As we near the end of the book however, she puts her own feelings aside and shows her bravery when she stands up for her sister.…
Miranda Lambert is using the power of music to express her feelings about her recent split from Blake Shelton.…
Kay Redfield Jamison’s, ‘An Unquiet Mind: A Memoir of Moods and Madness’ is a first person memoir about the author’s life and struggles with having manic-depressive illness, or bi-polar disorder. It is an eye-opening read, as well as one that is much easier to read rather than a textbook or essay on the subject. She discusses her experiences with bi-polar, as well as the issues of taking lithium, and being a psychologist with the disorder.…
It is common for our society to prejudge the worth or value of something or someone by their outward appearance alone. In the essay entitled “Highway of Lost Girls” Vanessa Veselka returns back to the scene of her fugitive youth searching for clues, particularly that horrifying experience one night on I-95 when she hitched a ride from a stranger. Her essay also successfully exposes the struggle of invisible girls that were victimized and lost their lives to the hands of the serial killer Robert Ben Rhoades. Veselka’s use of suspense, pace and setting makes her essay very compelling.…
The article “Singing a Subversive Song of Hope” by Lydia Neufeld Harder focuses on the different definitions of service and draws on how service that is inclusive has strong connections with a feminist reading of the Bible. The ideal definition of service is “something a person does for someone else, thus at least temporarily preferring the other’s good to one’s own (Harder, 14). For Harder, service strays away from this ideal model when there becomes ambiguity where love for oneself and love for others overlaps.…
Senior year is like listening to a broken radio that repeats the same phrase over and over again. As an incoming freshman in college, we are still unable to throw this broken radio out. We've been forced to listen to the phrase "How are you going be successful in college?" I believe that everyone has a different definition of being successful in college. For me, being successful in college is keeping up with my grades and living my life to the fullest.…
Among all the justice related issues both Audre Lorde, author of “Sister Outsider,” and Alike, the protagonist from the movie Pariah address issues regarding sexual discrimination and racism. Both of these women are black, lesbian, females who operate as every other person but are seen as different due to their sexual orientation. Lorde expresses herself as being classified by others as deviant, inferior, or just plain wrong because she is lesbian (Pg. 114). Alike, as well as Lorde, endured the same dehumanizing language used against her by not only strangers but her own mother. All of this to show how similar and prevalent these women’s experiences still occur in the 21st century. Whether it be recognizing the issues of racism against blacks,…
Enter Without So Much as Knocking What is the poem about? The Poem follows the journey of a man’s life from birth into society to death. It shows how he and his family conform to society as becomes just like everybody else taking a critical view of modern day society. The signs throughout the poem indicate that we, as humans, are told how to live. Beginning with the birth of the child in the hospital, comes home to hear Bobby Dazzler on the TV, where the baby is seen as lucky because he doesn’t understand what he is saying doesn’t mean anything to him. As a young child it is shown how he and his family conformed to be like every other family. As a young boy his mum won some money where the family was able to buy the typical ‘Australian’ station wagon. Going into young adult hood he changes from being optimistic to becoming just like everybody else and losing his individuality, greedy for money only thinking about himself. By death he is seen to have been an untrustworthy and selfish man. They try to give his body an identity “adding a healthy tan he’d never had” What is the poet trying to say? The main idea of the poem is Memento, homo, quia pulvis, et in pulverem reverteris… Remember man that thoughart dust and unto dust that shall return. The poet is trying to say that it doesn’t matter how many consumer items and materialistic things you buy, everybody ends up the same way, back to dust again. He is trying to say that the world is run buy consumerism which has lead to conformity and taken away the individuality of many people. The conformity is shown in stanza three through the signs which we all live by. Bruce Dawe highlights that humans seem to destroy and change everything they can get their hands on, but they have been unable to change the stars, or had gotten around to fixing them yet. Dawe shows that as we change from childhood to adulthood our views on the world and society change, we become more greedy, selfish and most people only care about themselves…
Stress is an unavoidable cause of living in the real world. It can cause several health complications or can help you get out of a dangerous situation in a pinch, but how much stress is too much? In “The Most Stressed Out Generation? Young Adults”, Alexandra Sifferlin sees stress as a problem that troubles young adults everywhere. Sifferlin ties in the research and evidence to back up her point. Her clear and enlightening tone allowed me to grasp each and every word in the article. Furthermore, reading each paragraph lets the reader find out something new about how Americans rate and handles their stress.…
The movement to change from tradition comes in many forms, but includes complex and often hostile results. The change may be subtle and seem to lack a negative results; however, breaking away from the deep roots of tradition will cause an effect overflowing with strong emotions. This overflowing of emotions will carry over into unseen areas of peoples life’s and culture. This idea remains true when the broader society experiences tension from an individual changing from the society’s traditional values to the individuals values. Authors Barbara Mellix, Nancy Scheper-Hughes, and Robert Scholes wrote essays attempting to explain the struggle individuals and society face when trying to follow the traditional path instead of their own path to achieve success. As a result, too much tradition limits and controls people’s gifts and talents. Therefore, an individual and the broader society needs to learn from the tradition taught to them and strive to travel their own path to display the power within an individual.…
The general thought among all people is that the only things that truly matter in life are “what we do”. In the end, the only people who are actually aware of “what we think”, or more importantly “what we believe”, is our ourselves. One’s beliefs and ideals may fade, but the only legacies that can never be erased is our deeds. Great men and women are never remembered for beliefs or thoughts, for “only consequence is what we do.”…
Paper Towns starts with nine-year-olds Quentin “Q” Jacobsen and Margo Roth Spiegelman discover the corpse of Robert Joyner, a soon to be divorced man who committed suicide in the Jefferson Park. Nine years later, Quentin and Margo grew apart from each other considering that they are neighbors. One night, Margo shows up in Quentin’s window with black paint on her face. She asks Quentin to help her that night with eleven missions to get revenge on the people that have hurt her throughout her high school years. She especially needs Quentin's car and assistance driving. Margo convinces Quentin to take his mother’s minivan, sneak out of his home on a school night, and help her seek revenge. Margo takes Quentin to an adventure filled with fish, vandalizing,…
Second of all, throughout my life, I want to accomplish each and every one of my personal desire. I do not want to miss one of them. I do not want any single moment of my life to be faded like the bar code girl’s. I think that all my personal goals or dreams are all as important as the others. I do not want to conform to anyone neither to everyone. I want to be unique and particular. Everyone should try to be different from one another to forge their characters into their own life, and also to achieve their…