Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

College Hazing That Changed My Life

Satisfactory Essays
351 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
College Hazing That Changed My Life
R&R “The College Hazing That Changed My Life” Right from the beginning line, Thomas Rogers, sucks me into this story. It takes guts to start something off like that and pull it off, but he did. I found it very amusing, hilarious, and dangerous. College hazings are no joke if they are anywhere near the level he describes this one as. When he states, “ College is a strange time…we’re free to make an extraordinary amount of mistakes and end up in situations that may not teach us much…” I began to think about next year when i start my college life and what exactly is in store for me. I hope its not a struggle balancing everything and trying to pass my classes. When the author begins to describe his childhood I feel like I can relate to him. My brother got most of my parents athletic abilities so I have to make due with the amount that I have. We both are tall, also clumsy even though we don't want to be. You don't get to pick how tall you are, what traits you have, or if your athletic or not. You have to make due with what you have and find something that suits you. Thats one thing that i believe the author was trying to get across. He showcases that by doing something out of the ordinary and joining the rowing team. Also another thing that I believe he tried to get across is to strive for what you want. He went through two weeks of tryouts to join his universities varsity crew rowing team. Then he finally made it and had to then go through hazings.I believe that if you have to become a jock in order to boost your self esteem that you have issues you need to sort out. No one should have to do that to feel good about themselves. Finally, he tried to get across that you don't have to be normal its okay if you're not. Embrace and find excitement in whatever it is. Be your own person.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    The Reading “Brain versus Brawn” is about a jocks high school career and how he was discriminated against because he was athletically talented. At his first school he benefited from the special treatment he was receiving from his teaches. But he declined their offers because he decided to earn his grade as every other student. When he transferred to another high school where football was not as important he began to see how his new teacher were harder on him than they were on any other students. The teacher judged him because they assumed that he was expecting hand outs and wasn’t willing to earn his own grades. But he proved everyone wrong and used discouraging teachers as motivation to work as hard in the classroom as he did on the field.…

    • 250 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Sacred Hoops

    • 1036 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Lastly this book shows how sports can greatly affect people 's lives. People can be affected for the greater, worse, or sports help them find abetted place. Some players careers can go so great, per say Michael Jordan, who is one of the greatest basketball players of all time. Basketball affected his life so positively because he was so good, and because of this his life was great. For some people sports can also tear their life apart, say they have a rough year or an injury, this could get to their head and mess up their career. So many athletes are affected by injuries and after they attempt a comeback might never play as good as they did before because they let it get to their heads. There are also people like Phil Jackson that playing professional basketball wasn 't made for him, so once he learned that he figured out that his thing was coaching, and he became one of the greatest coaches ever because of how much the sport of basketball impacted his life.…

    • 1036 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    I agree with Edmundson that sports make a person better in many ways. I am very similar to Edmundson in the sense that I was also a football player. I really like when he (Edmundson) talks about when he entered into the real world, the job world. He calls back on the feelings of two a days to help him get through whatever assignment or obstacle he was faced with. The reason I liked this so much is because I feel that going through two a days (hell week) has helped shape my mental and physical toughness. I did wild land firefighting last season and I know for a fact that I would not have made it through the season if not for the things that football has taught me. In paragraph thirteen Edmundson says the most important thing (in my opinion) that football has taught him. This is something his coaches taught him. To “get up and walk it off” the reason I think this is so powerful is because my coaches told me the same thing and I truly do believe it has helped. It not only helped at times when I thought I was hurt or even injured. This message can be put towards any part of your life. If one day i feel like I am too tired to get up and do the things that are needed to be done, I simply think back to these words. “get up, walk it off, you will be ok”. Another part of this article that I really enjoyed is when Edmundson uses a story to better demonstrate how he feels about sports and if they build character. He uses a story…

    • 890 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ethan Fisher is a former basketball star a produce in high school in Fort Collins Colorado has devoted his life to bringing awareness of alcohol and drug abuse to high school and college students athletes. Using his horrific story as an example of what not to do. Ethan Fisher is naturally shy. He had problems meeting people. especially girls, and he believes those issues combined with peer pressure, led him on the road to addiction which led to vehicular homicide and nearly his own death. Ethan graduated with two bachelor degrees with minor and master. He played basketball during college, but things were going bad for him. From his past he started smoking weed, then went on to drinking alcohol in junior year. When he was smoking weed and drinking…

    • 679 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Interestingly enough, the author’s main idea is to enhance the readers understanding of Jock culture and to inform the readers that there are people in this world that are driven to believe that jocks and pukes are completely different men. Also there are some people who don’t want anything to do with all the chaos.…

    • 678 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Shawn Grim earned a scholarship for community college called Pikesville, he beat the stereotype of his town, family, and school and attended college briefly, eventually he needed to drop out because he could no longer afford to go and could not handle the stress of keeping his grades up. But he still made history in his family and was a football star. Likewise, Rudy Ruettiger attended a major college, which was Notre Dame. He also beat the odds with his family and attended the college after not being accepted into Notre Dame after applying 3 times, but he brought his grades up and worked out an insane amount so he could go to Notre and Dame and play football there and pushed everyone's doubts to the side. Nonetheless, Rudy and Shawn both made it to college in their own ways, but used everyone’s doubts as a motivation to keep pushing…

    • 819 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    <br>It all started in the summer when Bobby, an overweight fifteen year old is embarrassed to take his clothes off and swim in the beach because he is embarrassed that people would make fun of his wobbly legs and stomach, yet that isn't the his worst fear. He had taken swimming lessons the last summer, but quit because he started to gain a lot of weight. He tries to ignore the nasty remarks people say about him, but they stay in his mind. He can sort of ignore it because his best friend, Joanie has the ugliest nose on the face of the earth, but she doesn't care a bit about what other people think, which makes her Bobby's mentor, kind of.…

    • 694 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Robert Robinson, a thirty year old social worker at a home for troubled youth, has lived a difficult life and overcome many obstacles to get where he is. Raised in a lower income community in Miramar, FL., the concept of college was a faraway dream. In high school his main focus was to play football. He said “2 years of hard work and my grades were good enough to play, finally.” Robert’s goals were to complete high school, go to a 4year college, and go onto D1 football then the NFL. Robert experienced many struggles on his way to college. He underestimated his educational capabilities not knowing what he wanted to do, or if he could get good enough scores to make his dreams come true.…

    • 989 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Although they have an innocent motive, it turns out to be a very dramatically and weird experience for others with the motive to just be part of a group to fit in. The argument presented in by Wrigth has complex ideas as the different points of views and opinion about sororities and their practices somehow end up with the argument of these groups being a high standard community girls want to be in. In the reading it is pointed out the experiences many college students were having and their opinions about these groups, as we read through the different opinions the reader can sympathize with what's being said because of similar situation they had or the typical college life many college students want to live too, this could lead to the technique of pathos because it reaches out to people. How the author approached the readers by using the variation of students, how they're introduced, and their different opinions as well as the different situations each character of the story take place is very familiar as a documentary of what's really going on and a different yet neat strategy to get the reader's attention. As young adults in college, we want to live to the fullest and become successful at the same time, college is the place when we become responsible and grow to be adults, preparing ourselves to live the real life; unfortunaly for some people, especially women, society throughout the years had put the pressure of fitting into groups to not remain as "the different one" as well as the physical pressure society has put us in. Sororities practices challenge girls to look, act, and behave a particular way while at the same time giving them the so popular bad influences of living the moment when they take it too far. The author made a good…

    • 727 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Richard L. Worsnop offers multiple different points about high school sports and athletes. Concerns about the oppression of young athletes and debating if high school athletics “builds character”, are some of the main issues pointed out. Some coaches believe interscholastic sports competitions teach everything about character and teamwork, while others believe overemphasizing a win can teach the growth of negative character traits. Meanwhile, there are no doubts that certain drugs can enhance an athlete’s performance, but this can lead to injury and other harmful effects. High school athletes are sometimes considered, “dumb jocks”, which leads to the question if student athletes should maintain a certain grade-point average. Some players think…

    • 269 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Although slavery was abolished in 1865, there is one major case that is overlooked by millions and that slavery is the plantation system involving universities taking advantage from the forced amateurism of student athletes in the present day of sports. In the world of college, athletics today schools have become a billion dollar industry profiting from the exploitation involving thousands of college athletes who are given only a scholarship, which more than 50 percent of college athletes push aside for another goal. This goal chased by millions but only grasped by few is the opportunity to play professionally for the desired sport of their choosing. This is not an easy path especially when the NCAA does not…

    • 2813 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    I walked on a thin layer of ice in high school; every time someone judged me, I could hear the ice slowly cracking under my feet. My life was in a fragile and brittle state during my junior year. I didn’t have the support of my parents, nor of my closest friends at this stage of my life. My own parents, teachers, and classmates had lost faith in me; to them it seemed as if I had ruined my life and that I would no longer succeed. On the contrary, I was determined to be successful because now I had someone special looking up at me as their role model.…

    • 547 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Although college is a great place to be! There are a lot of suspicious schemes to the educational system called college. Schools may try to hype their programs to be something that are not, and once students and their parents buy into those schemes, a schools “true colors” began to show. The schemes that I am referring to are: “Student Athlete vs. The average student”. There’s a big difference between the two and I don’t understand why. It’s a little unfair to me, how student athletes get treated better than people who actually work hard to get in school and stay in school. The behaviors of colleges towards non-athletes and athletes are different, and if it’s not fair to those students who are non-athletes. This discrimination from colleges should not be allowed because there are more average students than there are student athletes.…

    • 333 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    These same kids who bullied me in middle school were acting like my good friends cheering me on whether it was my failing effort in Gotcha or chanting “chug, chug, chug” as I ruined my small stomach. Just hours ago, I had slowly crept on the bus, book in hand, to be dissected by the eyes of 50 upperclassmen, swiftly dismissed as I scampered to a seat in the very front, feeling very alone. I hoped and prayed that no one would ask for my name. All the memories of my lisp and stuttering making my name sound like a foreign language rushed to my mind. I had never been to Younglife club before, and it was uncommon for someone to just show up for the weekend camp. I had heard that the people who went to Younglife were heathens, and by the continious yelling I heard from the back of the bus as I tried to finish my book, I believed all the rumors.My mom had thrust her little Christian boy into the lions den or more appropriate the Dawgs Den, half of these students were in the obnoxious student section at our school “The Dawg Pound”. The goal of the weekend was just to survive, my mind was already made up that I was going to plead to my mom for us to move out of Morgan County. I hated my high school and knew that there was no way I would have a pleasant four years there.…

    • 571 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    I cannot even begin to describe the hole that was left in my heart. My entire identity revolved around swimming and now that was gone. I had no idea what to do and what to think. The only conclusion I could come to at the time was it was my coach’s fault. Somehow, it was their fault I wasn’t on the team. That was my first failure. My fate was decided when I neglected to deal with my physical ailments. I left no choice for my coach; you can’t keep a cripple on a completive team. It was my fault and my fault alone. That realization hit me hard. It was unfathomable to think I was the one who destroyed this part of myself, but I did. That led to my second failure, failing…

    • 713 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays