When most people look at me, they don’t always see me. They see a girl. They see a quiet girl who is a big reader. They see a girl who is a hard worker and does well in school. They see the sister of three younger brothers. It’s true. I’m all of these things. I am also much, much more. I am mature in certain matters, and childish in others. I change my personality according to my surroundings, and do not show the world the real me. There are even some things that my family does not know about the real me.…
Jackson, Mississippi. 3) I have two childs. One is a girl named Clair. 4) The other…
Though I hate to admit it, used to be more comfortable following directions than giving them myself. I grew up a shy girl with maybe one or two close friends. I followed the teachers’ directions, listened to my parents, looked after my sister, and remained diligent in my studies. This doesn’t seem so bad, however I was not satisfied with my personality. I was too timid, expressed no unique thoughts, and had almost no independence. This all changed when I was almost ten years old and entered 4-H, the West Hawaii 4-H organization which was geared towards community service and volunteer work to address the four H’s: head, hands, heart, and health.…
Until I was three years old, I was having fun as a toddler by myself. Although, a month before my fourth birthday, I received a beautiful baby sister named Kinsley Ann Kemper. Little did I know that within about nine years she was going to become an ornery child. When she was little, my parents had to set rules for me to follow because they knew that I could follow the rules that they gave me, while they were taking care of Kinsley. Also, when I was three, I started to go to dance. My first year of dance, I got an award for the dancer of the year, which made me very overjoyed and excited at the same time. I can still remember…
Since Jack stood up for me, I’ve regained my confidence. Nancy invites me over during the week and helps me learn to be more carefree and how to open up to others. Nancy was vehement while teaching me and was hoping I could start to fit in. Mr. Addams continues to tutor me after school and my grades have been gradually increasing. My classmates have also started to accept that I’m different and I’ll never be like them, but being different shouldn’t affect how I’m seen by everyone. I started to make small conversations with classmates rather than holding back my thoughts and others have seen my looks may be different than theirs but they could still be friends with me rather than judge my mistakes and the way I talk. I’ve had less stress since…
Suppose you live in a new suburban community that combines all the amenities and benefits of a tight-knit small community with the benefits of living close to the big city. Some years pass, and several children and adults in the community start developing extensive and similar illnesses. You think this is clearly not a case of genetics, and you become suspicious that something has gone wrong in the development planning and execution of your community. You start researching possible causes for the illnesses plaguing the community and, upon further investigation, find out that a company’s unsafe chemical-disposal practices may be to blame for the calamity. You decide to notify your community of your findings so that everyone can unite in a fight for justice.…
Have you ever looked in the mirror and analyzed your body through comparing to others, listening to others, or remembering stories? In Heti’s, Julvatis’, and Shapton’s “Wear Areas,” women reveal their insecurities about their bodies through telling stories, restating what people have said, and comparing to other people. All the women have many insecurities and share their most prominent ones with readers. These self-doubts vary from how they wear their hair to not having the same body features as their family. “Wear Areas” ironically uses other people’s insecurities to help readers recognize and then abandon their own insecurities so that they can live a more fulfilled life.…
I have been through a lot and I have come a long way, I’ve always been told how smart I am and that I can do anything my heart sets out. My personality has always been caring, and honest, I am a good listener and friend, I’ve done what I could do for people around me even if I could barely do for myself. My social skills have always been great throughout my childhood years I’ve always been popular, people always take a likening to me, and always ask for my advice or they just open up not even knowing who I am, I’ve been told that I have that open heart on my sleeve. My talents have always been poetry, and drawing, and dancing, the three most things I really do enjoy and adore they have helped me out of some bad times and also good times, physically I do what I cannot so much as when I was younger but I still try to be very active, I do have a 14 year old I need to keep up with, and by all means I try to keep her active so she can maintain health and physical happiness.…
The challenge began when I received the news that my dad had passed away. This moment not only brought me to my knees, but it also changed the expectations, plans, and possibilities I had envisioned in my head. The icon I had simply disappeared. He was no longer there to give a comfortable pat on the back, daily hugs, or words of encouragement. After his loss, along with the challenges teenage years usually brings, the various facets of my life slowly began to deteriorate. After numerous bad grades and disciplinary actions, I finally realized that internalizing my emotions was not the solution, but rather the source of my disappointments. It was at this point that I decided to embrace my loss, remember his words, and stand tall as a new man. A man, who is strong, determined, driven, and level-headed, just like my…
My room has looked the same since we put it together. From my bed to all of my dressers. My bed is in the center of my room on the left side is my desk on the right is my night stand. My duck calls sit on my lamp and my pheasant feathers on my night stand. I don’t think I will move because we built this house it would be pointless to move. I don’t have a favorite book, but I do have a few of my favorite games such as Black Ops, Madden 16, and Halo. Right now we have two dogs. The two dogs we have are Ace, brown lab, and Bella, a teddy bear. Nicki was our black lab, but, we put her down not too long ago. I listen to country and hip hop music depending on my mood. My home life is pretty usual. So are most my…
Little girls dream of marrying their daddies and boys dream of being president of the United States or some other larger than life character; but as they grow older they realize how different life is from what they imagined when they were six. As children develop through their adolescence many of the dreams hold true due to their ideas of right, wrong or what they want in life; but for some, their dreams may be modified, altered or crashed due to events in their lives, or the friends they begin to identify with. In looking at the similarities and differences between children and adults, the most intriguing ones are their outlook on life, the attention to self appearance or vanity, and marriage.…
This paper is about the trial and tribulations associated with the stage of becoming a young adult; it will focus on social and intimate relationship established in this process. It will also talk about people and the changes, encounters, and experiences a person can experience in this stage. People in the beginning stages of early and middle adulthood can go through many changes throughout their life. Relationships private and social have a need for the confirmation of the roles played by each participant in the relationship. Each can form healthy relationships with friends, co-workers, and family members,…
I am a 20 year old, Caucasian male of upper-middle class status. Physically, I am not tall, but of a slightly below average height. I have been dating one girl for almost four years now but nothing serious (i.e. marriage) has ever really been discussed. I still live with my parents, as they are helping me pay for college and my family gets along rather well. I have had several jobs, but right now I work at a sandwich shop making food for people. Someday, I hope to be a musician or artist, although a job in psychology has appealed to me.…
But I from the ages of 6-11, I felt the feeling of inferiority not feeling good enough, the kid that went to a special school, then I felt industry I was confident I was not unusually I went to a private school yeah a lot people do, then I felt inferior again in 6 the grade and went back to feeling more confident in 8th grade and my ability to work with other slowly is growing and my trust slowly is growing. I know theories state you find your development in adolescent, I don’t think I fully found my identity until college and I have not finished growing even now. But after going back home for fall break and seeing my family I notice how much I have grown and developed over the past just a few months, I am more organized, I have at least a loose plan for my future, my confidence to talk to people about how I truly feel and who I am has sky rocketed. Before college, I would never have made this paper so much about me, I would have skimmed the surface of myself and added a lot about what I wanted to be mostly based on what my school and family wanted me to be but now it doesn’t matter so much what they want me to be but what I want to be and should become. This is my life, I have found my identity more and more every day, I am committed. But, I am also ready to explore to take that class that looks interesting, but is not toward my major or toward what my dad wants me to do. My dad, I love to…