On Being Cripple by Nancy Mairs tells her story about her life as a handicapped person‚ and how she doesn’t want to conform to how society sees disabled people as weak. She is suffering form multiple sclerosis which is a disease that slowly degenerates the use of her limb overtime. “Cripple seems to me a clean word straightforward and precise… as a lover of words‚ I like accuracy with which it describes my condition: I have lost the full use of my limbs. “Disabled” by contrast‚ suggests any incapacity
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On being a cripple: the lesson of losses and gains. In spite of the rapid medicine progress in the last centuries many different incurable diseases still threaten human society. Some of them are deadly; the others develop slowly but restrain the life of a human in various ways. Often sick people just have to put up with the hope to be cured and to accept their situation. However‚ they do have choices to resign themselves to the disease completely or to look for the ways to cope with it and continue
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Perfectly Imperfect Cripples We are all cripples; or we all cripple ourselves in one way or another. It may not be as obvious as those who are in a wheelchair or those who live with any host of diseases that deform the body‚ but nevertheless we all have issues. Some may battle serious diseases such as depression or anorexia‚ while others battle more obscure diseases like narcissism‚ kleptomania‚ or social ineptitude. More than those who would admit it have addictions to sex‚ drugs‚ or alcohol. As
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12/05/2011 “Cripple” Often times‚ people with disabilities feel sorrow and unfortunate. Nancy Mairs faces sclerosis‚ a serious condition that limits her ability to do regular‚ everyday tasks. In her essay‚ Mairs stresses the meaning of the word “cripple” to the point in which she defines her own meaning of the term. With the use of rhetorical strategies‚ Mairs presents herself as a strong‚ proud individual despite her disabilities. Mairs’ specific language choice reveals that she is not ashamed
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“differently abled”. Nancy Mairs‚ however‚ is proud to be called a “cripple” as she demonstrates with her use of comparison and contrast‚ blunt diction‚ and confident tone‚ all of which explain why she truly believes that she falls under the “crippled” category. Maris presents three distinct definitions of “disabled”‚ “handicapped”‚ and “crippled” and why she believes that she falls in the last. She advocates that the word “cripple” accurately describes her because it’s a “straightforward and precise”
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repeats words such as "handicapped"‚ "disabled"‚ and "crippled" in order to propel her self-definition across to the reader. Mairs uses a mediocre choice of language in her passage that allows her to be clear and precise as simply stated in line15‚ ""Cripple" seems to me a clean word‚
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The documentaries of Being Mortal was very interesting. I learned that doctors wear multiple hats. They are not only doctors‚ but they are counselors‚ problem solvers and team players. Doctors are taught to be optimistic. They are always looking for ways to fix a problem and keep the hope alive. It is their job to to find solutions to illness and not give up hope. Doctors are not taught how to deal with the problems that can’t be fixed like aging or death. One doctor in the documentary stated that
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Disabled. Disabled is a word commonly defined as being physically or mentally impaired‚ injured‚or incapacitated(dictionary.com.) Disabled is a word that brings a bad astigmatism over someone with its negative connotation. Nancy Maris dislikes the word disabled because she thinks that the English language uses to much euphemism in our speech. Maris want the language to use more straightforward language‚ even if it might offend some people. In her memoir Maris talks about how she became disabled from
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Rhetorical Essay The Great Influenza The 1918 influenza epidemic inspired author John M. Barry to write about the importance of uncertainty in science and research. In his piece‚ The Great Influenza‚ Barry endeavors to reveal to both researchers and men of modern science that science is not a domain in which one can rely on the comfort and strength of certainty. Rather‚ it is a domain that is reserved for the courageous and one in which the “weakness” of uncertainty must be embraced. To stress
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”(62) Baldwin’s attitude towards his father reflects the way his father acts towards him. Baldwin’s attitude towards his father becomes slightly different as he reminisces the times he had with his father when he was a child. Baldwin remembers being at church "sitting on his knee‚ in the hot enormous crowded church.” (66) Baldwin shows one of his good memories with his father. Baldwin remembers he was taken to the barbershop and he began to cry‚ his father "soothed his crying and applied the
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