Thursday, May 2, 2013

"Crime is Pride"

Think: all men make mistakes
But a good man yields when he
Knows his course is wrong,
And repairs the evil:  The only
Crime is pride.

This quotation from an excerpt from Antigone, by the classical Geek playwright Sophocles, implies that it is perfectly okay to make mistakes. In fact, all people make mistakes, but it is admitting those mistakes that we show who we are as people. Pride is the only ugly thing, the only sin. A man who does not admit to his mistakes but acts as if he is perfect is nowhere near the man who makes mistakes, but who admits them and forgives those whom he has hurt.

This is so true. I have met many people who are very arrogant and who refuse to admit their mistakes. These people are very unappealing. They think too highly of themselves and their ego gets in the way of everything else. But people who are loving, forgiving, and humble--and who admit to their mistakes-- are much more likeable as people, as friends, as co-workers, as bosses, as managers, etc. The people who are truly good and kind are the ones who will coexist happily with the rest of the world. These are the people who have earned their respect because they are respectful of others. These people are honest and humble and kind, not boastful or egotistical or insolent. It is these people who live by the golden rule: they treat others as they themselves would like to be treated. If you are respectful towards others, you will earn their respect and they will treat you as you with dignity.

No one is perfect. God made us this way. He gave us free will. Each one of us was given human dignity, and we are to treat others with dignity as well. Pride is one of the seven deadly sins.

God wants us to feel good about ourselves and be proud of what we have accomplished, but our accomplishments are not of our own doing. We have accomplished what we have accomplished because of God and his grace. No one is perfect--only God is perfect, and this is the way it has always been and will forever be. Each of us was born with original sin. So when we make mistakes, we ask Him for forgiveness because God knows we are only human, but if we are sorry for our sins and ask pardon for our mistakes, we become better people.

(Word Count: 418)

Sunday, April 28, 2013

Curb Appeal

We are currently working towards improving the curb appeal of the front of our house/the front porch. Our house is a rust- and white-colored brick that is meant to look like it was once painted white and the paint is chipping off. The rest of our house is cheap white vinyl siding. (We will have to deal with that later.)

The windows are oak so you cannot see cute white window panes or mullions. The windows just look dark and black, and all you can see is the black screens. The windows also do not have shutters. We already removed the cheap white plastic porch railing, and it already looks 100 times better than it did before, but it is still not great.

We went with a green wood stain for the shutters my dad made out of cedar. In addition, we bought a porch swing that we are about to paint/stain and install, and we also bought planters to put on the front porch to put flowers in. Hopefully the house will have a bit more curb appeal after we do these things.

Weird Idea for Backyard

I know this sounds absolutely crazy or strange or odd or weird or ridiculous or whatever, but I would like to have my dad built an outhouse or composting toilet in our backyard. We have a cabin in the woods, but if you want to spend the night in it, you have to walk out and up the pathway to the house and go inside to use the restrooms. This is very inconvienient. It would also be nice to have one because my mom spends a lot of time outside gardening, so it is inconvient for her to drop everything she is doing to go inside the house to go to the bathroom. Also, I have to admit that I love little European stone cottages, and this is my excuse to build something out of stone since we cannot reface our brick house and cheap, white, vinyl siding.

Here's my theory: People use Port-a-Potty's when they are at outdoor events and construction workers use them when builing houses or buildings, etc. The thing I have against Port-a-Poty's is that they are ugly and blue and blastic. The other thing is that outhouses are now illegal, I think. Except my grandma still has one at her house, but she lives in the middle of nowhere and it's been there since the house was built, probably in the mid to late 1800s.

 So why not have a Port-a-Potty that is built of stone? The only reason they are normally built of cheap blue plastic is because it is cheap and light weight, and most of all, "portable" (hence the name, "Port-a-Potty"). But I would not want ours to be portable. I want the function of a Port-a-Potty, which is basically a composting toilet, but I want it to be attractive. I want it to look like a little European stone cottage, only smaller. It would look nice, it would be legal, and it would be functional. We could really use one outside because of the cabin. That way I will be satisfied because I will have something cute and made of stone and it will perhaps make our place look more european. It would also be really unique. NO ONE else would have one.

Or a composting toilet would be fine as well. But you get the point. Something that is not an outhouse, but more like a really sophisticated and attractive Port-a-Potty or something like that.
Actually, come to think of it, it is kind of like those outdoor public restrooms at public parks. Those must be composting toilets, because they do not flush, and they are not Port-a-Potty's.

Here are some photos of the stone I like and the European/English stone cottage look that I like:







 So you get the idea. There are hundreds of other photos that I could probably find and post for you to see, but I will just post these for now, even though they are not the very best ever.

(Word Count: 499)

Thursday, April 25, 2013

The other thing I want to talk about today is dining rooms. We have a formal living room in the entrance of our house, but right now we are using it as a music room and just a place to sit down in quiet or to seat guests who come over to our house. But personally, I am torn between keeping it as a living room or turning it into an incredible dining room.

It is a very large room, with tall colonial windows that reach almost to the wood floors we recently put in. The room has a very old look about it, somewhat colonial. There is a piano and a Beethoven statue by the windows. There are also a lot of my dad's paintings on display in addition to a secretary and a small white painted antique desk that my dad refurbished.

If I went with making it a dining room, I think I would want to keep the antique look about it and find a table that goes with the time period. I am thinking a Jacobean table, or maybe even Italian Renaissance or Gothic. The only problem is that these tables are either very rare or extremely expensive. I also want a really long table that seats LOTS of guests, like in castles. Here are some of my ideas:







Thursday, April 18, 2013

For Your Eyes Only


For Your Eyes Only
Keep me from sharing your letters to me,
Words you wrote just for me
Not for anyone else to see.
Write something lame. Say something dull, dumb, or mundane.
Be trite, and I might resist
The urge to splurge with your verbal gifts.
Send me your letters, still,
But make them boring, if you will.
I cannot help myself, otherwise,
From treating your letters like a prize.
I never thought you’d mind at all
If I shared your words on my Facebook wall.
I only wanted the world to see
the wonderful things you write to me.
You don’t just say “I walked the dog;” you tell me first about the fog,
The shine of rain-wet city streets,
The funny people that you meet.
Were those words so very private?
Speak to me, still, of chores and weather,
And I’ll try to be better at hiding each letter
Like pearls in a treasure chest.




Maine Coon Needs a Home

Our family seems to be having way more trouble with animals than the average person lately. Not only is our thirteen-year-old dog Bailey dying as I am typing this, but we have an extra cat in the house that needs to go, too (except not by means of death, of course).

My mom had originally bought him at the pound because she saw him sitting in his cage that was too small for him and saw that he was not happy. He was confined to a cage that he could barely move in. He had been there for three months, and it seemed nobody had any interest in bringing him home as their pet. He was a mean looking cat, but he was half-price, and Mom sort of took pity on him, I guess. (Apparently, he also reminded my mom of our previous dog, Bailey's brother, Blaise.) Granted, she did this against my dad's will and my will. We did not even know she did it until she came to pick me up from school and I saw a vicious-looking cat staring at me from the back seat of the car.

Back to the point, though. We are now trying to get rid of him. He is not friendly, he does not like other cats (or dogs, for that matter). He does not like much attention to speak of. He either hides out all day by himself, or he is in the kitchen opening cupboard doors looking for canned catfood. (I forgot to mention this cat was three years old when my mom brought him home from the pound, and he had been neutered, implying that he had an owner who either died or abandoned him. But one thing we do know is that this cat was spoiled and was served Fancy Feast for every meal of the day.)

He simply needs to go. He sheds all the time, my family is most likely allergic to him, and he scratches and claws at furniture and fights with our other cat all the time. (Well, according to my mom, it is completely the fault of our other cat. Supposedly, he is the one who initiates all the fights.) Either way, he must go. He needs a new home (although I'm sure that after reading this post, no one will want him). But either way, if you are looking for a beautiful maine coon cat who likes to keep to himself and does not want to live with other animals, he may be a great match for you. He is very quiet, and he meows like a baby and like a girl, which does not fit with his overall looks. He looks mean, but he is really very sweet. He is simply stressed out living around a cat who is constantly trying to fight with him. So if you know of anyone looking for a maine coon, just let me know.

(Word Count: 494)

Our Dog Bailey

Just when I thought our thirteen-year-old female collie dog would live forever, she had another one of her episodes two nights ago and it is still going on today. Her breathing is rapid and irregular, as is her heart beat. She continues to have a rattling cough that will not go away. She did not eat anything at all yesterday, except for the bite or two of Mongolian beef and steamed rice that I somehow managed to get her to swallow. When she finally does drink water, she seems extremeley thirsty, but it is harted to get her started in the first place. She has no appetite. She will not eat her food unless you hold it up for her the entire duration of her meal. She cannot walk anymore, as of last night. She did not leave the house once yesterday, let alone even the small room she was in, to get up and go to the bathroom and/or to eat. When we did get her outside, my dad had to carrie her like a baby and when he sat her down on the grass, she fell. We tried this multiple times, and each time she would fall. She could not even squat to go to the bathroom. Her back legs just kept giving out. I eventually convinced my dad to carry her in and put her on the sofa (something he would NEVER do if this dog were not dying). It seemed to put her at ease ever so slightly, but she still was having trouble breathing. Not to mention, she peed on the sofa. Dad did not even seem that mad. I was in shock. Normally, my dad would be so angry I that would not have words to describe it. But not this time. He remained calm.

As bedtime approached, my dad said she had to go sleep out in the garage because our dog Bailey is afraid of storms and will keep my dad up all night otherwise. Bailey has always walked up to the mailbox every morning with my dad to get the mail, even when she seems like she's at death's door. But today, when I asked him if she did, he said no. This was it. The day that she stops walking up to the mailbox with dad every morning. The day she can no longer get up and walk by herself. The day she can no longer control her bodily functions. The day she officially loses her appetite. This is it. Today or tomorrow, we will have to bring her to the vet to be put down. Her quality of life is no good anymore. To be honest, it hasn't been for awhile. But I think we have been selfish trying to keep her around for so long since her brother did not too long ago. He was put down on my sister's golden birthday, July 19th. So we could either put her down today, or we could wait until tomorrow, the 19th of April, and ironically, my mom's birthday. I guess at least it would be fair this way for my sister, and at least it will not be my mom's golden birthday. We'll see. I hope she's still alive when I come home from school today.

(Word Count: 550)

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Silly Blogging Requirements...NOT my idea!

This is just a reminder to everyone who (does not) read my blogs--I would not be writing them if it were not for a grade in an AP Language and Composition class. These blog posts are required and I personally hate writing them. Why should everyone else in the world care what I think or have to say?

I am a private person. I enjoy my privacy. I do not enjoy sharing all of my thoughts and feelings with everyone else in the world/for all to see. There is a reason that I do not have a Twitter account. There is a reason why I do not post status on Facebook.

I am only writing these blogs because they are required for class in school. Each week we are required to post three blog posts, accumulating a total of 1200 words. It really seems like a silly requirement to me. I think it would be more reasonable if you just plain had to have 1200 words. But the fact that we have to have three posts is a different story. What happens when you write one blog that already adds up to 1200 words? Or two of posts combined equal 1200 words? Then you are writing a low-quality post just for the sake of having a third post.

Whatever happened to quality vs. quantity? If these blog posts are supposed to represent our writing skills as AP students, why require multiple posts each week if they will not be quality? And you may argue then, "Well why don't you put effort into all three of them and make sure all of them are high quality and well-written?". The answer is simple. We only have so many things on our mind that we feel are important enough to write about. We should not write about meaningless things just for the sake of words. Instead, we should put forth our very best effort into one or two masterpieces.

Think about it this way. Are famous bloggers required to post a certain number of blog posts each week, and a certain number of words? No. I don't think so.

Real bloggers write only when they feel like it. Only when they have something great to talk about. And they are famous! Some of the best blogs are the ones that are short and sweet; straight to the point. No nonsense.

It is silly for AP students to use filler words and make their blogs as wordy as possible, just in order to fulfill a requirement of 1200 words per week. In fact, I am on a rant and I am guilty of it myself--right now, in this very moment, in this very blog post.

I think it is more important to think about quality vs. quantity when it comes to many things, but especially in blogging for an AP Language and Composition class. It is silly to have a required number of posts and word count each week. It is also unfair to make students write things that the whole public can see, and future employers will someday see. Something that will be on the internet forever, for all the world to see.

I honestly would much rather be writing papers each week...I think.

(Word Count: 623)

P.S. If you look above and see that I posted my word count in parenthisis, there it is. It is required. And I still have to write two more blogs, whether I want to or not. Whether I have anything to say or not. Even if this blog totaled up to enough words. Oh well. Looks like I will be up late again Sunday night, blogging until I barely reach 1200 words.

Sunday, April 7, 2013

School Vocabulary Always Comes Back to Haunt You

Remember when you had to do those red Sadlier-Oxford Vocabulary Workshop books in middle school and high school? It seems as though everyone despised them. Every week we would have to complete a unit that consisted of multiple pages of filling in the blank (completing the sentence), synonyms, antonyms, choosing the right word, and that one at the end that was similar to reading comprehension. Rarely did people take this task seriously. Perhaps this is why these words are coming back to haunt us.

Last night I was thinking about how I would be taking the Iowa Assessments in vocabulary, and I though it would be a good idea to review some vocabulary words since I had saved all my red Sadlier-Oxford Vocabulary Workshop books from years past. I had the hardest time trying to find them, since my mom had gone through and organized all my old school papers, books, etc. I finally found it on a bookshelf later that evening.

Before testing, I glanced through some of the words in the book so that I could refresh my memory in case any of the same words word be used on the Iowa Tests. Sure enough, quite a few of them were. I guess this goes to show how important learning and studying those vocabulary words are. They will always come back to haunt you.

I sure am glad I took vocabulary seriously and that I saved all my old vocab books from previous years.It really did come in handy.

(Word Count: 259)

Ad Analysis

Ad Analysis

The ad shown below is an ad I used as an analysis in my AP Language and Composition class. We were supposed to analyze the ad and see what kinds of things the advertisers used to appeal to the reader in the magazine. Here are some of the things that I observed:

#1: The advertisers are using a play on words with the word "stems". Now, this part may get complicated and tricky to understand, because this is not the identical ad that I had found in the Glamour magazine. It is similar, but it is missing the part that says "formulated with Raspberry Stem Cell Technology".

This is a play on words because when it says "Youth Stems from Origins", "Stems" is being used as a verb, implying that looking young/youthful comes from (stems from) using this anti-aging cream/product called "Origins". Yet, at the same time, they used the word stems in "formulated with Raspberry Stem Cell Technology".

#2: Another connection to that phrase is the fact that the add pictures fresh red raspberries. Raspberries also provide a burst of vibrant color for the otherwise colorless ad, and raspberries are also known for their anti-aging properties, a result of antioxidants in the berries, which prevent damage to the skin from free radicals.

#3: The marketers are establishing ethos when they say "The truth is nothing can permanently erase wrinkles." The advertisers are admitting/acknowledging the fact that you cannot stop the aging process, but you can at least slow it down or prevent it from worsening. This makes them look like better people for telling the truth about anti-aging products.

#4: Another way they establish ethos is encouraging the reader to read the reviews of women who have already used and rated their product. This shows how confident they are in the quality and effectiveness of their product. Reviews usually show both the good and the bad in the product. Some will give rave reviews, others will only give the product one star out of five. But this company is so sure that their product will work that they believe the good reviews will outweigh the bad.

#5: This company makes the claim that you will see results within four weeks of using this product. It says "83% showed an improvement in the appearance of lines and wrinkles in just 4 weeks." This would also be an example of logos, because they are using reasoning/logic to persuade the reader to buy the product.

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Everyone is offended by something

I am so sick and tired of everyone in this society being "offended" by something that has been tradition for a very long time. I am sure there is not a single person who is not offended by something. We are all  offended by one thing or another. Now it is the Easter Bunny.

Some schools have stopped allowing children to call the Easter Bunny the Easter Bunny because it may offend some of the other children at the school. Easter eggs and Easter egg hunts are now called Spring eggs and  Spring egg hunts. It is absolutely sickening.

Can't I be offended by their offense? I personally offended that these people who are complaining about the Easter bunny can prevent everyone else from calling it the Easter bunny. It is like when the Atheists were offended by a park that annually set up a Nativity set for Christmas. Just because the Atheists did not like it, the Christians had to get rid of it. That just seems totally unfair. I am just as offended by their offense as they are offended by the Nativity set. Why should they get their way, and we have to make sacrifices and give up things that have been tradition for generation after generation? Besides, the majority of the U.S. population is Christian. The Atheists are actually a minority. So why should we have to give up our traditions just because someone in the world is "offended".

(Word Count: 248)

Easter

This Easter was wonderful yet disappointing at the same time. It was fun because I was able to go to my grandparents' house on Friday to spend the night, and then wake up in the morning to the smell of Grandma's buttermilk pancakes. It was good because I was able to spend time with my sister, who was also there visiting my grandparents. I also was able to spend time with my aunt Lori, aunt Linda, and my cousins; Tyler, Lana, and Erica. I also got the chance to meet my cousin Lana's boyfriend for the first time. He seemed like a really nice guy.

I enjoyed being able to spend time with my family and listen to my grandpa's stories. I loved my grandma's cooking and I will not even mention how many chocolate chip cookies I ate. I loved exploring the many entrances to the basement (there are 4!--it is a really old house which had many additions added later). The original basement is really scary, though. It has stone walls and about five foot ceilings. It is completely dark and there are lots of old artifacts down there, including an old washer and drier, an old cast-iron stove, and a barn door boarded up, with stairs leading out of the storm cellar.

On the more negative side, I did not get to see my brother the entire weekend, nor did I see him on Easter Sunday. Also, my sister had to work all day Sunday (on Easter!) at Red Lobster, so she did not get to eat Easter dinner with the family. In addition, my family did not go to visit my aunt and uncle in Omaha, Nebraska this year, so it did not really feel like Easter. We could not go because Easter is on a Sunday and it takes six hours to get there, and school is the very next day. Despite my mother cooking a fabulous dinner, there were only three people to enjoy it (well...I guess four if you include our old, senile dog, Bailey)--my mom, my dad, and me. It was a quiet Easter. It was cold, and there was no Easter egg hunt. I am too old. In fact, I did not eat even one piece of candy this Easter. What a shame!

(Word Count: 385)

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Negative Effects of Social Media

Has social media ruined our social skills? In my opinion, yes. Yes indeed.

When we were kids and when our parents were growing up, people would either have to call each other on the phone or see each other in person to communicate. We could not bury our noses underneath our cell phones to avoid making conversation with other people or to avoid talking to someone we did not like. We knew how to carry a conversation and make eye contact.

Now, we do not even have to see a person or talk on the phone to communicate with them. We can simply go to Facebook and write on people's walls, send private messages, or use instant messaging. This helps to avoid/prevent those akward silences everyone dreads. You have time to think about what you want to say to the person before you say it, without akward pauses. You do not have to make eye contact whatsoever. If you want to see the person, you can simply look at a photo on their facebook but only you can see them, and they do not see you. This makes you feel more comfortable not being face-to-face and having to make eye contact with this person and decide what to talk about. You can even pretened to be someone else! Or maybe get advice from a friend on how you should reply to the person you are having a "conversation" with.

So many time, I will go to a store, a restaurant, a cafe, etc. and all I see is people constantly checking their iPhones for their Facebook and Twitter updates. People will not even say "Hello" to you because they are so engrossed with whatever they are doing on their iPhones.

Our society is losing the ability to initiate face-to-face conversation with other people. Some of us meet people online who we have never even met in person, and when we do meet in person, we do not know what to say to each other and it is "akward". People may say things they would never say in person to someone through Facebook. Or maybe a really shy person acts like someone who is extremely outgoing and talkative, but when you meet that person they do not have a word to say to you.

When we do socialize with people face-to-face, it is almost always something involving social media, such as things someone posted on Twitter as their status, or a photo someone uploaded onto their Facebook that is getting a lot of attention. Most of what teens talk about with each other involves topics such as social media. People merely gossip.

It is so irritating to me when people cannot wait longer than ten minutes before having to check their iPhones for news feed and updates.

Not only has the social media ruined our social skills; it has also ruined our spelling and grammar. When people post on Twitter or Facebook, they usually could care less about spelling, capitalization, punctuation, etc. Think about when it comes time to fill out a job application and it is just filled and filled with numerous spelling errors. What employer will ever want to hire you if you cannot even do such a basic thing as spelling words correctly or using proper punctuation and grammar? I know I sure wouldn't want to hire that person.

I wish we could go back to the days when things like Twitter did not exist. I personally have never had a Twitter account in my life, and I still do not see the point of it. Who cares what you are doing at every precise moment in your life? What makes you think it is so important that you have to share it with the rest of the world? What ever happend to the thing known as "privacy"???

I wish I could say it's time for a change, but in reality, I do not know how the effects of something like this can be reversed. It is truly sad.

(Word Count: 671)

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Simplicity is Elegance


I have seen so many bad wedding dresses and bridesmaid dresses in my life. What makes them so bad? First, there is the choice of fabric. So many women buy dresses made of satin. In my opinion, this is the worst choice for a wedding dress because it looks very cheap and it usually does not hang well. It looks so ordinary and also looks like any other cheap dress I could find off the racks of Goodwill or any other consignment store. There is nothing expensive-looking about a satin dress.

  

    
This one fits almost all the categories.
It is too perfectly white, too fluffy, too
much bling, looks cheap, and it is made
of satin. I hate it.

Another thing I dislike in a wedding dress is too much bling or too much of anything. Many dresses today are gaudy. I do not like excessive bead work or a design that is too intricate. Again, simplicity is elegance.

      
I do not think the bead work on this dress
looks elegant. I think it cheapens the dress
and looks like a high school prom dress.

I also have a problem with dresses that are too perfectly white. I think this makes a dress look cheaper. Personally, dresses that are slightly off-white look more expensive to me.


If you want to know my ideal wedding dress, here it is. Simple, off-white, somewhat form-fitting, not made of satin,  no bling.



The dresses below are also very nice, and they are designed by Vera Wang:

   

(Word Count: 255)

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Sitting Through Long Orchestra Concerts

This weekend I went to see my brother play upright bass with Orchestra Iowa at the Paramount. Although it was great to see my brother play and I was proud of him, I hate sitting through concerts in general. I would much rather play along with the orchestra or sing or at least be able to get up and walk around. I absolutely love classical music, but it is so boring for me to sit through an orchestra concert, even if it is my brother who is performing. It did not help that my mom, dad, and I were sitting on the balcony and did not have a close up view of the performers.  When my family goes to see my brother play bass in the orchestra at University of Iowa, we are often sitting in the front row. But even then, I would rather listen to music in my car, play in the orchestra myself, sing opera, or play along on the flute while sitting at the computer.

(174 words)

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Emerald Green: New Color for 2013


So, apparently emerald green is the new color for interior design. It was named color of the year for 2013 for its “energizing, exciting, [and] enticing” effect.

But emerald green walls? Really?

Apparently so, according to an article in the Cedar Rapids Gazette, saying it made a home look regal, warm, rich, etc. In my opinion, it makes it look like you are trying too hard to make your house look expensive and it probably wouldn't match the style of your home.

Although I’m okay with the idea of emerald green accents, I am opposed to the idea of emerald green walls in my home.

Here are some pictures where I think emerald green accents look nice:
Emerald green works in this room because, for the most part, everything about this room is very neutral, but the green in the pillows brings just the right amount of color to the room—nothing is at all overdone.

  
The emerald green of this sofa works in this room because the rest of the room looks very European, with the ivory walls and dark woodwork, the archways, the Persian rug, the ottoman, and the style of the furniture in general. I also like the yellow curtains on the window in combination with the emerald green of the sofa.  This goes to show that this shade of green looks better in small amounts or as accents to add color to the room, as opposed to having the entire wall painted in this color. Well done!

Same with the chair. You can still add color to a neutral room by adding colorful accents, such as the emerald green chair shown above. That way, you still have the color you want without it being "too much". 


To show you what I mean about entire rooms being painted in the color, I have put together some photos of emerald green gone wrong:

 
 
Who would do this to their home?! And I will point out that the majority of these photos were found on design websites saying this was the next big thing and implying that this color looks good!


Below are some photos I found where I am pleasantly surprised to see that emerald green walls can actually look pretty neat sometimes; that is, if they are done in the right style of home and they are the right shade. I still don’t think emerald green walls are right for every home. That I am sure of. And most of the photos I've seen are not done well.

 
  
Even then, I would stick to just using this green as accents such as pillows, throws, rugs, etc. I think it is extremely difficult to find the right shade and to make it work in the average home. Plus, it could be easy to get sick of it very quickly.

(478 words)


The Best Decision I've Ever Made--The Best Advice You Could Ever Take


One of the best decisions I have ever made was in middle school. Although many say that middle school really doesn't matter once you get to high school since colleges only look at your high school grades, what they may not remember is that the decisions you make in middle school really have an impact on how successful you are later in life.

I was in seventh grade, and it was finally time to find out what classes our teachers thought would be best for us to take in eighth grade based on our ITBS scores. The two classes being considered were math and Spanish, and Spanish was required in eighth grade at my school.

I guess I wasn't too surprised to find out that, of the three math classes—Pre-Algebra, Algebra Prep, and Algebra—I was average and put into Algebra Prep. I had never been good at math and had never expected to be put into the highest level. But when I saw what Spanish class my teachers had recommended for me, I was beyond horrified.

It was recommended that I take Introduction to Spanish, and not Spanish I, based on how well I performed on my ITBS tests. I just could not believe it. I felt so stupid, and it seemed like all of my friends had been put into the higher level Spanish class. I refused to feel stupid and be put into the lowest level class. So, instead of following my teachers’ advice, I signed up for Spanish I instead.

To my surprise, it may just be the best decision I have ever made. When my teachers did not believe in me (so to speak), I believed in myself and I took on the challenge. Spanish actually turned out to be one of my best subjects, and I received A’s on just about every assignment, quiz, and test that I took. I absolutely loved learning Spanish and I cannot imagine how different my experience may have been if I had taken Intro to Spanish instead of Spanish I.  My Spanish teacher was absolutely wonderful (even though I seemed to be the only one to think so) and I have learned more in that one year of Spanish than I have in any other Spanish class I have taken since. I don’t know if it was because of my teacher or because of my hard work and motivation, but I know for a fact that it was the best decision ever made.

Spanish continues to be my best subject. Since eighth grade, I have received an A or A+ as my final grade in the class in every Spanish class I have ever taken. Spanish comes very easily to me and it is so useful in life, not just sitting in a classroom receiving grades. After taking three years of Spanish, I had the opportunity to visit my sister in Spain since she was there studying abroad to experience another country and improve her Spanish. While I was there, I was able to use my Spanish with my sister, her host family, her friends, and the people of Spain in general. In fact, very few people in Spain, if any, spoke English to us, even though we were clearly tourists. It was as if they expected everyone to know their language, and they sure were not willing to make an effort to communicate with us in anything besides Spanish.

I had another opportunity to practice my Spanish when my sister’s friend from Spain came to visit our family in the United States. Just from speaking Spanish to Blanca for as little as two weeks, my Spanish improved immensely and it was so fun to be able to communicate to someone in another language. Plus, I knew I was doing her a favor because she did not know that many words in English and it was a struggle for her to communicate to the rest of our family, who did not speak Spanish.

Now , in my fourth year of taking a Spanish class, I still continue to improve and I have never regretted taking that Spanish I class in middle school that was supposed to be “too challenging” for me. As I said, it was the best decision I have ever made. And the occasions listed above where not the only times where Spanish came in handy; I just used them as examples. There have been so many times and places where it has been useful to be able to understand and speak Spanish, and I plan to continue Spanish in college and maybe study abroad like my sister did. I cannot stress enough the importance of challenging yourself and learning another language. It will be the best thing you ever did and, had I not followed my gut and had I taken the class recommended for me, who knows how bad my Spanish would be today. 

(834 words)

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Re-Face a fireplace today; tomorrow...

 
For weeks and weeks, I researched floor tiles online, encouraged the cat to barf on the carpet, smiled when the dogs tracked mud on it, and at last, I persuaded Dad that it was time to tear out the ugly sea-green carpet and install floor tiles. He stood at the computer staring at pictures of tiles, drove to Menards and brought home samples, said no to this one and no to that one, while Mom kept saying she wanted harlequin. Coffee and cream, alternating diamond-shaped tiles, with no thought whatsoever for the resale value of our house. Finally Dad brought home a porcelain floor tile called Ragno Rustic Ridge, and it brought to mind the old look of Spain, and we all agreed this was the right floor. We tore out the ugly carpet. Dad got busy with the yards of orange underlayment that go under the tiles. To our surprise, the boxes of tile seemed to contain a darker and a lighter tile, and Mom got her way with a sort of harlequin pattern of alternating darker and lighter tiles. Things were looking pretty good. Until I noticed the fireplace.
 Cheap.
The ignorant, evil woman who designed this house and lived in it for two years before we did made so many, many bad choices. Mom says it may have been that she ran over budget and had to cut corners, but i say it's a simple case of bad taste. Who puts sea green carpet in their dream house? Who would choose ugly, grainy oak trim if white painted trim cost no more? I'll tell you who. The same ignorant, evil woman who'd choose 50-cent ceramic tiles in a pale, depressed shade of gray for her fireplace surround. The biggest cost of this fireplace was the labor, not the tile (even though we did not hire anything done- my dad did it all himself and always does). No matter the price or the type of tile, the same effort is required for spreading grout and slapping up tiles and holding them in place until the grout dries. So why cut THAT corner and install cheap, ugly, pale gray tile in a corner fireplace that is the central focus of the main room? Worse, why would she choose cheap, ugly brass strips for the grate? Plain black would have been better.
 Needless to say, the new floor just wouldn't look good when that fireplace stood there staring us in the face with its cold gray ugliness. I took a deep breath and went back to the computer, searching "fireplace surround" and "face of fireplace" and finally, I got some ideas.
 Marble tiles.
 Mom is a rock hound, and we had just paid $5 to attend a rock show at Hawkeye Downs. She could have spent two whole days staring at rocks--at the first table out of a hundred. She kept picking up a sodalight the size of a baseball and saying, "If only it weren't six hundred dollars. I love this sodalight." There were other rocks with names I've forgotten or didn't hear in the first place, and she wanted them all. Even Dad got interested in a four-hundred-dollar coffee table made of lime rock, and the top was inlaid with fossils. At the time, all these rocks and dollar signs drifted through a fog of boredom and hunger in my brain. But now, staring at a computer screen with one hand in a bag full of Pepperidge Farm goldfish, my synapses fired into brilliance. If Dad for even two seconds would have considered spending four hundred dollars on a coffee table made of rock, and to be honest, it was ugly, even if the fossils in it were cool, then Dad might spend, oh, three hundred dollars for a dozen squares of onyx to turn our ugly fireplace into a showcase.
The idea of "real onyx" lit a fire in Mom's imagination. With her on my side, it did not take long to convince Dad we should go through with this fireplace remodeling job. We drove to Ar-Jay's, Lowes, Menards and Home Depot. Mom loved all sorts of things until she saw the price tag. Finally, because it was beautiful and less expensive than other natural tiles, we agreed on marble. Emperador marble, a swirling brown and black, would look good with the black insert of the fireplace and black grates that convered the vents and air intake. We found a hole-in-the-wall store called Floor Trader that had the best price on the marble, so we placed our order and stocked up on more grout and waited two weeks for our marble to come in.
Dad carted boxes of heavy, heavy, heavy rock tiles into the family room, opened one up, and held a tile next to the new ceramic floor. "What beautiful marble," Mom said. "Too bad there's so much variation. Some of these don't look like the same stone, even."
Too bad Mom couldn't see the beautiful marble looked terrible with our ceramic floor.
Too bad Dad couldn't see it either.
Finally, I said it. "This looks terrible."
Too late, they said. Special orders are not returnable. We'd be out three hundred dollars.
They'd be out a lot more money than that if seeing the clashing tiles caused me to go insane, but I did not use that argument on them. I just got Dad to agree with me, finally, that the rich, warm brown of the elegant Emperador marble clashed with the muddy grays of our Ragno Rustic Ridge floor tiles. Mom made that terrible gasping noise she makes when she imagines large sums of money going down the drain. And so, back to Floor Trader we went, Mom staring down the guy who sold us the marble. With far too many words, she stated what everyone already knows: things look different in the fluorescent light of the store. And with natural stone, variations are so much more dramatic, so what we saw in the store display just didn't look anything like what showed up in the boxes we had special ordered, and if only he would take pity on us, she would shut up. But the nice man smiled before she finished her speech. "You can return this for an in-store credit," he said. I was back in the corner flipping those huge panels full of samples before Mom could finish heaving a big sigh of relief.
It took some arguing, but we settled on honey onyx, even if it cost a lot more than marble. Two weeks later, Dad was carting in heavy boxes again. The tiles were various shades of honey-gold, white and off white, in swirling patterns caused by rain or rippling water. Dad bought a mighty blade for his wet saw and stood outside cutting stone, a dusty, dirty job. He pieced the stones around the fireplace inset, held them in place with support brackets and waited for them to dry and harden. Two days later, he pulled away the brackets. He put the black vents back in place. We stood back to take a good look. And I said....
Yuck.
What happened to the pale honey onyx? This looked orange, almost. Hawkeye gold, against those black vents.
I am tearing it down, I said. This will not do.
Mom made the terrible gasping noise, then said, "You chose it yourself. Live with it." The onyx was cemented in place. Even Dad just blinked at me and walked away.
Desperate, I considered all our options. I had never paid attention to the brass strips that are part of the grates. Long narrow strips of cheap, shiny brass. It had looked terrible with the depressing gray ceramic tiles, and it looked even more terrible with the onyx and our nice, new, Spanish-inspired Ragno Rustic Ridge floor tiles. I interrogated Dad until I dragged the truth out of him: the black vents COULD be replaced.
With what?
Another long, arduous search at the computer led me to replicas of Victorian grates, none of which were the right size, all of which cost a small fortune.
Mom, Dad and I drove to antique stores in tiny towns, desperately searching for wrought iron scraps or vents that Dad could re-purpose for the fireplace. Nothing turned up. Finally, Dad found a website for fences and one had a Victorian design he liked. He made phone calls to welders, laser jet operators and a  man who calls himself Handsome Herb and loves to talk about his super expensive, super high power water jet machine that cuts metal at the speed of light. Well, at some super speed, anyway. Dad emailed him drawings, Herb sent an estimate, and, wonder of wonders, Dad agreed to pay for custom fire place grates. Add that to the cost of the onyx, and our fireplace was becoming a solid investment.
A week later, we drove to see Handsome Herb's handiwork. Mom made that awful gasping sound I've come to dread on discovering that the Herb's estimate was for ONE grate, and we'd ordered TWO grates, top and bottom, so the price was double what we expected. Oops.
The grates looked marvelous. Dad installed them, and with the onyx, the Rustic tiles laid out in a diamond pattern, and the Victorian grates, the whole room looked incredible. So European. So....elegant.
Dad's ugly black recliner would have to go.
The sofa, too.
"It never ends," Mom said. "You want and want something, and finally you get it, and right away, you want something new."
Back to the internet I went, pretending not to hear the terrible gasping noise Mom makes when she pictures more dollar signs going down the drain.
 



Sunday, February 3, 2013

Disney: Question

The next question I will be asking is "How has Disney clothing for female characters changed or developed over time?" As you may have noticed, many of the female characters on Disney wear provocative clothing. To begin, let us revisit that icon of the wholesome 1960s era, that innocent little fairy and friend of Peter Pan, Tinkerbell. She wears an extremely short little green tutu/skirt/dress. It is also very tight-fitting. She carries a wand and waves it around while thrusting her hips and showing off her cute bare legs. Good thing Peter Pan hadn't grown up yet, or....



Quick change of subject. Ariel! The Little Mermaid's outfit basically consists of two purple clam shells slapped onto her...er, chest...no straps, no visible means of support. She also wears a tight-fitting skirt. Oh wait, it's not a skirt. It's part of her body. That means she's very nearly topless and totally bottom-less. Her human stomach is exposed above her fishy naked tail. Her clam shells work like a push-up bra, showing too much cleavage. And her expression is that "come get me" look you see in Victoria's Secret ads.



Jasmine- She is also wearing basically just a bra and some baggy pants. Her stomach is also completely exposed. The push-up effect you see on Victoria's Secret models is apparent here too. Does Disney design these things for little girls, or for the dads who drag their girls to the movie theater?



Pocahontas- Her dress is very short. Her legs are impossibly long. Her hair flows in the wind. That's all I want to say about that.


Esmerelda- Her dress is very low-cut and is falling off of her shoulders.


Megara- Her dress is also very low-cut and her cleavage is showing. The dress is also very tight.



Rapunzel- Basically, the top of her dress is a corset. Which is an undergarment. And guess where she bought it? Judging from the amount of cleavage, I would guess Victoria's Secret. "Tangled," the name of the movie, also might describe the kind of thinking that goes into Disney fashions.

Belle from Beauty and the Beast- her dress is too low-cut and her cleavage is showing. The way she slow-dances with a beast wearing a man's suit? Let us hope little girls don't think about this.

*I would like to point out that all these girls have a large chest and a tiny little waist, in addition to curvy hips.


Below is a list of female Dinsey characters that dress more modestly:

Snow White (1940s)

Cinderella (1950). Her dress is also fairly low cut--but at least no cleavage is showing.

Princess Aurora from Sleeping Beauty (1950s)

Mulan- the majority of the movie, she is actually dressed as a man!

That's all I want to say about THAT.









Super Bowl Commercials

So what did everyone think of the super bowl commercials tonight? In my opinion, they were not all that great. There were a few that I really liked, though, such as the Doritos commercial with the goat. Goats are cute. Any lame commercial is better if you put a goat in it.

However, putting Stevie Wonder in a commercial does not make it cool. Two young guys drag a chair all over city sidewalks and park it in front of a famous blind singer, and suddenly the beer they brought with the chair is cool? Sorry.

Then there were the pistachios. Human sized, dancing pistachio nuts. And leading them, that Korean guy name PSY, dancing Gangnam stye with pistachio nuts. PSY has left people all over the globe wondering how and why his weird video became the number-one, most-watched song and dance ever on you tube. He's so uncool, he's cool. But putting the world's most famous weird dancer on stage with dancing pistachios just isn't funny or cool. PSY is cool, in the minds of millions or billions, but the commercial was not.

The Clydesdale commercial was cute, but too cute, if you know what I mean. A man raises a baby Clydesdale to become a parade horse. He sees a team of Clydesdales in a parade one day and thinks he sees the one he raised. Later, he gets into his truck to go home, but down the street comes this huge Clydesdale. His horse had recognized him and run off to greet him before he drove away. Of course it's cute, but what does it have to do with drinking beer?

In future, before companies spend millions of dollars per second for a commercial during the super bowl, they might remember this: animals are cute. Famous musicians, not so much. It has to be way cheaper to hire a goat or a horse than a guy as famous as Stevie Wonder or PSY.

Re-Face a Fireplace

For weeks and weeks, I researched floor tiles online, encouraged the cat to barf on the carpet, smiled when the dogs tracked mud on it, and at last, I persuaded Dad that it was time to tear out the ugly sea-green carpet and install floor tiles. He stood at the computer staring at pictures of tiles, drove to Menards and brought home samples, said no to this one and no to that one, while Mom kept saying she wanted harlequin. Coffee and cream, alternating diamond-shaped tiles, with no thought whatsoever for the resale value of our house. Finally Dad brought home a porcelain floor tile called Ragno Rustic Ridge, and it brought to mind the old look of Spain, and we all agreed this was the right floor. We tore out the ugly carpet. Dad got busy with the yards of orange underlayment that go under the tiles. To our surprise, the boxes of tile seemed to contain a darker and a lighter tile, and Mom got her way with a sort of harlequin pattern of alternating darker and lighter tiles. Things were looking pretty good. Until I noticed the fireplace.

Cheap.

Cheap, ugly fireplace tiles- just ask the cat

The ignorant, evil woman who designed this house and lived in it for two years before we did made so many, many bad choices. Mom says it may have been that she ran over budget and had to cut corners, but i say it's a simple case of bad taste. Who puts sea green carpet in their dream house? Who would choose ugly, grainy oak trim if white painted trim cost no more? I'll tell you who. The same ignorant, evil woman who'd choose 50-cent ceramic tiles in a pale, depressed shade of gray for her fireplace surround. The biggest cost of this fireplace was the labor, not the tile. No matter the price or the type of tile, the same effort is required for spreading grout and slapping up tiles and holding them in place until the grout dries. So why cut THAT corner and install cheap, ugly, pale gray tile in a corner fireplace that is the central focus of the main room? Worse, why would she choose cheap, ugly brass strips for the grate? Plain black would have been better.

Needless to say, the new floor just wouldn't look good when that fireplace stood there staring us in the face with its cold gray ugliness. I took a deep breath and went back to the computer, searching "fireplace surround" and "face of fireplace" and finally, I got some ideas.

Marble tiles.

Mom is a rock hound, and we had just paid $5 to attend a rock show at Hawkeye Downs. She could have spent two whole days staring at rocks--at the first table out of a hundred. She kept picking up a sodalight the size of a baseball and saying, "If only it weren't six hundred dollars. I love this sodalight." There were other rocks with names I've forgotten or didn't hear in the first place, and she wanted them all. Even Dad got interested in a four-hundred-dollar coffee table made of lime rock, and the top was inlaid with fossils. At the time, all these rocks and dollar signs drifted through a fog of boredom and hunger in my brain. But now, staring at a computer screen with one hand in a bag full of Pepperidge Farm goldfish, my synapses fired into brilliance. If Dad for even two seconds would have considered spending four hundred dollars on a coffee table made of rock, and to be honest, it was ugly, even if the fossils in it were cool, then Dad might spend, oh, three hundred dollars for a dozen squares of onyx to turn our ugly fireplace into a showcase.

The idea of "real onyx" lit a fire in Mom's imagination. With her on my side, it did not take long to convince Dad we should go through with this fireplace remodeling job. We drove to Ar-Jay's, Lowes, Menards and Home Depot. Mom loved all sorts of things until she saw the price tag. Finally, because it was beautiful and less expensive than other natural tiles, we agreed on marble. Emperador marble, a swirling brown and black, would look good with the black insert of the fireplace and black grates that convered the vents and air intake. We found a hole-in-the-wall store called Floor Trader that had the best price on the marble, so we placed our order and stocked up on more grout and waited two weeks for our marble to come in.

Dad carted boxes of heavy, heavy, heavy rock tiles into the family room, opened one up, and held a tile next to the new ceramic floor. "What beautiful marble," Mom said. "Too bad there's so much variation. Some of these don't look like the same stone, even."

Too bad Mom couldn't see the beautiful marble looked terrible with our ceramic floor.

Too bad Dad couldn't see it either.

Finally, I said it. "This looks terrible."

Too late, they said. Special orders are not returnable. We'd be out three hundred dollars.

They'd be out a lot more money than that if seeing the clashing tiles caused me to go insane, but I did not use that argument on them. I just got Dad to agree with me, finally, that the rich, warm brown of the elegant Emperador marble clashed with the muddy grays of our Ragno Rustic Ridge floor tiles. Mom made that terrible gasping noise she makes when she imagines large sums of money going down the drain. And so, back to Floor Trader we went, Mom staring down the guy who sold us the marble. With far too many words, she stated what everyone already knows: things look different in the fluorescent light of the store. And with natural stone, variations are so much more dramatic, so what we saw in the store display just didn't look anything like what showed up in the boxes we had special ordered, and if only he would take pity on us, she would shut up. But the nice man smiled before she finished her speech. "You can return this for an in-store credit," he said. I was back in the corner flipping those huge panels full of samples before Mom could finish heaving a big sigh of relief.

It took some arguing, but we settled on honey onyx, even if it cost a lot more than marble. Two weeks later, Dad was carting in heavy boxes again. The tiles were various shades of honey-gold, white and off white, in swirling patterns caused by rain or rippling water. Dad bought a mighty blade for his wet saw and stood outside cutting stone, a dusty, dirty job. He pieced the stones around the fireplace inset, held them in place with support brackets and waited for them to dry and harden. Two days later, he pulled away the brackets. He put the black vents back in place. We stood back to take a good look. And I said....

Yuck.

What happened to the pale honey onyx? This looked orange, almost. Hawkeye gold, against those black vents.

I am tearing it down, I said. This will not do.

Mom made the terrible gasping noise, then said, "You chose it yourself. Live with it." The onyx was cemented in place. Even Dad just blinked at me and walked away.

Desperate, I considered all our options. I had never paid attention to the brass strips that are part of the grates. Long narrow strips of cheap, shiny brass. It had looked terrible with the depressing gray ceramic tiles, and it looked even more terrible with the onyx and our nice, new, Spanish-inspired Ragno Rustic Ridge floor tiles. I interrogated Dad until I dragged the truth out of him: the black vents COULD be replaced.

With what?

Another long, arduous search at the computer led me to replicas of Victorian grates, none of which were the right size, all of which cost a small fortune.

Mom, Dad and I drove to antique stores in tiny towns, desperately searching for wrought iron scraps or vents that Dad could re-purpose for the fireplace. Nothing turned up. Finally, Dad found a website for fences and one had a Victorian design he liked. He made phone calls to welders, laser jet operators and a  man who calls himself Handsome Herb and loves to talk about his super expensive, super high power water jet machine that cuts metal at the speed of light. Well, at some super speed, anyway. Dad emailed him drawings, Herb sent an estimate, and, wonder of wonders, Dad agreed to pay for custom fire place grates. Add that to the cost of the onyx, and our fireplace was becoming a solid investment.

A week later, we drove to see Handsome Herb's handiwork. Mom made that awful gasping sound I've come to dread on discovering that the Herb's estimate was for ONE grate, and we'd ordered TWO grates, top and bottom, so the price was double what we expected. Oops.

The grates looked marvelous. Dad installed them, and with the onyx, the Rustic tiles laid out in a diamond pattern, and the Victorian grates, the whole room looked incredible. So European. So....elegant.

Dad's ugly black recliner would have to go.

The sofa, too.

"It never ends," Mom said. "You want and want something, and finally you get it, and right away, you want something new."

Back to the internet I went, pretending not to hear the terrible gasping noise Mom makes when she pictures more dollar signs going down the drain.

THAT'S MORE LIKE IT :-) 





Sunday, January 27, 2013

Remodeling the Cabin

In the fall of 2000, my dad built a little cabin in our backyard woods, made from reclaimed barn wood from my grandpa's farm. It is not big, but it is just enough to enjoy a good board game, invite some friends over, or tell scary stories in it. Oddly enough, I almost never go in it. This is mostly because it is either too hot or too cold outside, and when it is too hot outside, that also usually means there is poison ivy along the pathway that leads to the cabin. Not to mention, it is scary sleeping in the cabin because of wild animals making noises in the night, such as deer, coyotes, or raccoons.

 But I've realized these are not the only things keeping me from wanting to use the cute little house in the woods. Remember my earlier posts about hating oak woodwork in homes? Well, I also hate anything that looks like a log cabin. You see, the walls in the cabin are made of stacked boards of knotty pine wood. It looks very rustic, but it is just not my style. What I would like to do is make the place look more like a New England cottage. We already have some of the things needed for this. For example, all the windows and doors we salvaged from an old house that was being torn down, probably built in the early 1920s or 1930s or so. And there are nice wood floors in the cabin, too.

And now I have realized what needs to be done in order for me to like this cabin. All I need to do is paint the walls and maybe change the furniture and bedspreads. In addition, I will have my dad stain the wooden beams on the ceilings to a darker color and maybe either stain or paint the catwalk at the top of the cabin. Here is a photo of what I am thinking of the place looking like when it is finished:



You can see from this photo that the walls are made of individual pieces of wood, just like in our cabin, so if I paint the walls in it, they may resemble this photo. I was also thinking that painting the walls will brighten up the place and make it feel homier. I will also accessorize with colorful blue pillows that have a coastal/beach home/New England feel because once the walls are painted white (I think that is the color I will choose), it will already have that feel to it.

For extra storage and a better use of space, I think I will try to find a wicker coffee table/storage bin like the one pictured above so that people can have a place to rest their feet, play a board game, have a snack, or store coats, pillows, board games, etc. Maybe I will post some photos of the before and after and see what you guys think.

Brutal Boyfriend Murder

I recently finished watching the news on the murder case of Travis Alexander. It is a very strange case. It is believed that Jodi Arias is the murderer. There is evidence from her hand prints and blood on the bathroom shower walls, where she killed him. So the question is not whether or not she did it, but rather why did she do it? What reason did she have for murdering Travis Alexander? Or if she did not do it, why were her hand prints and blood at the scene of the murder?

It is strange because Jodi acts totally innocent, as if she does not remember anything or even that she did anything wrong. It is as though she was not aware of what she was doing or why. She still claims she is innocent, despite the obvious evidence. She claims she had no reason to harm him or kill him. She had nothing against him, no evil intentions. She quote "would never hurt him". Yet she now has three different stories telling what happened the days leading up to and on the day of the murder. She also says something about her grandfather's gun having been stolen from his home.

The other strange part is that she had more than one weapon with her. It is believed that Jodi shot Travis first, and the reason she also used a knife to kill him was because she could not get the gun to fire a second time. But why would she have planned in advance to bring a backup weapon with her? What would have made her think to do that, to think that maybe the gun would not get the job done? One would think that most people would only bring the one weapon, the gun. So this leads to other questions, such as whether or not there were other people involved in the murder, at the crime scene? Or was she maybe forced to kill Travis?

Something else I find truly bizarre is is that the other girls and roommates she lives with in jail think she should be freed from prison. They think she is an innocent girl with a big heart, that she would never have hurt her boyfriend, Travis. But if you were those other girls in prison, wouldn't freeing her be the last thing you would want for her? Wouldn't you be jealous that she would get to be freed but you would still have to live in a prison cell for who knows how many more years, if not the entire rest of your life? Her inmates think her behavior is very normal, and that nothing seems wrong with her, but they can tell she is hurt by all of this.

And the fact that some people believe the gun shot came last really confuses me because Travis was much bigger than her and you would think that Jodi would want to shoot him before stabbing her so that he could not defend himself and hurt her. You would think that because he is so big, he would have had more defensive wounds if she had stabbed him first and then shot him.

Here is a video of Jodi Arias' police interrogation.

So what do you think happened? Do you think Jodi Arias is innocent or guilty of committing the murder of her boyfriend, Travis Alexander? Or do you think she was forced to murder him and was a victim of domestic violence? I look forward to finding out more information on the murder case. We shall see what happens next.


Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Disney/Gender Roles

As I mentioned in one of my previous posts, our class is watching a documentary called "Miss Representation" in AP Lang and Comp. The film is about the media and how it negatively influences and/or portrays women. In one segment of the film, a statistic stated that between 1937 and 2005, only one Disney character was not seeking love as a main aspiration. The question I will be answering is "Between 1937 and 2005, which Disney character was not aspiring for love?". The answer to this question was found on this website.

So, what is the answer to this question? Which disney princess was not seeking romance? The answer is Mulan. Mulan was the only disney princess that was not looking for a handsome prince. Her mother and father kept pushing her to find a husband and get married, but Mulan did not want to. As a girl, her duty was to bring honor to the family and make herself a desirable bride according to Chinese tradition. Instead, Mulan pretends to be a man in order to fight in the war in place of her aged and woulded father. She chops off her hair, steals her father's armor, and takes off on the family's horse without telling anyone. She defies gender stereotypes and fights to save China. She trains to be a strong warrior with all the other men and does not want to be treated differently based on her gender.

Later on in the movie, Mulan is stabbed and her true gender is revealed when her wound is bandaged. The other men are outraged and leave Mulan on the mountain while they go to spread the news of the Huns' defeat. Mulan was treated as an outcast simply based on the fact that she was a woman, and the men thought they were the only ones who could fight for their country and be warriors. In the end, Mulan proves she is capable of more than what people expect of her when she tricks the Hun onto the rooftop and challenges him to combat. The hun is eventually killed and Mulan is praised by the emperor.

Mulan brought honor to her family through a greater act than making herself a desireable bride. She saved China and kept her dad from having to fight when he was too frail to do so himself. The emperor was proud of Mulan and this made her family very proud.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mulan

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0120762/plotsummary

http://www.fanpop.com/clubs/disney-princess/articles/45394/title/disney-princesses-role-models-young-girls

Monday, January 21, 2013

"For women, their value is how they look."


“For women, their value is how they look.”
A few days ago, in AP Lang and Comp, our class started watching a documentary called “Miss Representation”, a film about the harmful ways women and girls are portrayed in the media. With facts and statistics about the number of hours teens spend per day on media consumption, which would include listening to music, reading magazines, watching TV and movies, or simply being online on the internet, the documentary presented a case for girls in our culture growing up with unrealistic, impossible, frustrating or demoralizing images of what they are supposed to look like. Regardless of how accurate the data is, I am sure we could all agree that girls today are exposed to a daily onslaught of messages, direct or indirect, and that these messages define our cultural ideals, set standards, and plant ideas in little girls, teens and women on how they should look, how they should act, what they should like, what to buy and wear, and how to get guys to notice. 


“For women, their value is how they look,”the documentary states. There is this idea that a woman has to be perfect. They have to be skeletally thin and six feet tall. They have to wear lots of makeup. Their hair has to be perfect. Their skin has to be flawless. Their cheekbones have to be high. Teeth must be straightened and whitened. Asian women pay to have their eyes surgically altered to look more deep set. Women are trying to attain such an appearance that is simply unattainable. Even supermodels get photo-shopped to make their waists look smaller, or their chest bigger, or to cover up blemishes.Lips are injected to swell to bee-sting proportions, but noses are supposed to be smaller, not bigger. Ears can be cut and stitched closer to the head. Where does it end? If even the supermodels are not considered perfect, who is? Why are we comparing ourselves to something so unattainable? Just because the media makes us feel terrible for not being a certain way?

From a very early age, girls learn what the “ideal” woman should look like. They play with Barbies, see pictures of women in magazines, watch TV and see what actresses in Hollywood look like—we learn very early on what society expects of us. However, pretty much nobody ever lives up to these expectations. Some fall short more than others. Girls obsess over their skin, hair, height, build, weight, face shape, everything. Pretty girls tend to be popular, and less attractive girls may be socially shunned. Those who have the money to dress up with the latest trends have more friends than the girls wearing WalMart clothes or hand-me-downs. Self esteem plummets. It’s no wonder the depression rate has increased at such a high rate, along with anxiety and other mental disorders.

For all the alarming and compelling facts this film presents, I do find one thing I find that the focus is exclusively on females, and almost nothing is ever mentioned about men and how they too might suffer from how the media presents an ideal for them to live up to. Their fashion choices and hair styles may not be as excessive, but boys and men are pressured to look and act a certain way to fit in in this society. Just take a look at stores like Abercrombie and Fitch or Hollister or even Calvin Klein. Women and girls are seen only with slender, handsome men who have six-pack abs, bulging biceps and a golden sun-tan. Teenage boys take protein powders and lift weights constantly trying to “bulk-up” and meet the standard. It is considered a bad thing for boys to be skinny. Guys are pressured to be athletic and strong and to play sports. It seems to be true in every school that it's always the football players who are the most popular with all the hottest girls.

Male or female, all of us are being pressured to fit in and look just right. Women and girls may suffer the most pressure and the most uncomfortable fashions, such as high heels with narrow toes that resemble nobody's feet, and mascara, eye shadow, lipsticks, and other expensive little things that require us to buy a purse to carry it all around in. Guys get to carry a wallet in a back packet and not have to apply make up or wobble around in high heels or worry about a run in panty hose or a loose bra strap.  Guys don’t have to update their wardrobes as often, but they do have to look trendy and cool, whether the trend is pleated pants or flat fronts, distressed denim or the new palette of colored denim.I hope the day never comes when men, too, are expected to wear makeup, straighten or curl their hair, and buy a whole new wardrobe every season. I also hope that our culture's obsession with how we look will someday relax. We should be free to wear what feels good and looks just right, and to use our wardrobes, jewelry and hair styles to express who we are, not to make us all match each other like peas in a pod. Variety is under-rated. Conformity is over-rated. People who work in the media should try harder to send a message of being happy as we are, rather than making people feel they can never be as desirable as movie stars and models.

What should I blog about?

What should I blog about? Every week I am supposed to write three blogs totaling 1200 words for AP Lang and Comp class at my school. Every Sunday night I spend bent over the computer trying to find something to write about and get my word count up to 1200 words. Most of the time I get points docked for not having enough posts or not getting to the high-enough word count. Besides, why does anyone want to even read my blog? Why should people care about what I have to say if I don't even have anything that I want to say to write down on my blog? It is very frustrating and, personally, I don't think it is fair to expect this of students. What we say will be on the internet forever for our future employers to look at and it's not like we're even thinking about what we are writing half of the time. We are only writing these things because we are forced to for our AP class. How is that fair? What is does is it forces us to write  as many words as possible and use as many filler words as possible just to satisfy the requirement of 1200 words per week instead of writing quality posts with only the words that are necessary. That is the problem of many writers today. They simply use too many words and are therefore forced to cut out lots of parts from their novels or stories. But instead, I'm here trying to do the opposite. I'm TRYING to write as many words as possible instead of getting clearly to the point. And I'm not proud of it. If it were up to me, all my posts would be pretty short and concise. I would be straight to the point and say what I needed to say and then I'd be done with it. It would be much easier for readers to read anyway. Who wants to read really long posts with lots of unnecessary words? Definitely not me. Certainly not.