Saturday, May 28, 2011

Some Lessons from the Assembly Line

    Andrew Braaksma's essay " Some Lessons from the Assembly Line" is about the struggle he went through going to work for twelve hour days in the summer and going to college during the school year. I feel that I can relate to Braaksma's situation because I do the same thing I work really hard and I go to school full time.
    Currently I attend the Art Institute of Sacramento full time as a student in the baking and pastry program. I also work part time at Mountain Mikes. When I am not at school or at work I am usually at home doing homework. It is hard to try and do everything because I hardly ever have time to do my homework I am usually staying up til midnight or later trying to get it done. Then I only get about four to five hours of sleep because I have to drive two hours to school so I get up at five in the morning to start getting ready. It is definitely a tough situation but I feel that it is totally worth it in the long run because I am getting a good education and learning early what it is like to live in the real world.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Salvation

        Langston Hughes' article "Salvation" is about his experience with pressure and the effect that it caused. Hughes' aunt pressured him into believing in Jesus and letting him save Hughes. Hughes felt so much pressure when the preacher was screaming and shouting at him Don't you want to be saved little lamb, Don't you want to be saved by Jesus walk to the platform my son come to Jesus, so when he didn't see Jesus he felt like he couldn't believe that he was real his aunt told him he would see Jesus so he thought he would. I have been in the same situation as Hughes feeling so pressured into something so you just gave in even if you didn't want to in my own experience I was so ashamed of myself because instead of standing up and saying no I gave in to the pressure.
         One time I had an experience where I gave in to the peer pressure of others. Some friends of mine thought it would be cool to steal some of their parents' cigarettes. So they did and Sarah kept telling me as she was puffing big clouds of smoke from a Marlboro 100  oh come on just try it it's what all the other girls are doing. Eventually I gave in and tried the cigarette and I thought that it made me look cool so I kept smoking. First it was only with friends then overtime I started smoking all the time and it became a habit to smoke. I wish I had never given in to the peer pressure of my friends because now I'm addicted to cigarettes and I smoke a pack in two days and I wish I had never started and just said "No" to the pressure.
             

Saturday, May 14, 2011

"Cell Phones and Social Graces"

       Charles Fisher's essay "Cell Phones and Social Graces" is about how cell phones draw people away from the things/times that are important. For example family vacations or a dinner with an old friend. Fisher is against cell phones because of the fact that it could distract a person from simple things like saying " Hi, how are you today" to a stranger as your walking down the street. I agree with Fisher, but I think a person should own a cell phone it is a good investment in case you get stranded on the side of the road, but I don't think that you should let it your life revolve around the device.
       I think that now days people let cell phones become their life. All the time you see people on their cell phones in the mall, at the movies, even driving their car (even thought that's illegal people don't even care). It's ridiculous how people will start fighting with someone on the phone while in the middle of the grocery store. I think that people should use cell phones for things like needing to get a hold of someone, or for an emergency. I don't think that someone should be as rude as to use their phone during an important event or just when going to the movies it's common courtesy to put your cell phone on vibrate. When your always on your cell phone sometimes you might be too busy to say hi to the person walking by you or say thank you to the bag boy that just bagged your groceries at the market it's the little things that matter.          
 

Friday, May 6, 2011

" Darkness at Noon "

     I think that Harold Krents' purpose in writing "Darkness at Noon" was to make point that disabled people can work just as hard and just as good as a person without a disability. So therefore why shouldn't a disabled person be treated as an equal to a person who is not disabled. I totally agree with Krents' viewpoint I think that equal right for the disabled is the right thing to do because there is nothing that makes them unequal.
     I feel that a disabled person can work just as hard if not harder than a person without disabilities. I work at Mountain Mikes Pizza and one of my fellow coworkers is deaf. Although he is deaf that does not affect his work what so ever he is one of the hardest workers at the facility. I feel that if any thing he is probably better than me (well at making the pizzas). So I think that it is wrong to think that anybody with a disability is not equal to us because those people are just as capable as any other person is.