My spirit is has no limitations. It can
reach from the heavens back to earth multiple times. It can love with a strong
passion and fight till the end. My spirit is free but follows its morals and
respects others in every way it can be thought of. My spirit is capable of being
benevolent to those who aren't as caring as I can be but can also switch in a
blink of an eye, cold and very direct. As much my spirit is free, my
traditional culture holds me and my conscience back at times; reminding me that
because I am a Latin woman, I have more
obstacles in the way rather than a man who holds less responsibilities. Hope and
courage helps me get away from submerging into my culture and religion rules
and encourages me to be bigger and better than what society tries to place me
in. when I was a little I knew from the start that I was different; I wasn't like
others and I dealt with more complicated things that made my spirit stronger. Fighting
cancer twice made my spirit invincible and incredibly powerful. I love letting
my spirit drift into where ever it wants to go after a few months in the hospital,
playing piano was my escape from reality. I thought that feeling never existed
and encouraged me to never give up the talent I gave myself. Playing piano
takes my spirit into a peaceful place where no one can take me away. I present
myself as a quiet smart girl but also as a loud tempered girl. Many people will
get my personality twisted with my attitude but my personality is me, (a down
to earth, realistic, humble being) and my attitude is depends on who that
person is.
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
Monday, March 17, 2014
Group 4: Azeb, Liz, Elizabeth, Da'rell, Myron
Prison Industrial Complex
- Corporate/Financial
- States- work & citizenship of persons with felony
research protocol:
- overview of the topic
- use at least 5 sources
- debate around issue, lay out the contours of debate
- take a position on the issue as a team
- make connection to our text
Notes:
St. Quentin
-Only suppose to hold 3,000 inmates
-Exceeds the limit by more than 1,000 more inmates inside that prison
-At least 10,000 inmates will be released before their time is done
-Will make crime rate go higher?
-Power points, and hand outs on our topic
Question:
- What causes this?
- How do we get affected?
Our jobs for today: find sources about...
Liz- Recidivism (likely of going back to prison after being released)
Da'rell- How many inmates are inside the public prisons and private prisons
Azeb- AB109 (how many people are going to be released because of the over crowding?)
Elizabeth- Money: who's funding the private prisons, how much money from our taxes are going to the public prisons?
Myron- The inside of the prison (rehabilitation)
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian
Lissette
Franco
Mr.
deWit
Hope against the System
Many people claim that everything in
life happens for a reason; it’s up to us to figure out whether we want to
accept our life’s path or change it. In Sherman Alexie’s novel, The Absolutely
True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, a young boy named Junior goes through
obstacles to find his true identity and fight society’s expectation as Native
American. With the support of his family and his inspirational teachers, he
left his reservation to achieve goals that only some Natives Americans can
dream of achieving. Graduating from high school and going to college was
difficult for people who lived in the reservations; they couldn’t financially
support each other nor give them the resources to find financial help. Since it
was a poor community, all the reservation people were just expected to work and
pay the bills. Without the support of Junior’s parents and hope that his
teachers has given him that things will get better, he would have submerged in
the system that has been created for that community.
Junior
wasn’t an ordinary child, he was bullied as a young boy and never thought that
things were going to get better for himself. With personal experience, I was
bullied as a young child like himself and found no hope that things were going
to get better. I lived in a poor community were all was expected was to go to
school and at the age of eighteen, start working. My teacher once told me that
the only way I will succeed in life is if I leave this city. Junior was told
the same by his white math teacher. When all hope nearly gone Mr. P gave a pep
talk to junior advising him the all the lives he has seen go to waste and all
the hope that was destroyed because of how the system worked in these poor
communities. “‘All these kids have given up’ he said. ‘All your friends. All
the bullies. And their mothers and fathers have given up, too… We’re all
defeated’” (42). Mr. P knew Junior was special and is capable of great things
that can change people perspective on that community’s capability; the only way
junior’s intelligence was going to be seen is by leaving the reservation,
before the people around him fill his mind with low expectations and only want
to achieve insignificant goals. “‘If you stay on this rez,’ Mr. P said,
‘they’re going to kill you… You can’t fight us forever.’… ‘You’re going to find
more and more hope the father and father you walk away from this sad, sad, sad
reservation’” (43). As described in the
book, not many people in the reservations make it out of the region or state.
It relates a lot to the lives of working lower class families here in the
United States; many lower class people live in a survival environment where
they hardly make enough money to support their family or get financial help
since low full time pay won’t be enough to pay bills. This proves to the
readers that to make it out and become successful, you are going to need to
leave your reservations and give yourself the confidence that you will do
something greater than expected.
Lower class civilians have a bigger
disadvantages than other classes in the system. People in the reservation are struggling
to bring enough money to support the family or themselves for the rest of the
month so they can get by and do this again the next month. “It sucks to be
poor, and it sucks to feel that somehow you deserve to be poor. You start
believing that you’re poor because you’re stupid and ugly. And then you start
believing then you start believing that you’re stupid and ugly because you’re
Indian. And because you’re Indian your start believing that you’re destined to
be poor” (13). Society has placed this
theory in their head, this gives them the disadvantage and loss of hope that
they will be greater and powerful like other social classes. Junior fights
against the stereotypes, insults, and put downs; giving him strength to stand
up and make a difference and help him and his people to get that that theory
out of their heads and live up to what you true dream/ goal is before you are
submerged by the obstacles life throws at you. “‘I have to prove that I am
stronger than everybody else. I have to prove that I will never give up. I will
never quit playing hard… I’m never going to quit living life this hard you
know? I’m never going to surrender to anybody’” (186). By proving to the world
that he will make it out of school and become something great is a goal that
can be achieved; Junior states that no one will bring him down even at his
weakest points. After losing many loved ones within months, many expected him
to surrender and come back to the rez, like nothing has happened, but with the
will power and support from his family, this has come to prove that nothing
will make him give up and he will fight against anyone who will try to take him
down.
The sad truth about being poor is that it’s
harder to be noticed in the real world; it will take you a longer time period
achieving your goal than other people who have the benefits of getting the
sources on how to reach your dream career, etc. “Poverty doesn’t give you strength
or teach you lessons about perseverance. No, poverty only teaches you how to be
poor” (13). In reality, being poor doesn’t make life a great experiment on how
far you can make it, it made for poor people
to stay in the bottom class and not get back up because it is believed that
poor people won’t be any greater than minimum wage workers. Junior’s sister,
Mary, left the reservation with her husband to make life better than what it
was seemed in that region. “It was courageous of her to leave the basement and
move to Montana. She went searching for her dreams, and she didn’t find them,
but she made the attempt. And I was making an attempt too” (216). Junior influenced
his older sister that there is more to it in life than be in the reservations
and not do anything that was productive in life. Inspiring his sister without
him knowing, made him push himself to be something greater than just any Native
American; no one was going to stop him from dreaming. This proves to the
readers that after hard work and motivation, no one will be able to stop you
from reaching that ambition of becoming who you want to be.
With that said, without dire,
motivation, support and hope, junior wouldn’t have made it so far in life. He would
have submerged into society’s stereotypes and left him working in a low income
job to suffer and live forever in reservations.
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