Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Fail to Succeed

Imagine yourself as a star, a person that everyone looks up to. Imagine yourself being paid millions to do something you want to do. Imagine yourself being one of the most important people in the world. That's how the minority like Michael Jordan, Bill Gates, Albert Einstein, Thomas Edison, and many more felt when they were on their rise to the top. Many people don't know that these great people all share one thing in common. They all failed. Every single one of them in their early ages were denied by their friends, teachers, coaches, etc. Through the toughness of having failure on their minds, it is exactly what got them where they are now.

Michael Jordan. What do you think when you hear that name? Do you think of a  basketball superstar? Do you think about the big celebrity he is? Well those are all true but it wasn't close to being that in high school. In high school he was a scrub, a person who wasn't good enough to make the high school team. He thought he was that good but turns out the coaches didn't see it in him that he was only an ordinary high school-er. After realizing that he hadn't made the team he got very upset, to the point where he cried in his room for days. Later he found out that being upset about it wouldn't help. That he'd have to work hard to get where he wanted to. So he worked and worked and the next season made the team. I learned a valuable lesson from his story. That you should never give up n your dreams, to push through the tough times, and work hard to achieve your goals.

Another very famous and possibly smartest ever, also failed. His name is Albert Einstein. Known as the smartest person that figured out that light travels faster than sound and that E=MC squared he wasn't always that smart. In grade school he has the worst grades in the class, he was thought to have mental problems, and everyone thought that he would never make it through the real world. But after dropping out at the age of 15 he had already started his work on theories and seemingly impossible math problems. What I learned from Albert's story is that people can doubt you and put you down but no matter what, you decide what you do with your life. You can decide to give up and accept failure. He took failure very well, worked hard and now is the smartest person known to man.

After learning about these amazing peoples stories it gets me to one question and one in particular. Do I have to fail to be successful? Many if not all of the greatest people in mankind failed to be the best in the beginning. I live to want to be the best, to be payed good money for something I want to do, and want to be looked up to by millions or even billions. There were many lessons to learn from the stories of failure and me knowing that could help me become more successful in school, sports, and the world.



Stories Found from-
http://avinashgamerboy.artician.com/blog/2009/09/famous-people-who-failed-but-succeeded

Works Cited

"Famous People Who Failed but Succeeded | Avinash_gamerboy's Blog on Artician." Famous People Who Failed but Succeeded | Avinash_gamerboy's Blog on Artician. N.p., n.d. Web. 04 June 2013. 

Friday, May 10, 2013

Risk it All

Many, if not every person in the world wants to take the easy road down life lane, but most of them want to be successful. Why aren't they getting to that point? It is most likely because they don't want to take risks. Risks are taken every day and they could affect your life significantly or very little and that can lead to something big. They will make you or break you. Here's the question. What are the rewards and consequences of taking the risk?

One of the risks adults take is going for the lottery. You have to pay for a ticket and choose numbers you want to win. The problem is that only 1 in 175,223,510 people actually win the mega millions jackpot. The risk is that you could (and probably will) lose money buying the ticket by not winning the jackpot. On the other hand the reward is huge and you could get millions and millions of dollars. Again this is one of those everyday risks that many people are willing to take to achieve wealth.

Another everyday risk is playing sports. There are many rewards to playing sports and there are some consequences that come with it like all risks. When you're playing a sport you love, you dream of becoming the top player in the world, the best of the best. Sadly becoming a professional player is hard enough because only 0.03% of people will make it to the big stage. That means there is a way less percentage of you being the most dominant player of the league. This one is only a small example of risk because if you make it you will be part of that small percentage so you should be proud of yourself. On the other hand it would crush you to hear that you weren't good enough to play at that level. It is more of a mental risk than anything.

Finally the last big risk is working towards one thing and one thing only. Yes, you will probably be better than it than most people because you've worked towards this most of your life, but what if someone they think better comes and takes your spot? Where will you look then? You haven't trained for any other job but this one. This is a huge risk because it is either you are the best and will most likely get paid a good amount of money or you could sadly be overtaken by someone else and have no other jobs to look at.

Risks are one of the things that will make or break your life. They will go one way for one person and the other for another person. Risk is what builds you, risk is what breaks you, risk is what scares you, risk is what decides how you live your life.



Thursday, April 25, 2013

Not As I Expected

Authors Note: I created this piece to compare the story A Clean, "Well-Lighted Place" and the screening of the story.



Whenever I see a movie and read the book they are really different. I picture scenes being a lot different from what they are in the videos. This is exactly what happened to me after I read and saw "A Clean, Well-Lighted Place". From the major parts of the scene, to the smallest details the video was very different from the book.

When the video started I instantly saw something that seemed very wrong. The old man. In the book it says that he is sitting in the shadows of leaves, alone in the dark. When I hear this I assume that he is outside and under a tree. In the video he is sitting inside of a cafe in plain light. No shadows anywhere. This bothered me because in the book this scene set a very dark tone. Watching it made it seem like any other scene in a movie.

Another major thing I pictured differently was the whole cafe. The one in the video looks very modern with tv's and technology that could not have come from the 1930s-1940s. I was picturing an old, shabbier looking building with a courtyard where the old man would've sat. What I pictured was a lot more 1930s-1940s than what the video used.

The last thing that was bothersome to me was that the two waiters were just sitting there watching the old man. The waiters weren't doing anything except watching the man eat and talking about how he was depressed and  tried hanging himself. What type of waiters just sit around and do nothing? This part of the movie just really bothered me.

The book and the movie are way different. Not to many things are like what I thought they were going to be. From the whole set to just one person those details changed how the whole story looked from my mind. I learned a lesson from this particular book to movie adaptation. Never trust that the movie will be what you expect it to be.

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

A Clean Well Lighted Place Response

4. How does Hemingway use light and dark as symbols? How do the shadows fit in?

He uses the symbols to set the tone of the story. Many times he will use dark symbols like "the tables were all empty except for where the old man sat in the shadow of the leaves," To me this creates a very dark and bad tone because it uses the word shadow which I think of darkness. Also he is alone so to me this means the man is alone in the darkness which doesn't sound happy at all. There is some light toned parts too. For example "With all those who do not want to go to bed.
 With all those who need a light for the night." The big word in this sentence is light. The way Hemingway uses the word it means like a retreat to me. To escape the dark energy around them that follows people. The light would ward off the darkness where people like the old man can finally rest and relax.

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Foreshadowing Analysis

Everything that happens is dark and evil. No one wants to think. The people are oblivious that they are living in a dystopia What could I possibly be referring to? The book Fahrenheit 451. Many times in this book you get the impression that maybe something bad is going to happen or the turning point is arriving. It draws you in, wanting you to find out what happens next. Through foreshadowing Ray Bradbury has many on the edges of their seats thinking what will happen.

 Foreshadowing was a big part of this book when it came to the suspense. Towards the beginning of the book, Ray Bradbury  set the book up around a particular scene: "He stood looking up at the ventilator grille in the hall and suddenly remembered that something lay behind the grille, something that peered down at him now. He moved his eyes quickly away" (10). Knowing that this book was about burning books, I instantly started thinking, does the fireman really have books? When it says he quickly looks away, that indicates that he was probably hiding something bad or unknown. With all of these thoughts in my head I knew it would play a big role in the book.

There was another example of foreshadowing but this one really means something big. On page 110 Guy says, "Why we've stopped in front of my house." This is probably the biggest line of the book. In this scene the firemen were called to  burn books and they stopped in front of Guy's house. Now they have to burn his house and arrest him for keeping books. The consequences alone make me think that this has to be the big turning point, where all of the action will start.Guy now has to make the choice of run or spend his days in jail.

The final form of foreshadowing is very subtle but it makes a huge impact on what happens at the end. After Montag had his little "incident" at his house he is forced to get out of the city or he gets killed by the infamous Mechanical Hound. He successfully makes it out but now he needs to find the group that lives on the train tracks in order to survive the wilderness. After Montag had been floating in a river forever, he finally finds what he needs on page 145 "The railroad tracks" Those three words alone mean that he is free, free from the dystopian world he lived in, free from the clueless lives of others, and best of all free to express and let out his emotions and thoughts that he had to keep in due to the city and its people.

The book Fahrenheit 451 always had you thinking about what will happen next.  Foreshadowing was what had you hooked, what had you want to keep reading to find out what happened. Ray Bradbury mixed the foreshadowing in with the most suspenseful parts which got me thinking about what would happen, what would go wrong, and what would go right. That's why this was such a surprising and great book.

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Quote Analysis


Important Meanings


"Outside the front door, in the rain, a faint scratching."
"Under the door sill a slow, probing sniff, an exhalation of electric steam"

These two lines I think will play a pretty big role in the book. When it talks about the scratching, sniffing, and the steam coming through the bottom of the door this makes me think about the robot dog. It does because the dog has been eyeing Guy for a while now and I think the department let it out to search for books. Since Guy has some books I think it has been attracted to the house and might alert the firemen. If the dog is actually hunting Guy down, he might get killed by it. 

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Word Choice/Context Analysis

Fahrenheit 451 Analysis

Authors Note: I created this essay to analyze figurative language quotes from the book Fahrenheit 451 to show my understanding of Word Choice/Context Analysis

Figurative language, figurative language, figurative language. This is what describes things so you can imagine it. This is what you use to get better grades on word choice. This is what makes your writing pieces better. From similes, to metaphors to, to onomatopoeia, figurative language is what helped the book, Fahrenheit 451, be a very interesting and attention grabbing book.

 On page 3 there is an example of a metaphor. The quote is "With the brass nozzle in his fists, with this great python spitting its venomous kerosene upon the world....." Right here the author is describing the firemen burning books. When it says "great python spitting its venomous kerosene" I think of the firemen using a hose  that shoots out oil. The "venomous kerosene" part I think describes the fact that this is being used to spread the fire fast because venom spreads through victims very quick.

Another example of figurative language is a simile. The author used this on page 10. The quote says "She had a very thin face like the dial of a small clock..." To me this means that Guy thought the girl had an unnaturally thin face. The comparison to a dial of a small clock makes me think that she could be in the Guinness World Records for thinnest face ever.

Another quote from page 3 is an example of personification. The author is explaining the blazing fires. "It was a special pleasure to see things eaten." When it says the things were being eaten it paints a clear picture in my head. To me this means that the fire is overtaking whatever it is burning it inch by inch as it is slowly consumed and turned to ashes like leftovers on a plate.

Ray Bradbury used figurative language at the right times so it made sense but it added different effects to the reader. I have to say his figurative language was used almost without any flaws at all. This book could be boring but instead Ray used figurative language to his advantage and made the book one of the most interesting and addicting books I have read.