Summer Reading

  • A Long Walk To Water
  • Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me?
  • The Bystander
  • The Help

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

The Fight for Animal Rights-Animal testing

      When you look at your shampoo bottle, what do you see? You may see the silky smooth hair you are yet to have. You may see a shampoo bottle, no ideas or thoughts attached. Or you may see an animal. But what do animals have to do with our shampoo? According to “Animal Testing 101,” your shampoo along with makeup and lotion and even soap are tested on animals. And I don’t mean a simple swatch of eye shadow. These poor guys as locked in overcrowded cages, forced to be injected with chemicals. Now what do you see?
      It’s easy to shrug something so heavy and depressing like this off, and just continue to shampoo our hair with that same bottle. When the fact is, “right now, millions of miceratsrabbitsprimatescatsdogs, and other animals are locked inside cold, barren cages in laboratories across the country. They languish in pain, ache with loneliness, and long to roam free and use their minds.” The best part?” over 100 million animals are killed every single year. And others are not counting the reptiles that make up 85 percent of animal testing. And Millions of animals also suffer and die for classroom biology experiments and dissection, even though modern alternatives have repeatedly been shown to teach students better, save teachers time, and save schools money. PETA recommends boycotting this disgusting behavior and buying only cruelty-free products.
      The author shows the importance of cruelty free products through including numbers. These numbers show how big it’s become, to a point that makes you feel sad. Another example is the vivid images of animals in enclosed spaces without anywhere to go. Trapped internally and externally. It’s sickening. The biggest example the author can give is that there is an alternative option to this cruelty. The simple fact that this did not have to escalate is maddening.

      I cannot sit still now thanks to this article. I turn to my pets, my household pets and have to consider the fact that animals just like them are hurting, dying, suffering. It makes me feel depressed. The most depressing thing is I am only one pixel on the image of the world. I can fight, I can fight long and hard, but in the end I am only a 13-year-old girl who cries when she sees a dead pigeon on the sidewalk. So I will fight to protect these animals, and I will try, and hopefully someone will see this and help me.

Thursday, November 6, 2014

ELA Essay

Themes in a book are like layers of a cake. A cake with just frosting wouldn’t be a cake at all! You need the layers in order to maintain a yummy cake. In the book, The Absolute True Story of a Part Time Indian, you discover that this would make one delicious cake! The most important layer is the fact that junior left the reservation. Although he was called a traitor and yelled at, he did it so he wouldn’t have to continue the sad hopeless lifestyle everyone he knows lives. Therefore, Junior leaving the reservation shows what can happen if you put yourself out there.
         Junior is a teenage boy living on an Indian reservation. He lives with his dad, an alcoholic, his caring mother, his understanding mother with the gift of tolerance, his sister who wastes her life sitting in the basement, and his dog. Everything is normal, until he is faced with a possibility of leaving the reservation and going to school. He decides to leave the reservation after speaking with his teacher, known as, “Mr. P.” He leaves, leaving his tribe behind him. At his school he is picked on and teased being the only Indian. His tribe is infuriated with him as well. Then out of the blue his sister leaves randomly with some guy she just met that day to marry him and move to Montana. Shorty after, he sees a girl he knows forcing herself to throw up and tells her to not give up. They become friends, and shortly after he becomes extremely popular. Things are beginning to work out, when his beloved grandmother is hit by a drunk driver and killed. With this entire going on, on top of this, his sister was also killed. Through the insanity, he reconnects with his best friend. This character goes through a lot, but at least now he has his new found hope. 
         Junior encounters different people due to this decision. His decision had a very negative impact on the people around him, but it also had some wonderful outcomes. One example was Mr. P. Junior used his drawings to make fun of Mr. P because of the way he looked. But then Mr. P approached him and motivated him to go out into the real world and become someone better. Another example of this is Penelope. At first she pretended Junior didn’t exist. She was too pretty and popular to talk to the loser Indian. Suddenly, one-day junior caught Penelope making herself throw up. He talked to her and showed her kindness, something she wasn’t too familiar with. After Junior showed Penelope some kindness, she returned his favor. He was suddenly the it-boy. He received popularity, and even made it onto the basketball team. He also opened up about being poor, expecting others to leave him as so many have already. But instead he was faced with gratitude from people he least expected to bat an eye at.
         Junior didn’t have it easy, but he found an escape. Through basketball. And leaving the reservation gave him an opportunity to thrive. With a dedicated team and a motivational basketball coach, he could achieve anything. He worked hard and he gradually became one of the best players on the team.  At the end of the book he is playing with Rowdy head to head. I think basketball is a symbol of hope. Junior was always good at basketball, but it wasn’t until he fed and nourished this talent that he achieved anything.

         This book beautifully illustrates loss and hope through humor. It shows Junior’s struggle internally and externally. He is faced with lots of challenges, but in the end the best decision he ever made was leaving the reservation.