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Showing posts from September, 2024
 Monkey Pox   formal to informal of  Monkey Pox             It's happening again. The second lockdown, quarantine 2.0, the new COVID. Monkey Pox is just around the corner, and it's going to be just like covid was. A small amount of cases in each states, one state starts picking up cases like their $20 bills on the street, and soon enough it's like a competition for which state can have the most cases. Somehow, it might be. Just like covid, this hell sent sickness gives you flulike symptoms, only for up to 4 weeks. This covid on steroids can transmit from person to person almost 10 times more intensely than before. As imagined, through mouth to mouth contact, being in close contact such as breath, and even worse, any sort of skin to skin contact. If you think the biggest struggle comes with keeping the monkey pox away, you would be wrong. The real problems start when monkey pox is contracted. Along with flulike symptoms, you must deal wit...

Duality; Life is Red.

  Duality; Life is Red. This week in class while reading Woman Warrior by Maxine Hong Kingston, we went over many things from this story as a class. One thing I noticed was that the narrators hopes of shifting towards a more modern society is represented by the name of the chapter in the book, “White Tigers”. In traditional Chinese culture, White Tigers represents the west in terms of direction. This is shown through their hopes of being westernized, and falling under the western culture. Another theme that we spent a lot of time on throughput class but I never got to share, was the duality in the story, mostly represented by the color red. In the story it talked about how she wore a pleasant red dress, but then Fa Mu Lan also wore red to represent blood, something disgusting and gruesome. Another thing to the point of its duality, is the fact the in Chinese culture, the color red represents good luck. The contrast in the two meanings is incredibly ironic, and I feel as if it accur...

A Long Day.

  A Long Day.     The alarm blares loud and early, I wake up to turn it off, only to go back into my bed. In what seems like 30 seconds, that devilish noise is ringing throughout my room once again, but when looking at the clock I realize I've clicked snooze 3 times, and I'm already running late. I run to the bathroom in a hurry, sprint past the kitchen and drink half a glass of milk as my breakfast, only to arrive to my car with a frosted over window. I turn on the defroster and race to my two friends house to pick them up, and I finally arrive to school with barley anytime to spare. After surviving the daily morning Troy High parking lot fiasco, the worst of the day is still to come, with 6 and a half hours of grueling class time lays ahead of me. I push through the first three hours, running off a couple hours of sleep and a half glass of milk, just have a whole hour until my designated lunch time. As I sit in fourth hour zoning out focused on nothing but the empty voi...

Washington DC

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The Symbol of American Memorials        When thinking of memorials, cenotaphs, and catafalques, my mind often goes to one place. A place in our country that is full of many different kinds of connections to our nations long and brutal past. The place I'm talking about of course, is our nations capital, Washington D.C. This week in class, we learned about different types of memorials, and how they all have their own sort of representation. When I learned I was going to have to complete an assignment based on a memorial, I immediately began thinking of my time in Washington D.C. When visiting the capitol for our 8th grade trip, we went to numerous memorials which at the time held little to no meaning to me, besides the fact that they honored important dead people. Throughout this week, I realized how the different memorials all had unique ways of representing the past. Some of these memorials include the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial, the Jefferson Memorial, the L...