"... Heel Up, Wheel Up, Bring It Back, Come, Rewind/powerful Impact, BOOM!" - Busta - 'Scenario' This

"... Heel Up, Wheel Up, Bring It Back, Come, Rewind/powerful Impact, BOOM!" - Busta - 'Scenario' This

"... heel up, wheel up, bring it back, come, rewind/powerful impact, BOOM!" - Busta - 'Scenario' This is the tool to rip my core this year, #toningwheel #corechallenge #bustarhymes #lns #scenario #tribecalledquest #realhiphop #90hiphop #rap #stayfit #challengeyourself

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8 years ago

"Yo! When I step up in the place, hey Yo! I step correct...." #boomerang time with my girls. #downtime #family #fathersanddaughters #daughters #bustabust #woohah #90shiphop


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13 years ago

Entry #9 - "The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson

Question #1

            Were you surprised by the ending of the story? If not, at what point did you know what was going to happen? How does Jackson foreshadow the ending? Conversely, how does Jackson lure us into thinking that this is just an ordinary story with an ordinary town?

            I was very surprised by the ending, since after the first paragraph when the children gathered their stones, until about half way through the story when Mrs. Hutchison complains about her husband having picked the marked paper, as a cause of Mr. Summers not having given him enough time to make a good choice, is that any negative connotation is given to the ceremony. Author Shirley Jackson does an excellent job at luring the reader to believe this story is just an ordinary one. She draws attention to the excitement and interactions between some of the principal characters, instead of foreshadowing the ending. For instance, this is visible when Mr. Summers and Mr. Adams greeted each other with a “humorous and nervous” grin. It may also be seen during Mr. Adams and old man Warner’s conversation regarding other villages having stopped their lottery traditions, and Mr. Warner’s negative comments about it. Mr. Summers’ cool demeanor is another aspect of the story which served as a decoy for the surprising ending. Same with little Dave, who once sent to pick his paper, placed a hand on the box and laughed, and though young, his reaction told me he did associate the box with any negative activity or action he might have witnessed before. 

    Question #4

            What is the ritual of the scapegoat? In what way might Tessie be considered a scapegoat?

            By definition, a scapegoat is in the biblical sense “a goat upon whose head are symbolically placed the sins of the people.” “One who bears the blame for others; one who is the object of irrational hostility.” These definitions were found in the Merriam-Webster online dictionary.

            Following these definitions, it may be said that Tessie may be considered a scapegoat. From her introduction, it was foreshadowed that she would be subject to some sort of judgment, as she arrives late to the ceremony, those around her laugh with her, though in my opinion in a disapproving way, and finally Mr. Summers, though in a friendly manner, does scold her for having done so. After her complaining and before the ending was made obvious to me, I felt she was looking to take her husband’s place, and once I read about her reaction when she was left with the marked paper slip, I could not help but to feel that out of all members of her family, should someone be targeted and/or even punished it was Mrs. Hutchison.

  Question #7

            Are there other symbols? Why is the “black box” battered, for example?

            The black box which I believe represented the many members of families which had been used as instruments of sacrifice since the village was settled, with its worn out colors, served as a symbol of permanence and resiliency for a ritual which would perhaps never be changed, at least in that particular village. In addition to the box, there is the lottery itself, which serves in my opinion as a new beginning for the people, marking the year by it as virtual calendar, as mentioned by old man Warner who remembers that soon after the lottery, the corn would be ready to harvest.

10 years ago
This #creepy Image Of A #BobMarley And #Basquiat Cross Has Been Hunting Me For A While, And Though Not

This #creepy image of a #BobMarley and #Basquiat cross has been hunting me for a while, and though not clear to me, I was fully aware, in my dreams, that this figure carried the energy of these two giants. #BetterOutthanIn


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8 years ago
Colors For The Mood. #fallishere #mood #pumpkin #mums #mum #fall

Colors for the mood. #fallishere #mood #pumpkin #mums #mum #fall


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7 years ago
Remember That #nofilter Or Are You Still Using It. #sunset #stl #stlouis #almosthome #2018

Remember that #nofilter or are you still using it. #sunset #stl #stlouis #almosthome #2018


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11 years ago
El Bigote Que Canta. Let's Grow It Out For Movember... F#$& Cancer. #MOVEMBER #bigoton #prostatecancerawerness

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14 years ago

Entry #1: "The Story of an Hour" - Kate Chopin (1894)

Question #7:

                The last line of the story: “When the doctors came they said she had died of heart disease-of joy that kills.” In what way is this an ironic statement? What is gained by having the doctors make such a statement rather than putting it in the mouths of Josephine or Richards?

A.      I believe this statement is ironic because her relief and happiness came after learning about her husband’s sudden death. The unexpected death of Mr. Mallard, although emotionally impacted her at first, it made Louise feel liberated, and enthused about the promise of an enjoyable life. Contrary to what I assume she had experienced prior to hearing the fatal new, Mrs. Mallard quickly developed an appetite for life which the author made evident when using figures of speech in the passage that follows, for instance…

“She could see in the open square before her house the tops of trees that were all aquiver with the new spring life. The delicious breath of rain was in the air. In the street below a peddler was crying his wares. The notes of a distant song which someone was singing reached her faintly, and countless sparrows were twittering in the eaves.”

With this imagery, the author tells me that Mrs. Mallard found herself awake, with all her senses aware of her surroundings, and ready to move on the very same day she learned about what turned out to be her husband false death news, ironic indeed.

By having the doctors make this statement, the author accomplishes to depict the views of a male society of the time, which refused to assume responsibility for the pain and suffering they caused their female companion, masking it instead with what seems to me a scornful language for their family circles, which only kept and still keeps women felling oppressed.

Question #8:

                What view of marriage does the story present? The story was published in 1894; does it only represent attitudes toward marriage in the nineteenth century, or could it equally apply to attitudes about marriage today?

A.      Right in the middle of the American Women Rights Movement, I feel the story presents a negative, but true to the time view of marriage where in most cases the woman is mistreated, oppressed, and even abused (physically and emotionally) due to many reasons, the lack of appreciation for her hard work at raising the very same men who later go out to marry, and mistreat their new wives just as their fathers did with their mothers. Perhaps men’s fear of losing their mate once they are educated and self-assured, which makes them much more attractive to other men, if we look at it from a psychologically perspective… the possibilities are endless.

 Today, women do have the right to work in the same industries as men, earn close if not the same salary as men, have the right to go to school, vote, come and go as they please, but unfortunately many are still victims of the same type of physical and emotional abuse others suffered 100 years ago.  

Today, the institution of marriage suffers for these reasons, as well as for the fact that young ladies are raised to not accept the treatment described above, which I think is great, but many times strive to be so strong and protective of themselves, investing their emotions far less in relationships that is almost impossible for a man to break that virtual wall down, in order to “sweep them of their feet.”

8 years ago
Morning Jewels: "the Eye Was Born, Knowledge Was Born, Wisdom Was Born, Science Was Born, Light Was Born.

Morning jewels: "the eye was born, knowledge was born, wisdom was born, science was born, light was born. It is always seeing through knowledge or wisdom, and not believing through blind faith." #whatthebuddhataught #budism #bookstagram #books #jewels #wisdom #knowledge #selfdevelopment #journey


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8 years ago
#goodfood #bettercompany #foodporn #merrychristmas #foodie #come2017

#goodfood #bettercompany #foodporn #merrychristmas #foodie #come2017


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sr-deflector - Sr. Deflector
Sr. Deflector

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