Monday, March 30, 2015

The Rez And Rest Of The World

One aspect of the reservation that is very similar to the outside world is the use of sports as a tool for many different things. In many places kids use sports for a variety of things. On the surface basketball, football, baseball, etc. may seem like a group of extreme athletes running around like a bunch of brutes. But to many people sports hold a much deeper purpose.
To Rowdy basketball is a release for his anger. To many other people outside the reservation the sport(s) they play serve as an anger release as well. Hard and physical activity is a great way to calm down. Your body becomes focused on one thing only and blocks out many other problems in a person's life. For Rowdy basketball blocks out his anger toward the rez, his father, and many other things in life.
Sports like basketball can also open up many doors in life. Arnold's basketball skills may cause colleges to look at him. Arnold can use basketball as a vehicle to get into college when so many aspects of his life are holding him back. On the Spokane reservation basketball is a great way to get off the reservation and become successful. This is very similar to lacrosse in the Iriqouis nation. Many Native Americans through various setbacks in their life. Things like alcoholism and drug dealing are very tempting to many reservation residents. Education is also inferior to outside the reservation so getting into college is very hard. But many Native Americans focus on lacrosse and become very good at it. Their skills can connect them to college opportunities outside the reservation.
Throughout Diary Of A Part Time Indian and on many reservations sports serve as one of the few connections to life off the reservation. Sports can cut through many cultural, racial, and physical boundaries set by years of differences and oppression.

Friday, March 6, 2015

Native Son and Bigger

I think Bigger is exactly what Max says he is, the product of not only a few decades of oppression but a few hundred years of oppression. Bigger is actually a bright young man, as he showed us when trying to cover up his accidental murder of Mary. He is no genius but he certainly is not an idiot like most of the white race thought of him at the time. Bigger is constantly oppressed from the time he was born to his eventual death. He sees the white race rather than individual people that each hate him but as a whole oppressive white blob that makes Bigger feel self conscious of his skin color. This constant feeling of hate and insecurity (for something he has no control over) makes Bigger seem like a failing dumb ape. The shame he constantly feels slowly eats away at Bigger until he kills, even though Mary's death was an accident. I feel that any other person in Bigger's situation would do just as Bigger has done.

Monday, January 19, 2015

A Principle To Keep

A principle that all of humanity needs to keep is reasoning behind your actions. Humans should always have a concrete reason behind their important actions. An example is killing someone for the sake of killing someone. If someone has a gun in his/her pocket and decides to shoot a person on the street for the hell of it that person has no place in modern society. When making large decisions whether it is to eat someone, kill someone, or even just making a large life decision each person should have reason in their actions.
Without reason within society almost everything will fall apart. Humans will begin losing the parts of us that make us human. The ability to use our brains to predict the outcome of situations and actions is what allows us to be the most successful and smart living thing on earth. Using reason allows us to keep our human identity and also allows many other qualities to evolve. 

Thursday, December 11, 2014

Janie

I believe that Janie is never satisfied with her life, which is only human. Throughout the story Janie has always jumped into seemingly great situations but Janie just ends up dissappointed again. The great thing about this recurring situation though is that it does not make Janie an unlikable person, unlike the characters in the Great Gatsby. I believe, and so do many others, that every person is always looking for something better. Janie especially has the right to be constantly dissatisfied because her relationships, living conditions, etc. are continuously displeasing. The consequence to this goal is that it can never be reached. The idea of an unreachable dream again relates to the American dream which we looked at while reading the Great Gatsby. Janie is in constant pursuit of a better life but can't reach it, so she ends up taking every enticing opportunity that comes her way. This idea also relates to the first paragraph of the book. Hurston says that Men's dreams are like unreachable ships on the horizon of an ocean, which is exactly what Janie is doing in her life. But Hurston also says that women's dreams are much more realistic, they discard the unreasonable and especially idiotic dreams and dedicate their life to reasonable goals. These dreams can still be ambitious but they are not out of reach. The second part of the quote contradicts Janie's actions throughout the entire book though. She is a woman who is living her life like a man at that time would. She tries to chase the unreachable boat far on the Horizon. So I think the first page of the book foreshadows what is to come for Janie, in the end Janie will finally become satisfied with her life, for better or for worse.

Thursday, December 4, 2014

My Friend I am Thankful For

I am thankful for my friend Erik Glascott. Erik is a really nice guy and a very interesting person. I've done a lot of things with Erik including lacrosse and even boxing (me and Erik boxed once and I lost). He is very funny and likes to laugh at a lot of things. Some people even call him giggles. One of the most interesting things about Erik is his family. He has a pretty large family led by his father who I like to call the Maverik. The Maverik's real name is Tim and he is a really awesome guy who scared the heck out of me once. Erik is very good at football which I think is cool, he was the starting center for Whitney and can block the heck out of people. My favorite memories with Erik are usually hanging out in his back yard, we make hamburgers, play catch, and crack witty jokes at each other. All of my friends have a grand time with Erik and I hope our relationship continues forever. Thank you Erik for being such a marvelous friend and person you truly brighten my day. Love you giggles.

Sunday, October 26, 2014

Hemingway

Ernest Hemingway is an extremely talented writer and has a touch of elegant simplicity in each and every one of his stories and novels. His stories give each reader a look into the adventurous and very masculine side of Ernest Hemingway that not everyone can experience. Ernest Hemingway's stories and novels are works of art and will be great for generations, like Mark Twain. Ernest Hemingway is still a self centered and sometimes greedy man who compensates for a weird childhood by living a very unnecessarily crazy and erratic life.
In his childhood Hemingway never had a strong and masculine father figure, his mother dominated his parent's relationship at a time when men were considered superior to women. Hemingway's mother also treated Hemingway as a daughter as he grew up and at times young Ernest would be actually dressed up as a girl and had his hair cut like a girl. So as Hemingway grew to be an extremely famous writer he would take on things like bullfighting in Spain, swordfish fishing in Cuba, and other extremely masculine activities in order to compensate for the internal manly struggle Hemingway's mom instilled in him. Hemingway tried to create a super masculine aura around himself that today many people see right through, and he is disrespected for it.
Hemingway also writes only about himself and the struggles he felt after war and during relationships he had. As I read my first few Hemingway stories I loved them. The Undefeated was exciting and Indian camp was sad but mysterious. But as I read other stories I noticed a pattern in all of them, 80% of the stories are about a masculine main figure that faces some sort of sad internal struggle. This is the way Hemingway viewed himself so this is what Hemingway wrote about. He never switched up and diversified the characters he used, and this becomes boring.

Sunday, September 28, 2014

36 Words

1) King loses millions, peasant buys island

2) War over, private given new arm

3) Spaceship is recovered, aliens are welcomed

4) Bears win, Jay cutler's foot reconstructed

5) New evidence found, innocent man released

6) Boy extinguishes fire, firework warehouse saved