I always feel hectic before I get to America. After I get to America, I have more freedom. I don’t have after school sport, but I walk to school every morning. If I walk to school in China, I will feel funny, but when I walk to school in America, I always feel tired. Sometimes I need 4 hours to finish my homework and just sleep for 6 hours for one day before, but now I always finish my homework at school and go to bed at 9 o’clock. I love my life in America. Now I want to buy a piano or an electronic…
Words 456 - Pages 2
Life is about making choices, but some of them can change us forever. I still remember that feeling I experienced when my mom told me that we were moving to America. I felt as if time had stopped, and I did not know what to think. I could not decide whether this life changing sentence was something I should look forward to in a positive way or be worried about. However, to be honest, I was more excited than worried since I was going to see my dad and grandparents after a long time. After spending…
Words 493 - Pages 2
hand to assure me that everything will be okay. We were leaving Italy because my father had died from a sickness. After he died we couldn’t afford to live in Italy anymore. My mother decided it was best to move to America with my aunt. She hoped that we would be able to find jobs in America. Waiting on the docks for what seemed like forever, and finally the ship arrives. The huge steamship settled near the dock. We quickly walked up to the ship. A man then directed us to the steerage. It was dark and…
Words 835 - Pages 4
“What really!”, I screamed, that was the day my parents decided to move to America. I was excited to go to the America but I still missed my whole family in Korea. My family went to America taking a 19 hour plane ride. I arrived in America, and my family went to Seattle to go check out our house. My mom looked everywhere in the house and told my dad that she like the house. Although when I saw her face it didn’t look like she actually did. That afternoon I asked my mom, “Mom do you actually like…
Words 505 - Pages 3
Moving to America everything was different, the culture, they way people dressed, the language, the food, the way people lived, the way of people interacted, and way more. Growing up in the USA gave me an opportunity to make my parents’ rules and beliefs flexible, until one day. That one day altered my whole life. It helped me learn more about my parents. One of the things I learned about them was that my parents don’t know my true self. They didn’t know what I am capable of. They thought their way…
Words 758 - Pages 4
Two and a half years ago, I faced one of the most challenging events anyone could ever face: to relocate and move from my home country, Jordan, to the United States. The difficult times that I’ve faced throughout this move have shaped my personality and, I believe, have changed my life forever. The many difficulties that I was keen to overcome were mainly concerned about me being able to speak English fluently, and learn about the new culture. The first barrier that I was determined to overcome…
Words 348 - Pages 2
Statement: We chose documents 3.1 and 3.2 because they offer a great personal outlook of the slave trade at both the province level and the individual level. These documents tell us that this was a strict period of new reform where money was top priority even if it meant treating people like animals. Discussion Questions: 1. What do you think may have swayed the non-discriminatory enslavement of all skin colors in the 1400’s to the specific African American dark skin color enslavement in the…
Words 456 - Pages 2
Adaobi Duru MC 7014 Narrative Analysis Exercise The documentary told the story of two presidential candidates Mitt Romney and Barack Obama and the defining moments that shape and embody their rise from obscurity to fame in the 2012 presidential election. The program described Barack Obama’s struggle for an identity and Mitt Romney’s fight to continue his father’s political legacy. It also depicted the shared experiences and how it shaped their political future. It described the differences and…
Words 1817 - Pages 8
their connected history, hardships, and aspirations while portraying a positive future of pan-Africanism and empowerment. In “Homegoing,” Gyasi follows the descendants of two half-sisters, Effia and Esi, across continents and generations. Gyasi’s personal stories highlight the long-term impact of the transatlantic slave trade on African and African American identities. Despite the physical and cultural barriers that separate them, the novel underscores the underlying links that bind these various…
Words 1469 - Pages 6
storytelling, with personal reflection by the author Tim O’Brien, seen through his own semi-autobiographical character, Tim O’Brien. Composed of short, fantastical stories that O’Brien repeats, changes, and claims are true only to later reveal they are false, reality is continually questioned in the text. Instead, O’Brien focuses on memory and fantasy, utilizing a number of different perspectives to convey an ironic national and self-awareness of new wars that conveys both personal as well as national…
Words 1789 - Pages 8