Monday, November 29, 2010

Reading and writing??No NO no..?

Being able to read and write today is something that needed to get through a lot of careers and when doing things. Reading is something we do every day whether we realize it or not. Being literate allows you to have so much more of a variety of opportunities and careers. Reading and writing is a thing that most jobs require you to have and it may be hard to do some things when you are not literate. I can’t imagine how my life would be if I did not know how to read or write because most of my day is spent either reading or writing in school. Some challenges the protagonist from the piece faced because he wasn’t literate was that he had a hard time finding where some people lived because he could not read the address and had to ask people around him where this address was or where that address was. He had to try to keep this job because it was one of the jobs that he could actually pull through without needing the ability to read and write. He found it hard at times because when he had to find an address he had to ask people about where it was and he even got lost one time because he could not read the sign for where he was going to and went a different way. Reading and writing is something adults and children today should have to ability to do because in the world it is hard to do things without this ability.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

What I wear.

Everyone has their own way of dressing. Some individuals are required by their religion to wear certain things and some are not. In Maysan Haydar’s “Veiled Intentions: Don’t Judge a Muslim Girl by Her Covering,” I think she really shows her readers that the way someone dresses does not typically define who they are as an individual. Haydar has some disadvantages and advantages with wearing her hijab. Some advantages Haydar has by wearing this hijab is that she does not have to deal with hearing boys sexually harass her or have others look at her inappropriately just for the way she dresses or if she has a lot of skin showing, which may lead some men to look at her wrong. Some disadvantages of her wearing a hijab is that some people look at her differently. People look at her as if she is a treat or question if they should even talk to her. Haydar can be seen by some people as being forced to wear her hijab or may be seen as though she does not have any freedom. I think that Haydar’s hijab does enable her “to be seen as a whole person”, but to some extent. I feel like her hijab allows some individuals to look at her as a regular person but then it may allow some individuals to look at her differently and they may not see the real Haydar. People may look at Haydar and think that she can’t do this or do that just because of what she is wearing. This is unfair and for the most part I think Haydar wearing a hijab does not change who she is as a person.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Male?Female?Neither?

In Stephanie Chen’s article about whether gender identity at same-sex colleges should be kept the same when entering a college and leaving, I think it is ridiculous that some students are being kicked out of colleges just because they have changed their sex gender. Students should have the opportunity to be what they want and if they want to be considered female or male should be their choice. Schools should still see them as what their real gender is though if they applied to a same-sex college. Sex gender problems have been around for a while where gays or lesbians were made fun of for various reasons. I think this is wrong for students to do because if they were in the other person’s shoes I think they would see how wrong and hurtful it is for them to make fun of these people. Whether students come into a school female or male and come out being something else should be no one’s business. I think it makes no difference if someone is female or male and if they change their sex gender during their college experience. Gender is gender and it is common for some people to explore different genders in college if they are interested. There should not be any banning to this because if there was, then I think that would be ridiculous because there is no point in banning whether someone can change their gender. That is their choice and no one should have a saying in it.

Monday, November 1, 2010

Because I want something in my life.

I agree with the quote, “Every act you have ever performed since the day you were born was performed because you wanted something,” by Andrew Carnegie, because I believe everything you do in life, you do for a particular reason. Everyone does things, but no one does it just to do it. Every action always has a reason for doing it. For example, we speak for us to be heard, we go to school to learn or earn a degree, we walk places to reach a destination, and the list can go on and on. Whether we act on something in a good way or bad way there is still a reason for doing it. Some acts we perform in our life can really effect how we are seen by others in a good or bad way. Even from the day we were born we perform to get something. Like when babies cry, they want a bottle or food. When we are a little older we may kiss and touch our spouse for sexual desires. When we are hungry we get some food because we want to fulfill our stomach’s desire. We might not even think sometimes that the actions we perform are performed because we want something but whether we realize it or not we are performing because we want something. We may think that some of the acts we perform in life, when we want something, are in our conscious mind, but sometimes we can perform an act in life when we want something without even realizing we are doing it.