Friday, November 20, 2015

Importance of Kindness Voice


            In George Saunders speech Importance of Kindness, he tells a story about a girl that used to get teased all the time for being so shy an awkward, and for chewing on her hair a lot. He takes this story into a further movement and into this greater idea about kindness. Saunders first starts off telling the story about her and then saying, “Now why do I regret that? Why forty two years later am I still thinking about it? Relative to most kids I was actually pretty nice to her.” After questioning himself about feeling guilty towards the girl that got teased, Saunders takes that regret into a further idea and explains “What I regret most in my life are failures of kindness. Those moments when another human being was there in front of me, and I responded sensibly, reservedly, mildly.”  He says that the reason he regrets not doing anything about the girl who was teased was because he could’ve been kind to her, but chose not to say anything at all, and he still thinks about it to this day. Saunders is trying to get across that the things you’re going to end up regretting are times when you could’ve been nice, but chose not to do anything.

            Saunders also goes on and explains how the girl who was teased felt, by using imagery and describing the way she looked “I still remember the way she looked after such an insult. Eyes caste down, a little gut kicked as if having just being reminded of her place in things she was trying, as much as possible to disappear.” He explains how depressed the girl was since no one was nice to her by describing how she looked after an insult, and how you could see her hurt. This shows that Saunders did notice that she was hurt, and could tell that people were being mean to her that it really did affect her, but he regrets not doing anything to change her, and make her happier, since he did nothing but be a bystander and let her hurt.

            The example of imagery that Saunders uses also shows how he notices things others may not. When he described her as having “eyes caste down, a little gut kicked…” other people probably didn’t notice the way she reacted afterwards, because they kept teasing her, or they didn’t care if it hurt her. Saunders noticed that it hurt her and felt sorry for her, and wishes that he did something to make her feel better. Others might not be as sympathetic as he was, and didn’t notice how hurt those words really made her feel.

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Cathcer in the Rye 9-10 option 1


In the article Your Rattle No One Else Can Hear, the author is really trying to stretch across that everyone has a problem in their life, or some sort of pain that has affected them in some way, but some people can’t see it. People can’t see your pain sometimes, or know how you’re feeling, and you’re told to get over it. Some things are hard to get over though, and the pain you’re feeling doesn’t go away because it has affected you tremendously. It’s a pain that can’t be fixed, and people tell you to get over it, but that pain will always be there with you. This article, and the further meaning behind it could connect to Holden, and his brother’s death. When Holden was writing a paper for his roommate Stradlater, he wrote it about a baseball glove, but that glove actually had a much deeper meaning to Holden. He goes on to explain this instance “My brother Allie had this left handed fielder’s mitt… The thing that was descriptive about it, though, was that he had poems written all over the fingers and the pocket everywhere… He’s dead now. He got leukemia and died when we were up in Maine... I was only thirteen and they were going to have me psychoanalyzed and all, because I broke windows in the garage. I don’t blame them…I slept in the garage the night he died, and I broke all the windows with my fist… It was a very stupid thing to do, I’ll admit, but I hardly didn’t even know I was doing it, and you didn’t know Allie. My hand still hurts me once in a while,” (Catcher, pg 43-44). This was Holden’s “thorn in his side” the pain that still affects him to this day, something that happened a while ago and people think he should’ve gotten over, but it still hurts him, and affects who he is. That’s what the author of Your Rattle No One Else Can Hear, when she said “you just might have a rattle, as well. Maybe not in your kinda, newish car. Rather, that thing that is the thorn in your side, that others can’t see or detect that you’re told to get over.” Holden has that thorn, it’s the death of his brother.