Monthly- Archives: May 2012



HARRY W

The Outlaws

When my family went to Guang Zhou for vacation we went to a place that attracted a lot of tourists. There were two ways to get in to the park: you could pay for the ticket which is very expensive, or we could go with some people who lead us to the park but charged less. We went with the people who would lead us to the park and charged us less. But when we started going, I realized that there was really no path and we were going deeper and deeper into the woods. That’s when we saw a person coming and the guide for some reason told us all to crouch behind the rocks. When the person passed, my mom whispered, “Harry we are breaking the law.” I guess I had on a confused facial expression so my mom whispered again “I’ll explain to you later.” I was really scared and excited at the same time because even though we were breaking the law, I finally had an experience of being an outlaw. When we finally got out of the woods and paid the people, we were not outlaws anymore… but almost everyone was bitten by mosquitoes. I had two on each leg, but my mom however was even more popular, she had seven on the right leg and five on the left, but since my brother is very skinny he only got one bite each leg.

We kept hiking upward until we saw a very big pot and people throwing red ribbons wrapped around balls of sand at the big pot. Then I realized that we were standing under an enormous wishing well. We went to a place they sold cooled drinks and Chinese dim-sum. I got herbal tea but then my dad and the cashier started arguing because on the sign it said that the herbal tea cost 5 Chinese Yuan. But the cashier said it costs 20 Chinese Yuan which was totally not fair because it specifically said 5 Chinese Yuan. Eventually my dad reluctantly gave her 20 Chinese Yuan. We left quickly left because the lady was freaking me out first: because of her wrinkly face and because she kept yelling to tell people to come in and enjoy their fish balls.

When we left, we started going uphill again to see the different rivers or creeks. While we were walking I asked my mom about why those people had to be outlaws and she said that those people couldn’t find jobs and so they found another way to earn money and not have to beg in the streets.

We found out that we had to take a boat and then go through a butterfly garden; then we had to hike with a guide to the mountains and then to the creeks. When we got to the creeks I wanted to see how cold the water was and I stuck my foot in it. If you want to know how it felt, imagine sticking your foot into a box full of ice cubes.  After I did that, nobody would try it . So we kept moving on and soon my foot started to grow numb, and I thought that it was just because I walked too much… but I wasn’t even tired. Then the numbness crept up to my knees and then my whole leg felt like it was being drenched in the freezing cold creek. That’s when I realized it was because of the temperature of the water freezing my leg. Then my leg felt heavier and heavier and it was now really hard to walk, and I had to limp while dragging my leg behind me.

When we finally got back to the car I could barely walk and I literally fell from outside of the car to the inside. I made a footrest but the pain increased. I didn’t tell my mom or my dad because they used their free time talking about “important matters”.

We finally got to the hotel my whole leg was in pain so I crashed on the bed and fell asleep. Not long after I fell asleep my mom and dad woke me up and told me I hadn’t had dinner yet, but I told them I wasn’t hungry, but after hearing that it was a special river restaurant, I went with them. Later at the restaurant we ate river fish, which wasn’t much different from sea fish to me, but when I started to eat I noticed that they had fewer bones and the were addictive! Once I ate some fish, I wanted more. Then before anyone knew it we finished the fish in less than 40 minutes. Then when we walked back, I noticed that my leg had stopped hurting. When we got back to the hotel nobody said a word and everyone fell asleep.

This was the best first day in Guang Zhou even though got my leg frozen, and was ambushed by a group of beggar ladies. The good things were: we went to a place where there were a lot of water wheels and water falls, and we went on a hiking trip.



JONATHAN J

The Conflict Between Fate and Freewill

 

 

Fate is a very unpredictable thing that can prove to be challenging or benefiting to a person, because there are times where the positive mountains come, and times when negative valleys will occur. Fate has a role for every single person. Some people have bigger roles than others. When this happens, when someone has a larger role to play, the battle between fate and freewill begins. That person then must face the decision of choosing fate or freewill. Fate can prepare everything in order for you, but ultimately it is up to your own consciousness or freewill to make the decision to act.  In certain times, one can rise to the occasion and face challenges that have been given to them, or one can turn down what fate has stored for them and face the direction of their own freewill.

This conflict between fate and freewill happens to Frodo the Ring-Bearer, who does not want to carry such a responsibility in The Fellowship of the Ring. His conversation with Gandalf goes like this: “I wish it need not have happened in my time,” said Frodo. “So do I,” said Gandalf, “and so do all who live to see such times. But that is not for them to decide. All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given to us.” When Gandalf says this, it reminds me of what we encounter daily: the choice to fulfill our fate or go along with our free will. Gandalf however, is talking about the more important and crucial decisions in Frodo’s life. These words inspired Frodo, making his mind even more focused on his mission. Even when Gandalf was gone and believed to be dead, Frodo trudged through with the Fellowship and kept going down the path of his fate, keeping the path of free will in check. Frodo’s determination gives us an example of someone who travels down the road of justice and fate.

When we have these kinds of situations where we find ourselves trapped between the forces of fate and freewill, one should look at which side benefits everyone and not just oneself, the most. A crisis doesn’t have to be as big as one thinks it is: for instance having multiple minor choices can equal out with one or just a couple of critical choices. In other words, Frodo can consider his next set of moves, rather than get crushed by thoughts about the overall weight of the position he is in, which is to carry the One Ring to Mordor.

We all have a certain way of making hard decisions. There are many ways to help you make these decisions between fate and freewill. Thinking about what I am actually doing helps me make the choice between freewill and fate. For example, thinking about how my actions can benefit and harm others, depending upon what I do or don’t do, helps me make a decision easier. Another way that aids one in maneuvering between fate and freewill is looking back on preceding determinations and how these outcomes turned out. Using these tactics in my daily life really helps me make decisions.

To me, there is not always a battle between freewill and fate. However, I would usually choose fate in most decisions. This is because freewill seems to only benefit you, not the people that around you. For example, you could have money and just spend it on a computer while your kids have no food. You can think of fate as being the way that, most of the time, is the right action for you to take. By choosing fate, you can create better possible outcomes. In The Fellowship of the Ring, Gandalf and Lady Galadriel are tempted to take the ring because of the greediness for power, but they stop themselves and chose the side of fate, because it is not their duty to be the ring-bearer; this shows that they are following their side of fate and struggling with their freewill, which compels them to take the Ring for themselves. I could want to just relax the whole day and ignore the work I have to do: this is an example of choosing the side of freewill. When this happens, we really only care for ourselves, and that can escalate into worse situations. Usually we visualize freewill as the act of selfishness; however, there can be exceptions. One might have a specific dream about what they want to grow up to be, however, fate might not prepare that for one. However, chasing your dreams is not act of selfishness, therefore, there can be exceptions. These bad situations represent valleys, and your accomplishments represent the mountains. For instance, if the work piles up while I play video games, I descend into a valley and will need help getting out. But if I complete my work before playing, then I can stand on a mountain and breathe deeply and happily, then have some fun.  Fate and freewill create a conflict in one’s mind, causing one to face making a decision between the two.

 



SAMMY X

“A happy family is but an earlier heaven.” –George Bernard Shaw

 

This can be true for many people because some people look at heaven as a place to reunite with loved ones that passed away earlier. This is because when they can be with them, they are happy again. If a family was like that before they pass away, then in the eyes of some people who would love to be with their passed away family, they are living in heaven. This is also true because some people define heaven as a place where all their wishes are granted. Most people in the world want to be happy, because that is one of the main purposes of life besides surviving. So if you met your goal of being happy, then you are in heaven.  Some people think that just being with a family is heaven. I think my family right now is currently very happy and I think it can be considered an early heaven.



LARRY H

FAMILY

 

 

Family is usually defined as one’s blood relatives. Your family can make you smile; they can cheer you up when you are down. Mother Teresa, a Nobel Peace Prize winner, once said, “Let us make one point, that we meet each other with a smile, when it is difficult to smile. Smile at each other, make time for each other in your family.” Families can bring smiles to each other, and this happiness will spread to friends and beyond. However, families are together whether there is happiness or sadness. Buddha once stated, “A family is a place where minds come in contact with one another. If these minds love one another, the home will be as beautiful as a flower garden. But if these minds get out of harmony with one another, it is like a storm that plays havoc with the garden.” Buddha is stating that family is a place, and the core of this place is a loving attitude, for without that, disharmony can grow, causing the place to crumble and fall apart. Family is an important place for people to bring happiness to each other.

However, family does not necessarily have to be only people related by blood; family can also include your friends, your neighbors, and your whole community. Richard Bach, an American writer stated, “The bond that links your true family is not one of blood, but of respect and joy in each other’s life. Rarely do members of one family grow up under the same roof.” His definition of family tells us that people do not have to be related by blood in order to respect and be happy with each other, acting as a family. These people who help you and respect you take on a new identity, one as your family. Similar to Buddha’s idea of the garden, the whole community you live in can be related to the close relationship of family. When the community falls apart, so will the relationship of each and every one of the community’s members. As Mother Teresa said, the family will bring smiles to each other, which will pass on to strangers. These people will become accustomed to this idea of a large family and pass it on. Perhaps the whole world will achieve peace and unity because of this core idea of family.

Richard Bach is telling us that people do not have to be related by blood in order to respect and be happy with each other. Relating to Buddha’s idea, Bach stresses that the true family is made up of the ‘flower garden’, those people who volunteer to be friends and forge a new identity together; rarely, he says, are these communities formed by the biological group of a father, mother, and siblings.  The quote is showing that family can be found anywhere, among like-minded and loving friends. In Mother Teresa’s world, this family can still bring smiles to each other, and in fact, as we grow and leave our nuclear families, each one of us has a chance to achieve the wisdom contained in all three quotations.

 



A happy family is but an earlier heaven.

 

George Bernard Shaw

 

A government that robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on the support of Paul.
George Bernard Shaw

 

Please choose and interpret the quote and then make comments about its meaning. 6 sentence minimum.