Deborah Smith Pegues book is a concrete guide to confronting conflict fortified with biblical standards. The book is broken down into five parts which shows confrontation harmony, styles, effectiveness, personality, and selected situations. Part 1 consists of the goal of confrontation and the commanded to confront. Pegues called it “the bridge to harmony”.…
Her name is Lucille Mattess. She is from the Ti,azen nation. It’s in British Columbia. She is a small community called Binchekoyoh. She went to Lejac Indian Residential School.…
The Reaper in Development When Reading the Boston Photographs by Nora Ephron it cause many to question the theories of right versus wrong on what the media should and should not do when it reports what it considers to be news worthy. Should a picture in the act of death with the shadow of The Reaper clearly stained into the films emotion be shown to the masses or should the privacy of the human mind and dis-involved ignorance of humanity take hold over what is acceptable when viewing the realities of the world. There are key reasons why it is necessary to show photographs of this nature which are as follows to wake up the world to realities, to invoke the heart. Ephron’s essay is very well written in the way it goes to wake up the viewer to…
Angelina Elizabeth Dickinson is a forgotten part of the Alamo. She was only a small child but was a hidden part of the Texas revolution. She may not have killed thousands of men or won a war but she brought smiles to all the soldiers at the Battle of the Alamo. She witnessed and survived the battle as a young child. She was the youngest survivor of the Alamo.…
It is common for people to do anything in their power to get what they want or deserve. This desire of what they want can motivate them to have bad intentions. In the short story, “The Life You May Be Your Own”, Flannery O'Connor suggests that bad intentions can motivate an individual to become manipulative, make irrational decisions or choices, and to feel guilty. As the short story progresses Mr.Shiftlet communicates more and more with the Mrs.Crater about himself and his personal views of the world.…
The short story “The Possibility of Evil” by Shirley Jackson is about an old woman named Miss Strangeworth who is determined to rid “Strangeworth Town” of evil, yet she does not notice that she is causing evil herself. Although she seems like a proper, nice old lady, when she goes home every day, she writes cruel letters to the people in her town. Miss Strangeworth notices that everyone in the town is distressed and she wonders why. She refuses to acknowledge that she is truly evil herself. No one in that town would suspect her sending rude letters to everyone.…
It was a normal day on the Carver Farm in Missouri in 1864. Moses Carver was plowing his field with Giles his slave along side him. Susan Carver was in their home washing the dishes and preparing for supper with Mary Giles wife alongside her with her two kids setting the table and little baby George asleep in his cradle. After dinner, when everyone was fed, they went out in the fields again to do more chores. All of a sudden men on horses came to their farm and snatched up Mary, George and his sister.…
There are always reasons for events that occur in a person’s life. For example, someone takes an object of yours and won’t return it to its rightful owner, therefore the owner’s reaction will be furious and troubled. The gothic novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelley is filled with anguish and heartache. Not everything goes to plan for two individuals, and their rivalry gets stuck between each other. In other words, if they resolved some issues, they wouldn’t be in the predicament they’re currently in.…
Have you ever done something bizarre, and wondered what your motives were? Has there ever been a time where you’ve done something but your reasons were much deeper than you could understand? This is the result of your unconscious hard at work. The unconscious mind holds the secrets that create our outer personality and drive our actions, the secrets that we cannot harness voluntarily. Psychologist Joseph Campbell describes how the unconscious mind plays a huge role in mythology and culture, two very relatable aspects of life.…
Dean Burnett is a neuroscientist at the University of Cardiff, a stand-up comedian, and a Guardian blogger. In his book, The Idiot Brain: A Neuroscientist Explains What your Head is Really Up To, he argues that our brains are fallible. The book covers several themes, but the most important themes are mind controls, mental health and fear. With respect, to the theme of mind controls Burnett explains that the brain’s control of the body sometimes results in irrational behaviours. For example, the neocortex, the part of the brain that deals with higher functions, is able to overrule basic human instincts that are essential for survival, which can result in extreme dieting and eating disorders.…
Guilt and Sanity: A Comparison Ever notice how doing something questionable leaves a shadow of guilt around you? In the plots of a short story and a thriller movie, guilt and sanity are connected at the hip. In “The Tell Tale Heart,” a character murders an aged man and guilt eventually floods over him. In The Call, a man is guilt ridden by the death of his sister and goes to maximum lengths to try to mend his deadlock. “The Tale Tale Heart,” by Edgar Allen Poe and The Call, by director Brad Anderson both illustrate that guilt and the question of sanity are connected; this can be seen by looking at sequence of events, observing motives, and cataloging actions.…
The picture painted in our heads upon hearing these words may be those of Ted Bundy, Jack the Ripper, or H. H. Holmes, the notorious serial killers of the last two-hundred years. These people are seen as the fore front of killers and murderers, but in David M. Buss’s book, “The Murderer Next Door: Why the Mind is Designed to Kill”, he illustrates his new theory on how everyone, including you and I, are naturally hardwired to kill. This book, being one of 7 books published, represents his conclusions after what he claims was “the largest scientific study ever carried out on people’s homicidal fantasies”, going through 375 murders…
An example of these sort of thoughts would be “It is best to always assume for the worst to happen and prepare for it.” People with these sort of thoughts attempt to predict possible events to protect themselves form danger, but, in return, see danger, even unrealistic danger, everywhere. To treat Jake’s anxiety, cognitive therapy would be used. Cognitive therapy focuses on teaching the subject how to cope. One method used by this therapy is Meichenbaum’s self-instruction, which had four stages.…
Productivity A common trait among highly successful people is taking action, so be productive! Being busy doesn’t translate to productivity as we are always engaged in one activity or the other at every point in our lives-it could be sitting, working, breathing, eating, cooking, sleeping, chatting, etc. Rather than focusing on just any action, outcomes matter the most. When you care about the results of your actions, the zeal to get the most of that activity is unwavering.…
In her book, “A Poetics of Postmodernism”, Linda Hutcheon identifies the term postmodernism, when used in fiction, to describe fiction that is at once metafictional and historical in the way it presents the texts and contexts of the past (Hutcheon, 40). This is what she calls historiographic metafiction. Most of the historiographic novels emphasize self-reflexivity and our paradoxical relations to past events. Historiographic metafiction somehow acknowledges the paradox of the past, that is to say, the past is accessible to us today only in the form of text. As Fredric Jameson reminds us, “history is not a text, but it is only accessible in textual form” (Homer, 4).…