Thursday, December 18, 2008

Outside reading post

In Moving Violations, John Hockenberry's world has completely changed because of his accident. Everything that used to be simple tasks that he never had thought about have suddenly become daunting. He describes his adventures of making it across a sidewalk. "It was crucial to be aware of the curbs at each intersection. It was on the concrete lip of each of these curbs that the most gripping of my early physical dramas were played out" (104). Walking across the sidewalk used to be something he never had to think about. Now that he is in a wheelchair, he has to pay attention to every single detail. Hockenberry notes how easily everyone else moves around and comments, "If the able-bodied hiked casually through the world's physical terrain, I approached it as a golfer playing sudden death on the back nine at Augusta" (105). Nothing is easy for Hockenberry anymore, and he must do everything with the utmost care. Just because of one accident, John Hockenberry had to completely alter his lifestyle.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Outside reading- stereotypes

John Hockenberry in his book, Moving Violations, reflects on the falsehood and hurtfulness of stereotypes. Ever since he became a paraplegic in an accident, people have always tried to categorize him based on his disability. They seem to think that his wheelchair defines him, and he frustratedly reveals what he knows to be true about stereotypes: "Each stereotype thrives in direct proportion to the distance from each class of persons it claims to describe. Get clse to teh real people adn these pretend images begin to break up..." (89). Hockenberry understands better than a lot of people the difficulty of breaching the physical appearance and really know someone. I find it hard to believe the questions that strangers ask regarding his physical and sexually disabilities, and also they ask "...what do I prefer to be called? Do they think I have an answer?... I am a gimp, crip, physically challenged, differently abled, paralyzed" (87). Hockenberry doesn't want to be called any of those. "If you need a name for me, call me John" (102). For most people, appearance serve as a barrier to getting to know the actual person. We all need to learn to let go of our stereotypes and ideas of how people are supposed to be in order to really understand them.

By the way, I know this post isn't about ethics, but this book hasn't been about ethics at all. I'm really sorry about that...

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Blog Question- OTW

In the movie, On the Waterfront, it is clear that there is corruption everywhere involving a mob and lots of money, and the question is hanging over everybody on whether or not to bring the mob cases to court. To one man, the answer is obvious. The priest is trying throughout the whole movie to get the dock workers to turn the mob in. To him, it is not a matter of money- money is worthless- but it is a matter of doing the right thing. It is a matter of truth and morality. For another character, however, it is not that simple. Terry knows better than anybody about all the corruption going on on the waterfront, but he doesn't dare bring it to court, for his brother is a lead member of the mob. Also, the main leader treats him very nicely, and he feels like it would be traitorous to turn them in. By the end of the movie, Terry must choose if the real act of treachery would be to betray his brother or stand by while the mob continued committing crimes.

It is obvious to me that this movie is in favor of standing up for truth rather than worry about keeping loyalties. Of course if Terry does turn the mob in, they will view him as a traitor, and he will lose all friendship with them. But on the other hand, people are dying, and Terry has a chance to end it. If he can gather the courage to do what is right, he will be clearing the waterfront of corruption and earn the title of a moral crusader.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

All My Sons

In Arthur Miller's play, All My Sons, the biggest debate is whether or not taking care of your own is more important than regarding the needs of society. There is one character in the play that you never meet, but is opinion on this subject is very clear. Larry Keller was a pilot in the war, and when he discovered the atrocious crime his father did, he wrote in a letter, "...I read about Dad and your father being convicted. I can't express myself. I can't tell you how I feel- I can't bear to live anymore...if I had him here now I would kill him" (83). Even though he wasn't even the one who committed the crime, he still can't live with himself with the knowledge that his father knowingly jeopardized people's lives on the basis of supporting his family. At the end of the play, Joe Keller finally understands his son's point of view and says, "Sure he was my son. But I think to him they were all my sons. And I guess they were, I guess they were" (83). Larry believed that as humans, we all are obligated to protect and take care of each other whether we are related or not. To Larry, the pilots that died were like his brothers, so it was as if his father had killed his own sons. Larry felt so strongly that protecting society was just as important (if not more so) than protecting your family that couldn't even live with himself when his father violated that obligation.

Personally, I believe that taking care of your family is most important, but it is not the only thing as Joe Keller thought. I think that it is each family member's responsibility to take care of their own, but not at the cost of other people's lives. If the choice is between your family's well-being and the lives of strangers, I would not have done as Joe Keller did, and I probably wouldn't have reacted much differently than Larry.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Outside reading- Getting Through Life-Altering Injury

In the memoir, Moving Violations, the author, John Hockenberry, defies what society sees as a life-ruining disability and accepts his new life with wonder and vigor. After being in a car accident that made him lose control over his legs, many people looked at Hockenberry as though he were a young man whose whole purpose in life was taken away. Several even suggested doctor-assisted suicide: "...it was chilling to think that going on with my life made less sense to some people than a self-inflicted death" (77). It is suprising to Hockenberry that society believes he should give up so easily; that his life is as good as done. He sees his disability as the start of a brand-new life and each simple action is an exciting challenge. He never once considered suicide. Instead, he declares, "From the beginning, disability taught that life could be reinvented. In fact, such an outlook was required. The physical dimensions of life could be created, like poetry; they were not imposed by some celestial landlord" (79). By seeing his injury as an opportunity to mature and challenge himself, John Hockenberry is able to live life to the fullest in a situation where most people would have readily given up. Every day, every single person is faced with problems, and they must figure out a way to get through them all, but how can they do it when they focus on everything they've lost and can't envision new opportunities? This is exactly how Hockenberry felt when he decided to take on life from his wheelchair.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Outside reading post #3

John Hockenberry in his novel, Moving Violations, learns the importance of bravery, especially when you are disabled, in order to make it through life. Hockenberry's grandfather lost his arm when he was young and suffered from limited abilities and was also made fun of by many people. However, his grandfather didn't complain once. Hockenberry notes, "Tom Hockenberry's trials and his quiet acceptance of fate was seen as a supreme virtue by his son, my father. The sacrament of that virtue was to never speak of those things" (66-67). Though his bravery was not noticed by most people, Tom Hockenberry's entire family saw and admired his gallentry. Unfortunately, John Hockenberry became disabled after his grandfather passed away, and he often wished he had his grandfather was there to give him advice. He asked his grandmother, one day, what advice his grandfather would have given him, and she confidently answered, "'He'd want you to, you know, be proud and brave and everything else. Because you have to be. You have to push. If you don't push, you're not going to get anywhere'" (68). Although it seemed to many people that Tom and John Hockenberry's lives were destroyed because of their diabilities, but both of them learned how to be brave and how to do everyday tasks and more. Of course this kind of bravery does not only apply to people with disabilities. Everyone must demonstrate tremendous courage and perserverance to get through any difficulties and find a way to succeed despite life's seemingly impenetrable boundaries.

Friday, November 21, 2008

Outside Reading Post #2

The book I am reading, Moving Violations by John Hockenberry, is a memoir of Hockenberry's life as a paraplegic journalist in which he learns that you've got to keep people in your life not because they are useful or convenient, but because you love them. After his car accident, Hockenberry can no longer feel or use his legs. To his body, they are just purposeless objects that use body heat and blood without compensating for them with services that legs are supposed to perform. He was advised by many people to simply amputate them and get them out of the way. Even though he sees the logic in this suggestion, he finds that he can't let go of his legs and says, "The truth is, I love my legs, not for what they can do for me anymore, but simply because they are my legs" (48). The attachment to his legs is so strong that Hockenberry is unable to just get rid of them. This is not because they make his life convenient- they actually make it more difficult- but he feels a connection to them because they are his. Hockenberry compares his sensless legs to his uncle, who is mentally retarded. His uncle developed a rare disease when he was very young that caused him to lose his senses, and his family abandoned him to a home, never to see him again. Hockenberry marvels at how his uncle's parents could have exiled him in such a way, "...[his] exile from his family and me was unfathomable. For reasons that will perhaps never be fully understood, a few years after he was sent away my uncle was so nearly erased, his existence denied by the family that had brought him into the world" (55). Hockenberry can't imagine why his grandparents would've discarded their sensless son as he was told to do to his with his legs. Hockenberry knows that family love isn't a matter of convenience, it is the fact that family members are all part of each other as much as his legs are a part of him.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Moving Violations

Gravity affects us all. It does not discriminate based on age, gender, race, or morality. We are all bound by its power and can do nothing to reverse it, so it is with the world. In John Huckenberry's memoir Moving Violations, he sees how the unstoppable forces of life afflict all people, and they cannot be resisted by an individual or by a nation. Hockenberry is an American journalist whose legs were paralyzed at the age of nineteen in a tragic car accident. When he recalls the incident in his book, he remembers the feeling of weakness and helplessness as was being thrown by gravity in a speeding metal machine and off the road. He compares the will of nature to wolves: "The wolves in my imagination didn't care if I was a good boy or about any of the other little-kid cliffhangers of grades and chores and the judgments of grown-ups. A wolf would presumably find me just as nutritious if I said my please's and thank you's as if I had omitted them" (19). Basically, he is saying that nothing about who he was or what he did could've prevented him from being in the accident. Not only does gravity overpower people as individuals but also as a nation. The book opens with Hockenberry in the Middle East among the Kurdish refugees, and one of the Kurds after learning of his disability demands, "'They send you to us. You who cannot stand? You are American, what is America now? Why are you here?' ...To him my presence was an unsightly metaphor of America itself: able to arrive but unable to stand" (7). He and the refugee both recognize that as much as America would love to think that they are in control of the problems plaguing people all over the world, there are places their arms simply can't reach. The power of gravity will always surpass them. Throughout history, man has always tried to conquor the universe. They experiment with new philosophies, innovations, and lifestyles, but mankind will never have complete control. We are all at the mercy of the power of gravity.

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Seeing the Invisible


Photographs can actually capture disturbances in the air! It is called Schlieren photography, and it can be accomplished by using "a small, bright light source, precisely placed lenses, a curved mirror, a razor blade that blocks part of the light beam, and other tools". The main point is that the photo can capture something like a cough because it makes the disturbances in the air visible.

Not only is this really cool, but it can also be used scientifically to determine the air and heat movements of a burning candle, and firing pistol, a blow dryer, an explosion, or a cough. A closer look at a cough has helped scientists see how viruses are spread by coughing.

I know that our photography unit is over, but I just thought it was interesting how photography can contribute to science. I found this article at http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/28/science/28cough.html?_r=1&ref=science&oref=slogin

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Using Photography for Education on the Conservation of the Environment

Nature and wildlife photographer, Daniel Cox, who is also involved in the conservation group Polar Bears International combined his profession and his talents to depict the effects of climate change. On October 23, he showed his photographs in a seminar in an effort to further educate people on how particularly polar bears are affected by climate change. He declares that it is his heart-felt mission to teach people with his photography about the dangers of climate change, so that hopefully, more people will do something to stop.

I was inspired by this article because it was a wonderful example of how we can use any of our skills to make a difference in the world. This article makes me think of how I can use the gifts that I have in creative ways to make the world a better place to be.

Here's where I found the article: http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?index=9&did=1581558471&SrchMode=1&sid=1&Fmt=3&VInst=PROD&VType=PQD&RQT=309&VName=PQD&TS=1224806876&clientId=47945

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Toddlers Who Look at Mouths Rather Than Eyes: Sign of Autism

During a toddler's early stages of "talking" they will look at a persons eyes rather than at their mouths as they speak. This means that they are developing social skills that they will need later in life. Now, scientists are finding that a toddler who watches a person's mouth as they talk is going to have autism. The more they watch a person's mouth, the more severe the disorder is. The reason this is is because they are focusing on only the physical aspects of the person's face rather than on the person themself. This is an important discovery for scientist because now they can flag autism at an early age.
This article didn't really relate to me because I don't know anyone with autism, but I did find the article very interesting. I wouldn't have thought that not toddlers not looking into peoples' eyes directly related to autism. I wonder what the fundamental causes of autism are and how it can be treated. I hope that scientists can make these discoveries, but they have made a good start with this discovery.
I found this article at http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/09/080926143751.htm

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Zimbabwe on the Way to Having Useless Money

Hyperinflation is driving the country of Zimbabwe into turmoil. Experts are calling their inflation problem is among the top five worst. From 2001 to 2007, the inflation has skyrocketed from 1,000 percent to 12,000 percent. The cost of items that we take for granted are blown way out of proportion to the amount the Zimbabweans are are getting paid to do their jobs. Tens of thousands of workers have stopped arriving to work because their salaries can't even even cover the cost of taking the bus to work.
As these economic crisis' rage on, the Zimbabwean president, Robert Mugabe, refuses to give up control of Finance and House Ministries. Meanwhile his country has nothing they can do but watch their economy die, which is happening at an alarming pace.
It really disturbs me that only one man can have so much power and the he would abuse that power. As of now, he is the only man who can help bring a stop to Zimbabwe's massive crisis, and he has done nothing. Now thousands of people are not working and they cannot afford to buy meals or necessary supplies.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Blog Question Concerning the Odyssey

According to The Odyssey, it would be much more correct to say Homer was an early feminist than a sexist as the women in the story play a very crucial role. Telemachus, for example, would never have found the courage to set sail in search for his father had Athena not showed up and inspired him to go. Were it not for Athena, Telemachus would likely have moped at home until the suitors had licked his house of treasures dry. Athena is also the one who convinces Zeus to order the goddess Calypso to set Odyssius free. These examples are two of the many that show that anyone reading Homer's The Odyssey could not come to the conclusion that Homer did not appreciate the importance of women.
Homer in his book also delves into the power, intellect, and charm of women. The goddess Calypso is powerful over Odyssius because he is held captive by her and can only be released by her will. The wife of Odyssius, Penelope, is an example of the cleverness that women have. She was able to keep the suitors at bay for a year by telling them that she would marry once she finished weaving, but every night, she would unravel everything she had woven. Penelope also demonstrates the charm of women. Many powerful men of Ithica were determined to marry her. These women used in The Odyssey are figures of strength, cleverness, and beauty, so clearly Homer could not have been a sexist.p

Monday, September 22, 2008

Hotel Bombing in Pakistan

The bombing at the Marriott Hotel was said to be one of the worst terrorist attacks in Pakistan history. It occured late Saturday evening on September 20 on the night of the new president's first address to Parliament. All government leaders were dining at the Prime Minister's house which is only a few hundred yards away from the hotel. At least 40 people were killed including an American citizen, and 250 were injured.
The massive explosion left a crater 40 ft wide and 25 ft deep. The explosion was so powerful that the windows of buildings a hundred yards away were shattered.
The bomb left a lasting impression on the people of Pakistan. The Marriot was an icon in Pakistan; said to be the equivolant to the Twin Towers in the United States.
In response to the attack, the two-week-old president declared, "We will get rid of this terrorism cancer." However Pakistan's new civilian government appears to be inactive and it is uncertain what their plan is to counter this attack. Hopefully Pakistan will soon act finally defeat the terrorists who have plagued them for far too long.

Gall, Carlotta. "Bombing at Hotel in Pakistan Kills at Least 40". New York Times. 20 Sept. 2008
21 Sept. 2008 <http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/21/world/asia/21islamabad.html?
scp=1&sq=pakistan%20bombing&st=cse>.

Monday, September 15, 2008

Welcome all

Welcome to my blog... You all get to read whatever I post on this blog concerning outside reading. Since I am a horrible blogger, this blog will look very boring so sorry. But maybe I very deep insight on outside reading books will be make up for some of that.