Saturday, April 23, 2011
Creative Project
The focus of my creative paper will be my fraternal and maternal grandmothers in the mid 1900’s.
My mothers’ mother, my grandmother, story began when my grandfather left my grandmother for “another woman”. She was left to raise six girls alone in a small, rural town. I can’t imagine the trauma that was created by in her life as a result of his action. Men just did not leave their wife and children.
So we piled in our Oldsmobile, no air conditioning, to begin our 731 mile trip to Billings, Montana.
Three people sat in the front seat, my Dad, Mom and my brother. Myself, my three sisters, and grandma sat in the back seat. Our meals were eaten out of the trunk (as our serving area) from “sandwich food” we purchased daily at local grocery stores. We ate in ditches, field approaches, or parks, never in restaurants. We slept in motels only twice on the way out to Montana. She made every day an adventure.
The best moment of the day was to have it be your turn to be in Grandma’s room for the night. Grandma would take two of us girls to share her room and the rest of the family would be in my parent’s room. This arrangement, even after being together all day in the car, created a definite bond with my grandmother. She dressed in a dress each day, washed her nylons in the sink each night, and when morning came, put her hat on for the day and off we would go. Never complaining (she was at the beginning her fight with Lou Gehrig’s disease). To me, she was a tower of strength. Unfortunately, she died two years later.
My fraternal grandmother lived closer to our home and she too lost her husband. This grandmother was also left to raise six children, after her husband, my grandfather, was killed in a work related accident.
She worked as a laundry aide/nurse’s aide in the local hospital to feed and clothe her children. She did not have a car so she walked to work each day, walked to get her groceries, walked to church, and amazingly lived until she was 91.
Both of these women have my utmost admiration. They were both thrust suddenly into single life in the early 1940’s at time when each of them could have remarried just for food and housing and allowed their children to become “free labor” for an overzealous farmer, as was so often the case. Or they could have given up the overwhelming responsibility of raising their children to someone else or sent their children to an orphanage to be cared for by the state, but they both stuck it out alone.
I give them credit for raising their children with the values, along with the religious and hard work ethic, that they lived by. Overcoming adversity and surviving without handouts from anyone, as family was not close by. This was definitely an example of living “without a net”.
Both my grandmother’s place in my coming of age is reflected quite well in the statement of Karl Knapper in his essay he states [I may be] “black and queer , but I’ve come from a long line of survivors.” “Since then, he states, “my mother has been an amazing source of strength and support of me”. These characteristics are what my grandmothers represented to me, strength, support, and resilience. They didn’t complain about the adversity that had come their way, they did what they had to do to survive. It may not be an earth moving part of your growing up at the time, but, it becomes a source of strength and support as you grow older.
Gloria Stienam riterated this statement “If I have any advice, it’s just to listen to your own unique self and make sure have support for it. This culture in general is much too much saying that we have to do what’s out there rather than what’s in here. It needs to be a balance. It isn’t that we’re more important than anybody else as an individual, but we’re not less important either.”
Saturday, February 12, 2011
Justin Bieber was born in Ontario, Canada on March 1, 1994 and began singing at the age of twelve. Popeater.com website states that in the beginning his career took him to all the tiny town DJs who would listen. Break-danced for any water parks that would have him and broke hearts in middle school auditoriums across the country long before the world came to know his as a star. The web site states that as frustrating as it was for the typically impatient teen, neither he nor his team gave up when things didn’t come easy.
“Never Say Never” is a film about Justin, the world’s biggest teen phenomenon.
The song by the same title is sung by Justin Bieber and Jaden Smith. The second verse begins with: I will never say never/I will fight till forever/whenever you knock me down/I will not stay on the ground/pick it up/pick it up.
Is Justin Beiber believable? According to Vanity Fair Magazine, he’s become one of the most googled people on earth with an estimated one billion YouTube views, 6.3 million Twitter followers, and 16.5 million friends on Facebook.
Young girls interviewed for the Vanity Fair article state that” it’s because of his talent and he’s so cute. It’s like he’s singing just for me.” Rick Springfield, recording artist, stated in his memoirs, “At that you age you fall for the praise and adulation and really start thinking you can do no wrong, when really you’re just another jerk – at least I was. A strong family tie is very important. After all he’s just a kid.”
One of the essay’s in our text “Without a Net” was titled “Getting Out” by Frances Vairan.
In this writing, she stated the only way to get money is to work for it and there are only two kinds of work: smart or hard. You enter the world, pull for air, and wait for payday, she states.. The parallel of Frances’ Dad getting a job as a security guard so that his daughter could obtain higher education, tuition free, is not unlike Justin’s mom in the beginning of his career posting his songs on YouTube. Both parents were protective of their children doing their best to overcome the working class stigma and to give their children better opportunities. The ultimate goal of Frances’ parent was to give her a better education and in Justin’s case, unknowingly at first, to improve their social class.
Work Cited
Tea, Michelle, and Frances Varian. Without a Net. Seal Press. 2003. Print.
Robinson, Lisa. “The Kid Just Has It.”Vanity Fair February 2011: 98-104 and 150. Print.
“Justin Bieber Biography.” n.p. n.d. Web. 01 Feb. 2011.
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