2,561 Matching Annotations
  1. Feb 2016
    1. how to procrastinate well.

      I agree that people need to learn how to do this because some people think oh i don't procrastinate but you do you just do it well.

    2. procrastination isn't always bad?

      I believe that yes procrastination isn't always bad if you are putting it off for another task maybe for something that has a more important value at the moment and needs to be done first. Procrastination inst good if your just being lazy and don't feel like doing it at the moment.

    1. the risks are minute in comparison to the alternative.

      you have to think about which is more safe, and people are not realizing that the vaccines are the safer route

    2. because the looming risk of childhood death is out of sight, it is also largely out of mind, leading a growing number of Americans to worry about what is in fact a much lesser risk: the ill effects of vaccines.

      people have become so used to not worrying about children dying of all these things that they've started to focus on something else for their children. That however, has made the problem of child mortality a problem again

    3. “I used to say that the tide would turn when children started to die. Well, children have started to die,” Offit says, frowning as he ticks off recent fatal cases of meningitis in unvaccinated children in Pennsylvania and Minnesota. “So now I’ve changed it to ‘when enough children start to die.’ Because obviously, we’re not there yet.”

      people haven't seen the cause and damage their choices are making yet

    4. A disease that vaccines made rare, in other words, is making a comeback.
    5. 10,000 kids, or about twice the number as in 1997), they tend to be clustered, disproportionately increasing the risk of an outbreak of such largely eradicated diseases as measles, mumps, and pertussis (whooping cough). The clustering means almost 10 percent of elementary schools statewide may already be at risk.

      one child can effect the masses. Now thousands of children will have a bigger effect

    6. philosophical exemptions are available in about 20 states, including Pennsylvania, Texas, and much of the West

      few states have it where you are required to get your children certain vaccines, these state has something called "philosophical exemptions" that allows for parents to choose what vaccines their children get

    7. In certain parts of the US, vaccination rates have dropped so low that occurrences of some children’s diseases are approaching pre-vaccine levels for the first time ever.

      eye-opening statement

    8. “science alone isn’t enough … People are getting hurt. The parent who reads what Jenny McCarthy says and thinks, ‘Well, maybe I shouldn’t get this vaccine,’ and their child dies of Hib meningitis,” he says, shaking his head. “It’s such a fundamental failure on our part that we haven’t convinced that parent.”

      even though there should be no blame on Offit, he still takes part of the blame for not convincing the parents enough

    9. Offit has become the main target of a grassroots movement that opposes the systematic vaccination of children and the laws that require it

      he has a variety of evidence proving no harm is being done and calls out the fake/bogus treatments people are getting their kids that are not helping but making things worse

    10. He boldly states — in speeches, in journal articles, and in his 2008 book Autism’s False Prophets — that vaccines do not cause autism or autoimmune disease or any of the other chronic conditions that have been blamed on them.

      this guy is very hated for sticking with his opinion that vaccines do not cause autism

    1. “God only made a few perfect heads, and the rest lie covered with hair.”

      A different, positive way to think about this idea.

    2. where I was told that every meal should consist of a brown thing, a white thing, a yellow thing and a green thing; that it was not right to lick the spoon while cooking; and that the inside of a dress seam was as important as the outside.

      This can relate back to my David Foster Wallace piece earlier about the "rights and wrongs" of life.

    3. A preparation-for-life curriculum would not consist of courses on Victorian Thought and French Romanticism, but of things like How to Cope With Marital Breakdown, Getting More for your Footwear Dollar, Dealing With Stress, and How To Keep Your Fingernails from Breaking Off by Always Filing Them Towards the Center; in other words, it would read like the contents page of Homemakers Magazine, which is why Homemakers Magazine is so widely read, even by me. Or, for boys, Forbes or The Economist , and Improving Your Place in the Power Hierarchy by Choosing the Right Suit. (Dark blue with a faint white pinstripe, not too far apart, in case you’re interested.)

      This jumped out to me because the author is pretty much bashing on her own education degree. She's making it known that these kinds of classes and education are not effective for today's society (in her opinion).

    4. As for your university degree, there are definitely going to be days when you will feel that you’ve been given a refrigerator and sent to the middle of a jungle, where there are no three-pronged grounded plugholes.

      I enjoy the way this is stated. The harsh reality of the world isn't easy and will not hand things to you.

    5. state of joblessness, angst and cosmic depression which everyone knows is indispensable for novelists and poets, although nobody has ever claimed the same for geologists, dentists or chartered accountants.

      The harsh reality of this statement is that the more artistic and deep minds are the one most sensitive to failure. They fully immerse themselves into their work

    1. to give credit for approved online courses. (Eighty-five per cent of the state’s community colleges currently have course waiting lists.) Following a trial run at San José State University which yielded higher-than-usual pass rates, eleven schools in the California State University system moved to incorporate MOOCs into their curricula. In addition to having their own professors teach, say, electrical engineering, these colleges may use videos by teachers at schools such as M.I.T.

      Online courses provide more interaction and engagement into the class, which seems to be the ultimate goal so that the students pass with great understanding and knowledge for their profession. By offering lower cost courses online, students will be able to learn with a more extensive rate with access to a lot of information on the spot that will help them succeed, and be able to save out of college instead of finding themselves having to pay off college debt.

    1. calculates that at today's market value, those 2,795 gigatons of carbon emissions are worth about $27 trillion. Which is to say, if you paid attention to the scientists and kept 80 percent of it underground, you'd be writing off $20 trillion in assets.

      This is the reason that people and big businesses refuse to acknowledge climate change, because there would be a huge loss in profits.

    2. Which is exactly why this new number, 2,795 gigatons, is such a big deal. Think of two degrees Celsius as the legal drinking limit – equivalent to the 0.08 blood-alcohol level below which you might get away with driving home. The 565 gigatons is how many drinks you could have and still stay below that limit – the six beers, say, you might consume in an evening. And the 2,795 gigatons? That's the three 12-packs the fossil-fuel industry has on the table, already opened and ready to pour.

      another analogy used to put in perspective how dangerous this new potential amount of gigatons, 2,795, is so much worse than the already bad 565 that is the current average.

    3. should be below two degrees Celsius
    4. our almost-but-not-quite-finally hopeless – position with three simple numbers.

      As i'm reading more articles this seems to be a general trend with the people who fight to end global warming They agree that they're losing the fight, and the longer that happens the worse the problem becomes until it reaches a point where we can't come back from.

    5. That followed the warmest May on record for the Northern Hemisphere – the 327th consecutive month in which the temperature of the entire globe exceeded the 20th-century average, the odds of which occurring by simple chance were 3.7 x 10-99, a number considerably larger than the number of stars in the universe.

      Very good example that incorporated not only statistics but also an analogy that tied to how impossibly small the chances are if you don't believe in global warming.

    6. If the pictures of those towering wildfires in Colorado haven't convinced you,
    1. ethologists actually believe that animals are simply rational calculating machines.

      humans must be included in the term "animals"

    1. astonishingly, was never struck by a nun or molested by a priest

      The purpose behind the author's use of hyperbole is to display the ridiculousness of these stereotypes.

    2. shaped me in many ways

      My grade school also shaped me in numerous ways making me into the young adult I am today.

    3. I relished my role as the bad boy among the goody-goodies.

      He wasn't THE bad-boy but he was the bad-boy of the good kids instead of the bad (dumb) kids.

    4. I relished my role as the bad boy among the goody-goodies.

      He wasn't THE bad-boy but he was the bad-boy of the good kids instead of the bad (dumb) kids.

    5. There was the smart kids’ class, and there was the dumb kids’ class.

      My grade school had the same thing except I was always in the middle class.

    6. St. Petronille’s

      I've been to this school for sports so I know where he is talking about!

    7. I attended Catholic grade schools,

      I also attended a Catholic grade school so I should be able to relate to this authors thoughts and experiences a lot.

    1. "I felt like he was just doing it because I asked him to, not because he wanted to" "He bought me flowers on Valentine's Day because he knows he's supposed to -not because he really wants to" I find this to be a very interesting comparison because I believe most women feel this way. When they ask their partner something most tend to feel like they only follow through with it because you asked them to not because they want to.

    2. "Because when a roomful of women who just raved about "Fifty Shades of Grey' don't want me to write about "this kind of thing," that tells me it should be talked about." The fact that the author brought this up I thought it was such a good point. Mainly because in the movie Christian Grey was the one who had more control in the relationship. It goes along with the idea that a relationship can not be equal in order to have a good sexual relationship.

    3. "Vacuuming would have killed the weight-life vibe" The chores has nothing to do with wanting more sex, it's all about if she really wanted to or not. If she did want to she would have and if she doesn't she will make an excuse on why they didn't which is why she brought up the point of him not vaccumming the day before.

    4. "The wife does not find her husband more sexually exciting, even if she feels both closer to and happier with him" I'm taking this as nothing changes the sexual relationship between a couple unless the sexual attraction alone is what's changing. Nothing outside of that will affect a couples sex life.

    1. The rhetorical willingness to break eggs became, in practice , only a thrifty capacity for finding the sermon in every stone. Burn the literature, Ti-Grace Atkinson said in effect when it was suggested that, even come the revolution, thee would still be left the whole body of "sexist" Western literature. But of course no books would be burned: the women of this movement were perfectly capable of crafting didactic revisions of whatever apparently intractable material came to hand.

      This is great expression in explaining thoughts and emotions on this topic.

    2. Very interesting way to start the essay caught my attention. I was confused at first but later caught on.

    1. All work is gendered

      Very true, and even as young adult, I've had first-hand experience with it

    2. must organize their workplaces or the work that most women do will continue to be undervalued

      i strongly a agree, they are already undervalued so if we don't bring awareness to the issue, it could become even less valued

    3. I liked how the author speaks of the women-dominating fields such as nurses. This gives us a perspective on how women will be treated for the rest of the article

    4. Female-dominated sectors such as retail sales, food service, and home health care are some of the fastest-growing fields in the new economy, and even in those fields, women earn less;

      It would make sense since it is a female dominant job to make the same amount of money as males or more.

    5. women in the restaurant industry earn 83 cents to a man’s dollar

      This just proves the inequality between men and women when women are the majority in the restaurant industry but continue to make less than men.

    1. my passion evolved into frustration and annoyance.

      How do we avoid this?

    2. For most people, it's easy to be passionate about things that are working out, and that distorts our impression of the importance of passion. I've been involved in several dozen business ventures over the course of my life, and each one made me excited at the start. You might even call it passion.

      Does passion really drive us to success or failure? Being passionate about something doesn't necessarily always mean we will be successful in a business for example, just because we love what we are doing doesn't mean we are going to gain the most from it.

    3. But you might also notice some familiar patterns in my story that will give you confirmation (or confirmation bias) that your own success wasn't entirely luck.

      Think about using these terms.

    1. people with Williams can have trouble deepening relationships. This saddens and frustrates them. They know no strangers but can claim few friends.

      This is unfortunate.

    2. Many with Williams have so vague a concept of space, for instance, that even as adults they will fail at six-piece jigsaw puzzles, easily get lost, draw like a preschooler and struggle to replicate a simple T or X shape built with a half-dozen building blocks.
    3. They told the group of the genetic accident underlying Williams, the heart and vascular problems that eventually kill many who have it, their intense enjoyment of talk, music and story, their frustration in trying to make friends, the slights and cruelties they suffered growing up, their difficulty understanding the world. When they finished, most of the bikers were in tears.

      This sounds like a particularly odd condition. I should try to look into this more.

    4. “Williams personality”: a love of company and conversation combined, often awkwardly, with a poor understanding of social dynamics and a lack of social inhibition.

      Interesting, lacking social skills, but enjoying being social.

    1. forty-four per cent will have barely a moment to breathe before undergoing the transformation from student to suit.

      After in depth studying in the business major, the student will be thrown into the work place immediately because he/she has been made proficient in their area.

    1. In the eighteen-thirties, Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s grandfather Warren Delano II made the family fortune exporting the drug to China, and Delano was able to sugarcoat his activities so plausibly that no one ever accused his grandson of being the scion of a drug lord.

      that's crazzzzyyy

    2. what if children also learn the things that make them who they are–that shape their characters and personalities–from their peer group?

      Children do learn parts of their identity and learn interests not just from their parents but from their peers. Apart from family, society can have a great impact on kids and introduce them to different cultures/interests that not all kids would originally know from their parents.

    3. Adolescents aren’t trying to be like adults–they are trying to contrast themselves with adults,

      I never thought of teenage rebellion in that way. I used to believe that teens rebel because they were mad but people have different interpretations and I think the one stated in the article makes the most sense. Since teens are still trying to find out who they are and create an identity for themselves, contrasting themselves from adults seems like a good first step.

    1. "Afterawhile,Anderseninformedme,he“startedusingbodylanguage.”It’snotsomethinganyonetaught him.Hejustwatchedpeople,hesaid,and“monkeysee,monkeydo."

      This shows how an autistic kid can try to fit in and adjust to society

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    Annotators

    1. sometimes an experience outside the home can back up what the parent has been saying.

      Sometimes? I can tell you right now, that I have had more than enough real life experiences to help me find who i was. As a kid from a rough living situation, I had to learn about myself for myself. I didn't have a parent telling me what I was good at. I had to find it myself. Kids can ONLY learn from experience. Any other kind of learning is considered a transfer of information. You never truly know something for yourself until you experience it for yourself, and no one else.

    2. Just by looking at a kid’s record, you can usually tell when he began smoking pot,

      Oookay XD

    3. Those skills are spiritual

      Not sure what she meant by spiritual...

    4. Then they look at their parents and see that none of this stuff guarantees happiness. The best way to teach a child is by example, and parents have to look at what their own lives are saying to their children.”

      Finally, something that makes sense.

    5. For years she has seen the dark side of Cobb County’s affluence – the kids damaged by broken families, undue expectations, and the rigid social categorization of other schools – and now she reaches an unsettling conclusion about American high schools.

      She knows that they still have a life at home that she may not be able to do anything about. A very real realization.

    1. "Both Germany and Japan, which appears to double its VAT rate, have been exploring new taxes to pay for the pensions of the boomers." It's not right that our money is going towards helping old people die happy instead of fixing their mistakes.

    2. "The public debt constitutes a toxic legacy handed over to offspring who will have to pay it off in at least three ways: through higher taxes, less infrastructure and social spending, and, fatefully, the prospect of painfully slow growth for the foreseeable future."

    3. "their indebted parents are not leaving their jobs, forcing younger people to put careers on hold." Old people are stealing our jobs.

    4. "Median net worth of people under 35, according to the U.S. Census, fell 37 percent between 2005 and 2012; those over 65 took only a 13 percent hit." This shows that the baby boomers screwed the younger generation.

    1. nd confident in our ability to find someone else, usually someone better, monogamy and the old thinking about commitment will be challenged very harshly.”

      more comparison of past times to today's views on issues, like in other articles

    1. Every bout of diarrhea or measles, he found, can bump a child off his growth curve.

      Sickness slows the growth. Having access to medicines and a healthy diet can lead to less risk of infection. Maybe nutrition does spur on growth but keep it from being hindered by other factors.

    2. The results were startling: adult slaves, Steckel found, were nearly as tall as free whites, and three to five inches taller than the average Africans of the time.

      All by being fed more.

    3. “Men grow taller and faster the wealthier their country,” the French hygienist and statistician Louis-René Villermé wrote in 1829. “In other words, misery . . . produces short people.”

      Interesting how you would be able to control someones development based on nutrition.

    4. And those experiences are spelled out in their bodies.

      Constant malnutrition, while younger, will lead into a decline in physical and mental potential.

    5. Any decent diet can send us sprouting at these ages, but take away any one of forty-five or fifty essential nutrients and the body stops growing. (“Iodine deficiency alone can knock off ten centimetres and fifteen I.Q. points,” one nutritionist told me.)

      During these growth spurts inadequate nutrition leads to stunted growth physically and mentally. Wish I ate more when I was younger

    6. Biologists say that we achieve our stature in three spurts: the first in infancy, the second between the ages of six and eight, the last in adolescence.

      The reason why parents make sure that you eat your fruits and vegetables to get all the nutrients you need to grow healthy.

    7. That’s why the United Nations now uses height to monitor nutrition in developing countries.

      This brings up how North Korea's children are stunted and smaller, due to malnutrition, while South Korea's children are just fine.

    1. A man who becomes conscious of the responsibility he bears toward a human being who affectionately waits for him, or to an unfinished work, will never be able to throw away his life. He knows the "why" for his existence, and will be able to bear almost any "how."

      So many times people just need something to motivate them to get through the difficult parts of life.

    2. This paper will become very useful when i begin to write mine!

    3. flow of paper is very smooth and clear

    4. Interesting quote

    1. Parents have a hard job determining the right amount of praise because without it, children are left to themselves to determine their own intelligence. There is a lot of pressure on kids and giving praise can be good or bad, its up to the parents to determine how much, how they will say it.

    2. The author explains his story about his son and how he only praised him on specific things and a limited amount. instead of saying "you played great" after his soccer game he would say " Good pass" or "Good effort getting the ball". This way the child sees what he is doing well and isn't over praised. If he was to be over praised, they when he grows older and tasks become more difficult, he is more likely to give up when the praise is not present.

    3. Baumeister and other researchers are now looking at if praise actually helps students. Depending on the type of praise and who is giving the praise can have a big effect in different ways. A parents praise has a big effect because the self esteem of the children is "Largely tied to parents' pride in their children's achievements".

    4. The research that Carol Dweck did showed that kids that were praised for their effort had better test scores than the kids that were praised for their intelligence. But Sue Needleman doesn't care what the research shows. She is a mother of 2 and is an elementary-school teacher. She tries to keep her praise specific that way students know what they did to earn the praise and eventually want to keep doing that. The reasearch still shows, with the kids knowing the idea that the brain is a muscle helped improve their math scores.

    1. Further down the article talks about taking care of her siblings, and how Dasani does things (such as take the end piece of bread for herself) all on her own. She is still a baby herself!!! :(

    2. It won't let me highlight, but the first few paragraphs have me extremely upset. It breaks my heart to hear these things (such as, sexual predators have roamed and small children stand guard for their single mothers outside filthy showers.)

    1. At the Killing Fields, babies were held by their feet and smashed against a designated tree, the Baby-Smashing Tree.

      They didn't care if there was an 100% chance someone as innocent. They killed to kill.

    2. torture to obtain confessions (including near drownings, the removal of toe- and fingernails followed by a dousing of alcohol, electric shocks applied to genitals, suffocation with plastic bags, and forcing prisoners to eat human excrement); that he ordered the murder of at least 15,000 people

      These people were animals to them, they had no care for human decency.

    3. In that first spasm of violence, everyone wearing glasses was killed. Everyone who spoke a foreign language was killed. Everyone with a university education was killed. Word was sent to expats living abroad to come home and join the new Cambodia; when a thousand or so arrived on special flights from Beijing, they were killed. Monks, so revered in Cambodian society and long the voice of conscience there, were killed. Lawyers, doctors, and diplomats were killed. Bureaucrats, soldiers, and policemen, even factory workers (who in the minds of the Khmer Rouge were equivalent to industrialization itself), were killed.

      They killed off anyone and everyone who was at all slightly different.

    4. 15,000 others were sentenced and exterminated in nearby pastureland famously known as the Killing Fields. But then, as fate would have it, he would emerge as one of only seven survivors from the prison camp

      Of 15,000 only 7 survived.

    5. While the odds were roughly one in four of dying—and worse depending on your demographic

      This is like flipping a coin twice and getting heads both times. That's how likely people were to die.

    6. People were almost certain that they were going to die.

    7. Four just four years this society killed 1/4 of it's own population

    1. But we should also cut ourselves a little slack when our intentions are good.

      "Essential feminism" needs to stop and people shouldn't be held to a high standard in order to identify as a feminist.

    2. “Democrat” and “Republican” don’t mean a goddamn thing.

      Being a Democrat or a Republican shouldn't matter when it comes to feminism. What matters is that everyone recognizes the inequalities that women face. It is undeniable, and no political party should say differently.

    3. I try to remind myself that honoring the works of the amazing humans who gave their hearts, souls, blood, sweat, genius, jail time, and even their LIVES so women could occupy an equal place in this world is far more important than any personal discomfort I may feel in fighting/living for what I believe.

      Even though there are still many inequalities between men and women, we have a much easier fight than women had in the past. They went through so much to lift women up that we should at least try to continue their legacy.

    4. some of the harshest critics of feminism are self-proclaimed feminists.

      True - feminists should unite rather than holding each other up to some unrealistic ideal.

    5. Some of the most inspiring feminists in my life have been men!

      Even though men might not fully understand the struggle, they should stand up for equal rights for women because "women's rights are human rights." Just because men are not female doesn't mean they're not impacted by females. We all have mothers, grandmothers, sisters, aunts, cousins, friends, neighbors, co-workers, etc., that are women. If these people play an important role in a man's life (sometimes GIVING a man life), then why wouldn't that person stand up and fight for their equality? If the Civil Rights Movement lacked support from any other race/ethnicity, the movement would've gone much slower. It is essential for the privileged group to use their advantages to speak up for underprivileged individuals.

    6. Some feminists are teachers, some are helpers, defenders and reminders, and some just gently let people be themselves. All are needed. We especially need more men feeling invited and helping out.

      The feminism movement needs support from everyone, not just those who are the loudest or fit society's feminist stereotype.

    7. HUMANS! There isn’t one core group that sticks out, I found: it seems to be a bunch of self-aware folks, mostly women, some in clumps and some alone, who (to whatever extremes) think everyone should get their fair shake.

      This ties back to the fact that people shouldn't be held to some standard when identifying as a feminist, everyone's perspectives and interests are unique. If everyone agrees that there should be gender equality, then other factors shouldn't stop someone from being a feminist. The less judgmental people are of each other, the more people will join the feminism movement rather than abstaining out of fear.

    1. water still flows from our faucets, the grass is still green, and the supermarkets are full of food.

      but only in America and other countries that are fortunate enough to have the infrastructure to support this system. But what about in other nations? Third world nations? Where children eat 1 bowl of beans a day. Will the system still work if more water, plants, food needs to be produced for everyone on the planet? resources are scarce.

    2. implement

      this is a huge point. There can be lots of technological advancements but it won't be able to be used overnight. What if new technology calls for a change in infrastructure? Then what? it'll take years to rebuild cities to adjust it to new technology.

    3. solve our food problems with new or soon-to-be-developed genetically modified crops

      I really hope not. It boggles my mind how we are researching and endlessly growing and creating genetically modified organisms where there are parts in the world, such as the European Union who won't even allow the planting of GMO's.

    4. Our strongest arguments for a healthy environment are selfish

      this is very true. mankind has always placed itself at the top of the food chain. It would fall under and anthropocentric worldview. The belief that everything on the planet is for the use and consumption of humans. what a couple months in environmental science taught me.

    5. We need to prevent toxic substances from accumulating in our water

      Flint, Michigan... hmm... precursor to the inevitable downfall of our society??

    6. bees,

      save the bees!!

    7. That's a familiar problem today.

      agree 100% why is that? looking at this from a historic viewpoint, an unhealthy climate is the downfall of all societies. as the author already mentioned

    1. "The Chinese participants tended to associate love with negative features, e.g., heartbreak, and spontaneously listed more negative items than Americans, who associated love with more positive features, e.g., adoration."

      This proves that culture plays a major role in our ideas of love

    2. Plus, the MRI gave me some supposedly objective proof of my feelings.

      the MRI benefited the author because he learned his true feelings not only for his wife but in general

    3. "Your brain is not just seeing pure reward, the way it is in the beginning of a relationship.

      I feel as if he lost his love for her the moment they got married

    4. And if I understand how I love my wife, maybe I can learn how to love her better.

      This is a very strategic way of thinking about love

    5. When I told friends and family I was trying to scientifically assess my love for Julie,

      If he has to test his love for his wife, he does not love her. The tests will only prove something that he already knows

    6. If love is simply chemicals, doesn't that change its meaning?

      Everyone has different meanings and versions of what they think love is

    7. I think I love my wife. At least most of the time.

      if he has to question whether or not he does love is wife, then maybe he does not love her as much as he wants to

    1. That’s Papasan,” she says. That’s the guy who yelled at a child for not dancing well enough.

      they force kids to dance once they are in. they try to pimp them out. they are monsters.

    2. at’s how a girl 13 years old walks into a bar and gets a job.

      shes a stripper at age 13 because she had no other way of supporting herself. her mother wouldn't do it, her father was dead.

    1. When you are poor, you wait.

      This was such an eye-opening article. I feel like I am so quick to judge those who aren't financially stable like myself. There is a lot that goes into making 'being poor' work for someone

    2. "When you are poor, you substitute time for money," says Randy Albelda, an economics professor at the University of Massachusetts at Boston. "You have to work a lot of hours and still not make a lot of money. You get squeezed, and your money is squeezed."

      Time is money, money is time

    3. According to the Census Bureau, more than 37 million people in the country live below the poverty line. The poor know these facts of life. These facts become their lives.

      Good statistic

    4. Like food: You don't have a car to get to a supermarket, much less to Costco or Trader Joe's, where the middle class goes to save money. You don't have three hours to take the bus. So you buy groceries at the corner store, where a gallon of milk costs an extra dollar.

      Interesting takeaway. Never put these two issues together to realize the struggle

    1. One has to go quite far back to find another group of sophisticated students who took for granted the idea that the universe is a just and orderly place—

      I hate this article.

    2. They have relatively little generational consciousness. That's because this generation is for the most part not fighting to emancipate itself from the past.

      Very true

    3. It's hard to imagine a recruiting poster of a few decades ago appealing to students' desire to make their parents happy.

      What I'm reading now is "boohoo I'm old"

    4. "I lived an incredibly ragged life," Kathryn Taylor, class of 1974, now an administrator in alumni affairs, told me of her college days. "It never would have dawned on me to try to look nice. They seem to be much more conscious of apparel."

      How horrible.

    5. And you have been rewarded with a place at a wonderful university filled with smart, successful, and cheerful people like yourself. Wouldn't you be just like the students I found walking around Princeton?

      The author says this like its a bad thing.

    6. Today's ramped-up parental authority rests on three pillars: science, safety, and achievement.

      The author is hardcore judging protective parents but parenting is a personal decision.

    7. Now a mere scooter ride requires body armor, and in many families kids aren't permitted to ride out of sight of the house.

      This isn't just crazy parenting though. With the increase in kidnappings and common knowledge regarding whats safe and whats not has encouraged parents to make safer choices.

    1. He wrote that if I followed his recommendation of taking 3,000 milligrams of vitamin C, I would live not only 25 years longer, but probably more."

      This is a high amount that you would never be able to get through eating food.

    1. adolescence

      The comparison that the author uses towards adolescence make me completely agree with the author in this last part.

    2. The whole idea of milestones, of course, is something of an anachronism; it implies a lockstep march toward adulthood that is rare these days. Kids don’t shuffle along in unison on the road to maturity. They slouch toward adulthood at an uneven, highly individual pace. Some never achieve all five milestones, including those who are single or childless by choice, or unable to marry even if they wanted to because they’re gay. Others reach the milestones completely out of order, advancing professionally before committing to a monogamous relationship, having children young and marrying later, leaving school to go to work and returning to school long after becoming financially secure.

      This whole paragraph kind of addresses the comment I made just before it, and glad that it did address this.

    3. marrying and having a child

      Though I get that this is very common, and maybe being part of this generation is what is speaking here, but I think that it is something that should not be used to measure adulthood. Not everybody wants to have children or get married. I understand that the same could be said about the rest of the criteria, but I feel that this criteria cuts more adults from being identified as adults.

    1. In a documentary film about Keiko, his Reino Aventura trainers, two beautiful young women, were nearly hysterical about his departure, saying he was not just a whale or a job but their closest friend.

      This is the key message in this article...I admire how so many people are able to connect and relate with the unique animals in this world outside the boundaries of cats and dogs. All animals, both big and small, can make a large impact in a person's life.

    2. More than a hundred and thirty orcas have been captured for display since Moby Doll's misadventures

      It is so sad and disappointing to hear of all the whales that have been kept in captivity. I understand why so many people want to observe the life and character of an orca, but it's best to keep them in their natural habitats in order to see the true beauty and intelligence of this whale.

    3. Many of them came from Iceland, until all whaling in the country was halted in 1989

      Now I can see why Iceland is so important!

    4. Sea World's Tillikum,

      Tillikum is one of the world's most popular whales. A documentary known as "Blackfish" was made about him, and I would recommend this video to anyone who has not seen this yet.

    5. Iceland

      The setting in this article is crucial for readers in order to convey the lifestyle in Iceland, and to determine where these whales are from.

    6. But Keiko -- which means "lucky one" in Japanese

      From the information that I have gathered, Orlean decided to reveal the meaning of Keiko's name in order to display the popularity of this whale, the achievements this whale has accomplished, and the number of people who admire this animal.

    7. where the wind never huffs or puffs but simply blows your house down

      I couldn't help but laugh at this phrase...it reminds me of the story "The Three Little Pigs."

    1. You know, you move from one place to another and you bring the element with you,

      Brings up a good point and makes the reader think of a possible solution.

    2. VIDEO

      I feel the video came a little early. I was confused to what she was referring to the Dixie home or Springdale. The video should have come after the author explained a bit more of Leslie Shaw after she moved into Springdale.

    3. called HOPE VI,

      Don't know why the roman number 6 is there? Unless they wanted a unique name.

    4. drug dealers control the stairwells, where children can’t go outside to play, where mothers put their infants to bed in bathtubs.

      Nice way to back up her claim that "poverty correlates with crime."

    5. “these enclaves of poverty,”

      I love how she uses the word enclaves.

    6. Legal scholars today often compare the case’s significance to that of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka.

      Nice connection to Brown.

    7. In 1949 in Chicago, a rumor that a black family was moving onto a white block prompted a riot that grew to 10,000 people in four days.

      It's amazing to see how much society has grown since then, although im not saying its perfect.

    8. Nobody in the antipoverty community and nobody in city leadership was going to welcome the news that the noble experiment that they’d been engaged in for the past decade had been bringing the city down, in ways they’d never expected.

      It's hard to believe that people still haven't noticed this. People who grow up in poverty are more likely to turn to crime: might have to add link for this.

    9. as part of a nationwide experiment to free the poor from the destructive effects of concentrated poverty.

      Might be a reason why crime might occur?

    10. Hot spots had proliferated since the mid-1990s, and little islands of crime had sprung up where none had existed before, dotting the map all around the city.

      Could be useful for my paper

    11. The session had none of the raucous air of precinct meetings you see on cop shows.

      Connecting to the reader

    12. VIDEO

      I did not expect a video, but it does a well job of giving another person's thought even it agree with the authors.

    1. become.

      seems out of context here...

    2. alternative

      All of this trade talk really shows how much goes into it just for even one small transaction between teams

    3. Harvard Magazine was that he himself had, for several years, employed graduates of Harvard to make abstruse statistical arguments.

      winning in baseball is basically everything other than money. This is a clever strategy

    4. 'We're not going to use him as a pinch runner. If you don't want us to use him, trade him.''

      do it or lose your job basically

    5. ''Do you want to go down and release Magnante?''

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZerYBHIacOI This is a visual of what the trading scenario looks like, this clip (also a movie about stats in baseball: Moneyball) is based off of this exact event in the article.

    1. feelings that come with cheating weren't there at the time,

      The feeling of new hands on your body is an exciting and pleasurable feeling. The guilt of cheating is not there, as you are too busy enjoying the stranger in your presence

    2. she's new

      This is why most people cheat, they're "new". They need something new in their life and not always stick to the same thing every day.

    3. he picked up the phone and said, Yeah honey, don't worry, having a drink with Brian, I'll bring home a pizza.

      His wife probably believed this pity of a lie, since it seemed to be such a simple and normal thing for her husband to be doing.

    4. I believe that everybody cheats.

      I agree with this statement. I think that no one is truly faithful to their partner 100%.

    1. Working-memory capacity is closely tied to general powers of intellect and decision-making. When it’s not working well, you’re not as sharp.

      :-)

    2. the test-taker surrenders to the stereotyped identity by disengaging emotionally and intellectually

      importantt

    3. It’s a failure of cognition. Call it a cognichoke.

      oh boy

    4. Beilock contends that such failures come not from unwelcome attention, as explicit monitoring does, but from a deficit of needed attention

      panic??? (Gladwell)

    5. And there are chokes, she asserts, that rise not from overthinking but from poor thinking.

      (??)

    6. Their bodies knew the hitting process well enough to do it with a distracted brain.

      !!!! Proof that you need to just trust yourself

    7. a useful distraction

      better and more effective than telling someone not to think about something

    8. “But once you’ve learned it, you’ve got to leave it alone.”

      If you don't trust yourself you'll mess up

    9. By consciously trying to direct a physical action that you’ve practiced until it’s automatic, you botch it.

      basically don't overthink

    10. “conscious attention to normally automatized physical operations that destroys the athlete’s normal fluidity.”

      Similar to explanation in Gladwell article

    11. classic chokes — appear to rise from the process known colloquially as “thinking too much” or “paralysis through analysis,” and among cognitive scientists as “explicit monitoring.”

      choking = "thinking too much," "paralysis through analysis," "explicit monitoring"

    12. Even the greatest athletes sometimes choke.

      Connect to the Gladwell piece; examples used are about athletics.

    1. How to Win A STARING CONTEST

      This section seems tacked on and irrelevant

    2. I took one, too, just for good measure. It seemed a small sort of bullying. I could do far worse with my eyes. Anyone can. The tool can always become the weapon.

      I was just thinking that, it seems that most people aren't prepared for eye contact and unknowingly freak out when someone tries to hold their gaze

    3. I had to force myself to stop reading every twitch, every sideways glance, every brush of the hair. I had to stop treating the world like a poker game, in which every movement might be a tell.

      Kind of contradicts one of my earlier readings that discussed how every movement of the face was a tell

    4. So I tried to concentrate on eyelashes, but this made my own eyes jump as I talked. My head bobbed, too, and I was hit with a sense of motion sickness. Women constantly excused themselves after talking to me to check their faces in the mirror. I was forced to apologize, telling them that I was just spacing out, not paying attention--the direct opposite of what I was hoping to convey in the first place. It was as if I had become a mirror in which people saw their own tiny imperfections, magnified by my glance.

      This is an interesting development, he was able to manipulate others by looking close to, but not at the eyes.

    5. When I paid attention to it, I found that my tendency was to click in, lock eyes for a second or less, then look upward or outward into the distance. It's just not my rhythm to stare.

      I tend to do this a lot too, it feels awkward to have too much eye contact

    6. The eye-contact specialist is like the one guy in the game of pickup basketball who knows only how to box out for a rebound

      Great comparison, helps get the gist of what he is trying to explain.

    7. These people may be as dumb as streetlamps, but they are an undeniable presence in the room. They know they must be dealt with. You know it, too.

      Now is this ingrained at birth or learned?

    8. But the truth is, I got nothing. No sign. Bubkes. In fact, the more I looked at his eyes, the more I began to realize that my dad had no idea that I was lying. None. He looked straight back at me, waiting to hear the next thing I would tell him. In fact, he was hanging on my words. There was no voice of God. My father wasn't listening to anyone but me. He had no idea when I was lying, especially if I stared him down the whole time.

      He must have been a very perceptive kid if he was able to read his father's facial expressions.

    1. THE ONE HANDSHAKE I most remember was my father's when I went to visit him in a nursing-care center in Albany, where he is recovering from a stroke. He was in his wheelchair when I got there, facing the window. I reached over his shoulder to touch his hands, and he pulled me around for a look and a shake."Pop," I said, reaching out and taking his hand. It was smooth as ever, though a little loose. I gave him the extra pressure, a bit of a sidewinder pull, and bent down for a kiss. "Wow, nice grip," he said. "Your hands are soft. You must be making real money." I told him I was doing okay. I asked how he was, and he allowed that he'd been better. He told me he loved the trees where he lived now. Didn't I like the trees? I turned for a look, but it was hard to see, because he held my grip. I have learned that sometimes you don't let go.

      I like the personal touch, but anyone can discuss how important something is, not much proof or studies beside his experience.

    2. and I just knew he was pretending to be small for me.

      Such subtleties to a seemingly simple gesture.

    3. I found that if I held on just two beats longer than usual, people stopped what they were saying and eyeballed me. They saw me. This worked particularly well with people who were working for me--the desk clerks, the bellmen, the valets, the concierge. I knocked down at least one suite upgrade with that alone. I also discovered that if I gradually increased the pressure of a shake, people would automatically smile. Really. It was like I was blowing up some balloon in their face. Unless you went at it too hard. And once I had them smiling, then, well, I had them.

      He has the experience, but is he able to explain with science?

    4. a man who has a good handshake can do any goddamned thing he wants. I'm not saying he will; I'm saying he can.

      The power of first impressions and body language

    5. You're a good kisser." I groaned. My teenage son was there, cutting a peach into little pieces, not paying much attention. "A kiss is not that easy," he said. He doesn't talk much, but I could tell he was speaking from experience--recent experience. "It's not like a handshake or anything." Most Popular The Largest Destroyer Ever Built Is Officially Out to Sea The Official Drinker's Bucket List The Friend: Love Is Not a Big Enough Word So true, my little man, so true. A kiss is not like a handshake. It's far easier than a handshake. A kiss you perform mostly in private, again and again. Why wouldn't you get better?

      Great use of a personal experience to introduce the argument

    1. last thing he looks is short.

      He does look short, but the way he presents himself in the drawing makes him seem as if he is not actually short. He became "blind" to his own shortness.

    2. short men too, have smuggled their way into our affections through the same cognitive door that was meant to open only for the infants.

      Weird way of saying short men are more attractive to women...

    3. This is because resources, easily found, are easily squandered.

      I'm not understanding how resources has to do with the marriage and how short men make better husbands???

    1. That all across the animal kingdom this cross-pollination occurs

      The Jungle Book

      This phrase in the article connects with the Disney movie The Jungle Book. The main character Mowgli is raised by other animals in the jungle, and soon finds his village at the end of the story.

    1. he tilts her head to look enticing. Why? Well, the neck, with its thick layer of virtual bubble-wrap, is one of the most heavily defended parts of the body.

      What an interesting way of thinking about it, everything has roots in primal behavior.

    1. professionalize childhood."

      I love this phrase because it shows how children are being treated like adults in the majors rather than being introduced to a sport

    2. "I'm seeing 15 to 30 kids a year who are younger than 11 years old and in need of surgery," he says. "It's unheard of."

      Many kids push themselves too much and avoid the pain to avoid being out of the game for an amount of time, however they harm themselves more and risk severe surgery and possibly risk a not full recovery

    3. "Little Johnny's going to blow his arm out just hoping to make his daddy feel good."

      Kids push themselves harder in hopes to make their parents proud of them, rather than focus on their health, that's what the author is trying to point out.

    4. "It's about winning," he said. "But not just about winning — it's fun, too. I want to do it for the rest of my life."

      To these kids, the ones who invest so much time and make so many sacrifices, it's no longer just a game. Of course they want fun, but it's not fun unless you're winning Any athlete could tell you that, no one wants to lose, everyone wants to win, but it's about what you're willing to give up to be the best and how long you can be in the game for.

    1. “Instead, they would take people one at a time into these dingy little rooms and have them sit around for an hour or so and talk about bad things that had happened to them. We had to get them to leave the country.”

      It's so interesting because the author is implicitly drawing the comparison to the way psychologists and psychiatrists treat depression because the people in Africa see this and reject it as a treatment.

    2. And I felt so up. I felt so up! It had been quite an astonishing experience. Even though I didn’t believe in the animist principles behind it, all of these people had been gathered together, cheering for me, and it was very exhilarating.

      Really I guess for depression, it's whatever floats your boat.

    3. And then when I had finished the Coke, they said, “Okay, now we have the final parts of the ritual. First you have to put your hands by your sides and stand very straight and very erect.” And I said, “Okay,” and then they tied me up with the intestines of the ram. In the meanwhile its body was hanging from a nearby tree, and someone was doing some butchering of it, and they took various little bits of it out. And then I had to kind of shuffle over, all tied up in intestines, which most of you probably haven’t done, but it’s hard.

      What a different culture

    1. It is about the real value of a real education, which has almost nothing to do with knowledge, and everything to do with simple awareness; awareness of what is so real and essential, so hidden in plain sight all around us, all the time, that we have to keep reminding ourselves over and over:

      I agree with this statement immensely. You can have all the knowledge in the world, but being unaware of what it is you are learning about and for what reason will destroy the real meaning of living.

    2. If you're automatically sure that you know what reality is, and you are operating on your default setting, then you, like me, probably won't consider possibilities that aren't annoying and miserable. But if you really learn how to pay attention, then you will know there are other options.

      The story told along with this idea is a great way to elaborate and make the reader understand just how life works. Negativity comes from focusing only on yourself, not the ones around you who could be struggling more than you.

    1. This disappointing air of saggy trouser seats, bunchy underarms, and wobbly shoulder vanes may be the result of imaginative indolence, the sort that would permit a grown man to tell himself he will find gratification in walking the exhibition floor wearing a pair of Dockers, a Jägermeister hoodie, and a rubber Venom mask complete with punched-out eyeholes and flopping rubber bockwurst of a tongue.

      The description of the old man going to a convention of some sort points out the ridiculousness of fantasizing.

    1. "Spring is the start of suicide season, the time when the average daily death toll begins its climb to a mid summer peak, before tapering through fall and winter."

      Why is that? Why is spring considered suicide season?Why not winter when it's dark and nasty out?

    1. As a fat person, burdened with the knowledge that your only valid cultural utility is as a "before" picture to inspire Kirstie Alley to eschew that third handful of GoLean Crunch, there is no socially acceptable posture but that of constant apology. Oh, I'm sorry, thin people, for eating where you can see me—but don't worry, I'll just have this salad so as not to confirm your suspicions about my disturbing fettuccine alfredo addiction.

      this is a really good metaphoric use and comparison to real life