2,561 Matching Annotations
  1. Jan 2016
    1. We're told we can get this disease and we believe it and vow to protect ourselves, and intend (really, truly) to stick by this rule, until we don't because we just can't, because it's just not fair, because our sense of entitlement exceeds our sense of vulnerability. So we blow off precaution again and again, and then we get scared and get tested, and when it comes out O.K., we run out of the clinic, pamphlets in hand, eyes cast upward, promising ourselves we'll never be stupid again. But of course we are stupid, again and again. And the testing is always for the same reasons and with the same results, and soon it becomes more like fibbing about S.A.T. scores 10 years after the fact than lying about whether we practice unsafe sex, a lie that sounds like such a breach of contract with ourselves that we might as well be talking about putting a loaded gun under our pillow every night.

      That whole paragraph really conveyed to me the author's paranoia, which the author creates by having long sentences, listing scenarios, and repeating the word "again".

    1. We see this tension in socially dictated beauty standards—the right way to be a woman is to be thin, to wear make up, to wear the right kind of clothes (not too slutty, not too prude, show a little leg, ladies

      People have the right to be who they want to be. clothing and makeup are ways to express through these techniques. For example, I know of dome girls that feel uncomfortable not wearing any makeup on because they feel like they will be judged as not caring.

    2. Like most people, I’m full of contradictions

      It's impossible to never contradict yourself. Human beings are complicated, and just because you fit certain "feminine" characteristics shouldn't mean you can't fight for equal rights.

    3. groundbreaking women and industry leaders, are afraid to be labeled feminists, afraid to stand up and say, “Yes, I am a feminist,” for fear of what that label means, for fear of how to live up to it,

      Very true and needs to be changed.

    4. I don’t think that I would consider myself a feminist. I think that I certainly believe in equal rights, I believe that women are just as capable, if not more so in a lot of different dimensions, but I don’t, I think, have, sort of, the militant drive and the sort of, the chip on the shoulder that sometimes comes with that.

      I just get very frustrated reading things like this. Believing in gender equality is what makes a feminist a feminist. It frustrates me that a woman would say "I believe that women are just as capable," but won't explicitly say she is a feminist because of the negative connotation that the word feminist has. Mayer is the president and CEO of a huge company and has an opportunity to show all the hard work it took for her to get there, but she is too afraid of to categorize herself as feminist.

    5. And while I may be a bad feminist, I am deeply committed to the issues important to the feminist movement.

      Being a feminist doesn't have to be a huge commitment that makes you feel guilty for enjoying the things you do. People are scared of identifying as a feminist because of being criticized or given a negative reputation. Feminism is simply believing that women should be equal to men, and although it helps to be vocal about the issue, no woman should be shunned from the movement because they have unique ideals.

    6. I very much like men. They’re interesting to me, and I mostly wish they would be better about how they treat women so I wouldn’t have to call them out so often.

      Feminism doesn't mean man-hating. It just means having a passion for equal rights to men. The movement is not supposed to be degrading to the other sex.

    7. Pink is my favorite color. I used to say my favorite color was black to be cool, but it is pink—all shades of pink. If I have an accessory, it is probably pink.

      Again, people shouldn't feel like they have to abandon their preferences in order to fit in with society's perception of feminists. Liking the color pink and liking dresses doesn't make you a "bad feminist." Everyone is different, and you can still want equal rights for women if you enjoy traditional "girly" things.

    8. I sometimes cringe when someone refers to me as a feminist, as if I should be ashamed of my feminism or as if the word feminist is an insult. The label is rarely offered in kindness.

      I do the same thing. I have multiple items of clothing that show my feminist support and when I wear those things to school, I am often judged because I am a feminist. I sometimes become embarrassed when some one calls me a feminist. Being called a feminist should not be seen as an insult. Being called a feminist should not make me feel ashamed or embarrassed but proud because I know that I am fighting for a cause that I very strongly believe in.

    9. When I drive to work I listen to thuggish rap at a very loud volume even though the lyrics are degrading to women and offend me to my core.

      The author's sarcasm toward the end of this article is very interesting. It makes readers realize that there is no right way to be a feminist. No one is perfect, and no one can completely erase their inner feelings. You can be a feminist and still be yourself.

    10. Essential feminism suggests anger, humorlessness, militancy, unwavering principles, and a prescribed set of rules for how to be a proper feminist woman, or at least a proper white, heterosexual, feminist woman—hate pornography, unilaterally decry the objectification of women, don’t cater to the male gaze, hate men, hate sex, focus on career, don’t shave.

      There is no right or wrong way to be a feminist. Feminists can be the "perfect woman" or someone who does not physically fit the mold of a "perfect woman." Women can like sex and still be a feminist. It's ridiculous that society believes that ALL feminists are filled with anger and hatred towards all men, when really they are just fighting for the equality they deserve. The reputations that feminists have is just untrue.

    11. Trailblazing female leaders in the corporate world tend to reject the feminist label, too. Marissa Mayer, who was appointed president and CEO of Yahoo! in July 2012, said in an interview, I don’t think that I would consider myself a feminist. I think that I certainly believe in equal rights, I believe that women are just as capable, if not more so in a lot of different dimensions, but I don’t, I think, have, sort of, the militant drive and the sort of, the chip on the shoulder that sometimes comes with that. And I think it’s too bad, but I do think that feminism has become in many ways a more negative word. You know, there are amazing opportunities all over the world for women, and I think that there is more good that comes out of positive energy around that than negative energy.

      This is so frustrating. Somebody that obviously has an education to serve as President and CEO of Yahoo! still has a misconception of the word. She even says that women should be treated equally and that women are sometimes even more capable in different situations, but refuses to call herself a feminist because that would be "negative." And there are already "amazing opportunities all over the world for women." Categorization should not be so scary.

    12. we see this fear of categorization, this fear of being forced into a box that cannot quite accommodate a woman properly.

      So many women are afraid to categorize themselves as feminists for fear of being connected to the negative connotation that the word has adopted over the years. The education and perception about feminism needs to change. People are so afraid of this idea of "essential feminism" and that you have to act/be a certain way to be an actual feminist. This shouldn't be the case, rather women should be encouraged to join the feminism movement as they are - that's part of what feminism fights for in the first place.

    13. If labeling and categorizing ourselves is going to shut the world down, it has been a long time coming.

      GREAT QUOTE

    14. really enjoy how this is played out into context because it is completely accurate from a female perspective.

    15. the movement has been warped by misperception for so long that even people who should know better have bought into this essential image of feminism

      The way that society and the media have presented feminism has lead to widespread misconceptions across both genders. There is no "right way" to be a feminist.

    16. Good women work but are content to earn 77 percent of what men earn. Depending on whom you ask, good women bear children and stay home to raise them without complaint. Good women are modest, chaste, pious, submissive. Women who don’t adhere to these standards are the fallen, the undesirable.

      Many people in society, mostly men who are uneducated on the subject, have a subconscious prejudice against women and often stray from nontraditional females. It is unfair that women are expected to work for less, bear children regardless of their own preferences, and be submissive to men. If women refuse to follow these guidelines, they are often abandoned by a large portion of the male population. These expectations of women are extremely unrealistic.

    1. any determined kid with a ball, a bat and a sandlot to play in stands a chance of making it big.

      I believe the author is trying to make the statement that baseball is a sport of talent and defined skills, but anyone can play as good as the next with determination, dedication and hard work, talent isn't everything. And no matter how much talent one has there will always be one kid who is better than the next.

    2. But by all accounts the level of play in youth baseball, as well as the degree of competitiveness and the investment of time and money required of parents, has escalated dramatically in the past 10 years or so — primarily owing to the rising popularity of tournament-oriented travel teams.

      The author is trying to describe how the role of parents shifts in youth sports. It's not just showing up for games and sitting on the sidelines anymore, they want their kid to succeed so they push them harder and treat them as though they aren't kids anymore. As the competitiveness gets more intense as does the parents' "enthusiasm" but many parents to it to extreme measures.

    3. But from the very start, Jarrod had an especially determined arm

      Important details here. I also started at semi-young age but never was as dedicated as some were.

    4. rec-ball

      the league where almost every kid will be placed on the team and their skills are underdeveloped. They are not the top level of competitiveness.

    1. Leading a happy life, the psychologists found, is associated with being a "taker" while leading a meaningful life corresponds with being a "giver."

      interesting concept

    2. the single-minded pursuit of happiness is ironically leaving people less happy

      This shows that because people are trying so hard to be happy, their search often leads them to overlook whats in front of them.

    3. Forty percent either do not think their lives have a clear sense of purpose or are neutral about whether their lives have purpose.

      This serves as a good statistic to get the point across. It kind of made me think, "wow".

    1. More than 70 percent of those who scored high on the Self-Report Psychopathy Scale correctly picked out the handkerchief-smuggling associate, compared with just 30 percent of the low scorers. Zeroing in on weakness may well be part of a serial killer's tool kit. But it may also come in handy at the airport.

      This is an interesting result for an interesting study.

    2. detractors

      a person who regards to certain people as little worth

    3. recalcitrance

      obstinately defiant of authority

    4. Such a profile allows those who present with these traits to do what they like when they like, completely unfazed by the social, moral or legal consequences of their actions.

      Good.

    1. In its wake, the global average temperature, which had been climbing steeply, suddenly fell by roughly half a degree Celsius—a drop accurately predicted by climate models. The cooling was only temporary, however. Within a couple of years, the mercury was climbing once again. To date, the fourteen warmest years on record have all occurred since 1990.

      proven his rebuttal by showing evidence that sulfur dioxide into the stratosphere works, but only temporarily, and then heats up again.

    2. That “second option”—most often referred to as stratospheric sulfate injection—is hardly the only climate engineering proposal on the drawing board. Other schemes range from the merely goofy-sounding to the wildly implausible

      The last paragraph was the counterargument, now the author is proposing a rebuttal as to why we shouldn't just add materials to our stratosphere.

    3. global warming is an energy problem, and solving it will require nothing less than a complete and radical transformation of the world’s energy infrastructure, something most energy experts believe will take decades, if it happens at all.

      The author is writing in a way in which they're proposing a solution but it seems that they don't believe it can actually happen.

    4. But while seemingly everyone agrees that society should be hitting the brakes on fossil fuel consumption, we appear to be stepping on the gas instead.

      I believe this is almost always the case when it comes to climate change, everyone agrees there is a problem, everyone agrees we should address the problem and do something to fix it, but in the end we do nothing and the problem becomes worse.

    5. The eruption killed at least ten thousand people instantly, entombing a culture and wiping out a language in the process.

      Morbid use of imagery used well to describe how big the eruption actually was.

    6. “manmade dust and aerosols”—the very stuff of acid rain and nuclear winter

      Good use of irony to show how quickly our minds change, especially when it comes to environmental issues.

    1. that as the economy slowly recovers, today’s young people will eventually want to buy cars as much as their parents and grandparents did

      True, as gas prices have been falling everyone, not just millennials, are traveling more and buying bigger cars(or just a car) because gas is no long so expensive

    2. “I don’t believe that young buyers don’t care about owning a car,

      he's right

    3. Since the end of World War II, new cars and suburban houses have powered the world’s largest economy and propelled our most impressive recoveries. Millennials may have lost interest in both.

      What has propelled the economy for years now holds no interest to Millennials.

    4. Ultimately, if the Millennial generation pushes our society toward more sharing and closer living, it may do more than simply change America’s consumption culture; it may put America on firmer economic footing for decades to come.

      Despite problems arising today with the swift shift in the economy, the author is hopeful that the way Millennials are headed will eventually be beneficial.

    5. In an ideas economy, up-to-date knowledge could be a more nimble and valuable asset than a house.

      Perry Wong states that the extra money Millennials save without house or car payments is most likely to go towards their education.

    1. Also, it could be women find infected men more attractive

      this would be a very interesting experiment

    1. We'll see then how the flowers of rage, planted and nurtured so carelessly for three decades, have sprung up and who will harvest them.

      The author uses metaphor and imagery to further his point.

    2. The Advancement Project, a civil-rights advocacy group, calls the move "the largest legislative effort to scale back voting rights in a century."

      To sum up, the author provides new laws in place to restrict young people from voting. Sounds a lot like the restrictions placed on black people before the Civil Rights movement.

    3. We will hold our tongues lest we seem ageist, lest we seem bitter,

      The author believes that this way of life, the old being taken care of and the young on their own, will continue because they don't want to seem ageist against old people.

    4. The money borrowed from the future paid for massive tax cuts, with no serious reductions in domestic spending, two expensive wars, and a prescription-drug benefit added to Medicare.

      The government continues to screw the younger generation over. The author points out how Bush and Obama are increasing the overall debt. Instead of helping the younger generation get good educations to get good jobs (which would help the economy) they instead spend their funding on wars and Medicare.

    5. The 2011 report by the Social Security trustees estimates that, under its current administration, the fund will run out in 2036, so there's just enough to get the oldest Boomers to age ninety.

      Although Social Security continues to be funded, reports show that it will run out by the time most of the "baby boomers" die. Meaning that the younger generation's taxes continue to go to a government that does not benefit them.

    6. There is a young America and there is an old America, and they don't form a community of interest.

      The author continues to show how the government funds programs to help old people while the younger generation is left to fend for themselves.

    7. He resisted Republican efforts to slash Pell grants by $845 per student, but then made other changes to the program that will save the government — or cost students, depending on your perspective — a projected $100 billion over ten years.

      This is another example of the government working for the benefits of themselves instead of the younger generation .

    8. But to show he was really serious about belt tightening, relatively cheap programs that help young people like the Adolescent Family Life Program and the Career Pathways Innovation Fund were killed.

      The author states that Medicare and Social Security were unaffected in Obama's budgeting but programs that benefit young people and their abilities to get jobs were completely de-funded.

    9. The graying of Congress has obvious political ramifications, although generalizations can be deceiving.

      The author mentions how the generational conflict today is affecting politics. There are mostly older people working in the government and it is hurting the younger generation. The older people don't understand the conflicts the younger generation faces today and therefore can't benefit them.

    10. the predictable outcome of thirty years of economic and social policy that has been rigged to serve the comfort and largesse of the old at the expense of the young.

      The author blames today's economy on social policies for older people such as social security.

    11. A Great Disappointment will no doubt follow.

      The author makes this great comparison with the Great Depression by naming the even the "Great Disappointment".

    1. The father, too busy playing, doesn’t hear him. “He’s losing his mind,” the son says.

      People playing games get addicted to the point that they ignore other people.

    2. I thought it was important, more important than anything else in the world.

      The author shows why his teacher thought he had a problem

    3. [He] quickly became enamored with making money

      Addiction with money. This is used as a comparison to video game addiction

    4. games, my lazy eye didn’t matter anymore because the screen I was playing the games on had no depth; it was flat.

      His disability doesn't impact his game play. This means that he can use his full potential without being let down by his disability.

    5. the word "glitch" relating to an error in a program towards a poorly functioning eye

    6. I had recently been skipped ahead from first grade to second grade and the new teacher was worried about me. I was keeping up with the class fine, I was having no problem with that, she said in the note, but she was worried about me because all I would ever write or talk or draw about in class or in my journal or for homework were video games

      the author only talks about video games, but he's doing excellent in school

    1. hirdWorldnations;they'reinthatdeeply.

      He's notices that there is poverty in the USA, and mainly in the US... hm... interesting.

    2. Thecrowdmovesatoneslowpace,eating,denselypackedbetweentherowsofbooths.

      I like how he's describing how packed it is. hie;s noticing a trend in the fair here.

    3. Thefairgroundstakeup3oo-plus.acresonthenorthsideofSpring-field,adepressedcapitalof109,000whereyou.can'tspitwithouthittingaLincoln-siteplaque.Thefairspreadsitselfout,andvisuallyso.Themaingateisonarise,andthroughthetwosaggedhalvesofribbonyougetaspecularvan-tageonthewholething-virginandsun-glit-tered,eventhetentslookingfreshlypainted.Itseemsgarishandendlessandaggressivelyspecial

      very descriptive. He truly makes you feel like youre there with him.

    4. pithhelmet

      what doe this mean?

    5. HelpMeGrowtentisdifferent-pine-greenandprickly-looking
    1. I'm so scared. I mean, I won't lose it. I'm just addicted.

      She is addicted to a love that she has created with someone she knows she will never be able to be with

    2. She says, I hate myself. She says, This is thrilling.

      The author does not feel bad for being with someone who is married because it gives her a rush that she has never felt before

    3. More than the illicitness of the sexuality, there's a sexuality to the selfishness. To doing precisely what you want to do.

      Cheating makes the author feel selfish but also gives her power at the same time

    4. Once a cheater, always a cheater.

      I don't necessarily agree with this saying because at some point a person may find that one special person who will make them not want to cheat. But many of those who have been cheated on believe this for the most part.

    5. Days after she'd been told by her husband that he's leaving not for anyone in particular but only because he doesn't love her anymore,

      Why continue to lie after already saying that you are leaving? If you are leaving might as well be honest because the truth will come out eventually. It's more painful for someone discovering the unfaithfulness then just coming clear with it.

    6. More than guilt, there is fear. You don't want to be found out, he says. Guys who tell you they feel bad, I think it's bullshit

      I completely agree because if they actually felt bad they wouldn't have started to begin with or have continued the affair. They "feel bad" that they were caught cheating.

    7. The first time there's a strange hand on your pants, Dorian says, I don't know that there's a better feeling on the planet, I don't care who you are or who you're married to.

      Is this really true for all men or is it just Dorian just trying to justify why he cheated to begin with?

    8. he cheats because he wants to feel like his old self

      A man or woman wanting to go back in time to feel like a person who they once were doesn't justify cheating.

    9. The idea of someone thinking of you, then, who shouldn't be. In bed with his wife. In bed with your fiancé. Nothing has happened, except everything in your head.

      When thinking about another person instead of your significant other, some tend to believe that there is nothing wrong. You didn't do anything wrong but that wont stop what is going on in your head.

    10. where he knew everyone and he likened me to a jar of cherries beside his glass of Scotch and he kissed me there at the bar

      If he knew everyone wouldn't they know he was married? Or question why he was kissing another woman?

    11. I've been with married men, which I feel taught me to be careful not to get hurt, to know that one day it could happen to me.

      Not get hurt by understanding that everyone cheats? or Not get hurt by being careful who you get in a relationship with?

    1. It’s not that sweet and oily foods have become less expensive; it’s that they’ve been reëngineered while we weren’t looking.

      It isn't one single issue, but this is one of the major ones.

    2. If it’s cheap to consume too many calories’ worth of ice cream or Coca-Cola, it’s even cheaper to consume fewer.

      People don't have self control to eat less.

    3. there’s no more basic tenet of economics than that price matters.

      lower price more quantity

    4. If, instead of sweetened beverages, the average American drank water, Finkelstein calculates, he or she would weigh fifteen pounds less.

      WATER!

    5. Between 1983 and 2005, the real cost of fats and oils declined by sixteen per cent. During the same period, the real cost of soft drinks dropped by more than twenty per cent.

      Easier access to fatty and sugary substances, especially those in financial difficulty, consume more and more of these substances.

    6. humans are genetically programmed to put on weight whenever they encounter plenty, it would seem that by this point virtually everyone in America should be fat.

      Now it comes down to a conscious decision when is the appropriate time to eat and what to eat.

    7. “We evolved on the savannahs of Africa,” Power and Schulkin write. “We now live in Candyland.”

      Wonderful analogy of how we no longer have to go far to find food, but that food contains large amounts of sugar, fats, and etc..

    8. In America today, by contrast, obtaining calories is very nearly effortless

      Pampered lifestyle of fatty quick food that is easily affordable.

    9. As a consequence, a person with a genetic knack for storing fat would have had a competitive advantage.

      Society is no longer competing for survival, thus the weight gain must be for another reason.

    10. The result of this self-reinforcing process was a strong taste for foods that are high in calories and easy to digest; just as it is natural for gorillas to love leaves, it is natural for people to love funnel cakes.

      Calories aren't the only factor to play into weight gain. How active people are as well as their metabolism rate. Many many factors.

    11. Something big must have changed in America to cause so many people to gain so much weight so quickly.

      Never an easy way to find out how an individual personally gains weight.

    12. Hospitals have had to buy special wheelchairs and operating tables to accommodate the obese, and revolving doors have had to be widened—the typical door went from about ten feet to about twelve feet across.

      Rather disgraceful? Why would anyone allow themselves to gain so much weight that accommodations had to be made for the entire country? Baffling.

    13. Had other researchers noticed a change in Americans’ waistlines?

      Since the B.M.I. does not account for anything besides fat it easy to be misrepresented if your muscle mass is above normal. America wasn't putting on fat but the B.M.I. is showing otherwise.

    1. Employing mature adaptations was one. The others were education, stable marriage, not smoking, not abusing alcohol, some exercise, and healthy weight.

      The 7 major factors that predict happiness.

    2. how mature adaptations are a real-life alchemy, a way of turning the dross of emotional crises, pain, and deprivation into the gold of human connection, accomplishment, and creativity. “Such mechanisms are analogous to the involuntary grace by which an oyster, coping with an irritating grain of sand, creates a pearl,” he writes. “Humans, too, when confronted with irritants, engage in unconscious but often creative behavior.”

      This is so true!! Good things can come from bad events! By coping with the pain, that can lead to a better opportunity.

    3. “When you come to the end of your rope, tie a knot and hold on.” He replied: “But the knot was tied so long ago, and I have been hanging on tight for such a long time.”

      This makes me sad to know that some people have been at "the end of their rope" for several years and grow hopeless and tired of holding on.

    4. This means that a glimpse of any one moment in a life can be deeply misleading. A man at 20 who appears the model of altruism may turn out to be a kind of emotional prodigy—or he may be ducking the kind of engagement with reality that his peers are both moving toward and defending against. And, on the other extreme, a man at 20 who appears impossibly wounded may turn out to be gestating toward maturity.

      I agree that human are develop their entire life and thus studying one at age 20 is not always the most accurate reading of their life. Some people need several years of immaturity to grow mature.

    5. When they were between 50 and 75, Vaillant found, altruism and humor grew more prevalent, while all the immature defenses grew more rare.

      I am glad that immature responses often go away with age.

    6. “Much of what is labeled mental illness,” Vaillant writes, “simply reflects our ‘unwise’ deployment of defense mechanisms. If we use defenses well, we are deemed mentally healthy, conscientious, funny, creative, and altruistic. If we use them badly, the psychiatrist diagnoses us ill, our neighbors label us unpleasant, and society brands us immoral.”

      I have never though about mental illnesses this way, but Vaillant simplifies the complex problem by relating mental illnesses to defense mechanisms. I agree that if we cooperate well with harmful situations then we are considered mentally health.

    7. Vaillant’s work, in contrast, creates a refreshing conversation about health and illness as weather patterns in a common space.

      I am glad that Vaillant's work changed health and illness into a conversation topic rather than taboo.

    8. The healthiest, or “mature,” adaptations include altruism, humor, anticipation (looking ahead and planning for future discomfort), suppression (a conscious decision to postpone attention to an impulse or conflict, to be addressed in good time), and sublimation (finding outlets for feelings, like putting aggression into sport, or lust into courtship).

      It is interesting to read how a "mature" person will respond to a situation.

    9. His central question is not how much or how little trouble these men met, but rather precisely how—and to what effect—they responded to that trouble.

      Actions speak for the character of a person. Think Vaillant was wise for studying people's response to an event.

    10. “Dad, I just don’t know what I’ll do with this watch. It’s so fragile. It could break.” The other boy runs to him and says, “Daddy! Daddy! Santa left me a pony, if only I can just find it!”

      I had never considered this side of optimism as the young boy concluded from the manure that he received a pony.

    11. Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House

      [http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/dollhouse/] summary and information about A Doll's House

    12. His wife found him by the pool, a revolver next to him and a fatal wound through the mouth.

      I think it is very sad when someone commits suicide without warning but even family members often overlook or are oblivious to signals of depression.

    13. But it turned out that the lives were too big, too weird, too full of subtleties and contradictions to fit any easy conception of “successful living.”

      As I expected, there are too many factors that contribute to ones life.

    14. medicine, physiology, anthropology, psychiatry, psychology, and social work

      Good scientific basis by drawing from multiple health aspects.

    15. His study would draw on undergraduates who could “paddle their own canoe,” Bock said, and it would “attempt to analyze the forces that have produced normal young men.” He defined normal as “that combination of sentiments and physiological factors which in toto is commonly interpreted as successful living.”

      Bock started with a sample of men that are self-driven to analyze their factors.

    16. What happened to you?

      This particular case study gives insight on how although you may grow up loved and well off, that does not ensure lasting happiness.

    17. hoping to learn the secrets of the good life.

      Are there really any set secrets or rules?

    18. Is there a formula—some mix of love, work, and psychological adaptation—for a good life?

      thesis

    1. exley said that one Saturday morning, when there were ninety people waiting outside, a local resident asked permission to gather signatures along the line for a petition, only to return a few minutes later with the information that there wasn’t one person there from Lee County.

      I wish Illinois was like Texas, where people would come from all over to try great bbq.

    2. In the weeks after the Texas Monthly feature was published, Snow’s went from serving three hundred pounds of meat every Saturday to serving more than a thousand pounds.

      This is an absurd amount of meat that shows the dedication people have to bbq.

    3. In central Texas, you don’t hear a lot of people talking about the piquancy of a restaurant’s sauce or the tastiness of its beans; discussions are what a scholar of the culture might call meat-driven.

      I like that people can talk about the flavor and substance of meat without other food getting in the way

    4. some barbecue fans visit the way the devout of another sort walk the Camino de Santiago.

      People are serious about their meat products

    5. like a sports fan who is almost monomaniacally obsessed with basketball but glances over at the N.H.L.

      This author has very relatable analogies

    6. barbecue tradition that developed during the nineteenth century out of German and Czech meat markets

      BBQ is german and czech

    7. the equivalent of Matt Damon and George Clooney and Brad Pitt would be establishments like Kreuz Market and Smitty’s Market, in Lockhart

      This analogy makes it easy to understand

    1. While Lucy's parents' expectation was that many years of hard work would eventually lead to a great career, Lucy considers a great career an obvious given for someone as exceptional as she, and for her it's just a matter of time and choosing which way to go.

      Due to the easy life they had growing up with successful parents, Generation Y kids have missed the lesson on hard work and expect their successful careers to be handed to them.

    2. So on top of the generation as a whole having the bold goal of a flowery career lawn, each individual GYPSY thinks that he or she is destined for something even better --

      According to the author, each individual in Generation Y believes that they're unusually special and deserve the best.

    3. The same Ngram viewer shows that the phrase "a secure career" has gone out of style, just as the phrase "a fulfilling career" has gotten hot.

      Generation Y doesn't want a stable career anymore, they want a passion filled career.

    4. Where the Baby Boomers wanted to live The American Dream, GYPSYs want to live Their Own Personal Dream.

      The author states that this thinking has evolved in the Generation Y that they won't be happy unless they achieve more than stable careers. They want it all.

    5. Baby Boomers all around the country and world told their Gen Y kids that they could be whatever they wanted to be, instilling the special protagonist identity deep within their psyches.

      The author states that the Baby Boomers success caused them to teach the Generation Y that they each were special and could achieve anything.

    6. They wanted her parents' careers to have greener grass than their own, and Lucy's parents were brought up to envision a prosperous and stable career for themselves

      Each generation's challenges and opportunities have affected the next generation.

    7. when the reality of someone's life is better than they had expected, they're happy. When reality turns out to be worse than the expectations, they're unhappy.

      The author provides a simple formula for obtaining happiness or unhappiness. They explain that The Generation Y adults are now unhappy.

    1. aged war against them.

      In these paragraphs the author is trying to talk about how kids who dress differently or aren't the school "Walton" are cast out and even treated differently by teachers and students. One teacher says though that these "Longhairs" the same amount of opinions to say than other kids that dress really nice and try to look smart. People should not be judged on how smart they are or what kind of person they are. The so called "Walton" appearance was proved wrong when kids from Walton brutally murdered another by stabbing him multiple times. So, appearance is not everything you need to know about a person.

    2. the flyers inevitably warn parents to watch out for a fixation on rock music and its iconography, for abrupt shifts in hairstyle and dress and, most importantly, for unexplained changes in an adolescent’s circle of friends

      I would like to disagree with this. As one of those "freaks," not all of us are into drugs. Also, our friends change due to normal circumstances like typical drama and other BS. No one can tell me that their group of friends never changed through out high school. My point is, this goes to show how wrong some people are. This shows exactly how some people are cast out by society before we even get to being our own adults. Before we even find ourselves.

    3. They all have written messages and phone numbers on their forearms, the ink: sinking into their skin like homemade tattoos. Once the administrator stalks past their table, they begin to complain about the way they are treated: “You know, it’s like, ‘hair and black, you lose,’ ” says Chris Angelo, leader of the pack. “Just because you don’t fit in, then they [the administration] are like, ‘You don’t even exist here.’ ”

      Main point of tangent/powerful message.

    4. A few weeks earlier a food fight had rocked the calm of the cafeteria, a bowl of mashed potatoes had been upended on a coach’s head, and these boys with the long hair and the black heavy-metal T-shirts – these freaks – had shouldered the blame.

      Showing how certain cliques can affect how someone is treated in an "equal opportunity" environment. Also a very powerful message.

    5. “If you wanted a name for yourself,” says Eric, “you either had to be real good at football, real good-looking or real fucked up. I was the third.” 

      Very powerful message that pertains to the essay, and it's argument.

    6. he had to hit bottom

      For lots of people, hitting rock bottom is the only way for them to realize what they are doing needs to stop. Not just kids only but parents with smoking or drinking problems. Some may never stop until they meet the grim reaper himself and some unbelievable miracle comes and saves them from his grasp. This could be that they don't want to leave their family or just because they realize that if they keep up their habits, their life will not end happily

    7. dossiers

      Documents on a very specific person, place, or thing.

    8. it – so do the teachers, counselors and administrators – to describe what happens to the loners, druggies, dropouts and suicides. They look around at the masses scarfing pizza and salads and baked potatoes in the lunchroom, and they say, “In a school this big, it is easy for kids to fall through the cracks.”

      Point of the entire essay.

    9. High school, by definition, is a time of turmoil and transformation. It is a rite of initiation, and very few who participate in its mysteries emerge unchanged or unscathed. With their hormones in riot and the cherished purity of childhood receding like a dream, high-school students find themselves called upon to establish a stronghold in the precarious gap between innocence and experience.

      This is a good describtion and explaination about highschool and how it can have a big effect on a person's life because of the big changes student are going through, the difference in age and experience, and all the emotions that students can feel during this time. High school kids at this point start to see and learn more about the world as it really is instead of being sugar coated because of their age. This is a big time for people because the chances, risks, and goals that people do or make can determine how they will end up after high school.

    10. Falling through the cracks. For a cliché, the phrase is mighty versatile and descriptive, and at Walton it is part of the lingo. The kids use

      This is where the point is starting to come through. His prime example, Eric Stone, is finally coming back around to the original point he was making. This is where the point of the entire essay snaps back into place.

    11. Does chemical dependence run in the family? Has either parent’ struggled with addiction? Does the child exhibit emotional dependence, a fondness for medication, a bottomless self-image?

      The reflection in the reality of the situations at hand is being addressed here. I love the fact that it is short sweet and to the point. It's bringing to light what questions parents and school boards have about a very real problem, through an appeal to a moral/emotional side of the audience.

    12. his parents expelled him from their home

      What i wonder is what the parents did to help Eric. He has a drug problem and won't do his school work. Parents have the power to influence and discipline kids. It seems to me that the parents didn't treat Eric the way he should have been. If they would have put more effort into helping Eric maybe things would have been different for him.

    13. One survived high school. The other did not.

      The outcome to someones life can be changed to anything depending on the choices that person makes. In this story Curt goes through high school with flying colors, keeping up grades and going on to college. With his friends, teachers, and family that most likely influenced him to do well in school he was able to be successful in high school.Eric did't do so well because of his decisions to do drugs and not keep up with his school work.

    1. This article talks about rich problems. The author explains how (for example) they would rather drive than fly commercial plane. The rich aren't trying to be 'snooty' but this is what they have become accustomed to.

    2. Whenever the captain informed us we were descending for landing, Corky always cupped his hands about his mouth megaphone-style and announced in a loud voice, as if over the intercom: “Please return all seats, tray tables, and stewardesses to their original upright and locked positions.”That always cracked us up.

      Private jet, rich person humor. There jokes are pretty different than the average

    3. We never had to deal with airports like O’Hare or J.F.K. and their intestines of roadways looping over and under one another on the way to terminals teeming with the aforementioned ordinary people. No, we always left from small general-aviation airports.

      The author is looking for sympathy for 'being rich'. Feel bad for me because I've never had to deal with a public airport...

    1. Minimal knowledge of nutrients that were seen as unhealthy clumped foods together based on broad categories. Healthy foods, in moderation, are now seen as food that will lead to health risks. MODERATION.

    2. Early attempted to guide healthy consumption of foods was inadequate and ill informed.

    3. I think it was a wise decision to put goals on dietary heath. Also, showing how when certain foods were rationed during war time the rate of heart disease plummeted.

    4. In terms of eating nutrients over food I believe is true even more so today. Especially for those that workout religiously. I know many people that take protein supplements to get their protein for the increased labor. As well as far as going to take mass gainer, myself included at one point, 1 scoop could contain 2,000 calories as well as up to, if not more than, 200g of carbs.

    5. Sometimes eating properly can't keep you healthy. That's where I would recommend exercise. Again, everything is based on an individuals preferences.

    1. Because of his arm, and because of his team, Jarrod has a list of things that he won't do, or can't do, by decree of his parents, who are usually thinking ahead to the next baseball game. He will not, for example, jump on a trampoline. When his friends from school hold their birthday parties at a rock-climbing facility, Jarrod does not go. He does not play pickup basketball at school, and if it is the week before a tournament, he sits out of gym class. If he goes swimming in the backyard pool, he's careful not to get sunburned or tired out. He is not allowed to skateboard or ride a scooter.

      This may sound crazy to some, because his parents might be taking it too far, but if he really wants a future in the major leagues, he can't take the chance of an injury.

    2. Due largely to its reputation, the team now has players on its roster whose parents think nothing of driving an hour and a half each way from Tampa or Gainesville for the twice-weekly practices

      It may sound crazy to drive an hour and a hald each way for practices twice a week, but when you want your kid to succeed and be on the best team in the 'area', then driving that much shouldn't matter.

    1. Welcome aboard!

      I really like how the author kept her voice throughout the entire article. She included humor but did not take away from the importance of this article.

    2. Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton who were all, "Heeeeeey bros, we were thinking that maybe if you're not busy we could get the right to vote and stuff please maybe?" Then they proceeded to righteously fuck shit up until the ratification of the 19th amendment in 1920, which gave American women the vote

      I like how the author using her voice throughout the essay, she also does not forget to add actual facts but in an interesting way.

    3. To deny these things makes you, at worst, a bad person who hates women, including but not limited to: Sarah Michelle Gellar, Jennifer Garner, Jennifer Aniston, Jennifer Lopez, your mother, Jennifer Lopez's mother, Jennifer Garner's Aunt Marcy, Michelle Obama, Ellen DeGeneres, Cher, Julie Andrews, Kim Kardashian, Khloe Kardashian, Kourtney Kardashian, Kraken Kardashian, Karphone Kardashian, Kickball Kardashian, Kornkob Kardashian, and THE VIRGIN FUCKING MARY. At best, it makes you a complacent idiot

      As a reader I enjoyed the humor in this, the Virgin Mary part added the last touch.

    4. If you are a person alive in the world, other people, both men and women, have told you that all feminists are hairy, reactionary, undersexed, man-hating bitches who need to quit cryin' (because we have suffrage now! And Roombas!)

      I guess society is afraid of what an organized group of people that are encouraged to speak their opinion about femininity so they are given a terrible description.

    5. If you are a person alive in the world, other people, both men and women, have told you that all feminists are hairy, reactionary, undersexed, man-hating bitches who need to quit cryin' (because we have suffrage now! And Roombas!).

      I don't understand how all feminists received the reputation of hairy, over dramatic, women who hate all men. This reputation is completely wrong. Feminists don't fit a specific mold.

    1. It also served to increase the individual's sense of disassociation. One moment the soldier was part of a group. The next, in sudden battle, he could find himself alone. A man's world compressed to a frantic and companionless space, punctuated by the disorienting roars and blasts of incoming and outgoing fire.

      This must be scary going from walking with your brothers to suddenly being alone and being fired upon. Are there any other reasons for this dispersal method besides the fact that automatic weapons made an appearance?

    2. To close the gun gap, the Pentagon rushed the M16 into service.

      Which would be a better weapon of choice? the M16 or the AK47?

    3. a design so simple that their basics could be mastered in a matter of hours.

      With this small amount of time needed to master the basics it is completely understandable why the AK-47 was the tool of choice.

    4. the AK-47. China had set up assembly lines to make its own version — the Type 56

      Compare the two. What is the difference between an AK-47 and a Type 56? Accuracy? Shots per minute? Mag capacity? Weight? Cost?

    5. This is a huge number! 800 killed each month...if there are 31 days in each moth that would be an average of nearly 26 people killed per day.

    1. Lately, though, a new and unexpected pattern has emerged, taking criminologists by surprise.

      Gives me ideas on what to write my paper: "why crime happens?"

    1. I was unaware of it, but an epidemic had broken out across the country. Late adolescents in suburbs like ours had suddenly gone berserk, running away to other cities to have sex and not attend college, ingesting every substance they could get their hands on, not just clashing with their parents but rejecting and annihilating everything about them.

      From the last confrontation with his mother it seems like he himself is on the verge of being a part of this epidemic. He must be in the adolescence stage because he seems to reject his mother when she wants to have a serious talk and all he is saying is "OK" and "Can we turn the air-conditioning on?".

    2. Up in the bedroom that he and I shared

      He most likely has more siblings or a small house if he is sharing a bedroom. Also, something I have never experienced before.

    3. distant of these schools

      Probably to get away from his controlling father.

    4. (you could even say forced him

      My parents are the opposite, they gave me a lot of freedom to choose what I want to do the rest of my life. It is interesting to see what someone else does when the conditions are different. Lots of perspectives.

    1. "You know," Baron-Cohen says, looking around his office for a ready example, "you and I just say, 'It's hot, we need a fan,' and turn it on. That isn't systemizing. A child with autism would look at the fan, and very likely would become fascinated by the rotation. What happens when light hits the blades, the kinds of reflections you get. So the child ends up staring at the fan for hours every day, because it is a form of mechanical motion that is systemizable—and that obsession gets described as purposeless. I actually think the child is doing something very intelligent."

      two ways to look at a kid with autism. You can see what they focus on as mindless or very intelligent

    2. way of helping autistic people through a computer program. On a CD-ROM, trained actors demonstrate the facial expressions and vocal inflections that correspond to 412 distinct emotions or mental states, arranged under 24 headings, such as "sneaky" or "happy." The idea is that people with autism can bone up on their mind-reading skills without the stress of having to attend a group-therapy session.
    3. "A few drops more of this little chemical could affect your sociability or your language ability. I found it extraordinary."

      chemical is testosterone

    4. how much testosterone a female fetus is exposed to—which is much less than a male fetus

      He wants to prove that the levels of testosterone that the unborn baby is exposed to will effect how much of a "male" brain or "female" brain the kid will have. If they will have more empathy or systemizing

    5. the evidence for sex differences in behavior right back to the womb

      going back to the source of the difference

    6. Proving with scientific data that sex differences in behavior are innate is notoriously difficult.

      the basic of his argument

    7. that gap

      talking about the gap between the kids with autism that can't function in society to the people that are high achievers but still have autism

    8. Autism affects far more boys than girls. At the Asperger's end of the spectrum, the ratio is about 10 to 1

      fact

    9. A rival theory,

      says the reason autistic kids narrow down onto details is because executive dysfunction or in other words "inability to plain, to control impulses and to switch attention as needed to solve a problem"

    10. why they do jigsaw puzzles without the picture: They just don't seek the pattern in a mass of details.

      good way to put in down into simplier terms that everyone can understand when talking about autism.

    11. mindblindness
    12. Autism is perfectly compatible with a high IQ—yet some degree of social disconnectedness, of extreme self-centeredness,

      so while the IQ level and social disconnectedness may vary within each autistic individual, self-centeredness does not. That is a constant in autism.

    13. "We all have some autistic traits," he says. "It's just a matter of degree."

      stance

    14. there are many more male ones: In Baron-Cohen's theory, autism is a case of the "extreme male brain."

      Because the essential difference between men and women is empathizing and systematizing, he believes autism is when the traits in a guy's brain are extreme. -He does keep in mind that there are females with autism and males without autism

    15. The essential difference between men and women, according to Baron-Cohen, is that women are better at empathizing and men at systemizing
    16. Baron-Cohen's theory of what characterizes autism.

      overall definition? Low-empathizing, high systemizing

    17. Asperger's is a mild form of autism in which individuals are able to function normally, but have difficulty reading the emotions of others.)

      different types

    18. systemizing may take the form of a seemingly purposeless obsession

      relate to brothers

    19. "systemizing ability." They are lousy at understanding people but relatively good, he says, at making sense of the world.
    20. surfeit

      an excessive amount

    21. Autistic people, says Baron-Cohen, a psychologist who has studied and treated them for 20 years, lack empathy.

      add to definition

    22. an autistic person would not have been able to see through my polite fib, put himself in my shoes and decipher my concerns.

      starts a definition for what autistic people are and how they act

    1. he can look up and down the line, “read” the defense, and decide where to throw the ball before anyone has moved a muscle

      Read and respond to a situation/scenario correctly is what recruiters look for

    2. he can look up and down the line, “read” the defense, and decide where to throw the ball before anyone has moved a muscle

      Read and respond to a situation/scenario correctly is what recruiters look for

    3. school funding levels, class size, and curriculum design

      Who fits the means? Which candidate proves to be able to contribute within the parameters that the school (or job site) has?

    4. replacing the bottom six per cent to ten per cent of public-school teachers with teachers of average quality

      Important to bring in people how can get the job done, which is more effective with more education (more time spent in study at a college or university)

    5. starts to become predictable

      Maintaining a job is crucial, and constant research (bettering your understanding of effectively contributing and completing your tasks in the work environment) is important so that you can't be easily predictable to somebody; you have to set yourself apart and show how you're different.

    6. imparts to his or her students can be captured on a standardized test

      Not everything that you have to offer is evident. For instance, consideration of other characteristics and qualities are significantly important to job consideration. In the college aspect, attending college shows ambition.

    7. “value added” analysis

      This can be tied back to the education principle of going to college and getting the degree that demonstrates your specialization towards something specific, which can show your effectiveness/capability over another.

    1. That's because when it comes to predicting exactly how you will feel in the future, you are most likely wrong.

      thesis

    2. Gilbert's*

    3. Author seems to throw a lot of information at readers and can be confusing as to where this paper is going

    1. uture always seems like something that is going to happen rather than something that is happening;

      This is true we are part of a millennial era but it seems like we are not as futuristic as previous generations would have imagined.

    2. cognitive dissonance between changing-reality-as-experienced and change as imagined

      We really do not have a mental capability to see the future.

    1. A majority of Americans say, for the first time ever, that this generation will not be better off than its parents.

      I think that this is a powerful closing statement that leaves a strong impression in the mind.

    1. I wanted to say that it had been my mistake, the chill in our friendship,

      I don't know why this is but, kids get the feeling that they could have done more to help their parents, or even want to take blame. they want to find some reasoning to why the problems happened and start to believe that it was their own neglect

    2. I could never compose my face carefully enough to hide the unhappiness I felt on seeing him

      When a child sees a parent that has gone through hard times, its hard to look at them. Watching your parent grow unhealthy and depressed is not something someone wants to see. People have different reactions to this type of thing. This could be running away from them, maybe anger towards them, or even depression them selves.

    3. He was only 49 when he and my mother divorced,

      Divorces can be hard on parents and children. Even though in today's world there are more and more divorces than ever, the kids are affected greatly. Divorces cause issues when parents try and slander the other or cause fights with each other. fighting over kids can be a big struggle with kids going back and forth between homes. But not only with the kids parents can become depressed and not care about their own life anymore. Like John's father, they just let themselves go.

    4. It was just that I put him in the position of always being the one to make the effort. It was punishment

      This is similar to the relationship that i have with my brothers and father. We don't talk much because i'm at the age that i'm on my own and only talk to him when i need something signed or need to talk.Just because we don't talk doesn't mean we don't love each other neither of us put much effort to talk but maybe that's what more families need in our world.

    5. being close like this – was better than being seen or heard.

      Having a father i know this feeling that i want to prove or be seen by my father. i want to make him proud any way i can. Being able to go to work with his dad, John was able to really connect with his dad, or try to at least.

    6. ndure a special torture during their school years

      This really explains well how kids go through "Torture" as their parents endure in these terrible habits of smoking, drinking, and not staying healthy in general.

    1. (It wasn’t the lost revenue; it was that you’d squandered some animal: the rearing, cleaning, caring, fattening, slaughtering, transporting, and now butchering, and, at the end of a disciplined line of purposefulness, you’d lost your concentration

      People do care for the animals

    1. But for all the fibbing and fudging that go on, outright lying about who you are is generally regarded as uncool and self-defeating

      Can you trust people you interact with and what they say?