Monday, August 31, 2009
Buffy the Vampire Slayer S1 EP5
Posted by Robby at 10:46 PM 0 comments
Labels: BtVS, BtVS Season 1, TV Show
Sunday, August 23, 2009
Book Review #7
Glass
By: Ellen Hopkins
After absolutely loving Crank I just had to get my hands on Glass to read more about Kristina’s story. I devoured the 688 pages in only a matter of a few hours. Glass is a powerful story about a young girl coping with being a teen mom, and also a drug addiction. We watch as she spirals out of control, and takes all these wrong turns and looses herself.
Glass left me wanting more, and I’m excited for the next book about Kristina George Snow to appear in 2010, titled Fallout. Ellen Hopkins is a powerful writer, and she speaks such volume with her words.
I love how all of Hopkins’ stories are told through verse and I believe that it gives them a much more powerful meaning.
Posted by Robby at 4:06 PM 0 comments
Labels: book review
Saturday, August 22, 2009
Buffy the Vampire Slayer S1 EP4
Original Airdate: March 24, 1997
Posted by Robby at 7:47 PM 0 comments
Labels: BtVS, BtVS Season 1, TV Show
Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Book Review #6
Tuesday’s with Morrie by Mitch Albom is the story of one man’s journey into death and another man being taught how to live by him. Morrie Schwartz, who was once a professor at Brandeis University, has been diagnosed with ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease), and the book follows his last few months on this earth through the eyes of Mitch. Mitch is an old student of his, and has not spoken to his professor since they last said goodbye after graduation, sixteen years earlier. Mitch happened to be flipping through the channels one night when he saw his old professor on Nightline with Ted Koppel, and that moment changed his life forever.
After seeing Morrie on television, Mitch then gets in touch with him, and visits him. The visits become a regular thing, and are always on Tuesday’s, because as Morrie states “We’re Tuesday people.” During Mitch’s visits he is able to watch the disease progress over Morrie’s body, at first it seems as if he is uneasy about watching his professor die, but in the end he starts doing more things for him, like adjusting his pillows, massaging his feet, even helping him out of his chair, it just shows how much he grows with each visit.
Tuesday’s with Morrie is a wonderful story. Even though a man is dying he seems to only see the good in life and what life has to offer. He is kind-hearted, and takes on a task of teaching an old student one last time. The message of the book seems to be not to dread the little things in life, don’t spend so much time looking back on what you could have done differently. Look to the future for what you will do next, and live everyday to the fullest, because you never know when death will creep up on you.
One thing I noticed throughout the book was each Tuesday, Mitch would be reading the newspaper, and at least one of the stories had to deal with a sudden death. I thought that was interesting, especially after Morrie had said that you have to live each moment as if you will die in the next. I think the author put the stories in the book to show that. One was a mother shot her two kids and her husband, another was two boys were playing with their father’s gun, and shot each other. It shows that death has no remorse, and can strike anyone even the innocent, and not think twice about it.
This book relates to nursing because it shows the compassion that nurses really need to give their patients. When you are truly passionate about something whether it be your profession or a person, no matter what is going on in their lives you try not to take notice in the bad and only think about the good.
I also believe that this relates to nursing because Morrie talks about how to detach yourselves from your feelings. I know that there will be something’s in my nursing career that I will need to do this with. For instance I would love to work in the ER, and I know that if a trauma came in that was a young boy, I would need to detach myself from the feeling of sorrow, and just have to help my team to save this boy’s life. There will be no time for fear or remorse; I will just have to focus on the task at hand.
Tuesday’s with Morrie showed me that even after someone is gone their spirit will live on, whether it is through their teachings, old photographs, or just simply thinking about that person. When we have had such a strong teacher in our lives, and we take those teachings that they taught us and allow others to experience them, then their spirit will always live on. By retelling of stories we were once told, we show how much we loved and adored that person, because we were paying attention to them enough to recall information about things.
This was actually my second time reading this book, I had to read it for summer reading in high school, the summer I was going into 10th grade, however I read this book with a new version of myself. Originally when I read this I never really took anything away from it, I only did it because it was summer reading, I didn’t know that there was more meaning behind it.
Having matured quite a bit from the last time that I read this, I found that it was much more meaningful. I found myself really being able to relate to Mitch as he was telling the story. I remember watching my grandfather suffer a few years ago, and I didn’t really understand what I was supposed to do. Just sitting there with him watching him die didn’t appeal to me, it was too hard to watch someone so close to me wither away. Had I read this book a second time, I would have understood that I was keeping him company, and that all he wanted was someone to talk to and to hold his hand, so he wasn’t alone, but instead of doing that I would spend a few hours with him, and that was that. It was all I could bear.
At one point in the book, Morrie says to Mitch “ We put our values in the wrong things. And it leads to very disillusioned lives.” This made me immediately think of my parents. Before my parents divorced, we lived in this gorgeous house that all my friends called a mansion, we had 17+ acres of land, and we always had the top of the line things. It made people think that we were happy, but honestly my parents were masking the hurt and pain. They weren’t happy with eachother at all, but this sort of exterior made people believe that we were all happy inside.
After living in a broken home that was gorgeous for so long, I moved to Vermont into a small apartment with my boyfriend, and I have to say I was happier there than I ever was in that big house. We lived in an apartment that was smaller than my mother’s basement in the house she lives in now, we could barely afford food and only bought things with coupons or that was on sale, but because we were together, we were happy. We didn’t have any money, just enough to get by, but somehow we made it work.
I know several people who if they are unhappy will go out and do “retail therapy,” to make themselves feel better, but in the end they are still unhappy, and now have a bank account that is slowly depleting. People don’t seem to understand that the materialistic things in life aren’t what make like worth living. It’s the love and laughter and the people you grow old with that make it worth it. I know that if all I had were things cluttered everywhere, and no friends, I would not be happy. Sure I would have nice things, but I would have no one to share them with. Without friends and family, why would someone want to live? They would just be bitter, and not know the joys of what having people in your life can bring.
Morrie also says the following “They don’t know what they want in a partner. They don’t know who they are themselves-so how can they know who they’re marrying.” I agree with this saying, to an extent. There is actually a line from a Broadway musical that I think sums this up very well. It’s from Rent; “You’ll never share real love, until you love yourself.” When Morrie said those words, it automatically makes me think of that line from Rent. I believe that this is only partly true, because sometimes it takes loving someone to love yourself. Looking into another person’s heart will show you the compassion that has always been lingering under the surface of your own.
Tuesday’s with Morrie is a wonderful, moving story. I found myself curled up on the couch, with tears streaming from my eyes as I finished this book. The first time I read this I felt nothing, so I don’t feel as though I fully understood it, or even really absorbed it at all. Reading this again, allowed me to see the book from a whole new side. I don’t feel sorry for everything that Morrie went through, I feel blessed to have heard his story. To know that even in the wake of death, he was still fighting and trying to live every moment to the fullest.
I would recommend this book, to anyone that has lost a loved one that they were very close with. It will bring tears to your eyes, but you will remember the times that you had with them whether they were good or bad. Morrie’s story has touched so many people and I hope that it will continue to touch people. It may take a few reads to get the true meaning behind the story, but once you grasp it, it will always stick with you until the day you die. I give this an 8 out of 10 Stars.
Posted by Robby at 5:14 PM 0 comments
Labels: book review
Thursday, August 13, 2009
Book Review #5
The bullied girl goes home and cries, and her poor mother has no idea what to do with her. When she asks what’s wrong, the little girl responds, “Nothing, just go away and leave me alone.” Finally the little girl will open up to her mother, and tell her everything that’s going on, and the mother furious that no one has done anything will step in and talk to the mother of the other child, the principle, the teacher, everyone she can until she finally gets the other child in trouble and gets her voice her that there is a problem.
When children are bullied starting at such a young age, their self-esteem falls and it’s hard for them to make friends and sometimes even have a normal life. It can cause drastic changes in their moods, and the child can be left a broken mess, that no one can clean up. The bullies really have no idea how much they damage someone just using their words.
As the children get older the fights become meaner and nastier. They can go from Taylor’s mom still buys her footie pajamas to Taylor’s the world’s biggest slut. Things like that can ruin a person for life. Another thing that bullies seem to like to prey on is body image. They can call the skinniest girl in the school fat, just because they don’t like her, and then everyone will be doing it. That girl could then develop an eating disorder, and it all started, just because someone didn’t like her.
In the chapter titled, Intimate Enemies, Rachel Simmons talks about how girls hurt their friends. They whisper behind their friend’s back, while glaring at them out of the corner of their eyes. Right then the person being stared at feels uncomfortable and knows that something is starting to go wrong. They don’t want to believe it, so when they ask, “What’s so funny?” and their friend replies, “Oh it’s nothing,” on the outside they believe them, but on the inside they know that’s not true.
The book does raise questions, I feel that if girls know how mean they can be, and they do, then why do they still do it. It’s not like it will look good on a resume or college application. Do they just do it to hold power over someone? Do they like to belittle people?
When you think of a bully, most people think of a big burly boy, not some little girl that is really sweet to everyone. The female bullies are out there and they need to be noticed. Girls are brutal, if you’re too big they make fun of you, if you’re too small they make fun of you, if you wear the wrong style shirt to school they make fun of you. Every little thing you do they pick on and make you feel like you’re so small.
This book makes you think. Everyone at one point or another has either been the bully or been bullied, so then why do teachers not do anything about it. If they see the girl shoot another girl a dirty look, why don’t they question why or anything like that. They just seem to let it go, and let it roll right off their shoulders. Just because a person can be really sweet around adults, does not mean that they are always like that.
Female bullying is around in all cultures, with girls of all ages, even adults! As the years go by the fights go from “you stole my pen” to “you stole my husband” or “you stole my promotion.” The adult bullies are few and far between, but they are still out there.
Female aggression is often seen in the teenage years. That’s when more girls tend to turn on each other the most. There tends to be more pressure from parents to get good grades, and get involved in activities, so when something happens between two friends someone usually tends to snap because they are under a lot of stress. Their bodies are changing and so are their interest, so why is it that when we need each other the most, we are often turning on each other?
When you are the person who is the outcast, it hurts. No one ever seems to think, “Well what if the show was on the other foot.” That’s not how girls think. By getting everyone on “your side” you now have the power and you can almost control the other person. It’s hard for us to admit, but honestly who wouldn’t want the power, it will make everyone like you, and you would become one of the most popular people in school. But like most things, popularity comes with a cost. You belittle a person who has stuck by you through all the tears, the break-ups, and who has been there all along, and that’s just to become popular.
One of the most common things when dealing with female bullying and aggression is depression, which can lead to other things such as self-harm and suicide. It’s in our nature as humans to want and crave relationships in general no matter if they are healthy or not. When your friends are all turning on you, you just don’t want to believe them, or you try and fix all the things that they make fun of you for. You get different clothing, change your hair, your shoes, start doing worse in school, and this is all just to get a few people to like you. However nothing seems to work.
Once they’ve turned on you, you now have no one to sit with at lunch, chat with between classes, or hang out with after school. You’re “friends” all make plans to go to the movies this weekend right in front of you, but no one’s even asked you if you would like to come, so you chime in and say “Oh I can’t go this weekend my mom needs my help cleaning the house.” And one of the girls says, “Well what makes you think you were invited.” This stings. It rings in your ears and all you can say to yourself to not cry is those funny lyrics you heard in the car on the way to school. Once you get in the comfort of your own room at home, the tears just come. All you want to do is curl up and die, because you’ve had it confirmed. They don’t like you anymore, and now you have no idea what to do.
When you go through this type of thing at such a young age, it can ruin you for years to come. You end up with trust issues, and believe that every friend you’ve ever made will leave you. When that one friend comes along that hasn’t left, you still fear that they will, because no one has shown them differently. No matter how many times you tell them you won’t run, it’s always in the back of their mind.
In the section labeled, Annie’s Story, Rachel Simmons talks about a young girl who is torn between two friends. One is more of a loner, Samantha, and the other is one of the popular, Alison. Towards the end of the friendship with the Samantha, she started to act like a stalker would. The mother was so worried; that she would intercept phone calls meant for her daughter and would tell Samantha that Annie couldn’t speak on the phone today. Annie felt like she couldn’t do anything. Whatever she did would make one of them more upset. Eventually she had to rid herself of both friendships, because they just weren’t healthy for a child that young to have.
Just Kidding, talks about girls that use humor to get back at someone. They will start making rumors up about a girl or talking about a girl behind their backs to one of their friends, but the moment they are caught by an authority figure, they were “just kidding.” By saying this they think that everything is ok, and that they can keep talking about this as long as they are “just kidding.”
When you start to get others involved in the fight, they are known as the Middlegirls. They are the people that don’t want to take sides, but go from friend to friend telling one what the other said. Many times this makes the situation worse, because the girl in the middle likes the attention she’s getting, so she makes matters worse, by saying something different than the other girl side. The analogy that Rachel Simmons used was a ping pong ball, because the middle girl is being tossed between two girls that are like ping pong paddles.
One of the reasons Rachel Simmons gives for writing this book is because when she was young, she too had to deal with bullies when she was young. In the beginning of the book she talks about how every young girl is either bullied or the bully. Female bullying goes so unnoticed because adults just chalk it up to be girls being girls. However if it’s boys fighting then they do yell at them to stop.
Odd Girl Out is also a movie, and it takes a few of the different stories and meshes them all into one big story. We see how cruel girls can be and just how much damage they can do, with only one rumor. But we all know how it is once one rumor spreads; it escalates from there. If some young teenagers wouldn’t want to read the book, the movie addresses the same issue, and honestly I think it gave the story of female aggression a little more meaning because it was a visual thing, you didn’t have to imagine anything happening because it was happening right in front of you.
Though Rachel Simmons writes very well, it felt as if she kept making her point over and over again. Maybe that was the point of the book, but she would use different stories from people, and then would say pretty much the same thing about each one. The girl was bullied by another girl, bullying is bad, adults need to step in sooner, we’ve all been there. It never felt that each story had it’s individual problem that she addressed and I think it would have benefited a lot more from that.
The intended audience would have to be women from the ages of 15-100. If teenagers were to read this book, then maybe they would understand how cruel they can be and how hurtful they can be to their fellow classmates, even when they don’t mean to. No matter the age a woman will always be able to relate to this topic, no matter if they were the bully or the one being bullied. Maybe if the bully were to watch it they would remember how they treated that girl in high school, and think back and now feel sorry for them, and the pain that they caused.
Female bullying is everywhere and needs to become more noticed. We punish the boys for being bullies and fighting but just because you don’t always see the girls directly do something, doesn’t mean that they aren’t doing it. Girls can be very sneaky and will usually shoot glances behind their backs.
Rumors spread like wild fires and can damage any girl’s reputation, self-esteem, and even their lives. Because someone may have called them a name once, it can have daunting repercussions on anyone. Bullies beware adults are watching now, so stop making that poor girls life miserable and start lending a helping hand. I give this a 6 out of 10 Stars.
Posted by Robby at 4:30 PM 0 comments
Labels: book review
Monday, August 3, 2009
Buffy the Vampire Slayer S1 EP3
Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Season 1 Episode 3
"Witch"
Original Airdate: March 17, 1997
Since the characters have been pretty well developed, we were able to dive right into the episode. This episode is one of my favorites of the season, granted there are only 12 episodes of the season so that’s really not that hard. In the episode, Buffy is trying to get on the cheerleading squad, along with several others. In the first scene we see one girl trying out and her hands catch on fire, then the credits role.
Buffy seems to be jealous of the girl Amy, who has a “close relationship with her mom.” When she talks to her mom about cheerleading, her mom doesn’t really pay much attention to her. She’s too busy getting everything ready for the gallery.
We find out that there is witchcraft among Sunnydale High School, and the gang has their suspicions that it might be Amy, a girl who is desperate to follow in her mother’s footsteps and get on the team. First Amber’s hands get burned up, then Cordelia goes blind, then another girl loses the ability to speak because her mouth is no longer there, and Buffy is hit with a vengeance spell. Once she is hit with the spell, the gang really gets to work, to save Buffy’s life.
When they get to Amy’s house, they find her mother alone and shocked to see Giles and very sick Buffy. Buffy comes to the conclusion that Amy’s mother switched their bodies because she wanted another shot at cheerleading so she could relive “her glory days.” The gang ends up saving Buffy, and reversing all the spells just in the nick of time to save Buffy (this is becoming a pattern.)
It’s a great episode of Buffy, that doesn’t have anything to do with vampires. I would say this is a classic episode. We Giles cast a spell, the gang comes together to help Buffy and all the others that were affected. The storyline is great, and we see that Xander has an infatuation with Buffy, and in a weird way we see Buffy get a little closer to her mother. The episode is very original, especially for when it first aired. I give this episode 6/10 stars.
Quote of the Episode:
Xander: I laugh in the face of danger, and then I hide until it goes away.
Posted by Robby at 9:46 PM 0 comments
Labels: BtVS, BtVS Season 1, TV Show
Buffy the Vampire Slayer S1 EP2
Posted by Robby at 12:14 AM 0 comments
Labels: BtVS, BtVS Season 1, TV Show