Thursday, March 19, 2020

Dancing essays

Dancing essays When I look back through my old family photo albums, I find it difficult to recall much more than what is pictured in their pages. The dated clothing, the people, the locations... all of these are quite visible, and therefore appear memorable, but the fact is, without the visual prompt, I probably wouldn't recollect many of the pictured events at all. Things that made no major impact on my life remain simple illustrations in the back of my mind or images in the album tucked away in the back of an unused closet. Looking at a picture of my fifth birthday party, I can see who was there, what the cake looked like, the gifts I received, but I can't remember much else. Other times in my childhood I remember rather vividly, however. It's funny how memory is selective like that, how certain things can be completely retold down to every last detail. Often, however, a simple prompt can trigger an outpouring of memories that may have otherwise remained hidden deep in the mind. A sight, a sound, perhaps a smell...all of these things can trigger a deluge of retrospection. We have a home movie of this party...it is grainy and of short duration, but it's a great visual aid to my memory of life at that time. And it is in color - the only complete scene in color I can recall from those years. -Judith Ortiz Cofer, "Silent Dancing" In her book "Silent Dancing," Cofer recounts the memories of her childhood induced while watching this short piece of film. Each scene brought about more memories, as colors and scents of the past were relived through it. Because the film was silent, however, those parts of the past had to be made up...explored by her. When I think of the things that remind me of my childhood and development, one scene in particular stands out. I experienced more learning and exploration on the playground at age eight than any other time I can recall in my life. The many things I learned st...

Monday, March 2, 2020

Profit and Prophet - Commonly Confused Words

Profit and Prophet - Commonly Confused Words The noun profit means a benefit, an advantageous gain, or a return on an investment. As a verb, profit means to derive advantage or to gain a profit. The noun prophet refers to a person who speaks by divine inspiration, a person with powers of prediction, or a chief spokesperson for a cause or movement. Examples Globalization has favored the pursuit of profit and the accumulation of private wealth over the provision of public goods.(George Soros, The Bubble of American Supremacy, 2004)Even while Shakespeare was alive, a few unscrupulous writers and publishers tried to profit from his reputation.(Jack Lynch, Becoming Shakespeare, 2007)Because ​Bob Dylan wrote and sang about improving society, some young people in the 1960s saw him as a prophet of change.I felt . . . like some crazy Old Testament prophet going out into the desert to live on locusts and alkali water because God had summoned him in a dream.(Stephen King, Bag of Bones, 1998) Practice Exercises (a) There was another part of Henry Wallace, no less important and certainly no less serious, that was known to few and fully understood by nobody. This was Wallace the mystic, the _____, the ardent seeker of cosmic truth. (John C. Culver and John Hyde, American Dreamer: The Life and Times of Henry A. Wallace, 2000)(b) Some of the bureaucrats were actually quite clever, and played the game well, sometimes even making a _____ on their trades and transactions.(Tom Clancy, The Bear and the Dragon, 2000)(c) I hope Im smart enough and mature enough to _____ from the mistakes I made in the past.(Julia Reed, The House on First Street, 2008) Answers to Practice Exercises:  Profit and Prophet (a) There was another part of Henry Wallace, no less important and certainly no less serious, that was known to few and fully understood by nobody. This was Wallace the mystic, the  prophet, the ardent seeker of cosmic truth.(John C. Culver and John Hyde,  American Dreamer: The Life and Times of Henry A. Wallace, 2000)(b) Some of the bureaucrats were actually quite clever, and played the game well, sometimes even making a  profit  on their trades and transactions.(Tom Clancy,  The Bear and the Dragon, 2000)(c) I hope Im smart enough and mature enough to  profit  from the mistakes I made in the past.(Julia Reed,  The House on First Street, 2008)