Posts

Live in the Moment

I am a firm beliver in putting your phone away when you're with family or at a sporting event or on vacation, because there is simply no need for it. What ever happened to living in the moment and taking mental pictures? We live in a society were we take pictures just to post onto social media. We upload photos and videos to our Snapchat and Instagram for other people to like and comment. Before I continue I would like to point out that I have an Instagram and a Snapchat but have considered multiple times deleting, because I opened my eyes and realized the dent it was making on my life. The dent being that I became so obssesed with trying to find the right angle, people, and place to take one stupid picture that wasn't going to bring me or anyone joy. I started doing things for the pictures instead of for myself. I was too busy capturing the moment, that I forgot to live it. Now, I realize that it really doesn't matter. If someone happens to take a picutre, great. I might p...

A Measure of Description

A Measure of Time had a very interesting beginning paragraph that really caught my attention and had me thinking. You can make anything sound beautiful and majestic. In the first paragraph, the author was talking about a cancer therapy machine and how it was "a cake of crumbly powder" and there was a dust that was "eerily glowing in the sultry dark". If you didn't know that he was talking about a stainles steele cylinder, you probably would have guessed that this was a passage taken from a fairy book or something. Words can have such an illusion on situations. Words have the power to persude a judge to either lock someone in jail for life or let them roam the earth. Words can make two people fall in love or out of it. When I was reading that paragraph I had to stop and think about how I wasn't reading a fantasy book. I was reading a book about how these two young men discovred Radium, which is a chemical element not some pixie dust.

What Is And What's Not

Guerilla art is when an artist anonymously creates art in public places, almost always unauthorized. A famous example of that is Charging Bull,  which was created by Arturo Di Modicav. In 1987 the stock markets crashed and people everywhere were affected. Two years, $350,000, and 7,000 pounds later, Di Modica created the famous Charging Bull. It was meant to "encourage representation of a booming economy". The people who ran the New York Stock Exchange weren't very pleased with the sculpture and wanted it removed, which it was, but after outrage from the public the city agreed to put it back up again.  It's been at the same spot for almost 30 years. Guerilla art is a great way for someone to express themselves whether it be politically, creativly, or for just some fun. Another popular peice of artwork that people think is guerilla art is Confident Girl. But it's not. Confident girl was "commissioned as part of an advertising campaign developed by McCann, a gl...

My Family's Experience With English

Coming from a bilingual background, I know the struggles one has to face when learning a new language. I knew how to first speak Albanian before English. For me it was easy, I was born here and I learned English through school, books and the TV. My parents were the first generation here and because they were in their twenties when they came to the U.S, they were able to learn English. They still have an accent but they are able to blend in and have a comfortable life. For my grandparents learning English was and still is an everyday struggle. It's hard for them to understand the news, radio, and communicate with native speakers. They came to America in their early fifties and at that age it is impossible to learn a second language and be proficient in it. Motivation is an important factor when it comes to learning a new language and my grandparents have my mom to translate for them everywhere they go, so they don't see learning English as an necessity. The problem though is tha...

What Do I Mean?

Words are the best thing that a human being has. Words take us anywhere and everywhere. They make us feel anything and everything. Words have been around for a very long time so it's no wonder we have gotten around to playing around with them. We have puns, alliteration, innuendoes. We even have different ways we say them like southern accents, French accents, and Australian accents. There's even different languages like German, Spanish, and Swedish. Life would be so boring if we all spoke the same language with the same accent. It would be especially boring if we meant what we actually meant all the time. The factor of mystery and magic would be gone. Sayings like, "Don't do anything I wouldn't," doesn't actually mean don't do the things that your crazy aunt Jan wouldn't. Because we all know if you were to listen to her advice you would be passed out on the floor of your neighbors patio with princess written on your forehead. But that little sayin...

Thinking About Virginia's Words

Writing is a very powerful thing. It's a therapy. It's a job. It's a hobby. It's so many things for people. And the reason that it's so important is because writing is something that can be personal. It can have a heavy weight on the people who read it. A love note perhaps, or even a suicide note. Some people don't care about their writing. They use their words to hurt other people and they don't think twice about what their words did to others. Someones writing can mean a million different things. One can have a completely different interpretation of what they read than someone else. And sometimes it's as simple as the cat jumped over the hat. Virginia Woolf's words in "The Death of Moth" could easily be labeled as the description of a moths long death. She described how it's "legs fluttered again" and how "he settled on the window ledge". Of course she's talking about a moth? Humans can't do that. But what ...

Taking a Dive Into Thrifting

Dumpster Diving is an art and so is shopping at thrift stores. Recently, thrift stores have been all the rage. I've seen YouTubers create videos on their channel titled "shopping haul", I've seen Instagram models rocking their "authentic vintage" clothes and I've seen stores like Forever 21 bringing back fashion ideas from past eras like the classic denim on denim, small sunglasses, and scrunchies and many more. Dumpster diving and thrifting sort of have the same concept; what some people don't want, others will take. So just like Lars Eighner, I will be giving you some tips on how to scavenge! Except I will be giving you tips on what clothes to get unlike Lars who was giving you tips on what food to eat from the dumpsters. Tip #1 - Make sure you don't go in with a fixed mindset of what you want, because 9/10 times you will not find what you are looking for. Instead, go in with an with an open mind and just roam the store of something that ca...