Harry Nash's Stretching Your Comfort Zone

Improved Essays
Stretching Your Comfort Zone When paying attention to a man like Harry Nash, I am astonished by the way one single man can reenact a lifetime of people. Harry is the actor everybody loves, although he has never loved. But what is love? Is it the warm feeling you get inside of yourself when you see somebody special to you? Is it the passion you feel, or the feeling of having to make that special person feel like the most wonderful person in the world? I believe it is all above. Does Harry get the warm feeling? Does he feel passion? Yes he does, but not in any way that is comprehensible. Mr. Nash doesn’t live his own life, he lives his life through the personality of past celebrities. In the first scene Harry is first introduced as a powerhouse

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    Same Kind of Different as Me by Ron Hall and Denver Moore, is about two different kinds of lifestyles between a black man and a white Texan man in which each man faces couple of life lessons or some kind of disappointment. Each main character faces obstacles in their lives in which they have to overcome them. It also tells how their relationship started building up towards the end of the story and how together they began planning future projects that helped homeless individuals. This book is about racism, poverty, cruelty, faith and redemption. Denver grew up poor and a slave in Red River, Louisiana.…

    • 1304 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Potter plays a crucial role in this film. (7) Underrated and not one of the most celebrated villains, he is still a highly ingenious antagonist, as this paper will point out. When the banks close, Mr. Potter tries the persuade the people to come to him for money, offering them ½ of their profit. But little did they know that his real motive was to get them all under his thumb. George puts it well when he says, “Mr. Potter doesn’t want to help.…

    • 600 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Choosing a career is not always based on what someone is greatly passionate about. It can be about the pay rate, the hours or even the environment. Gordon Marino author of "A Life Beyond Do What You Love", published in 2014 in the New York Times, believes that people should not only do what they love but perform something that can benefit society or their families. Mariano is a professor of philosophy, a student advisor and a community volunteer. He began to realize that when advising students, he would always tell them to do what they love even though in reality they did not know what they loved to do.…

    • 1118 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Tim Gautreaux's The Safe

    • 147 Words
    • 1 Pages

    In today’s culture and society, many people will most likely value an expensive car over an ancient artifact. In other words, artistic objects with valuable meanings are less appealing than exotic goods or products to the average person. The short story The Safe, written by Tim Gautreaux demonstrates a situation in which a few workers in a junkyard discover a safe with a fancy sewing machine inside of it. With the exception of one character, Alva, the rest of them find objects with physical value more appealing than ones with artistic and sentimental value. After being exposed to the sewing machine, Alva, Snyder, and Little Dickie develop their own sense of imagination and recognize the importance of sentimental value, which is exemplified…

    • 147 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    To begin the inquiry of the possibility of there being and enduring self, the argument that J. David Velleman holds against the enduring self, will be evaluated. In the beginning of Velleman’s paper, So It Goes, he asserts that the enduring self is an illusion. Velleman is helped by another philosopher, Derek Partif, in establishing his claim that anything enduring seems false in claiming that, “connections of memory do not necessarily trace out the career of a single, enduring object, and they are unsuited to serve as the integuments of an enduring self” (Velleman, 2). In the quote listed above, it helps to grasp the idea that an enduring self does not come together just because the object or person is able to remember their memories and…

    • 888 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The first job someone has is often memorable in many ways, they are earning their own money, accepting a new form of responsibility, and they’re usually treated horribly because their position is seen as inferior. In today’s world, people who work jobs that don’t require a degree are looked down upon. It is often ignored that the resources that are needed to obtain the education that is required for a white collar job, are not available to everyone. A certain intelligence that comes of blue collar workers and what they must deal with is also dismissed. There is no shame in being a blue collar worker, it requires a completely different skill set that cannot be taught.…

    • 891 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Between the World and Me is a phenomenally written work of literature. A memoir of the life of black Ta’nashi Coates in the form of letter to his fifteen-year-old son. Readers follow him as he goes from a boy in the ghettos of Baltimore, to what he refers to as the Mecca that is Howard, to a man raising his son in a white America. Coates makes good points, but as I continued to read it seems that he contradicts these point. At first glance this book seems like a father’s attempt soothe his son’s uneasiness about his position as a young black man in America, during a time when many young black men are being killed.…

    • 674 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    “Don’t Blame the Eater,” writes David Zinczenko, president of a global health and wellness media company, who also asserts that obesity is becoming a genuine medical problem. Before 1994, he emphasizes, the rate of diabetes between children was so low that it could have been called a cultural stereotype, but, now, one out of three teenagers suffer by “obesity-related” problems. David Zinczenko claims that “the lack of information” about fast-foods and the deficit for the affordable supplementary for the fast-food restaurants are main reasons for the obesity issues; confusing explanations of calories perplex teenagers and lead them towards obesity while America possesses 13,000 McDonald’s restaurants, and it’s more complex to find a way to the…

    • 988 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Do discrimination and racial profiling still exist? Brent Staples answers this question in his short essay, Just Walk on By. In this essay, Staples elaborates his opinion on the concern of racial profiling and the injustices that come with it by providing us with his experience as a young adult living in Chicago. Staples never faced his ultimate goal of reality until being awarded a scholarship to attend the University of Chicago. When his dreams of budding out of the rancorous cycle of poverty he was born into were becoming a reality, Staples then had to take on a few other hurdles that would now, presently, be considered racial profiling.…

    • 1392 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    There has always been two driving forces in our culture, doubt and faith. The novel, A Prayer for Owen Meany by John Irving, tackles the ceaseless debate if doubt can exist alongside faith, to convey this message Irving implores two diverse characters. Owen Meany, an extremely faithful follower of Christ, and Johnny Wheelwright who is doubtful of the supernatural forces that Owen believes. However, both characters have transgressions against established systems in society. While faith and doubt are on opposite sides of the spectrum, Owen and Johnny are able to have a blooming friendship that eventually allows Johnny to grow his faith through Owen.…

    • 740 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Can you believe every photo you see? In “The Photo is Lying to You” by Rob Haggart was written about photographers that were taken by a photographer and photo shopped. The saying “one picture is worth a thousand words” Implies that pictures describing many things without reading or hearing about it. In the reading Haggart introduces a photographer name Ed Freeman who was working on a novel about surfing at the time when he took a picture of surfers he saw in Hawaii and photo shopped the picture to fit his own description of surfing. According to Haggart, Photographers have been photo shopping pictures since 1994.…

    • 797 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In “Under the Influence” by Scott Russell Sanders, an American novelist and English professor at Indiana University at Bloomington, the author explains the struggles he had to go through while dealing with his alcoholic father. Alcoholism has slowly transformed his father into a completely different person, and even a different creature at times. Every time his father would get drunk, Sanders and his family felt as if they were losing a piece of their closest relative. They felt ashamed of the disease that had consumed a portion of their family and this developed to an extent where telling other people was impossible, making their father’s alcoholism a secret that the family kept hidden and closed away from the rest of the world. They felt…

    • 1513 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    In the documentary “No Impact Man”, by Colin Beavan, displayed how Colin and his family tried to reduce pollution and lessen the environmental damage to the planet for a whole year also referred to as the “no impact for one year”. Humans are the main causes of carbon emission. This is why Beavan goes through and introduce how certain chores or routine will be different from normal since such activity like grocery shopping and house chores will be limited. Beavan has a wife named Michelle, a one year old daughter, and a dog. To reduce plastic packaging as much as possible, they purchase necessities in bulk and if there are no other alternatives, they purchase only items with the least amount of packaging or recyclable packaging and use…

    • 1681 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Hamlet's Love For Ophelia

    • 619 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Love is an ambiguous feeling; it is often questionable to even those experiencing it whether it does or does not exist, and yet more difficult to analyze from a third perspective. The very definition of love is subjective but at its core it is a strong attraction towards someone that you care for deeply. Shakespeare explored some themes of love in the play Hamlet, such as the relationship between Hamlet and Ophelia. Hamlet originally did have a genuine love for Ophelia but it was lost in the midst of selfishness and revenge.…

    • 619 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Hero And Leander Analysis

    • 1346 Words
    • 6 Pages

    In literature, love has always been a concept of great debate, although, what exactly is love? Pamela C. Regan, from Los Angeles University, explains that “…A person who experiences sexual desire for another individual, along with other emotional or psychological events, may characterize his or her state as one of ‘being in love…’” (Regan 139). However, does this sexual desire always breed emotion? When one thinks of love, thoughts of tenderness, kindness, and romance often arise with it.…

    • 1346 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays