Loss And Liberation By Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot: Article Analysis

Decent Essays
You learn from failure or success. Memories help you remember what to do the next time you are in a similar situation or a new situation that you are stuck in. If you do not have memories, then you are like a baby learning how to walk all over again. This is why memories help you remember all of your mistakes and successes, it is as if it was muscle memory. I disagree with Sara Lawrence the reason being memories do help people , they do not hinder us to succeed in the present. In the article piece that was Adapted from Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot,
I’ve Known Rivers: Lives of Loss and Liberation, she states how many people like to look back in the past and think of the memories and Intertwine them with the present. She starts of her article

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    His 105 Book Summary October 13, 2016 Independence Lost The book Independence Lost was written by Kathleen DuVal. When you think of independence freedom comes well Kathleen DuVal provides us with an amazing image of what independence is through the story Independence Lost. The story gives us background information and so much history about what went on during those times as Americans and others was fighting for independence. Kathleen DuVal tells the story through many characters that I will get into later.…

    • 915 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In her story, The Lovely Bones, Alice Sebold illustrates the idea of dealing with grief by forcing the reader to suffer with Susie and her broken family. The death of a loved one can sometimes cause a person to experience the five stages of grief, and as a result, the person accepts loss and moves on. As Susie remains in the “in-between”, the five stages of grief are shown through each member of Susie’s family throughout the story as they try to cope with the tragedy of her death. Jack Salmon, Susie’s father is a major character who suffers a lot of pain after the disappearance of Susie. When Susie goes missing Jack has hope, he thinks she is still alive.…

    • 1018 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    During his Nobel Peace Prize speech, “Memory, Hope, and Despair”, Elie Weisel said, “The opposite of the past is not the future but the absence of future; the opposite of the future is not the past but the absence of past. The loss of one is equivalent to the sacrifice of the other.” This quote really captures how I feel about the past; without it, one cannot have a future, which is the reason I find my memories more important than my dreams. In that same speech, Elie Weisel also said, “Without memory, our existence would be barren and opaque.”…

    • 545 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Unbroken is a story by Laura Hillenbrand about an extraordinarily brave and courageous man by the name of Louie Zamperini. Throughout the story he endeavors many inhumane hardships and challenges. Louie is in fact, unbroken. He did not give up regardless of how difficult the issue was he was fighting through. There are thousands of people, all over the world, who have incredible survivor stories similar to Louie’s.…

    • 1026 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    While Anne Fadiman rightly asserts in her novel The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down: A Hmong Child, Her American Doctors, and the Collision of Two Cultures that the tragedy of Lia Lee, a Hmong bounded epileptic child of Laos natives, was a result of cross-cultural misunderstanding; I feel that she does not sufficiently explore the role of language and translation serving as factors of psychosocial and cultural aspects of medical diagnosis and the overall confrontation of foreign patients with the American medical system. As described by Janelle S. Taylor, culture is the process of making meaning and social interactions. The embodiment of cross-cultural meaning can be articulated through the intertwining of language, the duality of vocal…

    • 989 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    This section of text from Marya Hornbacher’s 1998 memoir, Wasted: A Memoir of Anorexia and Bulimia, is a first-hand account of her experiences with eating disorders throughout her life. This depiction of her on-going battle with anorexia and bulimia for over fourteen years establishes her familiarity with the topic while appealing to the emotions of the audience as they experience the perspective of a person who has struggled with negative body image, eating disorders, and insecurity. Furthermore, by detailing some of her own experiences—many of which from when she was a child—without establishing a definitive opinion on the implications of negative body image, Hornbacher allows the reader to arrive to their own conclusions about the real-life dangers of the over-glamourized standard for the “perfect” body and the addictiveness of the quest for thinness. Hornbacher’s memoir was originally published nearly two decades ago, illustrating her experiences with eating disorders through the age of twenty-three; however, the content of her book is just as…

    • 2108 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    I came up with one of the first 12 questions which probably now to my memory was “What are your goals for the future?”. I voiced my concerns over asking her if she was married or have children because she might have gone through a bad divorce thus had her children taken away from her. Plus, I also told them with that I feel like that is not what you want to ask someone you don’t know never met. I also had the question of “Are you from Florida” changed to “Are you originally from Florida” because I have people asking me “where I am from” based on my skin color which is racist and when you put “originally” it sounds as if you are not meaning it from the standpoint of racism. When we first went to interview Miss Diaz, I asked her two questions and wrote down what she said.…

    • 832 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Unsettling Curiosity Oftentimes people think of the ideal nostalgia, getting comfort from looking back on the past, instead of the reality of pain and hardship. In A Separate Peace, a novel written by John Knowles, Gene the very impressionable narrator, looks back on his past with strong discomfort about what happens and what actions he commits. Every time Gene thinks of the tree where he pushed Finny (his best friend and roommate) off of, he is overridden with immense guilt. We intend to look through the pain and issues we experience, because we have had to live through them once and we do not want to undergo that familiar tenderness all over again. In reality this situation is quite unheard of; the majority of the time our thoughts are suffocated…

    • 1033 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Without a memory of beautiful or horrible events, we wouldn’t be who we are. Our memories and dreams make us who we are and set the path for our…

    • 671 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down is the tragic story of a young Hmong girl named Lia who suffers from epilepsy and who was the victim of a cultural collision and misunderstanding between her Hmong parents and her American doctors in Merced, California. The story follows Lia’s family, the Lees, as they navigate the American culture and system while maintaining strong ties with their traditions, practices, and rituals. The author, Anne Fadiman, uses the battle between the doctors of Merced and Lia’s parents as a way of emphasizing that doctors, and people in general, need to be more sensitive to the various aspects of different cultures and that not doing so can result in cultural misunderstandings and conflicts. With that being said,…

    • 1437 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Memory is the name given to the process of storing and retrieving information. We would be unable to learn without it. Memory helps to process different variations of information, such as pictures or sounds. It allows us to recall what has happened in our past, and lets us make predictions about future events and consequences of actions. Memory is an individual behaviour by which we retain information about events that have happened in the past.…

    • 748 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Equality In Phaedo

    • 1125 Words
    • 5 Pages

    In the section of the Phaedo we read, Socrates argues that one has knowledge of the form absolute equality prior to birth, and that learning is a “recovering of knowledge which is natural to us” (40). Socrates’ argument for theory of recollection and that one cannot acquire knowledge of absolute equality through empirical means does succeed despite some minor issues with it. Socrates first proves that there is no example of absolute equality in one’s own experience. To do this Socrates and his interlocutors first have to accept that absolute equality, the standard by which all other ‘equal’ objects can be measured, does exist and is known. The question then arises as to whether there is an example of this absolute equality in observation…

    • 1125 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Distortion Of Memory

    • 1206 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Memory is the encoding, storage and retrieval of past events and experiences, it is present in the short term memory store and then transferred to the long term memory store. The retrieval of memory isn’t always accurate as memories become distorted over time. The distortion of these memories are due to some influencing factors such as language, age, reconstructive errors and emotion. Taking all these factors into consideration leads to the point that memory is only to some extent reliable. Language plays a big role in how we remember, language is used to convey how we remembered the event but it is also a influence on how we remembered the event.…

    • 1206 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Memories Shown Through a Bullet Memories usually come and go, but the ones that are important and help in the shaping of a person are the ones that usually stay. Humans make a lot of memories, some good and some bad, but at the end of they day they are the reason why a person is a certain way. Tobias Wolff’s short story “Bullet in the Brain” shows how Andres, “a book critic known for the weary, elegant savagery with which he dispatched almost everything he reviewed,” becomes angry after listening to two women have a “loud, stupid conversation [that puts] him in a murderous temper” (Wolff, 200). While impatiently waiting in line, he notices that one of the tellers placed a ‘POSITION CLOSED’ sign in front of her window, and this made Anders…

    • 1100 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    "The flow of time is always cruel... Its speed seems different for each person, but no one can change it... A thing that doesn 't change with time is a memory of younger days...” - Sheik, The legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time Whether it be warm nostalgia or sorrowful remembrance, memories are a powerful quality of the human mind.…

    • 1253 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays