“Mama, why are we leaving?” I kept asking her that same unanswered question since we won those glossy, olive airplane tickets. But today, that question was soon going to be answered. I had woken up with a distressed gaze on my face, because I knew it was the day I was leaving my home, Halych, Ukraine. I didn’t get up right away like I always did, instead I just stared at the ceiling, walls and the furniture in my room; examining the florid wallpaper, the life-size Barbie doll at the corner and just trying to cram every little complex detail in my memory about just that room, my room. I finally got up to the appetizing aroma of fried dumplings, mashed potatoes, and many other various foods that my grandma prepared for me …show more content…
The trees were like skyscrapers with their branches just dangling freely in whichever way they pleased. The people looked at me strangely because I was the foreign girl who didn’t know anything. The new scents I smelled weren’t like my grandma’s food, it was greasier and the fast food restaurants were at every corner Some of Temple Universities Fox School of Business stakeholders are as such: creditors, directors, employees, government and its agencies, shareholders, suppliers, alumni, unions, and the community from which the business attracts its assets. Not all stakeholders are equal.Three weeks after arriving in Philadelphia, I had started my first day of Kindergarten. I was extremely eager to go to my brand new school and meet diverse people but, once I had started school I began to realize that creating new friendships with people was extremely difficult for me. I was in fact really shy and I could not speak English at all yet. I had many kids come up to me and try to have a conversation with me, but I could not understand what they would try to tell me. I would even learn English more properly. I learned how to form sentences, speak clearly, and have actual conversations with kids, which led me into becoming more outspoken around