On June 17, 2015, there was a kidnapping and murder, and I was best friends with the murder victim. I was actually the last one to see her before she was killed. Her name was Katie Smith. She was my best friend, and now I lost her. In two days, I will be questioned about Katie.…
The door is locked. The mother knocks twice, but there is no answer. She knocks four more times, each rap on the wood with her manicured nails more intense than the last; the sinking feeling in her stomach deepens. Knocking turns to banging, banging to screaming, and screaming to destruction as the mother breaks down the door. Her son lies on the floor, white capsules surrounding his cold body.…
Suicide is a disease like no other. The disease is spreading ultimately infecting teens across the world. The Program is used to stop the infectious outbreak and to heal those that are sick. In her novel The Program, Suzanne Young shares society's attempt to treat suicide. Young uses cultural and physical surroundings to shape psychological and moral traits in the protagonist Sloane as she fights the epidemic and the program to attempt to change the way society continues to treat suicide.…
Today, suicide is one of the leading causes of death in the United States. It can be assumed that the reason for suicide would be depression or a mental illness, although it will never be clearly understood when the victim takes the answers with him. However, the individuals who attempt suicide and survive say that dying is a better option then suffering through the pain of living. The novel, The Ordinary People, by Judith Guest is a story that explains the healing process of a teenage boy after a suicide attempt in result of a guilty conscience. The author utilizes the elements of theme, character relationships, and symbols to convey her message.…
Throughout the novel, Kesey incorporates metaphors and further characterizes one of the main characters, McMurphy, to critique the authority of the doctors that work with the patients in the hospital. To the other patients in the ward, McMurphy preaches to them about the importance of sticking up for themselves against the other nurses, doctors, and even patients. The author uses a rabbit metaphor to illustrate the difference between the patients and the doctors. “All of us in here are rabbits” (Kesey, 61). In the ward, the patients are the rabbits and the doctors are the wolves.…
Heartlessness progresses as a topic of discussion. In these three opposing works, Serial Podcast, Ordinary People, and The Glass Castle come similarity. They relate not only in comparing the themes but comparable in modern society. The theme heartlessness leads to abuse or death, matches in all three texts. In current times, we see this problem more often than necessary.…
Dahler, Don. “12-year-old's suicide spotlights cyber-bullying threat.” CBS Evening News. CBS Interactive Inc. 2013. Web.…
The C word in the Hallways essay Anna Quindlen goes deep into the minds of today’s youth. She explains the importance of physiological autopsy which basically means that a kid kills himself and then they uncover why the kid did what he did. Quindlen is an amazing author and uses many different rhetorical strategies to make us feel her emotion on the subject. Quindlen uses pathos, refutation, and metaphors in order to get everyone to be aware of the dangers of mental illness.…
I sat in my car gazing through the window as the lightning violently struck through the air. My heart was drowning in the rain as I looked at the broken picture in front of me. I have no dad, at least not one present at the moment. I see a mom at her wits end trying, but I know it's all pretend, an illusion that doesn’t have an ending. Looking at our house, our doll house, with all its broken figurines I can see the lights are on…
And if a mother isn’t giving her child conditional love, they will find it in someone else. Hannah’s death was evidently shown that the love Sula had for her mother was nonexistent anymore. She stood there and watched her died without any pain and remorse. ‘’ But…
One morning school was canceled because of the snow. As they soon realized the snow was dying down they left their house to go to their parent’s good friends house. During the ride there something terrible happened. They car crashed and Mia and her family were raced to the ICU. Mia’s parents dead, her brother later dying, she had the most difficult decision to make.…
When her mother saw that she was cutting her wrists, she said “I don’t have time for this, Melinda”(88). This made Melinda feel even more lonely and depressed. Throughout the book, Melinda heals by talking to herself in her head about what happened and trying to understand it on her own. The school isolated her, but she also isolated herself from anyone she could learn to trust. She skipped class almost everyday and hid in an “abandoned janitor’s closet”(26).…
The Ill Feeling of a Mother Addicted to Pills I still remember the day I found out my mother was sick. It was not a disease doctors or medicine could cure. It was a disease one finds at the bottom of a pill bottle. My mother’s drug addiction was not only destructive to her, but it was destructive to her children. As a result, I was diagnosed with depression, turned to self-harm, and developed an eating disorder.…
You’re sitting in your room. Door locked, with a pen in your hand and a blank piece of paper in front of you. Your hand is shaking and the tears begin again- for the third time in the past hour. ‘To my family’ you write at the top of the page, but decide it’s a bad way to begin your letter, your suicide letter. You try again, start over, again, but you don’t know how to begin.…
“What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger” is a commonly used quote. I can honestly say I didn’t hear it from an upbeat pop song at first. But from someone more important in life, my father. When I was younger I thought the tiny scars and disgusting bruises was something hard to overcome. What I “overcame” was nothing compared to what would happen in January of 2008.…