The third most important value is trust. I have to say this to some people which is “if you can’t trust the person you are with, well who can you trust in your life”. Trust plays a big role in everybody everyday life, but without it what you going to do. First, I got loyalty, but do others have loyalty. People say “not to have loyalty” however, I need loyalty and so do they.
The next value is respect. Respect to me is treating others how you would want to be treated, and having faith that they will respect you back for that. Respect starts by respecting yourself, because if you lack respect for your self in my eyes than you will not be able to respect others. If you were to not respect others it would show then others will not respect you. Selfless service is the next value in the army values.
At the start of the novel Stanley is fat and has no friends, however when he goes to the Camp Green lake he gets friends, and he also digs lots of holes. He met boys called magnet, armpit, x-ray, zero, zigzag and squid. Stanley was getting bullied and had no friends at his school, so he was not a very happy person. Then when he goes to Camp Green Lake he makes friends, gets really healthy and strong and is enjoying his life at camp. But at the start he got bullied and he was scared to join in with some of the boys.
She had gone there to pick up her summer shorts that she had left there two months ago and to see how miserable he was without her. Of course he was miserable without her, she has been the greatest thing to ever happen to him. Max never had a family. He was raised in an orphanage near the Brooklyn bridge and ate at soup kitchens more often than not. Simonella kind of felt bad for him for
He hasn't eaten since breakfast and late at night while he waits for Corley to return with money, he orders a meal of peas and vinegar with a bottle of ginger beer for his dinner. He simply doesn't have the money for a proper meal. And, his future looks dismal: it will only get worse. By showing this detail, readers are not as quick to judge Joyce's character, and while we certainly can't like this leech, we can perhaps understand and view him in a sympathetic light. In "Clay," the older unmarried character Maria lives a life of diligent sacrifice for a pittance.
Having an imagination is necessary to get deeper in the story, and a good memory is also required to tie the pieces of the story together. And of course an artistic sense to appreciate the beauty of the author’s writing. Nabokov states “Since the master artist used his imagination in creating his book, it is natural and fair that the consumer of a book should use his imagination too.” The reader needs to also understand and appreciate the language used by the author. He needs to pay attention and notice the details in a novel and not just the general storyline. He needs to read with an open mind regardless of other people’s judgment of the novel.
She loves the boy who was four years ago and not the man who is now standing in front of her. His son tricked a girl into getting into his car where he raped her and now he is back to spill salt in her kitchen as he did after he ate his breakfast. Because she doesn’t want to look into his face, she pretends that she is sick then she goes to her room. There are many unanswered question in Myrna’s mind, and she couldn’t stay at her home anymore and be her mother so she leave with a note for Kenny that it means he should go away within a week. In my point of view Myrna made a good decision in this situation for two reasons, first it is a good punishment for Kenny as she dose’s want to be her mother any more.
Tree of Life Film Review Terrence Malick’s Tree of Life, which debuted in 2011, is one of the weirdest, yet more enjoyable films I have seen in a long time. The film concentrates on a family growing up in a rural area of the United States in the 1950’s / 1960’s time period. It is about how a father and mother raise their three boys in contrasting ways. The father, played by Brad Pitt, is very strict with his kids, often scrutinizing them for doing normal things like talking at the dinner table or trying to put the radio on in the car. He is disliked by his children especially the oldest son because he is hypocritical by doing the things he scolds them not to.
His family is fully dependent on his ability to work, and he never misses work. Because he did not show up for work the morning of his transformation, his manager came to the house and tried to get an explanation from Gregor as to why he missed work. It is at this point that Gregor’s family first sees him for the bug that he is. His mother has an immediate concern for Gregor. She screams “‘Help, for God’s sake, help!’...fled from the table, and fell into the arms of his father, who came rushing up to her” (18).
The ideal man provides for his family materially and is brave on the battlefield. Second, the unbalance plays a part in the lives of the clan members. For instance the main character in the novel, Okonkwo, is extremely focused on being super masculine and finds everything feminine less worthy, leaving him very unbalanced. This unbalance leads him to violate the feminine beliefs such as peace. For instance, during the “Week of Peace” Okonkwo came home to find that his second wife had not returned from her friend’s house in time to cook dinner.