Sometimes women smile to support their family ,or because somebody is smiling ,forgetting what is the real importance and value of a natural and spontaneous smile. When I smiled is in order to show my emotions , but sometime I just do it for education and to seem nice, feelings According to Amy Cunningham ,”We smile so often and so promiscuously—when we’re angry ,when we’re tense , when we’re with children , when we’re being photographed.”Amy’s opinion support the idea that a woman’s smile has lost it’s real value of meaning. Women smile, to show that they are happy and to share their love with their loved one’s to demonstrate how proud they are of their family. Families are very dependent of a women support and love. In our society a woman’s smile has become part of our life and culture, and for that reason they smile so often to show their feelings and emotions.
She was actually a very intelligent woman but chose to play dumb. Just as Marilyn told her fiancés father,” men prefer this way.” She was a very
Diana can write away her problems and let them fade away it is who she is. She has Amazing friends that she looks for inspiration and encouragement. She not only has the worst yet best parents in the world. They are supportive and they are crazy. She would like others to know she is special, she knows she has a need to be free.
In the play, Gwendolen sets the image for a typical Victorian woman, along with her mother, Lady Bracknell. She has her personal values and ideals, and exhibits self- confidence. This can be proven by some of her lines in Act 1, like her first line “I am always right!” or “In fact, I am never wrong.” However, sometimes her over-confidence makes her look foolish. When she meets Cecily for the first time, she declares that they were going to be “great friends” and she has “likes her more than she can say”. Then when she suspects that Cecily is going to steal her fiancé, Gwendolen immediately switches her tone to saying that she “distrusted” Cecily from the first moment she saw her and that her “first impressions of people are invariably right”.
She possessed a rare talent to make friendship in a second, charming people with her *** smile . She also had a power to read people’s mind, their sacred intentions and desires although she never used it in a bad way yelling or making fun of their dreams. Of course she knew all my secrets reading me like an open book. I never mind because her advice was always the best one. She was always the best and the first.
The insecurities of Maggie’s character are not just skin deep, much like my own. Her older sister Dee is very flamboyant and educated, both of which are threatening to Maggie who “eyes her with a mixture of envy and awe” (297). Maggie is intimidated by those around her whom she feels are better than she is. Although my insecurity is not as extreme as Maggie’s I still at times feel ashamed of the way I look or am susceptible to those around me. However as previously stated in my comparison to the character of Amanda I often mask this insecurity through a more confident persona, which Maggie’s character does not do.
Strength and Weakness of Elinor Dashwood Elinor Dashwood, the heroine of Sense and Sensibility, cements her sisterly relationship with Marianne, and resolves her convoluted relationships with male characters and antagonists throughout the book. Her affectionate and well-composed nature provides the others comfort and consolation, and earns her great respect and credibility in retrospect. However, Elinor's extreme composure backfires on her as she keeps her thoughts and feelings to herself and hardly releases them. This sometimes seems to cause her some degree of distress, as well as creating a communication gap between herself and the other characters. As a result, she remains quiet instead of speaking out, which prevents her from being fully in control of situations when she confronts people, especially Lucy; Elinor is often dominated by the other characters.
Rite of Passage BSHS 342 September 19, 2011 Babara Kennedy Rite of Passage A high school boy, 16 years old passed his math exam. Math was not Robert’s favorite subject so he had to study really hard for it. His parents said how well he was studying and promised to teach him how to drive if he gets a B and would give him a car if he gets an A in his finals and if he passes the driving test. Robert literally spent time in the library daily receiving extra tutoring from a friend John, he meets at the library. Robert forgot about his x-box and had less time for his friends Mike and Sean, who didn't think he needed to study as hard as he was doing.
Her kind and gracious Aunt build’s Sybylla’s confidence and self esteem and is gentle and understanding, recognising her inner beauty, while reinforcing her physical beauty. Aunt Helen’s positive impact on Sybylla can be seen through the quote “No one would dream of calling you plain, let alone ugly; brilliant is the word which best describes you.” This quote assists the reader in furthering their understanding into the contradictive impression that others have on Sybylla. Similarly, the protagonist, Peekay, in the
While I will agree that we girls sometimes don’t think about what were saying, we always stick together. Ella Goodman also added in this quote by Coleridge, “A woman’s friendship borders more closely on love than man’s. Men affect each other in the reflection of noble or friendly acts, whilst woman ask fewer proofs and more signs and expressions of attachment.” This quote is exactly right. Goodman then also goes on to explain that guys have groups of buddies. For example, golf buddies, work buddies, and college buddies to name a few, and I agree with this as well because I’ve seen it in my everyday life.