Tuesday, September 22, 2009

3. Cultural Considerations

Being born into a family that was fluent in another language rather than English, Vietnamese was and is still the spoken language at home. Although in many cases this is an advantage, it also has its many disadvantages as well. Walking in the hallways of school full of English-speaking people and speaking my own language, I was an easy target for the bully kids who think it is cool to make fun of something that does not sound "English." When I mentioned the word: "Pho," as in the "noodle soup" of the Vietnamese people, people assume that I just said a cuss word. When I say: "Tai Sao" for "why", people give me weird stares as if I had just grown another head. A majority of the time, when I speak Vietnamese in public, I would hear kids screaming some obscene things at me, most of them assuming that the language only consists of the words: "Ching and Chong," which in the Vietnamese dictionary, does NOT even exist. It is a sad to know that simple everyday words in another language that kids are not familiar with are often criticized by people who do not understand the complex and beautiful language, people who are ignorant to the truth, and people who have no care for the country and its amazing diversity.
Disheartening as it may sound, the simple act of trying to preserve one's language today is a lot harder than it seems because there are still people in the world who are not "open" to new things and the to the fact that there is more than one language that exists in our world.

Monday, September 14, 2009

&if..

you are in a bad mood, why do you take it out on the people who care most about you?
I don't get it and neither do you.

Monday, September 7, 2009

Reflect on Narration

Throughout the entire narration unit, I learned that narration is basically the retold story of an event that happened whether you were a witness or a character in the story. Narration can be told in many different ways such as a newspaper article like in the short story "Thirty-Eight Who Saw Murder Didn't Call the Police," or written in a first person perspective, the author being the main character like in the story "Indian Education." No matter what perspective these stories are coming from, they all have one thing in common. All of the narrations we were given to read described, gave commentary to, and/or recounted an event.

Saturday, September 5, 2009

<3


The proof that innocence exists in our world makes me smile:)