Wednesday, May 29, 2013

We Are Humans

Some situations don’t have easy solutions. That is an everyday thing in life. Problems are problems because they don’t have an easy solution. Bu it is worst when we are dealing with human beings. Sometimes oppressions can get so out of hand, that it takes an extreme measure to make people notice the injustices being done.

This has been seen all through history and can be represented in The Awakening, by Kate Chopin. Edna is living in a world that suffocates her. She was born in the wrong period because her personality clashes with society’s views of her era. If we were to look back at women’s situation back then we would all say that it was an abomination. They had no say, no voice; they were just leaving souls taking care of the house and husband. As dark as it may sound, technically it was like that. It seems dreadful, but for the majority it wasn’t. They were accustomed to the life they lead. Their obligations ended up being something they enjoyed, and they lived life as in nothing happened. But Edna was different. She knew something was wrong, but she was alone and had to take it up herself. She tried isolating herself, quitting her obligations, rebelling against women most sacred person, -the husband- but all those efforts were in vain. They had no effect on her because she still felt that the world she lived in was not okay. And thus the extremes measures came. She swam so far out into freedom that she ended up killing herself. Suicide was the only way of escaping her reality, nothing else worked. An extreme solution, but the only one that suited her. The oppression was so embedded in people’s mind that nothing else worked.


Edna is a symbol of fight. She represents the people that died trying for a good cause. She had to taka it to extreme but she was able to finally liberate herself from the chains of society, holding her back and making her something she is not. Changes were not seen, immediately after her death, actually nothing happened: the book ended like that. But that it the way that most revolutions happen. People realize about the harshness of situations when tragedy strikes. We are humans and that is how we learn.

Monday, April 15, 2013

We Never Learn


Human kind is the most intelligent and advanced animal on earth. Over time we have developed skills that have allowed us to evolve without boundaries. But every good thing has its negatives, and humans are not the exceptions. Hand in hand with evolution, has been the oppressed of the weak and their struggle to break the injustices. Kate Chopin’s “The Awakening,” and Ken Kesey’s “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” both show injustice oppressions made by society on people who are considered less.

In the first, we see the oppression of women, and in the latter, we see the oppression of people who do not seem to fit society’s rules, and are seen as mad, and how the people try and break the ties of society that are holding them down. In “The Awakening,” there’s Edna an atypical women for her era, who goes against the role of women during her time. The book was written in 1899, were women were supposed to be two things: wives and mothers. Their life revolved around their family and they were the ones in charge of making the household work. On the contrary, Edna decides to forget her house duties, and “completely abandons her Tuesdays at home, and does not return the visits of those who call upon her.” (pg. 110) On the other hand, in “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” two characters are the ones responsible to go against society. For many years, people have been placed in a mental ward because they are not considered normal; they have traits that go against what was accepted by society. One example is a man called Harding that was put in the ward because he had feminine attributes and liked men. The Chief, with McMurhpy’s help, take “arms” against the combine and disturb the running of the hospital. They end up winning because the Chief escapes. In both books we see the struggle that the oppressed groups have to go through to win the battle against the injustice. Through history, people have been degraded fro being what they are. Even though there can be people that support them, the common view of society is a phenomenon that controls many. It is this common view that ends up degrading the oppressed, and they alone have to stand up for themselves and beat society.

This phenomenon has been seen all through history. Various groups, such as women, black, gay, Indians, have been affected by the rules of society. Unfortunately, masses of people go with the current and fear what’s different. Most of the people follow society’s law, and look down at the people that don’t, and here is where the oppressions starts. With these two books we can see the injustice that these two groups suffered, and we can see that it had no reason to be. Never the less, it seems as though we don’t learn fro our mistakes, because as some oppressed groups win the battle and gains acceptance, another starts being oppressed. 

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Wrong Place, Wrong Time


The Awakening, by Kate Chopin, presents a character that way ahead of her time. Published in 1899, Edna Pontellier has characteristics that appear many years after the book. During this time, the role of women revolves around the household, taking care of the husband and children. It is more accurate to name these women wives. But Edna is different. She feels uncomfortable with her situation, as surely more women did, but defies society, and gives more importance to herself as a human being, than to her role of a wife. Her characteristics portray her as a women of today.

Edna is a woman who does not fit the image of the women of that time. She is always defying the authority of her husband over her, and the chores that were given to her for being a woman. It is more the time that she spends wondering the streets, and failing her duties, than being a good wife or a mother. She never says he does not love her husband or her children but we are given the impression that she does not like to be with them.  In fact she says that she would give her life for her children, but not her self. On the contrary to almost every other women, she feels that her self is more important that her children and husband. That inner self that defines her is the most important thing in her life.

She is a complicated character, full of mixed emotions. Even though she gives the impression that she could live with out her family, when her husband left to New York, “she cried…calling him dear, goo friend, and she was quite certain she would grow lonely before very long and go to join him in New York.” (Pg. 136)  But at the same time, her children also left, and she felt “a radiant peace settled upon her when she at last found herself alone.” (Pg. 136) She even took over the kitchen and the meals, something that she had resigned of doing, maybe because she was doing only for herself, and not doing work for anybody else. Edna is happy alone, she feels relieved, but at the same time she misses her family and thinks about them; she cannot decide on what she really wants. It’s as if she was on a road to self-discovery, but is a long way from getting there. She knows for sure that the duties of the woman do not fit her, but she fails to know where she stands on love and relationships.

Edna does not fit in the society she lives in. She is much more similar to the women of today, who know give the same importance to work and the family. Back then women were 100% devotes to the household, but know it’s more balanced. Women are still related more to the household than men, but they are also given importance in the work force.  Clear examples are the high positions that women have, such as CEO or even presidencies of countries.


Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Leave the worst or best for last?


It does not matter wether we are talking about an adult or teen, everybody procrastinates at some point in their life.  It is something that has been present for many years, and one of the most common activities (or inactivities) through out the human race. The true questions is why do we do it, or rather do not do it?

There can be various reasons as to why one prolongs certain types of activities, but the most common reason is because we do not enjoy what we have to do. I can speak from a student's perspective and affirm that "procrastinations is the student's curse." We simple delay our ask because we don't like what we have to do. Or rather because there are other things that we could be doing. The same happens to Hamlet, who delays his revenge as much as he can. Very few people could say that it is fun to kill some one. Rather, very few could say that the enjoy killing the uncle. Hamlet loved his father and he felt justice had to be made, but since killing was not some thing he enjoyed doing, he looked for excuses to delay it as much as possible. The same happens for our day to day lives. As a student, I can say that I enjoy some classes more than others, and most of the time I work first on the ones that I enjoy. I almost always leave the worst for last. But this is a trend in society. When one has to do something that one doesn't enjoy, it can de dreadful to complete the task. No one likes to do something that they don't enjoy, some can even suffer by doing so, so, our human feelings and guts tells us to leave it for last. And as humans, I am sure that if it weren't for deadlines creeping in, we would only do the things that we enjoy; it's in our nature. We don't like to suffer, we like to have fun, and since things we dislike exist, we procrastinate, and leave the worst for last. 

Some times leaving the worst for last, is actually far worse than better. I am a strong believer of the opposite: "leave the best for last," because I like to get over the things I don't like fast, but sometimes it's also good to take it down a notch and procrastinate. It can even lead to good things, like being able to think things through and take the correct decisions. In conclusion, it is good to procrastinate some times. Being a chronic procrastinator is another story, but sometimes delaying things, is for the better. 

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

What to Take IN


One of the greatest advantages of Shakespeare’s plays is that they lend themselves to many different interpretations. Not only can the plays be acted in different ways, but also people can understand and view them differently.  In the beginning of the podcast, this is shown when glimpses of different interpretations of Hamlet are played. All of the actors’ voices and interpretations are different. Even though the play has a literal meaning people interpreter that meaning in different ways. Also people take in different messages and read and understand the play differently, base on their current situation and what they want to learn from it. 


For many, the prisoners from the Missouri Eastern Correctional Center were not only acting out one of the most important plays in history; they were engaged in an act of self discovery.  At first they were reading lines, and had difficulties because many did not graduate from high school, but towards the end, they transformed into the characters they were playing. They took something that materially had no meaning to them and were able to complete the meaning of the characters through the memories of their respective crimes. Since the first time that Dan Waller read the ghost’s opening scene he knew he wanted to play it. He felt that the man he killed was “talking to [him]” through the ghost, reminding him“what [he] put him through.” Also, James Word saw so much of himself in Laertes that he ended up feeling “I am Laertes. I am. I am.”  A 400-year-old play, that many would think had nothing to do with them, changed them.   This is also true for those forced to reflect on crimes they have committed. The prisoners acted out a play, and through the play, they relived their crimes.  More importantly, they rediscover their humanity in the face of a society that has deemed them monstrous. As they discovered themselves in the characters, the felt human again. In their perspective, they went from being monster to actors, which gave them the feeling that they were important.

The prisoners were just acting out Hamlet. But when they starting reading the lines, they understood the poem because they were able to compare themselves to it. Life comes with things that may seem to have no relevance to your life, but every situation has something to offer, you just have to want to learn and grow. 

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Forced to Act


“No! I am not Prince Hamlet, now was meant to be,” is a famous line from T.S Elliot’s poem, The Love Song of J Alfred Prufrock. He is referring to William Shakespeare’s famous character, Prince Hamlet, and even though he is not Prince Hamlet, they have very similar characteristics in their personality.

Both of the characters described in the poem and the play, are very doubtful and have trouble making up their mind, but in the end, Prince Hamlet is the only one that takes action.  In his poem, TS Elliot is describing a man that has an obsession for a woman but can never decided for the right time to act. He starts by wanting to ask the women to go with him: but then starts making up excuses to delay that question by arguing that there will be "time yet for a hundred indecisions…”  At the ends he never makes up his mind and ends up growing old alone. On the other hand, Prince Hamlet has trouble deciding when to act, because what he plans on doing takes a lot of courage. Taking revenge and killing one's uncle is not an easy task to do.  All through the play he questions himself and always finds obstacles to avenge his father’s death, just like J Alfred Prufrock, cannot decide to ask the women.  Both of them have trouble making up their minds and acting because they lack the necessary self-confidence; they feel insecure and are afraid that things don’t go out as planned. Most of the time, this is what makes people doubt. The fear of failing is what keeps us from taking importance decisions. But life is about making mistakes and learning from them. Just like J Alfred, and Hamlet, many people delay their actions, and have trouble making up their mind, but the only road to success is actually trying. Even though J Alfred was all alone and Hamlet died, the later was the one that succeeded because he actually acted. 

Both approached different situations in similar ways. They delayed their actions because of self doubt, never the less, Prufrock failed more than Hamlet because he never tried. Even though, Hamlet was forced to act, he ended up doing it and accomplish his goal. And this is what has to be done in life. People have to take away their fears and act, because as the old [modified] saying goes it is better to have tried and failed, than never have tried at all.