I’m just your average teenage girl who would rather be in bed watching “Grey’s Anatomy” on a Friday night than going to a football game but will also be the type to take a road trip at 3:00 am to the beach to watch the sunrise on a Saturday morning. I’m a very humble person who doesn’t really worry about the future. As kids, we grow up worrying about the future and we tend to depend on it. We go to school so in the future we can get a career and hope that that career will support us later. I like to be very optimistic and just worry about the things happening in the moment. Being able to enjoy life with the people that make me happy and creating memories that will last a lifetime is the way I live by. Life is so precious, people mistake it by thinking life is all about going to …show more content…
Our lives aren’t granted to last us forever. We grow old and were all given a certain amount of time. We live in such a beautiful world, giving us so much to offer. For example; having mountains to climb, rivers to swim in, cities to explore but people don’t acknowledge the beauty of their surroundings. I don’t understand why society would settle in one spot when there so much to see. I want to travel the world and see the different cultures and environments this world has created. I got the chance to visit Utah this past summer and it made me realize that Utah might be the state where I want to continue school. It will be a drastic change in my life, but I have come to realize that change doesn’t always have to be necessarily bad, but for the better. I have watched my mom change her whole life around from working at a liquor store to now working for the city of Riverside. She has inspired me to go out and do what my heart desires. My mom continues encouraging me to pursue my dream job of being a fashion designer. There’s so many careers that interest me that I wish I could major all
Grey’s Anatomy is a medical drama that focuses on the personal and professional lives of the doctors of Grey Sloan Memorial Hospital. Over twelve seasons Grey’s Anatomy has had many controversial and spiritually based storylines. Women make up the majority of the shows demographic. One of the most explicitly religious episodes aired as the thirteenth episode of the ninth season, aptly named Bad Blood. It focuses on a nineteen year old boy named Rich who is brought to the hospital with life threatening injuries after being hit by a car while skateboarding with a friend. Christina, a cardiac resident, is the surgeon in charge of his case, Rich had lost a lot of blood and Christina first order was to have some hung. Just at that moment something falls to the floor and Christina’s resident Leah picks it up, its Rich’s medical ID stating he is a Jehovah Witness. Christina automatically ordered the nurse to stop hanging the blood, stating they could not give him blood because he is a Jehovah’s Witness.
I don’t like changes. They frighten me, and I’m always afraid of losing my stability, but they are also the medium to achieve high goals. When I decided to move to the United States, I took a considerable chance. I had a terrific life, marvelous friends, and a lovely family; but I wanted more. Moravian College allowed me to take a step forward toward my dream. There I found incredible professors, with a terrific will of teaching and share their knowledge; I met peers and upperclassmen that became friends, and some almost family. The two years spent here were the most extraordinary of my life, but I believe it’s time to move.
The four MSMS ideals: creativity, service, scholarship, and community will play a vital role in my educational and occupational future. Knowing the importance of these ideals will be beneficial. Individually, each ideal has a different significance, but collectively, understanding them will provide me with an invaluable advantage. My occupational aspiration is to become a pediatric oncologist.
Grey’s Anatomy is a medical drama television series on ABC that is about a group of surgical interns working at Seattle Grace Hospital. Many people watch the show for the entertainment and drama, but the series portrays more than just that. The series not only creates a negative stereotype of doctors in today’s society, but also shows different topics and themes of diversity, such as gender, ethnicity, and gender identity.
As season 12 of “Greys Anatomy” is nearing the winter finale, the twist and turn are coming from every department and twist no one saw coming.
American author Christopher Morley wrote, “There are three ingredients in the good life: learning, earning, and yearning.” Throughout past year, I have learned a tremendous amount about school subjects, but also other aspects of my life. I have managed to narrow down my interests and passions in life to decide on a future career, and from that I have also chosen my college. I have learned about myself and realized what works for me and what does not. Within the past year, I have also changed some of my beliefs and made decisions concerning what I will and will not support. My junior year of high school has been a crazy one, nevertheless, it has taught me about school, myself, what I want do in the future, and what I believe in.
At some point in everyone’s life they start to branch out. They deviate from the paths chosen for them by their parents and start discovering. I, for one, was eager to leave the dull and lifeless path my parents had chosen for me. I was ready to begin exploring. One should know that before the events of this story, I had been living on the Saint Francis University Campus for six weeks. My days were long, eventful, and rather stressful. This was to be expected from a schedule of six challenging classes. It was an excellent change of pace from my monotonous existence at home. These six weeks were worth the trouble though, because I was able to conclude them by taking a trip to Massachusetts. A family-free vacation to a location I always dreamed
Going to College was a new door opening in my life, yet I didn’t know should I walk through it. I knew senior year I was going to have to do something with my life; get a job, learn a trade, or go in the military. A few weeks after making my decision to go to college, I signed up for the ACT. I didn’t do as well as I thought I could, after that things in life started to snowball down. Even though learning a trade or going in the military, could of lead me on many cool adventures. The effects of going to college has led me to wonderful things as well.
I will be living on this campus for four years, and in that time, I can create ample seconds of human experience. It can be daunting to live on your own for the first time, and I spent a portion of my senior year stressing about leaving the only town I have ever lived in. However, now I am taking a step into the future. I hope that when my college days are over, I will feel more comfortable in my own skin. When I imagine myself a few years from now, I see an intelligent young woman who feels confident in her ability to make a life for herself. The growth from the girl I am now to the one I aspire to be will have roots in the new experiences I have and the memories I will make. It will come from the people I meet, whether it be new friends, professors, or a kind stranger. It will emerge in all the tricky bumps in the road
Growing up I never gave too much thought to college, whenever people asked me about furthering my education my only response was “I don’t want to go”. I didn’t see the future in it, “success doesn’t come with a piece of paper” I thought to myself, and although that was true I didn’t realize all the doors that weren’t open without that piece of paper. I always felt optimistic growing up, but for whatever reason, I never felt sure about the route I would take in life. Graduating high school was a priority but after that there was nothing. I’ve always had big dreams but back then I hadn’t mustered up a plan on how to get there, like driving to California with no map or GPS I was stranded, suspended in this mindset of what I wanted to be and what was comfortable. Neither of my parents went to college and in spite of that my childhood was beautiful. In hindsight I think that was a big reason I thought the way I did. When I was a kid I remember looking at my
A a teenage boy I am full of inconstant feelings. One thing that will remain constant though is I always try to make the best choices I can. Whether that is choosing to be follow in the path of my heros or trying to live each day to the fullest everyday. I do what I think will lead me to positively impact myself and hopefully
After spending 15 years of my life in Japan, the only place I considered home, my father informed everyone that we were set to leave and move to Virginia in two months. I was a freshman in high school now realizing that I was leaving the only place I knew and was about to encounter a whole new culture. Terrified is the only emotion I could fathom in that moment. Terrified that I wouldn’t fit in, that the next three years of high school I was going to be an outcast with a school filled with two-thousand kids compared to my old school of only five hundred like a goldfish swimming in the deep ocean. Today, I wouldn’t change the way that things turned out or the way that I reacted to this life changing experience. Fear is necessary and in that moment it was a life lesson to be taught and it was brought to me at an early age that things change and all we can do in life is except it and know that it will bring great things. I’m about to be 18 years old, no longer a child and with this experience of transitioning it has allowed me to be open with new things and it will be an advantage for me when I enter into college and the new environment that I will be facing in the next four years of my life. It’s allowed me to have my arms open wide as I transition into another big moment in my
College is a huge step to take in life and causes lots of change in one’s life. In a way, it stealthily teaches you how to be independent and breaks you away from the sheltered life you’re in and throws you into a whole new world. When I think about my life so far, and what I have ahead, I now know that I am ready to take this step in life. Growing up and moving around a lot, I had to become adaptable to new situations and environments. This is a genuine skill that has become a true aspect to my life. My best adaption was entering high school. That’s where my interests truly flourished. I joined marching band and swim. These decisions changed my high school life in a big way. I enjoyed showing up every day and it gave me confidence.
Uncertainty. Depressed. When I think about my life right now, those are the words that come to mind. Nothing in my life at this moment is certain. Today isn’t. Tomorrow isn’t. My life could end at any moment. If my life was to end right now, I would not be content with the way I have been living. I don’t think I have been living life to the fullest. Ever since I have started high school, I have realized that while I am here on this earth, I want to make the most of it and be with the people I love and care about the most. I want to be remembered. High school isn’t easy and I don’t know how to deal with my feelings and control them. High school and growing up is a lot harder than I ever thought it would be. Adults always tell me that high school will be some of the best years of my life. So far I don’t see it.
It was 2016, and I was finally a senior in high school. Being a senior in high school was something that I had dreamed of since my early middle school days, and at last, I was there. It was the last year in one of my least favorite environments, and I couldn’t wait to graduate and move away from the only place I had ever known. I had lived in the same town for seventeen years, and I had gone to the same school with the same people for thirteen years. I was looking forward to something new in my life. I was most excited for my senior year because it was the year that I was going to choose where I wanted to move away to and what school I wanted to spend the next four years of my life at. As the year moved along, I slowly realized that I wasn’t moving away and that I’d be staying home to attend college, which was one of the most difficult decisions that I ever had to make.