what my parents taught me essay

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    How To Read Out Loud

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    learning how to read, b’s were d’s and o’s were c’s. My family saw this as silly mistakes, the kind every kid makes for attention. The older I got, the less acceptable it was. By third grade they weren’t just simple mistakes anymore. Teachers assumed I was shy or that I didn’t try hard enough and but they were wrong. I feared reading out loud because I didn’t know how people would react. I would study for hours but the words would just jumble up in my head. They were signs. They were part of a bigger

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    My parents, who moved to Guam from the Philippines, lived through a much harder time than my siblings and I have. My mother finished high school in the Philippines, then moved to Guam for college. After completing her first year, she placed her education on hold and worked to support her family in the Philippines. She bounced between jobs for two years, then met my father. At twenty years old, she withdrew herself from the workforce to do what most women consider to be the most important job: being

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    up in the United States, my parents constantly talked about my heritage and invariably enforced it on me throughout my 17 years in this world. As an adolescent I often see my parents on the phone with my relatives in Nigeria discussing their daily struggles, lack of food, little or no electricity and the withering health of the old and the young due to lack of medication and treatment. This prompts my parents to constantly send money to their loved ones. This sparked my awareness of the problems

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    Moving To Diversity

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    with my family. My parents decided to move here to give their daughters a better education and better opportunities. My parents are my biggest influence because they have helped me understand how important it is to work hard to achieve my goals. I learned that if I work for what I want, I can be very successful. My parents left their own house, land, jobs, and family just to give their daughters a chance to be successful in life. I think that seeing them give everything away just so that my sister

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    makes it hard for the younger generation to maintain the same morals and values we were taught growing up. Throughout my childhood and even into my teenage years, my parents did a great job teaching me right from wrong and embedding good morals into my lifestyle. My dad taught me how to earn respect from a guy while my mom would remind me to put God first while living by the Golden Rule. Obviously my parents play a huge

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    Traditional families versus single parent families. A traditional family household is a household with two parents, mother and father. A single parent family household is a one parent household a mother, or father. This household is usually occurs when a parent dies, parents divorce, or the parents was never married and separated after having a child together. The question at hand is would a child be more successful and mentally stable in life growing up in a traditional family household, or single

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    called life. Due to me being a premature baby, I had a few complications in my early years of development. Also, my mother who I love dearly has been handicapped my entire life and the first couple of years of my life was wheel chair bound. Because of these two factors, I would mimic much of my behavior in my early years after her. For example, I did not walk until I was two years. This caused doctors and my mother to be concerned about my development. So for the first four years of my life, I went to

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    I grew up without a mother and father and did not have moral principles instilled in me to help develop my moral code and standards for maximizing my utility in life. For example, some children are taught to show respect to parents, teachers, and elders. Respecting parents, teachers, elders, and other people within society can help to enhance relationships. The better the relationship, the better coexistence between people. Good moral principles allows a person to make the right decisions and

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    Community service affected my life in a big way. While volunteering, I learned to be more open minded, learned more social skills and it taught me to have fun. When I was younger I did some volunteering, but by doing more I learned that being more open minded was good. For example, I wouldn’t think as much as what it would feel like to be all alone, but when I volunteered at the Elderly Hall and was told that the people who lived there didn’t get that much visitors from their families, it was sad

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    I looked around myself at the other kids, sitting in a circle wondering if they knew what I knew. Meanwhile, I sat on the little first grade beanbag chairs, feeling the pokey beans move beneath me, and listening to the teacher read the book called "mum and dad glue". All the while, still wondering if the other kids knew what I knew. What being divorced meant. The book Ms. Lyga Jones was reading intrigued me. I realized that some mommy's and daddy's had infallible glue, some had cracked glue and others

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