Friday, January 24, 2020
Charlotteââ¬â¢s Web, Goblin Market, and The Secret Garden :: Goblin Market
Charlotteââ¬â¢s Web, Goblin Market, and The Secret Garden Instructorââ¬â¢s comment: This studentââ¬â¢s essay performs the admirable trick of being both intensely personal and intelligently literary. While using childrenââ¬â¢s literature to reflect on what she lost in growing up, she shows in the grace of her language that she has gained something as well: an intelligent understanding of what in childhood is worth reclaiming. We all should make the effort to find our inner child Certain elements in childrenââ¬â¢s literature make me feel nostalgic for the past when I lived a more carefree and perhaps careless lifestyle with my eyes and ears wide open. Now, a college student and adult struggling to juggle school, work, and future career planning, I often forget the simple things that brought me pleasure when I was a child. The stresses I have encountered while growing olderââ¬âtaking on added responsibilities and accumulating prejudicesââ¬âhave clouded my childlike, innocent, and fun view of life. This childishness, which was reawakened by reading Charlotteââ¬â¢s Web,ââ¬Å"Goblin Market,â⬠and The Secret Garden ,is something Iââ¬â¢d like to bring to life again. I miss it, and Iââ¬â¢m tired of repressing it just so I can appear to be a mature adult. There are some characteristics in me that were rooted in childhood and still survive to express themselves today, like my love for animals. But these are few. The majority of things I learn ed, believed, and valued as a child have escaped me and perhaps lie dormant somewhere in my subconscious. My sense of beauty and healing power in nature has diminished since I moved away from my rural childhood home, as well as my relationships with my sisters, who were more easy to get along with when I was young. I regret losing these parts of me with age, and after reading these books I wish more than ever to bring them back, because they did form who I was as a childââ¬âand everything stems from childhood. This is when I was my real self, naive at heart and innocent at play. As a child I related to Charlotteââ¬â¢s Web and I still do. One thing that has always concerned me is the beauty, treatment, and protection of animals. When asked why Iââ¬â¢m a vegetarian, the words seem to flow almost from instinct: ââ¬Å"Because I donââ¬â¢t believe in killing animals for our pleasure.â⬠Being a vegetarian is particularly hard, especially when the menus in most restaurants are 90% meat. Charlotteââ¬â¢s Web, Goblin Market, and The Secret Garden :: Goblin Market Charlotteââ¬â¢s Web, Goblin Market, and The Secret Garden Instructorââ¬â¢s comment: This studentââ¬â¢s essay performs the admirable trick of being both intensely personal and intelligently literary. While using childrenââ¬â¢s literature to reflect on what she lost in growing up, she shows in the grace of her language that she has gained something as well: an intelligent understanding of what in childhood is worth reclaiming. We all should make the effort to find our inner child Certain elements in childrenââ¬â¢s literature make me feel nostalgic for the past when I lived a more carefree and perhaps careless lifestyle with my eyes and ears wide open. Now, a college student and adult struggling to juggle school, work, and future career planning, I often forget the simple things that brought me pleasure when I was a child. The stresses I have encountered while growing olderââ¬âtaking on added responsibilities and accumulating prejudicesââ¬âhave clouded my childlike, innocent, and fun view of life. This childishness, which was reawakened by reading Charlotteââ¬â¢s Web,ââ¬Å"Goblin Market,â⬠and The Secret Garden ,is something Iââ¬â¢d like to bring to life again. I miss it, and Iââ¬â¢m tired of repressing it just so I can appear to be a mature adult. There are some characteristics in me that were rooted in childhood and still survive to express themselves today, like my love for animals. But these are few. The majority of things I learn ed, believed, and valued as a child have escaped me and perhaps lie dormant somewhere in my subconscious. My sense of beauty and healing power in nature has diminished since I moved away from my rural childhood home, as well as my relationships with my sisters, who were more easy to get along with when I was young. I regret losing these parts of me with age, and after reading these books I wish more than ever to bring them back, because they did form who I was as a childââ¬âand everything stems from childhood. This is when I was my real self, naive at heart and innocent at play. As a child I related to Charlotteââ¬â¢s Web and I still do. One thing that has always concerned me is the beauty, treatment, and protection of animals. When asked why Iââ¬â¢m a vegetarian, the words seem to flow almost from instinct: ââ¬Å"Because I donââ¬â¢t believe in killing animals for our pleasure.â⬠Being a vegetarian is particularly hard, especially when the menus in most restaurants are 90% meat.
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