Everybody dreams of being successful. The path to success has many avenues. In “A Walk to the Jetty” by Jamaica Kincaid and “Kewanua’s Ambition” by Paul Tough, both Annie John and Kewauna found success in their way. In these selections, ambition, sacrifice, and support are key components the cast used to meet their success.
Ambition is an earnest desire for some type of achievement or distinction, as power, honor, fame, or wealth, and the willingness to strive for its attainment. Some ambitions are consumed by wanting while others are induced by needs. In “A Walk to the Jetty” the character, Annie John ambition was to leave Antigua to be away from her parents. Annie John’s parents wanted her to have a better life after living in Antigua. They pushed her to venture to England to become a nurse. Her parents felt she would have more opportunities that would benefit her. In “Kewanuna’s Ambition”, the main character Kewauna had a more impelled ambition. Although Kewanuna had a jagged life, she endured too well in school and was determined to overcome her struggles. Kewanuna was passionate about learning. She also had an aggregated strategy that helped her during her college class. For example, Kewanuna had a biology
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professor who had a lot of uncommon words. To help herself, Kewanuna red-starred next to all the words she didn’t know. At the end of Kewanuna asked him what each word meant. Sacrifice is an offering and the act of giving up valuable things to benefit.
Sacrifice takes a lot of guts, giving up something you want to keep especially in order to get, do something else, or to help someone. Annie John is one of those persons who sacrifices a lot. Annie wasn’t able to choose her career seeing that her parents already decided for her. Annie had to pursue the life that was expected for her. Annies’ life isn’t a privilege, it’s a commitment. Annie had to leave everything she loved to earn a better life. Annie, had the choice to pursue whatever she wanted to. However, she was limited on resources. For example, like money, food, sleep, and time. These are just a few of the challenges the characters had to face along the path to
success. Support means to provide comfort, encouragement, or financial assistance to someone. Annie John had a very supporting family. She had to be guided by her parents’ principles so she was expected to achieve them. Annie parents pushed her along the way because they wanted her to be successful. Meanwhile, Kewauna did not have a family that can support her appreciation towards all of her hard work and efforts to surmount her education. That semester, she ended up passing all of her classes because of her hard work. Together they built a relationship on communication and respect. In conclusion, In “A Walk to the Jetty” by Jamaica Kincaid and “Kewanua’s Ambition” by Paul Tough, both Annie John Kewauna found success in their way. In these selections, ambition, sacrifice, and support the characters use to meet success. For these reasons mentioned above, achieving success means completing a task. When you look back, all of your work has paid off. To succeed, is to complete a task or assignment on time in an excellent manner. That's only half of it. The results should be good and the people involved should gain a valuable lesson or experience. For example, if it was a group project, and only two people out of four really did the work, I wouldn't call that success. If everyone participated and worked together providing a valuable deliverable then it's a success. So I think both the result and the process should be great to call something a success. “When you want to succeed as bad as you to breathe then you will be successful”. – Eric Thomas
Success is the chance to go out there and use the resources available to take advantage of opportunities that most people do not. Usually, things happen in life and it can prevent the process of obtaining success. In the readings, “The Lesson” by Toni Cade Bambara and “Horatio Alger” by Harlon L. Dalton conveys the message that success is not always an everyday thing and it takes opportunities for it to become part of life. In “The Lesson”, an angered girl named Sylvia is taken on a field trip to a toy store with Miss Moore to learn a valuable lesson. The lesson is to become successful in society because it is the only way to make it to the top. On the other hand, “Horatio Alger” shows more of a realistic viewpoint where success is not as easy
... and earns the treasure. In this occasion, Annie does not have any reward for getting the treasure. Her fight is actually against herself. She has to overcome on how she thinks about life. She has to change the way she treats others and herself; not based on her miserable life.
Many individuals find themselves developing ambitions or goals. Some of those individuals will have the determination to try to achieve these goals, which will lead to some failing, and others succeeding. In fact, this may impact other individual’s lives. In the non-fiction novel Into Thin Air, author Jon Krakauer examines both the advantages and disadvantages of ambition, implying that ambition can either be a blessing or become a tragic flaw. Krakauer develops his ideas by utilizing character motivation to explore the negative and positive aspects of ambition on self and others.
Any goal in life is achieved through ambition, fueled by determination, desire and hard work. Ambition maybe a driving force to success or to a pit of failure, the path chosen by an individual determines the end. Remember that any goal to be fulfilled needs desire, desire that strives to do good or greedy desire that is selfish. Also the actions that contribute to our ‘hard work’ need to be morally and ethically right to enjoy the sweet success. However, when the desire and determination is stronger than conscience, many tend to fail often reach or don’t reach what they strived for, leaving them emotionally or even physically dead. The inner lying consequence of ambition is clearly stated by Napoleon, he quotes “Great ambition is the passion of a great character. Those endowed with it may perform very good or very bad acts. All depends on the principals which direct them”. The undesirable consequence of ambition can be observed in the lives of the protagonists of ‘The Great Gatsby and Macbeth. This describes the direction in which ambition is driven could change the end result, it is simply based on the individual itself rather than the dream they seek to achieve. Therefore, the strong drive of ambition helps the seeker attain their goal but greedy desires and wrong paths taken eventually lead to downfall.
Therefore the ambition and desire is both a want and a need, it brings peace and comfort but also invades our decision making to figure out the fastest way to meet our goal, which in effect can harm family, friends, and one’s self without guilt.
The American dream is defined as “the ideal that every US citizen should have an equal opportunity to achieve success and prosperity through hard work, determination, and initiative”, yet many people in this day of age believe that this is no longer a plausible aspiration. Neverless, this demeanor is at the heart of the classic American tales of the highest and lowest points of the American spirit, making one question whether or not this fundamental dream is still worth pursuit. Though it is a path containing hardships and challenges, actively seeking to achieve what you desire is one of the most prominent life lessons throughout American literature, as evidenced through the Crucible, A Raisin in the Sun, and The Great Gatsby.
Ambition is frequently seen as desirable - it provides purpose, motivation to work hard, and a goal to strive towards. Yet it also has a dangerous side, when it becomes too great and out of control. Although ambition is often positive, excess of it can have detrimental effects. This unrestrained ambition is predominant in the tragedy of Macbeth. In this play, Shakespeare employs the use of hallucination, blood, and prophecy motifs to emphasize the theme of ambition, which, when goes unchecked by moral constraints, wreaks destruction upon an individual.
Sometimes adversity can be the key to success, as Walt Disney once said:“The flower that blooms in adversity is the most rare, and the most beautiful of all”. As seen in Marjane Satrapi’s The Complete Persepolis, James Baldwin’s If Beale Street Could Talk, and Sandra Cisneros’s The House on Mango Street, protagonists face and conquer different types of adversity. As seen in Marjane’s education in Persepolis, Fonny’s sculpting in If Beale Street Could Talk, and Esperanza’s writing in The House on Mango Street, all reflect
...rn day society, illusive ambitions can be incredibly detrimental, just as they are demonstrated to be in Macbeth. Ambitions, if they are untamed, can be an impediment to free will; they can overpower your good conscience, possibly leading you into causing death and destruction. They can also corrupt one’s mental health, while practically morphing that person’s perception of reality into something demonstrably wrong and twisted. Finally, they can boost ones ego to a point where that person is engulfed and imprisoned in the vehemence of their own denial, which can ultimately bear fatal consequences. If one’s hopes and desires are innately destructive, then it logically follows that that one’s ambition is also innately destructive; be wary of one with an immense ambition.
Ambition and desire are double-edged notions present in all who crave success and power. While ambition is most often associated with unfavorable greed and overwhelming need, people who express this desire are simultaneously praised for being goal-oriented and steadfast in achieving their goals. In the play Macbeth, by William Shakespeare, this duality of ambition is explored through the character of Lady Macbeth. In the play, Lady Macbeth’s husband, Macbeth, is prophesied to be king, and in order to expedite his path to the throne and their combined rise to power, Lady Macbeth plots to murder the current King Duncan. Throughout her Act I soliloquy, Lady Macbeth reveals not only her malevolent and scheming nature, but also profound determination
Ambition is a strong desire or drive to succeed or achieve something. It can help a person to strive at getting something they want. If someone wants something badly enough, their ambition will help them not give up until they achieve at getting what they want. But also, if a person has too much ambition, it could make that person do destructive things to get what they want and they will hurt anyone or anything that gets in their way.
An ambition is an eager, and sometimes an inordinate, desire for preferment, honor, superiority, power, or the attainment of something. To obtain object or goal that is immensely desired. It comes from the Middle English word “ambicioun,” meaning and excessive desire for power, money or wealth. Ambition is something that everyone, no matter their age or cultural background, has instinctively. Ambition can be a driving force for success, or in some cases a road to failure. Through ambitious undertakings we can set goals and find ourselves and our God-given talents.
Before I could really start to write about ambition, I had to ask myself what ambition really was. What causes people to be ambitious, and what are the advantages and disadvantages of being an ambitious person? At first, I must admit it was fairly difficult to comprehend. But I found it to all come together when I related it to another kind of person or group of people – dreamers.
When you think of ambition , you think about the passion to want something and you think about all the things that can help you reach the goal of your ambition. Ambition is a strong desire to do or to achieve something, typically needing determination and hard work. Throughout many scenes and lines during the poem you see people who have ambition and also see the bad things that ambition can make you do. It is shown by many people who all wanted something that they couldn’t just have. This essay will focus on certain roles and see how exactly ambition can make people do things just to get something that they want.
We all have a dream, but the difference is how we realise our dream, how we obtain our dream, and how our dream changes us. This is evident in our learning of dreams and aspirations through the texts Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keys, What’s Eating Gilbert Grape? by Lasse Hallström, and through my own studies of Million Dollar Baby by Clint Eastwood. These three highly acclaimed texts represent the same ideas on dreams and aspirations, which can be defined as hope, desire or the longing for a condition or achievement, but these texts express the same ideas differently, shaping our understanding of dreams and aspirations.