First Trip London
Memories, adventure, and travel. I must have told this story a dozen times to anyone who was interested. This story is quite memorable for me for a multitude of reasons. How illness alters my thinking. How taking chances makes for a great story. It also reinforces my hesitations about traveling alone. For the obvious safety concerns, but, also, I now have a memory that is unique to me and one other person. This is something that can never be recreated by any other two people.
In 2005, I was stationed with the 69th ADA (Air Defense Artillery) in the Brigade HHB (Headquarters, Headquarters Battery) in Giebelstadt, Germany. The unit was on a two year rotation. One year the unit went to Greece and the next year the unit went to
…show more content…
Dover. I was very excited. This trip was my first journey into England. The possibilities were endless. The first step, once we landed, was to find the train station. This particular part of Dover was not very large, but it was large enough to make finding the train station problematic. There was an older gentleman walking outside the port building and we decided that he would be a great source of information. Sgt. Femmling and I stop him for directions.
“Excuse me sir, do you know the way to the train station”, I enquired.
The old man’s face lit up and was delighted to part with his knowledge, “kasafdkadhfd…left….lkajsdajdajfkadaf…straight…..lacndlanca….and the station is on the left”
Not wanting to cause any kind of embarrassment, or an international incident, in the first ten minutes Sgt. Femmling and I just nod our heads, offer a “thank you”, and we were off. What turned to be about halfway to the train station we run into a couple drunk gentleman asking directions to the nearest strip club. About ten minutes later, and a few more awkward miles, we finally find the quaint little train station. Finally, my “free trip” perks kicked in and Sgt. Femmling payed for my train
A. Creech accounted for many memories during her early childhood years. She took many trips with her parents and four siblings. She enjoyed the company of others and making memories. Often, grandparents, uncles, aunts, cousins, and friends visited her and her family, making her always used to warm, large, extended family. Her favorite memories came from Creech’s traditional summer vacations to various destinations. She loved road tripping with her “noisy and rowdy family” across the country. Her never-forgotten memories eventually led to her recreation of the trip into many of her books.
An example of a good memory is when her science teacher gives Melinda and her biology lab partner, David Protracis an apple to dissect and study. This reminds Melinda of when her father took her to an apple orchard and sat her high up into a tree. It was windy day and the wind pushed her mother into her father’s arms. This made Melinda very happy. Her parents do not seem to get along in the story and her father rarely has time to talk to her mom or Melinda.
My grandfather, Larry, served in WWII. He enlisted and stationed at Camp Polk. He went through places like New Guinea and the Philippines during the war.
I would have to choose the essay of Once More to the lake by E.B. White. The essay engages readers in a relatable story that is easy to comprehend and read. Many of us can relate to a summer fishing trip with our fathers or even family and this essay encaptures that very essence. “I wondered how time would have marred this unique, this holy spot-the caves and streams, the hills that the sun set behind.” The author goes to explain the wondrous beauty of the lake and its surrounding areas engaging the reader visually. The thesis of Once More to the lake is also much more simplistic and easier to understand. In the first paragraph we know and can understand that this essay is going to be about the reliving of past memories returning to a
When the day came to leave I was woken at the crack of dawn. I was keen to get to Blackpool as swiftly as possible, not only for the football that was ahead of us but also for the famous Pleasure Beach. The coach picked us up at around 8 am and in we crammed into an already full coach. The journey down was full of laughter and friendly joking from the parents. That day, it was particularly hot and inside the coach a number of people were becoming uncomfortable. I was unaffected by the warmth inside the coach, with my earphones in I relaxed and paid more attention to the vast countryside we were passing through. The vivid scenery blew me away, with colossal hills to calm rivers that we met on the journey.
When memory is used as a source for narrative in literature many of the essential qualities of conventional narratives are lost. However, Kathy’s narrative voice in Never Let Me Go is by no means exclusive, it instead resonates on a universal level; each individual’s memories are fundamental in forming their identity. The supposed unreliable aspects of Kathy’s narration are only unreliable in so far as they present an intimate portrait of this universal experience.
We all had memories that are unique to our remembrance. One thing that makes memories unique is personalization (George, 2017). For example, nobody remembered the way I collected coins during the trip because that memory was important to me. It was a personal memory for me. Personalization made our memories different from one another because we all remember our individual experiences (George, 2017).
Our most significant memories are shaped by who we are and what is important to us. They are often guided by those around us, who help us to remember. Memories can be triggered by things: objects, pictures, music, tastes and smells, colors and physical feelings. To quote Cesare Pavese: “we do not remember days, we remember moments.” Shared memories connect people, create a sort of legacy. They reinforce our sense of community. One reason why memory loss due to illness or old age is so tragic is that it can distance a person from loved ones who have shared common life.
Most people are very convinced that they have memories of past experiences because of the event itself or the bigger picture of the experience. According to Ulric Neisser, memories focus on the fact that the events outlined at one level of analysis may be components of other, larger events (Rubin 1). For instance, one will only remember receiving the letter of admission as their memory of being accepted into the University of Virginia. However, people do not realize that it is actually the small details that make up their memories. What make up the memory of being accepted into the University of Virginia are the hours spent on writing essays, the anxiety faced due to fear of not making into the university and the happiness upon hearing your admission into the school; these small details are very important in creating memories of this experience. If people’s minds are preset on merely thinking that memories are the general idea of their experiences, memories become very superficial and people will miss out on what matters most in life. Therefore, in “The Amityville Horror”, Jay Anson deliberately includes small details that are unnecessary in the story to prove that only memory can give meaning to life.
Army, I experienced working with different cultures and personalities. I was first stationed in Camp Casey, South Korea, located 10 miles from the DMZ zone, and had the honor of working with Korean soldiers, traveling throughout South Korea and partaking in their culture and way of life. After a year, I was given orders to be stationed at Ft. Hood, Texas. During my last two years at Ft. Hood, TX, I led my platoon through company runs, physical activities, and obstacle courses. Needless to say, my initial interest in public health increased to a passion and yearning to learn more about the human body and health.
Global business is widely growing and increasing day by day, it has indeed manufactured benefits to both world and individual economy of a country. It plays a vital role to make it sustain in the long term profitability and also helps to improve interconnection between countries. Tourism business is however inter-related with world business and economy as it contributes a large amount of money exchange and also cuts the boundary of cultural and social backgrounds in other words the world has become local to everyone through tourism and globalization. Tourism in other words is a business which has grown globally and has become popular by marketing its products and aquatics every where around the world.
Just after this quick bend, the crew became visible helping people on. Just before I entered the transportation unit, I looked down at the gap left between the door and I. The metal around the entry door was rusted and worn, which gave me an eerie feeling. Reluctantly, I stepped aboard and felt uneasy as I saw those responsible for taking us to our destination. I would soon know for sure, how I felt about my now plausible career.
My First Memory- Personal Narrative I’ve had many memories during my lifetime, many good, and some bad. My
Military life offered the exciting adventure of traveling around the world. For example, in my first five years, I was only in the states one time. During my army career, I traveled to Kuwait, then to Egypt, then to Ireland, to Germany, to Saudi Arabia, and finally to Korea. In the states, I have lived in California, Hawaii, Maryland, Philadelphia, Florida, South Caroline, North Carolina, New York, and Virginia. My orders will tell me where I will report to and whether it is state side or to another country....
Looking back on a childhood filled with events and memories, I find it rather difficult to pick on that leaves me with the fabled “warm and fuzzy feelings.” As the daughter of an Air Force Major, I had the pleasure of traveling across America in many moving trips. I have visited the monstrous trees of the Sequoia National Forest, stood on the edge of the Grande Canyon and have jumped on the beds at Caesar’s Palace in Lake Tahoe. However, I have discovered that when reflecting on my childhood, it is not the trips that come to mind, instead there are details from everyday doings; a deck of cards, a silver bank or an ice cream flavor.