Struggler There once was a little girl named Chloe, who had a terrible life. Although she was only 12 when her parents passed away. She never did get to actually know how they died but the police just told her that they were eaten alive by a grizzly bear. Ever since then Chloe had been living with her grandma who she didn't really like, so by the time she was fifteen she decided to drop out of school and live on her own. This is where she got the nickname Dirt Ball because she lived in a box and was always all messy. One day when she was walking down the street headed to the flea-market she saw this guy who was a little overweight, he was 324 lbs and 5’ 11. She thought she had recognized him from somewhere, he was struggling with his bags so Chloe being kind and all went over to help him. After helping him take the bags to his car she started to question the man. He started to tell her about his life and how he became a billionaire. She had no clue who this man was but ever since that day her life had …show more content…
She started to gain things that she had never had before, Chloe became close with Billy Bob’s friends and made her own friends just branching off knowing many different people. It took her only 3 years to get enough money and get her life together. By the time Chloe was 21 she was living on her own and was seeing a guy named Charlie. Chloe went from being a nobody to having lots of money and starting her own makeup business. When she turned 32 her life was amazing, she had three kids. One day she saw in the news about Billy Bob, the man who changed her life, it was talking about how he had passed away due to a heart attack. She went to his funeral and gave a speech thanking the man for everything he had done for her, in his will it said that everything in his belongings were to go to Chloe. He left her with a huge house and all his money, everything was
...age and the crisis of integrity versus despair however, the two characters had different characteristics that categorize them in different ends of the crisis. Throughout the movie, the audience is able to visualize what types of issues are dealt with as well as what type of problems the characters had to go through to resolve their crisis. Chelsea also had different issues than Billy due to the fact; each were facing a different stage as well as crisis. Personally this movie provide me a great understanding in human development; I was able to understand why each person does a certain action: for instance my sister is disrespectful and immature because she is facing the adolescence stage as well as the identity versus role confusion stage. I also learned that a crisis can truly affect a person in a negative; if the person is not able to fully deal with their crisis.
In conclusion, the story describes that life changes, and nothing stays the same throughout it. It is in the hands of the people to decide that how they want their life to be. They can make it as beautiful as they want to and they can also make it worse than it has ever been
Barbara 's mother was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia and was sent to a mental hospital. This left Barbara in charge of the household raising her siblings while her mother was gone. Barbara visited her mother frequently and felt very sorry for her. With all of this happening it forced Barbara to grow up and take control of raising the family. Barbara 's mother ended up jumping off a building and committing
While she might think that her plans are working, they only lead her down a path of destruction. She lands in a boarding house, when child services find her, she goes to jail, becomes pregnant by a man who she believed was rich. Also she becomes sentenced to 15 years in prison, over a street fight with a former friend she double crossed. In the end, she is still serving time and was freed by the warden to go to her mother’s funeral. To only discover that her two sisters were adopted by the man she once loved, her sister is with the man who impregnated her, and the younger sister has become just like her. She wants to warn her sister, but she realizes if she is just like her there is no use in giving her advice. She just decides that her sister must figure it out by
Her big brother Gavin is in jail because he was court shoplifting. Every week Bridget recieves a letter from Gavin most of the time she is crying because she misses him so much. she also finds a boy called Menzies which helps her through the tough time and Bridget helps Menzies through his tough time.
The main character throughout most of the book is “Verity”, or Julie. She is actually telling the story of Maddie, however, although her presence seems to still be main focus throughout the story. Halfway through the book, however, it switched to Maddie’s point of view, or “Kittyhawk”. With both of the girls, you can see the changes in them. They both develop greatly and you can see it through them by just looking at what they are afraid of. It mentions once in the story that Julie once said that she was afraid of growing old, and then she say’s later that she could eat her words: she is now afraid of never growing old. “But mainly so very, very stupid. I desperately want to grow old” (114). With Maddie, you can see her changing just by the way her want to live grows as she is trapped under cover for many months without being able to see home, her best friend, or even just simply someone that she is comfortable around.
... then meets Joy Duncan and Justine who just like him the way he is, they are not concerned with his social status, they like him because he is a kind, genuine boy. As the text goes on, we watch Carl and Justine?s relationship flourish into something bigger. This helps him with his self esteem. Justine shows him the true meaning of friendship and shows him that he is loved and worthwhile. There is also Carl?s relationship with Maddie. At the beginning of the story, Carl follows Maddie around because he notices her, she stuck out from a crowd. He then helped her on New Years Eve. Maddie was quite cruel to Carl but he never gave up and near to the end of the novel, they form a true friendship. Maddie, Carl and Justines friendship was very important because they all leaned on eachother through hard times, like the hard times Carl and Maddie were going through.
It is the day Cali will remember for the rest of her life, for it is the day Cali Millhouse discovers her uncle was murdered by a family member. It is Two o'clock and half of the town of Rosewood is piling inside the local funeral home. Mrs. Dunham pays her respects to everyone except Cali’s father, Steve, for Mrs. Dunham finds him to be evil. Maybe she is right, and he killed Cali’s uncle? Whether he was or not, it is still a sad day and she needed the comfort of her father. That morning the sheriff came by and informed Cali and her family that someone related to Keith killed him. Surprisingly, her father made a comment that he believed it was her Aunt Audrey. Audrey was a money hungry, mean, gold-digger who dated men for their money, and she knew Keith had a two billion dollar company that would be left to someone if he passed.Steve felt much animosity towards his older sister, and would vituperate her name any chance he got. Audrey blamed Steve as much as her blamed her, nevertheless you could feel their acrimony towards each
At the end she risks her life and becomes a pretty to become and experiment to David’s moms to test a cure to the brain lesions created when they go ... ... middle of paper ... ... o save them from going through a transformation that will change them forever. The moral of the book is you don’t have to get surgery to look a certain way.
Throughout the novel, crucial family members and friends of the girl that died are meticulously reshaped by her absence. Lindsey, the sister, outgrows her timidity and develops a brave, fearless demeanor, while at the same time she glows with independence. Abigail, the mother, frees herself from the barbed wire that protected her loved ones yet caused her great pain, as well as learns that withdrawing oneself from their role in society may be the most favorable choice. Ruth, the remote friend from school, determines her career that will last a lifetime. and escapes from the dark place that she was drowning in before. Thus, next time one is overcome with grief, they must remember that constructive change is guaranteed to
...he story with the various characters. Melinda’s acquaintance, Heather works hard at finding friends and becoming popular, but in the end she turns away from Melinda. The story is about the high school years. Many times when we are growing up we can’t wait to get there because we will be treated as adults, but the truth is the problems that come along when we are older can be difficult. The various clans of students help present the theme by showing us that there are many different types of people. The popular cheerleaders, the jocks, the geeks and those who are just trying to fit in. Melinda transforming the janitor’s closet symbolizes her hiding her feelings and Melinda’s inability to speak and tell people what happened to her. High school can be fun but unfortunately through the eyes of Melinda it was a very hard time.
Presumably, complications start to revolve around the protagonist family. Additionally, readers learn that Rachel mother Nella left her biological father for another man who is abusive and arrogant. After,
The main character Lisa was introduced as being scared and confused. “But now all the adults are gone”.This represents her change because she had been just a normal child until her parents had died along with every other adults and this had made them all confused and scared with nobody to look after them. She had tried to avoid other characters because she knew they would try to steal from her. When Lisa was around her brother she was kind and brave.”Please tell me a story”. This represent her being brave and kind because she had taken over the parent role by telling him stories every night and she was kind because she had made up the stories and they all had happy endings.However as the story went on she became harsh. Yet around her friends and her brother she was caring. Lisa had became very responsible and smart as time continued. “I called this meeting because…”. This represents her being smart and responsible because she had developed a group that kept everyone safe around their neighborhood. Lisa had used her brain and came up with an amazing idea that could have been the only reason anyone in the neighborhood was still alive a year later.
She feels guilty about leaving her father behind and not helping him, but she also feels guilt about not sharing her success with the others she left behind. The beauty she saw in being alone is now tainted with remorse, and the absence of the bustle of Hester Street gnaws at her. She is hurt and confused as to why she doesn’t feel the bliss she dreamed of form the gutter, and she joy at being a teacher is tainted by questions when she realizes “The goal was here,” with here being the position as a respected school teacher. She asks herself why she was “so silent, so empty” in the face of presumed achievement of her lifelong goal, her American dream (269). She is confused by the fact that the silence bothers her now, and that she is yearning for company. It is with a note of panic that she asks herself these questions regarding her emotional state, and it is because Sara is such a self-driven person that she doesn’t know how to respond to a nebulous feeling of dissatisfaction after her apparent victory. Sara is haunted by the suffering of the community she left behind, and she confesses that she didn’t want the rewards of achieving the American Dream “if they were only for [her]” (282). She misses her community from Hester Street, and wants to share the wealth with them in an attempt to feel the connections and family she had back then. She wants the reassurance and strength that comes with being a small part of a whole, and so she lets her father come back to fill a hole in her life. This completes the circle of Sara’s life story, in that she escapes her home on Hester Street and her father to make her fortune, she achieves this goal, but then
... is reminiscing about the fact that she messed up and it cost the boy’s life. The overall tone in the end of the novel is depressing as the governess’s actions and attitudes about current events tend to reflect the tone of the situation.