Unreachable Essays

  • Unreachable Dreams in The Catcher in The Rye

    1131 Words  | 3 Pages

    Unreachable Dreams in The Catcher in The Rye Many people find that their dreams are unreachable.  Holden Caulfield realizes this in J.D. Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye.  As Holden tells his story, he recounts the events since leaving the Pencey School to his psychiatrist.  At first, Holden sounds like a typical, misguided teenager, rebellious towards his parents, angry with his teachers, and flunking out of school.  However, as his story progresses, it becomes clear

  • Free Essays - The Mirage in The Great Gatsby

    906 Words  | 2 Pages

    tried to reach for his vision, which is represented by the green light, but never seemed to achieve it because he didn't ever live in the life he had; Gatsby lived in the life he wanted. F. Scott Fitzgerald uses green light to represent the unreachable dream in the future that is always being sought after and wanted by Gatsby, but never obtained. In The Great Gatsby, the green light is visible to many and always distant. To some, like Tom, it is just a light, but to others, like Gatsby,

  • My Personal Goals

    892 Words  | 2 Pages

    goals are far stretched and sometimes even fairy-tale like, we tend to see life through a rose-colored glass, not taking into account the many sidetracks life throws our way. At that stage in life our goals tend to be less focused and somewhat unreachable. However, the process of growing up, or maturing, tends organized and center our goals, we learn to make compromises and set goals for our goals. There are different types of goals, short term and long term. I have learned to separate the many goals

  • Serendipity and Great Expectations

    1072 Words  | 3 Pages

    Serendipity and Great Expectations Directed by Alfonso Cuarón and written by Mitch Glazer, Great Expectations is a movie about the love of a man for an unreachable woman, and how fate ultimately brings them together. Serendipity directed by Peter Chelsom, is a more predictable romantic comedy that relies on destiny to bring a couple together, after the many coincidences that linked them to one another. Serendipity and Great Expectations both revolve around life’s great coincidences due to

  • The Effect of Telecommunications Technology on our Work and Play

    1753 Words  | 4 Pages

    roads more dangerous, yet having them in our cars has made it easier to call a tow truck when you're stranded, or to call a radio station to report gridlock. The same person that uses their phone in line at the store to get the advantage over the unreachable employee to gain status at the office, also loses status in the community due to the snickering behind them in line. The recent telecommunications improvements provide an opportunity for the appealing psuedo-self-employed aspects of telecommuting

  • Man Against Nature

    2102 Words  | 5 Pages

    Against Nature I perceived, and continue to perceive, a severe problem with our culture. We see the space we inhabit as not wild, as not nature. Nature is in the parks, is in the mountains we drive over to sun ourselves on the beach, in unreachable and savage depths of countries like Brazil and continents like Africa. “That is nature,” we say, “not this, not our home, not our workplace.” A favorite author of mine calls this an “estranged worldview”, a term she borrowed herself from Friedrich

  • Reaching The Unreachable

    696 Words  | 2 Pages

    How to reach the unreachable people groups the message of Jesus Christ? After defining the many terms of people groups and the location of where they can be found the task can be inaugurate. Christians around the world can obey the commission given by Jesus Christ to all believers. The commission is the make disciples of all nations, baptize them, and teach them to obey his commandments. With various ways of mass communication agencies, churches, families, individuals, leaders, organizations, and

  • Cloned Zoos

    4019 Words  | 9 Pages

    genes of species faced with extinction due to weak reproductive abilities or a population, which is split and unable to reach another population. A member of an endangered species can be cloned and reintroduced into the original or a distant and unreachable population. Another option is the member being cloned can be brought back to life after it has died in order that its genes are still part of the gene pool. An estimated one hundred species go extinct each and every day, which means that approximately

  • Cant Buy Me Love/3 Short Stories (check This Out)

    1232 Words  | 3 Pages

    wealthy. The middle class was virtually not existent. All of these income groups, including those characterized in our three stories, wanted money because it supposedly brought happiness, but were actually struggling to cling to the intangible, unreachable feeling of love. If money leads to love, Dexter Green has bought it a thousand times over. He wanted not association with the glittering things and glittering people [but] the glittering things themselves” even if they come in the shape of an

  • Atlantis

    1013 Words  | 3 Pages

    has effectively minimized the legend and the fantastic rumor, though to make up for this it has generated falsities not as lavish but just as interesting. Satellites have mapped and studied the earth, leaving only a space frontier that is as yet unreachable. But standing out is a charming fantasy the modern world has yet to verify or condemn: the lost continent of Atlantis. The father of the modern worlds perception of Atlantis is Plato (circa 428- circa 347 b.c.). (1) The Greek philosopher spoke

  • Ethernet

    1405 Words  | 3 Pages

    technological advancements. Just as the utilization of fire and carving of the wheel gave us advantages over the perils of life, the networking of computers has brought an unreachable far off world closer to each and every one of us. First and foremost we are now able to nearly instantaneously share information with an unreachable world. The engineering that made this possible began not on some other planet, or from the depths of a holy shrine. But from the ingenuity of a partnership of companies

  • Autobiography

    1525 Words  | 4 Pages

    We had finally done it! We were good enough to play on stage. We had sold all our tickets, which 100 initially felt like such an unreachable amount. Archaic was finally going to be playing the Battle of the Bands at Peabody's Down Under in Cleveland. We were all friends to begin with, no scouting to find the best guy for the position, just 4 guys that had grown up together wanting to have fun. Joe was the singer. He was the typical singer, somewhat taller, skinny, long scraggly black hair that

  • My experience throughout English 101

    605 Words  | 2 Pages

    please my professor or to fill the basic requirement to pass English. I always felt that my writing ability was never enough for my professors throughout the previous years. They always wanted clear and concise essays, which for some reason was unreachable by me. However, starting college and taking English 101 helped me with my weaknesses and changed my technique of writing essays. My experience in English 101 taught me to write to my fullest potential and to write what I felt; rather then writing

  • Faulkner's Writer's Duty In Growing Up

    960 Words  | 2 Pages

    and compassion and pity" to assist the human spirit in conquering and becoming something more than it was before. Why is it that writing today lacks so much of the substance that Faulkner speaks about? Is it the American population's desire for unreachable fantasies? Within the thousands of books that are deficient in truth and are willing to be temporarily "blown up", there are some books that fulfill many of Faulkner's wishes—one of these books is Growing Up by Russell Baker. Somewhere between the

  • The Unreachable Dream

    614 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Unreachable Dream Human nature is the concept of a set of characteristics that most humans have in common, including ways of thinking, feeling and acting. These inherent characteristics affect a person’s impulse and their decision making ability. When a person is presented with a problem, human nature takes over and resolves the problem at hand. When Jay Gatsby discovers the person that he loves, Daisy, is married to someone else, he tries everything to get her back. His attempt to achieve his

  • The Baby Can Sing and Other Stories by Judith Slater

    1889 Words  | 4 Pages

    all of the stories tell the tales of going off away from the usual or the norm. Let's assume for the sake of argument that Judith Slater wasn't available to explain why she did what she did with the book and stories involved. The writer is unreachable for questions or comments for the majority of the time, so much that the idea of contacting the actual writer is often not thought of. Without knowing anything, the first story "The Baby Can Sing" is a phenomenal introduction to the collection

  • Size Does Matter

    2079 Words  | 5 Pages

    shoe that had eluded me many times before. As I marched on through the halls, I was distracted by an intense glow. Before long, I found myself gradually progressing toward the mystifying light. There it was, basking in its splendid wonder on an unreachable pedestal, a modern day Holy Grail. My thoughts were abruptly interrupted. “Welcome to Footaction. How may I help you?” I was instantly confronted by the typical, cheerful greeting I received upon entering any shoe establishment. “Yes I am

  • The Morality and Utility of Artificial Intelligence

    4225 Words  | 9 Pages

    his or her own belief concerning what an AI program should be able to do. Without a consensus as to what constitutes intelligence, it is impossible to determine with universal agreement whether or not AI has succeeded, is achievable, or is an unreachable dream. In considering the definitions and implications of Artificial Intelligence, many philosophers have reached extremely different conclusions. Alan Turing, author of the Turing Test, believed that an intelligent machine would be able to

  • Wild Bill Hickok

    3462 Words  | 7 Pages

    were very religious people. They would make James wear a stiff, uncomfortable suit to church on Sundays. This caused a huge fight every week at the Hickok home. James was not close with his parents. His father believed him to be a dreamer with unreachable dreams. Nevertheless, James did his choirs so to keep the family happy. For many years Alonzo operated a station on the Underground Railroad. James and his two brothers and two sisters would often help with the work. It was during this time

  • How Is The American Dream Unreachable In The Great Gatsby

    710 Words  | 2 Pages

    change in the lifestyle of hundreds and thousands of people, it was a new way of living. After the stock market crash in 1929, life seemed to be meaningless, and it was too difficult to be someone that was carefree, the Great American Dream became unreachable. In the great American novel, The Great Gatsby, author F. Scott Fitzgerald uses the character Gatsby to demonstrate the difficulty of obtaining the Great American Dream. Firstly, the American Dream was a vision that varied for everyone, for some