Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Wednesday, January 9, 2019

My Name

From the Greek name meaning “manly”,
Which I aspire to be . . .

A multitude of men have had this name.
Two U.S. presidents,
Kings of Hungary,
A British prince,
A Scottish American steel-titan of the industrial revolution,
World famous artists,
A tennis champion,
and then;
there’s me . . .

My ancestors were from Scotland,
and my name manifests that heritage.
My first and last names linked by a middle name,
Which is the same as my dad´s . . .

Strong, simple
Bright, and clear.
As familiar as a copper penny,
easy to spell, and to say.
But a daunting history to meet.

Andrew Scott MacMillan

Monday, January 7, 2019

The Sun Is Also A Star


The Sun is Also a Star is a young adult romance novel written by Nicola Yoon. The two main characters, Natasha and Daniel, fall in love in a single day despite having nothing in common. Natasha is a Jamaican-American teenager who has lived in New York City for ten years as an undocumented immigrant. Daniel is a Korean-American teenager whose parents are pressuring him to attend Yale University and become a successful doctor. Natasha believes in science and factual information, while Daniel is poetic and not afraid to pour his heart out. After Natasha’s father gets arrested for drunk driving, her family is forced to leave the country and her world is shattered. Daniel is on his way to an interview with a Yale alumni and crosses Natasha’s path on a crowded street in New York City. Fate seems to keep pushing these two lovers together, as they can’t seem to let each other go. Daniel and Natasha challenge each other’s beliefs about love, whether its an abundance of chemicals signaling temporary arousal or a genuine connection between two soulmates. Daniel is convinced that he can make Natasha fall in love with him in twelve hours, and they begin to understand each other’s views and passions.
This intense novel helped me relate to Daniel’s character as he attempted to please his Korean parents and achieve his own dreams of becoming a poet. In The Sun is Also a Star, Daniel voiced his thoughts by stating, “If people who were actually born here had to prove they were worthy enough to live in America, this would be a much less populated country.” This quote reflects the struggles that many immigrant parents, including Daniel’s, had to face while moving out of their country. Daniel’s parents had to earn enough money in the family business of selling fish in order to arrive in America and open a haircare store for African-Americans. The parents of Daniel and Natasha continued to remind them of the many opportunities that they had. But, Daniel also realizes that he must pursue his own passions. Near the end of the book, he decides to not attend college, but rather focus on his writings. While respecting his parents, Daniel understands that he must lead his own life, and not their dreams. He wants to live life with no regrets, which displays why he is open and honest about his attraction towards Natasha.
Additionally, I learned an important value from Natasha’s experience in the novel. Natasha starts out as a smart, brave girl who is searching for a legal way for her family to remain in America. She believed in visible proof and data, not hope and faith. However, Natasha’s critical perspective of life began to change after meeting Daniel. She realized that destiny brought her and Daniel together, and not all relationships were temporary or insignificant. The Sun is Also a Star teaches readers that its okay to live a happy life without worrying about what will happen next. Throughout the book, you realize that living in the moment helps you connect more with the people that you care about. I would highly recommend this novel to anyone who believes in destiny, or someone who is more skeptical about life. The Sun is Also a Star will open your eyes to a new world where you can understand different cultures, personalities, and experiences.

Wednesday, January 2, 2019

Does Anything Matter?



Nihal Boina


Does Anything Matter?

Imagine spending your whole life working up to something very important to you and then one day realizing that none of it mattered, because your end goal did not have an appreciable effect on the world, much less the universe. Almost everyone has had, or will have, the thought of ‘Does anything we do matter?’; it’s a question that many spend their whole lives attempting to answer. This question is of top importance because if nothing did matter, then there would be no point of living life. When considering that we are pretty much nothing when compared to the everything surrounding us, the afterlife, the butterfly effect, and the Uncertainty Principle, I believe that there is no answer to the question. Instead of attempting to answer the question, we should choose to believe that life does matter, even if it doesn’t, because every living being would benefit.

Sometime in the 1920s, Edwin Hubble made the astonishing discovery that the universe is expanding, and at an increasing rate, or an acceleration, which basically meant that as time progresses, our presence in the universe becomes less and less noticeable. I currently occupy a space of around 24 cubic feet. The universe, on the other hand, is of a space of around 408 sextillion cubic light years (keep in mind that one light year is 31,039,141,970,400,000 feet). Through extensive calculation, this puts me as occupying 6.106 * 10-57 % of the universe-- .00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000006106. On top of this, there is also the possibility that there could be an infinite number of universes, which would make me 6.106 * 10-57 % of a grain of sand in the biggest beach ever; we are just too small in order to make any sort of appreciable change in our surroundings.

Put simply, life only matters if there is some sort of afterlife that becomes more pleasant/harsh based on our actions in the physical life; this is because if there isn’t some sort of afterlife that acts in this way then that would mean that our choices made in our physical life (our only life) wouldn’t have any, real, long-term repercussions. The reason why this is being brought up is because right now there is no concrete evidence for how an afterlife would exist and why an afterlife would exist for us, because, we are infinitesimally small when compared to everything. Even if an afterlife existed, it wouldn’t remain permanently because not even the universe is permanent, and will likely end itself through a heat death in about 101000 years due to the decaying of protons; this is contradicting to the whole idea of an afterlife because an afterlife is supposed to last forever.

The butterfly effect is the phenomenon that even the smallest actions in one moment of time can have the greatest effects in the future relative to that moment of time. It’s represented through the book 11/22/63 in which a young man named Jake finds a wormhole that brings him back to the year 1958, where he prevents the assassination of JFK, believing that he will make a positive change in the world. However, after taking out Lee Harvey Oswald and returning to his original time, he found earthquakes everywhere, half of the world destroyed due to a nuclear war, and his old home destroyed. Even the smallest actions, like the presence of a butterfly can have the greatest, most arbitrary effects. Because of the butterfly effect, it would be reasonable to believe that even the smallest actions that we have could make huge ripples in space-time.

In a book that I am currently reading, Stephen Hawking’s A Brief History of Time, the fabulous Stephen Hawking talks about something called Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle and how it changed our perception of the universe completely. Back in the 1900’s Newton’s laws of motion gave rise to the philosophy of determinism-- the idea that every action that we do can be predicted. What determinism meant was that nothing we do matters because every action we take can be determined; what is the point of living life if you already know the end result? Eventually, Werner Heisenberg came along with the Uncertainty Principle. What the Uncertainty Principle says is that we can’t know both the present position and velocity of a particle accurately because the more we know of one, the less we can now of the other; this meant that determinism is wrong, and that it’s impossible to accurately predict the actions of all parts of the universe.

From here on out, the evidence for whether or not anything we do matters tends to delve more and more into pseudoscience, or areas that can not be solved through the application of the scientific method (like astrology or religion), so I will have to solve this question through taking a step back. Let’s analyze what the universe would turn out to be if every intelligent living being believed in the idea that nothing matters vs. what the universe would turn out to be if every intelligent living being believed in the idea that everything matters. Through extensive analysis, if everyone believed that nothing matters, the universe would turn into a place of destruction, disorder, nihilism, and pessimism, proving bad for everyone. If everyone believed that everything we do matters, the universe would turn into a place of peace, pleasantry, order, and optimism, proving helpful for everyone.


When considering the arguments of expansion of the universe, the afterlife, the butterfly effect, that we choose our own fate, and the analysis of what would happen if everyone believed that nothing matters, I conclude that there is no answer to whether or not anything we do matters. Our physical life is very short as is and if we spend the majority of it searching for an answer we probably won’t ever find then we will miss out on most of the joys of life. Live life as if it matters, even if it doesn’t, because of the effects that it would pose on the the universe.







Works Cited





Hawking, Stephen. A Brief History of Time. Bantam Books, 2017.





King, Stephen. 11/22/63: Part 1. Scribner, 2011.

Some Publication Ideas for Semester 1 Portfolio Piece

Email submissions to the Rock Ridge Literary Magazine to rockridgelitmag@gmail.com

_______________________

Publish your best pieces on irockenglish@blogspot.com - requires a personal email and authorization from me

_______________________

Join/Submit to Write the World

_______________________

Try one of the contests below, or pick another one.

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/15/learning/out-of-the-classroom-and-into-the-world-70-plus-places-to-publish-teenage-writing-and-art.html




http://www.theprospect.net/writing-on-your-own-the-best-8-places-to-publish-teen-work-36877

________________________


Use Weebly, Wix or Google Sites to make an online portfolio of your best work.


Featured Post

Socratic Seminar - Community/Justice

Why do we feel the need to belong?  How do we maintain our individual identities and be part of a community? What are the benefits and draw...