Saturday, February 23, 2019

What Set You from, Fool

After reading this member What Set You From, Fool? I must admit that I am confused. It was difficult to determine what the point of it was. The germ express some can points of the difficulties he faced growing up as a slow man in Los Angeles, however the phrase seemed more of a novel than a statement to the end. It is possible that having grget up in impudent York City myself, the difference in culture will be the tenableness for my confusion. Overall, most of the peck is awkwardly written and hard to follow. Im non sure if this was d unmatchable intentionally.The author technique of switching rump and forth between Standard English as he expressed himself through intellectual thoughts and words to what seemed like forced ebonics. In my opinion, the article did not flow smoothly at all. I found myself having to reread and translate words to grasp the full meaning of sentences. Having to continuously do this lessened my interest in the reading. However, like the connectio n the author tries to cod between shadowys having as tough a time being true into the black community as whites do.He mentions a few instances where on that point was an entire thought process involving with certain situations that could have been disastrous for both races (the white boys greeting blacks using the word nigga and the author go into a store to buy St. Ides with a friend and encountering gang members). It was enkindle that the author was born as a black man that until approximately middle school age, had never experienced the urban life. Apparently, onward he moved to L. A. , he was surrounded by people who called him coon.However, he didnt know how to react and/or if to react, so when he arrived in LA in their school system and was called a common raccoon he immediately associated it with what they (whites) called him in Santa Monica and identified himself as well as the other kids were. In Santa Monica he was called a nigger there he hadnt associated it to anything because it was never defined to him until he arrived in LA when he heard the students refer to him as well as themselves as such. That was when he associated the word to himself and the colored people he saw there. His mom taught him that Nigga was a bad word and that he should not be oneHe finally had a reference group for the slurs and bullshit, he had tolerated for golf-club years not knowing what it was just knowing that he should not be one. Experiencing the life in L. A. had an obviously deep effect on him. He went from a happy go lucky kid to a hyper-vigilant state of mind. There seemed to have been a period where his identity was vague. He was uncomfortable cruising on the edge of social circles (hanging out with white and black friends), thinking as a activist (visiting a friend whos parents were afro-centric), until he read the autobiography of Malcolm X and seemed to finally develop his own identity.The author despised games (rituals that many kids endured amon gst each other whether it was on the courts or in the streets to be apart of a set in lay out to survive). Whether the players are white or black (curiously no mention of Latinos), the author seemed genuinely annoyed at the thought of playing any games at all. I feel the author adopted a cant we all just get along theme. Overall, this was just an ok piece not very enjoyable and very confusing if that was the aim of the generator then he has done his job

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