Edith Espinosa
4/15/14
English 102
Breaking Walls
People
tend to settle with what they have, whether they are happy or not, without
exploring their opportunities. They build walls over time and refuse to climb
over them to see what beauty holds for them on the other side. In Sherman
Alexie’s novel The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian there is
a boy named Arnold Spirit, known as Junior, who was a wall breaker, or more
like a tree climber. No matter what obstacles he had to face throughout his
life, from having water in his brain to experiencing the death of the people
dearest to him, he managed to see the bright side in everything and move
forward. Junior is a young indigenous boy living in a Spokane Indian
Reservation, where many don’t make it out. Growing up Junior knew the
reservation didn’t have much to offer and in fear of ending up either dead or
an alcoholic, Junior had to make it out. Junior decided to do something no one
has done before and simply leave the reservation in hopes of finding a better
future. By climbing to the very top of the tallest tree and breaking the
wall that divided the reservation and his opportunities, Junior realized that
if you want something you’ve never had, then you have to do something you’ve
never done.
A
daily struggle for Junior was bullying. His abnormalities such as his big head,
skinny body, and big feet made him the main target and punching bag of every
teenage boy in the reservation, even certain adults. Junior stated, “Everybody
on the Rez calls me a retard about twice a day. They call me a retard when they
are pantsing me or stuffing my head in the toilet or just smacking me upside
the head.” (4) This was nothing new to Junior, but he would find things to
distract himself from the torture he would receive in his community. Drawing
was one of Junior’s escapes from reality, “I draw because I feel like it might
be my only real chance to escape the reservation.”(6) Quite and alone in his
room Junior would draw cartoons of anything he could think about to keep
himself happy and away from danger outside his home. He believed this was one
of his talents that would someday make him rich and famous, “I think the world
is a series of broken dams and floods, and my cartoons are tinny little
lifeboats.” (6) Junior’s drawings represented the hidden motivation he had to
leave the reservation and become someone other than a target to everyone. He
understood from the beginning that leaving the reservation would be something
extremely difficult to accomplish but with the motivation Junior had he knew he
could make the impossible possible if he wanted.
Junior
had a reality check after he threw a textbook at his teacher, Mr.P. He realized
the reservation was, and always will be, too poor to give him the right
opportunities and resources he needed to be successful, “My school and tribe
are so poor and sad that we have to study from the same dang books our parents studied
from. That is absolutely the saddest thing in the world.” (31) At this point
Junior was so overwhelmed and disappointed in the education he has been receiving
that out of anger he ended up throwing the very same old textbook at Mr.P. Of
course Junior had to leave on suspension and you would assume Mr. P hated the
poor kid, right? Instead Mr.P came to Junior’s house and tried to convince
Junior to leave the reservation because it had nothing to offer to Junior, “You’ve
been fighting since you were born. You fought off that brain surgery. You fought
off those seizures. You fought off all the drunks and drug addicts. You kept
your hope. And now, you have to take your hope and go somewhere where other
people have hope.” (43) After the motivational conversation with Mr. P, Junior
realized the only place where hope was available was Reardan High School. Knowing
how his community would feel about this made Junior terrified to ever leave but
he knew what had to be done had to be done and there was a point in his life
where he had to become selfish and go after what he wanted without thinking
about the consequences involving the negative people in his life. Moving to
Reardan High School changed Junior in a way greater than you could imagine. Overtime
Junior found happiness, safety, opportunities, and love from a whole community
at Reardan. Yet he still had other obstacles at the reservation he has to overcome.
After
the death of his grandmother, sister, and a close family friend, Junior tried
his best to bring out the good memories from them and learn from each and every
one of them. When Junior’s grandmother died he realized nothing is forever and
you must forgive to move on, “My grandmother’s last action on earth was a call
for forgiveness, love, and tolerance.” (157) The motivation his grandmother
would give him was the strength he needed to overcome the pain he had over losing
his loved ones. He understood that no matter what happened in life there will
always be difficult things you had to deal with but if you had the right
mentality and support from loved ones a lot of things would be easier to accomplish.
From his sister he learned that chances should always be taken regardless of
the outcomes, “It was courageous of her to leave the basement and move to
Montana. She went searching for her dreams, and she didn’t find them, but she
made the attempt. And I was making the attempt, too. And maybe it would kill
me, too, but I knew staying on the rez would have killed me, too” (217) Junior
will always admire his sisters bravery for moving out of the house and finding
a way to make her dreams possible, even when an unfortunate event happened,
Junior held on to the simple thought that she at least tried to make her dream
possible.
By
climbing to the tallest tree Junior was able to realize how beautiful it was to
be at the very top and see things from a different perspective. He could see
how beautiful the community he was growing up in really was, but understood
that there were amazing opportunities waiting for him on the other side. Junior
was ambitious, driven, smart, and dedicated and knew that nothing would stop
him when it came to achieving him dreams, not even the tallest tree.
Edith, Excellent thesis and intro. really well articulated.
ReplyDelete1st body para: A daily struggle for Junior was bullying. This is not an idea, and it does not capture the analytical point you are going to make in the paragraph. This whole paragraph is too random, reread it what is the point.
2nd body para: this one is better, but the topic sentence is also vague and does not capture an idea. The concepts are more woven together and interesting in this one
3rd body: Best topic sentence and most focused of the three, could go deeper analytically but this is your most coherent paper.
Conclusion: Ok
You can write and you show command of all the basics--para development, using evidence, and sentence variety. You have a wonderful thesis and intro that your paper does not explore very well.
You are doing great in the class.
B-