Friday, March 25, 2011

Take a peek on Native American marriage websites

Hi guys, here are some websites which I used for my final paper. I viewed each of them carefully and these websites are really helpful and interesting to have a peek!
"American Indian Wedding Dress And Ancient Traditions ."

"What Is Marriage? A Native American View." 

 "Indian Marriage." 

 "Native American Marriage Traditions: American Indian Rituals in Love and Marriage."

 "Native American Traditions - WeddingDetails.com."

 "Native American Wedding Ceremony - LoveToKnow Weddings."

 "American Native Food."



artistic responses

By the time we discussed about the idea doing the artistic response, actually we spent time on how to do an interesting project to sparkle people’s attentions and also can doing it with passion for fun.
We’ve been thinking about doing a presentation or telling story, but those things might be not that impressive to do for people’ having a such good memories on our artistic response work. Lastly we decided to do a three dimensional house show, like each one of us got to pick one or two characters from the book, then we can choose the pictures of them from the book and scan those and fill out the picture with color. We need to let those pictures standing up to let people see them clearly, which like Hello Kitty’s mini house show.
I must say we have working on this project whole afternoon, and we also made some trees, sun and mountain backgrounds to make it looks better. After I graduated from primary school, this project would be the first time doing this kind of artistic work. First I thought I already forgot to do this kind of thing for a really long time which I might not that good on it. But during the process we were making the house, I felt really good and did it as better as I can. After I came to the U.S., there were more presentations or speeches we could work in group but not this kind of fun artistic works.
Compare with doing a presentation with whole pages of words, I really like and enjoy that afternoon I spent with my friends. Thank you for Seimy, Yuhua, Heng, Yi, and Zexian. You guys are really nice, that’s why we can do this project excellent!

Discussion on Summary of Normative Communication Styles and Values

Since I was taken a physical course, which is organizational behavior, I chose this article to make some discussion about communication and the relationship between different organizations.
            Actually, the organizational behavior is kind of talking about how to work in an organization and do well, which is emphasis the leadership and initiative communication are really important. Beyond our big topic this quarter, different tribes might need to communicate sometime, but the difficulties of their attitude on communicating with others or some kind personal problems block their information exchange, spirit interflow and culture sharing.
            In the reading, there's a good example of disability people's communication problems. Some of them have communication barriers like speaking or cannot able to given eye contacts with normal people. When normal people tried to speak with them, we should avoid to ask disrespect questions or even laugh at those people. This kind of behaviors should called politeness, which is the manners people know because of morality.
            The Summary of Normative Communication Styles and Values chart is really helpful on analyzing the differences between ethnic groups, in order to see the invisible differences and difficulties in communication style and values. As a self assessment, I think it's working on tell ourselves what kind of communication styles or patterns we are, and the purpose of analyzing ourselves is finding the right way to fit in the larger groups to communicate with more people.

Response to Indian education

Old work sharing again~

This short reading by Sherman Alexie includes the scenes about his childhood from first grade to twelfth grade. Each piece of the stories is really short, which gives readers blanks to fill in our personal response. The way he wrote doesn't have too much discuss by himself, but in a inconspicuous way to tell the truth and also get the same feeling in readers.
            Since I just started to read, the heavy powerlessness and hopelessness are all the way around the whole article until the last transition which Junior Polatkin transfer to the nearby junior high to get higher education. That's point of bright thing in the paper, and also gives me a little hope for Junior's future, which he knew about looking forward to schooling but not parties or farming.
            As an Indian child who needed to study or even live in white people's world in that time is really a hard thing to do. By the time "white supremacy" as the highest slogan, the little Junior suffered a lot from the racial discrimination and white boys' ignorant and egotism. When I was reading, I tried to think about if I were Junior, what would I do or interact with those people who was keep trying to tease me every day. The answer is very deep despair. As a little child, the thing he can do is nothing. The only way to protect himself is wait until the time he can out of the Reservation school. Glad to have Randy when he was in sixth grade, which is also the boy was Junior's soon-to-be first and best friend to tell him how to fight with white boys.
            The sentences in the reading are all substantial, which sparkle my interests about the Native American's life. I enjoyed Sherman's work very much.

Unforgettable History

By the last night this quarter, I reviewed my assignments done which are really meaningful for me to see how I get closed to Native American culture. This is the work of the Reflection on Seattle Civil Rights and Labor History Project website. I'd love to share with you guys.
 
As I view this website, I got a lot of information about the unique civil rights history, which is the particular part of time of Civil Rights movements in Seattle I didn't know before. This multi-media website provides the important history of Seattle's civil rights movements with videos, slideshows, photographs, documents, movement histories, personal biographies and other resources that explore various issues, incidents and people.
            The Seattle Civil Rights and Labor History Project is dedicated to social movements and labor history in the Pacific Northwest. It is directed by Professor James N. Gregory and Trevor Griffey of the University of Washington. This project represents the collaboration between the social community organizations and UW faculty and students.
            I followed "Tour the Project" sign to know the Seattle Civil Rights and Labor History Project step by step. There are hundreds Veterans of Seattle's civil rights campaigns' activist oral histories told by streaming videos. Everyone of them was participating the Civil Rights struggle. I watched few of them, those stories are really impressed. I can feel what they've been though from their experiences.
            Research reports are the part to get deeper understanding of the Seattle Civil Rights event. Those essays are not just including the civil rights' process, also work with special incidents and people. The pictures are helped to illustrate the stories more vividly and specific.
            About the "Segregated Seattle", I knew about from the 1910s through the 1960s, Seattle was  a segregated city. The "white supremacy" covered all over the America. People of color which almost everyone besides white people are all excluded from most jobs, schools, stores or other commercial establishments, even hospitals. Although the fact is really hard to believe, but the "UNFAIR" signs on the pictures proved the truth. People who were not white must be fight for their rights for about half century.
            In Seattle's Ethnic Press, those newspapers which published in different languages. All of these are now collected by University of Washington. The topic is almost about helping their particular community. These newspapers were the evidences for the Seattle Civil Rights and Labor History in the last century and a half.
            There's one sentence in the "Seattle's Civil Rights Organizations" page is my personal favorite in the website, which is "Others came and went, making contributions that can be too easily forgotten if we are careless with our past". Thank you for Trevor Griffey who is the man researched and written the list of the organizations of civil rights activism in Washington State. From 1910s, there were already some organizations get started to struggle for their civil rights. During the process of the event, which through 1970s, more and more organizations were coming out. All of these organizations have contributed to the struggle for civil rights in the Seattle region. To my surprise, some of these organizations still work until today. The civil rights built them, and time turns them to timeless. Because of the work from all the people who were working in these organizations, the Seattle Civil Rights and Labor Activism is unforgettable.
            In the special sections, there are about fourteen little history stories are recorded since the Seattle Civil Rights struggle started. As long as I read and see, people's endeavors  are the things we'll never forget. From the event, we can see their works, and especially their spirits. Like the Seattle's Asian American movement from 1969 to 1973, CORE and the Central Area Rights Campaigns from 1960 to 1968 and other event including the strikes and riots. Those Americans were trying to get their rights.
            As an international student, I didn't have get enough information about this event which cost people over half century. From this time viewing the website, I deeply get the idea of the spirits from the people who have working for the Seattle Civil Rights and Labor Activism. This project helped to change the state law. From my standpoint, the project really did an excellent work on helping people fight for the civil rights.
            Lastly, thanks for all the people who have been participated into the Seattle Civil Rights and Labor Activism and especially the people who created this website for people to view all these multi-media information. Hopefully I'll get more history knowledge from some other researches. The Seattle Civil Rights and Labor History Project will be engraved in people's hearts.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

The power fights with poverty in India

As soon as I read "The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian" by Sherman Alexie, the character who gives me the strongest feeling is the Indian boy who has over-sized head, hands and feet, poor eyesight so wears ugly, lopsided glasses since he was three, which made him "looking like a three-year-old Indian grandpa". And also has lisps and stutters usually when he talks. All since he was born with "water on the brain" which is born with too much cerebral spinal fluid inside his skull, and the surgery didn't successfully remove all the fluid outside his skull. Poor experience, humor way to say the story of Arnold Spirit Junior.
            If you want me to say the first impact of the whole novel, I'd love to say that Spokane reservation's incredible poverty and bad environment. The basic living situation of the reservation makes the people feel hopeless and dreamless. If they do have a dream, it would be easily broken by the poverty, low education or other difficulties. In the novel, Junior's mother's very smart and likes reading a lot which even can be a "human tape recorder", Junior's father plays piano and saxophone and who is also a good singer who sings "like a pro", Mary's Junior's sister who likes writing and for several years she can stayed at her basement room for 20 hours for writing her works, Junior dreamed to be a cartoon artists. All the members of Junior's home got talents, but the only one who's brave enough and successfully stepped out of the reservation and going to attend a white high school twenty-two miles from his home in order to get higher education.
            Junior first hated all the things around his bad decision, because that made him got teased and tormented by kids in the reservation who think he's an "apple" which is red on the outside and white on the inside, and the kids in the new high school since once one boy asks "Did you know that Indians are living proof that niggers fuck buffalo?". Every day Junior's biggest problem is getting to the far-off school, because his father is often too drunk to drive him or lacks of money for gas, so he has to thumb a lift. The life he has likes daytime in the white school and nighttime in the reservation makes him a part-time Indian. I'm wondering if he knows who himself is or not, because the two sides' pressures all day long might make people driving crazy. In the other way, he got so many troubles on the way to get succeed on education, such like being an Indian, body shorts and poverty of all over the reservation.
            Since I feel more interested in the poverty in India, one of the main topic all book long, I did some researches online about poverty. As the topic that is widespread in India, and we called India as "third of the world's poor". According to the World bank estimates, 80% of India's population lives on less than $2 a day and 41% of India falls below the international poverty line of US$1.25 a day. The data shocked me, because their living spends a day are even not more than a cup of coffee. A study by the Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative using a Multi-dimensional Poverty Index (MPI) found that there were 645 million poor living under the MPI in India, 421 million of whom are concentrated in eight north India states of Bihar, Chattisgarh, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal. What a unbelievable number to even think about.
            On the way doing the research, I realizes the percentage of Population Below Poverty Line is decreased year by year, which means different kind of programs works. The government has initiated and sustained those helping programs since independence to help the poor attain self sufficiency in food production and the supply of basic commodities. Some of the programs are intend to help part hardly poor situations' people to get enough food, but they are also developed to be the program can help people get jobs and earn money by themselves. The relieving is just the way to get people out of foodless situations in short time to quickly solve the problems, but not the way can be doing in long-term. From my point of view, the only way to get people out of poverty for good is doing works and trying to get the advantage from their areas, in order to get into the economics circle globally. The final goal is being one important and necessary role in the global economy development to drive India out of the list on "poverty".
            Back to the book, Sherman Alexie was using humor to soften the sometimes difficult and emotional stories. The loveable but struggled "Junior" makes readers  cannot help but root for. There's one plot in the book which is the most impressed part for me to get into the strongest feel Junior would love to delivered to us. Which is one the first day of high school, Junior received the textbooks from his teacher Mr. P, and he just realized the book he was handling is the one that his mother had been used. And his mother was given birth to Junior by thirty years old, which means the textbook is from at least forty or fifty years ago. Then he was too angry to throw the textbook, and just ended up  on the Mr. P. After this, the school suspended Junior, but he got the understanding from Mr. P. They were talking about the reason Junior threw the book and Junior's sister Mary which is the girl spent most of time in their home's basement. Mr. P have been seeing so many bright Spokane Indians, and none of them keeping their dreams and going outside the reservation. He's been losing hopes again and again, which Junior gives him a little bright light about someone will doing better and having better life than all the people in the reservation now. And Mr. P gave Junior suggestions to encourage him going outside to leave the reservation, "You can't give up. You won't give up. You threw that book in my face because somewhere inside, you refuse to give up". After hearing from Mr. P, Junior decided to transfer to Reardan, the rich white people high school. This part of story is telling me a truth about the situation in the reservation. Everyone faces to poverty day by day, but none of them have the guts to fight with it. People are like infected by the "poverty disease", since there's no first recovery example then none of them even think about it. All the people are beaten by poverty, but also the thing  inspire and stimulate Junior to go getting higher education for better life. People who are staying in the reservation choose not to strive with their current situation are like paying their lives on building the number of people who suffered under poverty all the life larger and larger.
            There are so many difficulties and obstructions from the reservation, his ex-best friend Rowdy, poverty situation, the Reardan's high school and the pressure from the inside of himself on the way he was going to get succeed. As bad as his condition like, as more as positive power from his never give up attitude will send to reader' hearts.
            Later on in the story, things getting to be better all the way about Junior. He met the girl named Penelope who is the girl he loved. And he got to be the leader of the varsity basketball team, one time had a competition with the team of his hometown reservation. Junior's opponent is Rowdy, which is the boy mistook him and broke up since Junior transferred to the high school.  But there are some more tragedies around Junior's life, all of his family except him were dead from different reasons. Through all of the experiences, Junior got a sense of who he is and where he belongs. The life he caught between two conflicting worlds of loyalty and responsibility are finished, and there's a kind of brighter life out there in the future is waiting for Junior and Penelope.
            The sad things happened in Junior's family is kind of a small sign of the people who lives in the reservation's hopes. The death represents the hopeless from my point of view. The sadness is the comparison Sherman gave readers to think of the differences of how different lives look like. But it's also told me the spirit of Junior's, doing the right thing which is got to try all the time for the life we would love to have and enjoy is always the way we should go.
            Sometimes waiting just making things more complicated to solve and nothing helped for the current truth. Nowadays, there are still billions of people are suffering by poverty. Outing of food and water is what they are facing now. The things we got from the book is in order to discover the inside power within our body to see what we can do and what we need to do for those people who need us. Sherman Alexie is one of the most excellent writer in my mind as I know, because he successful writing the life of an Part-time Indian, and writing "Junior" this character into our hearts.

Two Native American poems and prayers recommendations

Sun Tracks

Atoni (Choctaw)

The Track of the sun
across the Sky
leaves its shining message,
Illuminating,
Strengthening,
Warming,
us who are here,
showing us we are not alone,
we are yet ALIVE!
And this fire......
Our fire.....
Shall not die


The Deer Star
Hear now a tale of the deer-star,
Tale of the days a-gone,
When a youth rose up for the hunting
In the bluish light of dawn --
Rose up for the red deer hunting,
And what should a hunter do
Who has never an arrow feathered,
Nor a bow strung taut and true?
The women laughed from the doorways, the maidens mocked at the spring;
For thus to be slack at the hunting is ever a shameful thing.
The old men nodded and muttered, but the youth spoke up with a frown:
"If I have no gear for the hunting, I will run the red deer down."
He is off by the hills of the morning,
By the dim, untrodden ways;
In the clean, wet, windy marshes
He has startled the deer a-graze;
And a buck of the branching antlers
Streams out from the fleeing herd,
And the youth is apt to the running
As the tongue to the spoken word.
They have gone by the broken ridges, by mesa and hill and swale,
Nor once did the red deer falter, nor the feet of the runner fail;
So lightly they trod on the lupines that scarce were the flower-stalks bent,
And over the tops of the dusky sage the wind of their running went
They have gone by the painted desert,
Where the dawn mists lie uncurled,
And over the purple barrows
On the outer rim of the world.
The people shout from the village,
And the sun gets up to spy
The royal deer and the runner,
Clear shining in the sky.
And ever the hunter watches for the rising of that star
When he comes by the summer mountains where the haunts of the red deer are,
When he comes by the morning meadows where the young of the red deer hide;
He fares him forth to the hunting while the deer and the runner bide.

When you feel upset

Now I'm feeling extremely upset and anxious with no reason at all. I'm not like this in normal, but I do want to drop some words to simply express some easy-understanding stuff here for myself getting better hopefully.

Yesterday, I watched a Chinese TV show, which is about a boy who had really bad life and he still kept it up to now. He has very strong minds inside himself which is also the thing supported him for more than 20 years. The host said something I just cannot drop from my head, if sometime you feel too hard to go, just tell yourself, things could be a lot worse than you are facing now.

Several years ago, I read a article on someone's blog. It's kind of a long time ago, even I cannot remember where or whose of that website. Well, still one sentence in her post, if sometime you feel too hard to go, just tell yourself, things always get a lot better after the worst time.

Actually I always tell myself the second sentence which I read from the blog for many years when I got troubles or hard times to go through. It worked good for me. But until now, I feel much better with the host's saying.

I always imaging my hard condition is the worst in the world, there's no worse it can be. But I just realize there are more and more people are going through harder time, and those difficulties are the things I even cannot think about.

There's one old slang in China, "Shan wai you shan, ren wai you ren.", which means there's always higher mountain outside your sight, and there's always better person outside your world.

Things happened without order, and sometimes God just messed them up to make us stand in a really deep hole. It's too dark to see anything. But we gotta know, sun will come out, and lights will fill up the darkest black in our heart.

Peer review reflection

Based on my partner Yuhua Jiang(Sherry)’s topic proposal and Annotated Bibliography, I did some works on reading and thinking about her topic. Since we’ve been discussed and read a lot of information about Native American’s culture and stories. There’s one sentence I saw from Sherry’s topic proposal which I think listed her main thesis she wanted to talk about in her final paper :“ I want to explore the current situation and the reason of native American children's bad behaviors and high level of academic fail.” By the way knowing her thesis, I tried to search more useful websites for her. I think those might be the things she interested in to have a look for her paper.

From the feedback I received from Sherry, I think she really spent time on my stuff. She actually gave me a lot of useful and interesting suggestions about how she thought about my paper and what kind of things she wanted to know more around my topic. She did good work from a reader’s lens to kindly tell me what kind of things or points I should be able to work on, which is making my paper better.

From this peer review exercise, I have been doing a lot of communication with my partner, in order to know how we think about each other’s paper and useful suggestions for making our papers better. Sometimes I think paper’s good or not is based on different people’s personal views’ different. The paper we wrote is just from the one lens to see the things, but peer review is doing a good job on making our works more active from mutli-lens. So the peer review exercise helped me a lot. Whatever I looked my partner’s work or the feedback I received are all the things I think pretty interesting and I’d love to do since our goals’ the same.

I was able to give Sherry my useful feedback I think. I looked up her works which I think she already done a good job on collecting information and stated her thesis to follow in her final paper. But I think peer review’s one of the best points is get to know partners’ suggestions about what they want to know more about your topic. As Sherry’s topic is about Native American education’s current situation, I thought some of my resources would be helpful for her to know more about Native American’s general civilization and culture, also those information are not just based on a specific part about Native Americans. Those sources are actually could be well used on any topic about Native American culture. Also I found several websites that are fantastic to working on and collecting stories from.

Yes, it did. The suggestions I received from Sherry are pretty easy to understand and most of those are widely developed in my paper. She tried to make suggestions detailed, which better to understand correctly. By the day I finished my thesis stated, I think there should be more things I wanted to add but no more directions on my mind. Sherry’s peer review as a good guide for me to know what things I wanted to explore more and create fully.

Thanks for the process I went with Sherry, and I actually got so much help from our works and feedbacks. I’d love to know other people’s suggestions and here is the chance for both of us doing better on our papers. After I wrote this peer review reflection, I think I’m going to keep touch with Sherry to see is there anything else we can give to each other.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Almost the end of the quarter

Reminded by Seimy's post, it's almost the end of the quarter which there's just one week more left.


As I'm working on my final research paper, I want to share something with Melissa and my classmates. First I want to thank all of you guys, I had a very happy time in ENGL&102. Before I took this class, I thought it would be horrible because I've heard some of my friends who had already taken this class's comments. But I'd love to say this class is quite nice with our topic setting this quarter. Native American's culture is a absolutely new area I touched this quarter. On the way I explored more and more about their culture, I feel their civilization and traditions are magically interesting to know. All the works we did are the things to prove the way we are getting deeper and deeper on their culture discovering.


The project we did, the movie we watched and the paper stuff we wrote are all the memories we made, which are pretty precious to remember. Later on we will welcome the spring break time, the spring smell is getting closer too. Hope you guys have a great time on Spring!

Black Gold

A film reflection I did about "Black Gold", a good documentary film of coffee and trade. Just think there should be some conections between this film and our topic this quarter, like poverty, people who are low-educated and something else. I'd love to share my work with you guys, to see if we are thinking about this in the same way. :)
On the day I spend three dollar for one cup of coffee and feel quite nice with the unique taste of baked coffee technology by Starbucks, I watched this documentary film, a film about coffee, trade and unfair economic transaction among the world.
            At the first of the Black Gold, the leader from the local farmer cooperatives asked coffee farmers, guess how much a cup of coffee in Europe? All the people were shaken heads and said they don't know. Then the person asked, then how much a cup of coffee in your hometown? A coffee farmer said thirty cents. The leader told those farmers, a cup of coffee could sell to three dollars. Those farmers were silent by that time, someone asked soon, then why we just make a little money?
            Yes, why? We know on the day we are enjoying the economic globalization, all over the world are consummated the coffee beans produced from Ethiopia. The truth is the bottom farmer in this industry chain cannot even earn 1/10 of the final products' prices as their wages. Most of them are working hard for walking out of poverty or pursue education. But the people who watched this film know, their future that waiting for them out there are usually not that bright.
            Black Gold emphatically tells the story of the whole industry chain of coffee. For the global coffee industry, the final decision of price making on the hand of the New York stock exchange department's brokers and big buyers. The top four largest companies: Kraft, Nestle, Proctor Gamble and Sara Lee control the more than 70% of the import and export trades of the coffee beans in the world. They are not directly get the acquisition from Africa, but rather through middlemen or Africa middle local suppliers. Then they tried to seek the profitable price of financial derivatives market price to sell the original beans to the roasters all over the world. The process intermediate often pass through six or seven links to the final make-up, so the layer of detail prices are higher than the cost more than ten times. The prices' difference is not the only inequality, which the key question is the African farmers in the whole negotiation mechanism are absolutely out of the chance to speak up.
            The  Farmer cooperative organizations represents a kind of trying, like the peasant association in China before. The FCO put the production of coffee farmers organized and increase their ability to negotiations. Even step out of the intermediate links across the supply chain, just approach international processors directly. The process is very difficult, like persuading those farmers to join a peasant,  to earn money into education and other basic construction but not immediately points out.
            There's no answer in the film, but it shows the facts. The fact told me, if you spend a few cents when you drink coffee, and pay more attention on the products of "Fair Trade Certified", those farmers can get their actual gains.
            As you know, we are all together.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

the most fun project I've done so far


Don't you guys think the artificial artwork about Native American story "The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian" is excellent?
We spent a lot of time on thinking about what kind of project we would be willing to do and made it more interesting and nicie. This is kind of a pop idea for us to do, which I think it gave me quite nice time working with my partners. They are pretty good and we really had a good time to be together.
When we finished this big family of Junior's story.
As long as I got to know the book written by Alexie Sherman, this is the happiest time I had. Especially thanks for all of my friends. Love you guys!

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Native American marriage and wedding culture

      Accroding to my interests about Native American which the topic I'd  love to research in my final research paper, I chose Native American marriage and wedding culture to be the major thing to talk about. Since I think there are too much information about the negative or leggard stuff around the tribes. I seriously wanted to find some interesting and beautiful things to share with people.

      By the way I always think everything formed with reason and the reason of the Native American culture must be great since there's long time history and people's works behind. On the way to find the happiest and best thing to make everybody feels good, that'd be getting married.

      I thought every girl has a dream about the day getting married. I've been thought about that day for hundreds times for simply imaging how nice "the day" would be.

      So monogamy is thus found to be the prevalent form of marriage throughout the continent. The economic factor is everywhere potent, but an actual purchase is not common. The marriage bond is loose, and may, with few exceptions, be dissolved by the wife as well as by the husband. The children generally stay with their mother, and always do in tribes having maternal clans. Marriage's main idea and how the Native American's marriage traditions formed, talked from history and culture of the Native American Civilization.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

By the time creating the topic proposal

As long as we get started to learn the Native American studies, I really got a lot of information and interesting culture background. I was really curious on other countries' culture and human background when I was a little girl. The special tradtions, beautuful clothing, great food history and also Native American's postive attitude are all the reason I intoxicated by the beauty of the distinctive Native American Tribes.

Now I just realized that I've seen some Native American have been showed in the movies I've watched before, and I started felt interested in them by that time.

I'm happy to read the book written by Sherman Alexie. He's a great writer, also a great part-time Indian maker. I have to say the book impressed me so much, and I cannot forget some pieces in the book until now. The way Sherman created the book is kind of special humor, but made people hard to forget. Anyway, I believe the life in nowadays Indian tribes should not be that hard anymore. I'd love to explore more interesting and happy stuff from their everyday life. So I chose the topic of "marriage". Hope to know their another part of live, which is the word "love". Since sometimes people feel hard to think of love happened in Native Americans, or that's not the point which people would focus on.

We all talked about poverty, poor-education or bad living situation around Native American. "The is no lack of beauty in the world but the eyes of finding it." That's what I'm going to do. Being the eyes of finding beauty in Native American Tribes, doing the works on describe the most romantic Native American Wedding.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Someday, everything will be fine

Something about Junior which happened in his high school and reservation are kind of little stories combined as a novel. And what Junior did and thought is the thing I learnt from him, someday everything will be just fine.

He has congenital deficiency. He got bunch of teasing and mocking. He was the only native American in his high school. He was nonperson in the school. He couldn't recognize who himself is. He lost his best friend's trust. He lived in the poorest hometown, and walked to the high everyday. He was alone. He was discouraged. He was thinking about give up. He just a normal person, but has much more than that on the shoulders.

But anyway, Mr. P tried a lot to save him. Doing suggestions, and giving him the biggest confidence. Mr. P put his hope on Junior. This is a thing. When someone really relies on you, you must keep going on the way whatever the difficulties out there in the future.

Finally, Junior lost his whole family. But he saved himself, and helped himself to achieve his aim.

So everything he was suffering are the past, those are not big deals anymore.

When we was facing a problem, the one which we thought too hard to break. We gotta drop the bad idea of give up.

Because no matter we win or lose, that's our stories. And someday, you will realize that everything you've been licked the dust is NOTHING. You even cannot remember when you forget those. All since time is going all the way, and we are not that easily to break by life.

I'm eighteen now, and I'm pretty sure I have much longer in the future life. So many difficulties and happness are just stand out there waiting for me to hug or kick.

I'll be there, someday. To see what and how.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Info. share about Stillaguamish Indian Tribe

Since we gotta do the presentation about Stillaguamish Indian Tribe, I'd love to share some information I got about this tribe, including there lifestyles, mission statement, history and other interesting stuff.


First is their mission statement, they contributed to manage, protect, and conserve those natural resources that are required to sustain healthy populations of fish, shellfish, and wildlife within the Stillaguamish Tribe's U&A (Stillaguamish Watershed).I quoted this paragraph from the website http://www.stillaguamish.nsn.us/

Another good resource is http://www.stillaguamish.com/, which is a stillaguamish's website too. This website contains bunch of information about festival of the river, pow wow, their services and more. The videos and other media files viewing are available.

If you are interested in Stillaguamish Indian Tribe and get to know more about their culture and history. Here is a good place to go. http://www.native-languages.org/stillaguamish.htm orhttp://u-s-history.com/pages/h1574.html

As I know more and deeper about Indian Tribe, I feel like they just look like separately , but in some ways these Native-American  Tribes are connected even very closed to each other. The reason is they all do things good for the world.

Lastly, I'd love to share a paragraph I love from one of website, which is stated their missions.

"The river is alive. It is an essential part of our lives. When it is
vibrant and healthy, our well being is preserved. We must heal and protect this precious resource, not just for our own tribal treaty rights, but because it's a wise and respectful thing to do for everyone who lives here."