Ever since I was a baby alpaca, I was always told I was never allowed to go into the Rainbow field. Every time I would go towards the entrance, Mama would yell at me and say,”Alice! You know you aren’t allowed to go into the field.” I would always ask the same question, “But why can’t I go in?” “Because you are pink and you know only blue alpacas are allowed in the Rainbow field,” Mama answered. Then I asked,“But mama why are blue alpacas allowed in but not pink ones?” She would always replay, “That’s just how its always been.” I would then be stuck watching from the other side of the fence while the blue alpacas ran and played in the field. I hated that I could not be like them. As I got older, I could never accept that wasn’t allowed in the Rainbow field. So one day I …show more content…
What is it?” “Both Luci and I want to go into the Rainbow field.” “You can’t go in there. You’re both pink,” he explained. “You could change that rule Major Wilson,” Luci recommended. “Well I am not going to. Only blue alpacas can go into the Rainbow field and that’s final,” he said. Luci and I couldn’t accept this answer. We needed to get this rule changed, so we could go into the Rainbow field. We decided to hold a protest in front of Mayor Wilson’s house to change his mind. Luci made picket signs that said,”Let the pink in the field.” We would stand outside of Mayor Wilson’s house and yell our chants. On the third day of protesting, Major Wilson came out of his house. He said,“Okay, Okay. The rule will be changed as long as you both stop chanting.” Luci and I jumped for joy. “Oh thank you Major Wilson!” Luci shouted. Mayor Wilson just waved his hand and went back into his house. “Luci! Lets go frolic in the Rainbow field!” I yelled. Luci and I ran as fast as we could to the field. When we arrived to the entrance, we ran right on through. We were not bound to the other side of the fence anymore. We were now free to enter and be the same as the blue
APiper dropped the paper bag on the granite kitchen counter, balancing her cell between her shoulder and the crook of her neck and continuing her conversation while she began unpacking the numerous bags of groceries. • You have to go with us, Diane - Piper protested into the phone while pushing almond milk into the fridge- Alex won’t enjoy her birthday if you aren’t there. • I’m sure Al with prefer to spend a romantic couple of days with her girlfriend – Diane replied sarcastically with a snort – than having her mother tag along. • We traveled a lot this year.
Most people at the ranch actually take care of their horses in the way in which they are supposed to, other riders, however, expect other people to take care of their horse for them. The horse riders at AZUCUS Ranch can be divided into three groups according
Hi, um, my name’s Phil. I’m a peanut. Yep, just a peanut, not anything special like a dog with a family to love or even an almond, which is actually a nut. Nope, I’m just a little peanut trying to live as long as I can before somebody scoops me up, plops me in a bag, and takes me home to be a nice after-school snack. Now you might be wondering, How do you have thoughts, you’re just a peanut?
This complex work leads to conflicting feelings between the reader and Rodriguez. Rodriguez discusses categories which leads to his personal creation for all the misfits. Rodriguez utilizes his personal experiences to distinguish himself in his lack of a category in American society. Because “the brown child may grow up to war against himself,” Rodriguez searches
They do the same with blues and reds and yellows. Ivanito asks her, “If the grass were black, would the world be different?” (84). Through Felicia’s memory, and perception of events, she crafts a way in which she can test the boundaries of reality. She questions the limits of nature by turning the world around her into a canvas that is alterable at her will.
The passage focuses on how girlhood has become monochromatic. The preference of the color pink to girls has become very influential as it affects many businesses. Orenstein uses dialogue between a sales representative and herself to captures how important the color pink is to his business. He claims that girls are born loving pink and pink is the way they make money.
In Katy’s school wearing pink on a certain day is one of the tacit codes she must follow in order to belong. In doing so, she is giving up her unique style and conforming to what the other girls are wearing. She does this to calm her natural urge that pushes her to fit in. Katy is one of the many people out in the world that has willingly followed meaningless tacit codes instead of being unique. For a real life example, someone could consider immigrants.
So, instead of wasting the money the horse has earned the cheapest way is to send them off to wherever they want. Which, is not a nice home, it is a death home. Living as an animal in the racing industry is difficult exhausting. From endless suffering and injuries, being injected and digesting illegal pills, and if you fail you are thrown out of the industry and killed for multiple usages. The life of a racehorse is not sunshine and rainbows.
Bang talks about how we related purple to Little Red’s mom early on, therefore, shouldn’t this be a happy thing? Yet, it is not because we think of these kinds of colors to be associated with darkness, making it the scarier of the two.
The analysis of the reflections of society in Zootopia Zootopia is one of many of Disney and Pixar’s most celebrated productions. The animated film is the sixth highest-grossing animated movies of all time. Set in a world of anthropomorphic animals the movies protagonist is a young rabbit named Judy Hopps who comes from a small town with the dreams of becoming a police officer. When coming of age, Judy leaves her hometown to pursue her dream by going to live in Zootopia a city where anyone can become anything they want to be. She becomes the first rabbit in history to become a police officer.