Be yourself; Everyone else is already taken.
— Oscar Wilde.
This is the first post on my new blog. I’m just getting this new blog going, so stay tuned for more. Subscribe below to get notified when I post new updates.
Be yourself; Everyone else is already taken.
— Oscar Wilde.
This is the first post on my new blog. I’m just getting this new blog going, so stay tuned for more. Subscribe below to get notified when I post new updates.
Every story follows a certain story line, even if its from your own life experiences. Cheryl Strayed wrote the novel Wild, about her own life experiences on the Pacific Crest Trail. When looking through the second third of the novel with an archetypal lens I was able to see how Cheryl’s story follows some what of a typical plot.
The typical plot of a story goes something like this. The protagonist goes from innocence to experience, moves into an unknown and possibly dangerous environment. This is where the protagonist fights the battles that test who they are. After the battle has been fought they return home, as the hero.
In Wild: From Lost to Found On the Pacific Crest Trail, we learn of Cheryl’s past and this demonstrates her innocence. After her Mother passes away, she goes into some of the worst years of her life. Her hiking into the PCT is the beginning of her fighting battles with nature and her own will. This tests who she is, and it shows her gradually getting stronger. I predict that in the final third of the novel she will finish her hike successfully and if the story completes the typical story arch, she will return home as a hero to herself.
There are a couple of symbols in this novel which all motivate Cheryl. One is a feather, given to her by her friend on the trails. She was constantly motivated my Greg, and having the feather allowed her to stay motivated even when he wasn’t there. Another symbol is her horse tattoo, which represents her mother. Her mothers death is the main thing Cheryl is trying to get over. The last symbol is the water pump/purifier. This represents her struggles and weakness on the trails.
Overall, Wild follows a pretty typical story plot, and looking though a archetypal lens allowed me to see that there are so many more symbols and character arches in the novel itself. I cannot wait to read the final chapters of the novel, so stay tuned for my final blog and portfolio. I would love to hear your opinions, so feel free to leave a comment!
Welcome to my Portfolio, these are my fours pieces of Work dedicated to the Novel Wild: From Lost to Found on The Pacific Crest Trail. Today there is a blog post, a collage, a persuasive essay and a concept map.
Wild is a story about self- discovery and is the author, Cheryl Strayed's personal story.

This collage highlights one of the main themes throughout the book which is self discovery. Cheryl goes on the hike through the Pacific Crest Trail to find out who she is without her mother. In the collage there are key symbols and images used constantly throughout the novel. Resupply box, her scars, the boots and the 20 dollars.
Here is a blog post about the novel through a reader response lens:
https://juliasblog.tech.blog/2019/07/24/wild-though-a-reader-response-literary-lens/
Wild by Cheryl Strayed was a compelling novel about the extent someone will go just to feel a sense of self. After four years of her beloved mother passing, Cheryl struggles with moving on and she has to learn who she is without her mother. I looked through this story with a reader response literary lens, since this story is about personal growth, it is easy for the reader to relate and everyone takes the story differently.
With the story being about the author herself, it connects with readers much more. Even the title demonstrates the kind of audience who would maybe want to read this novel Wild: From Lost to Found on The Pacific Crest Trail. This novel is appealing to middle aged people most likely women, who are wanting motivation to find who they really are or who are just looking for a self-discovery novel.
“Devastating and glorious . . . It is voice—billowing with energy, precise—that carries Wild . . . By laying bare a great unspoken truth of adulthood—that many things in life don’t turn out the way you want them to, and that you can and must live through them anyway—Wild feels real in many ways that many books about ‘finding oneself’ do not.” —Melanie Rehak, Slate
http://www.cherylstrayed.com/wild_108676.htm
Each reader will have a different response to this novel. A person’s response to a literary text is shaped by their own unique perspective and experience. This story deals with topics like loss of a loved one, divorce/ unhealthy relationships, addiction and self-discovery. As for me, I found Strayed’s story personally inspiring and I was able to relate to her coping with the loss of a loved one. It is not an easy thing to get over and even though I didn’t cope they way Cheryl did, I was able to relate to the pain she felt. Almost anyone could relate to this and will interpret it in a different way.
Not everyone would do a near 100 day hike to find self-worth but Strayed chose to endure the physical pain to surpass her mental pain. It doesn’t take much to attract anyone to this novel as it is compelling and after the first few pages Strayed’s story it is hard to put down. For a small excerpt from the novel check out this link: http://www.cherylstrayed.com/wild_108676.htm
In conclusion Wild by Cheryl Strayed is a fantastic developing story that can cause the reader to have a personal connection. When looking through a reader response lens it becomes clear to see how much of a personal connection a reader can have to this novel. I would love to hear your thoughts, feel free to comment below!
The case of Adnan Syed and how he was accused of murdering Hae Min Lee is something that is still puzzling to me a week later. I always want to believe the best of someone and how a boy who seemed golden couldn’t be of harm to someone. After listening to Sarah Koenig’s narration of the case on the podcast Serial, I have to believe that Adnan is guilty.

In Serial we see Adnan as a golden boy …
He was an honour roll student, volunteer EMT. He was on the football team. He was a star runner on the track team. He was the homecoming king. He led prayers at the mosque. Everybody knew Adnan to be somebody who was going to do something really big.
This was a quote from the podcast, this first impression made me think, well if he was this perfect, how could it of gone so wrong so quickly? This made me sympathize with Adnan because I felt he had been framed for the crime of murder. Adnan had a friend named Jay, who gave a testimony which practically gave Adnan right to the police. This testimony “proved” Adnan guilty.

There was no real evidence that her murdered Hae and yet he is still in jail. I personally question the police work done for this case and how it was solved so quickly. I question that Jay really saw Hae’s body in the trunk of his car and how still no evidence was found. It makes me believe that maybe, just maybe Adnan could be innocent.
Despite me wanting to think the best of Adnan, Sarah made a excellent point about memory. How are teenagers supposed to remember what they did six weeks ago. When the argument and possible alibi from Asia came up I thought that Adnan must be innocent now. Then my mind went back to the memory argument and now what if Asia made this up just to take him out.
In conclusion I think that Adnan has to be held accountable and guilty for the murder of Hae. There is no evidence to either prove him innocent or guilty but that testimony Jay gave. The police had to trust Jay because he was the only person at the time that knew of what Adnan did that day. If humans start to doubt the Judicial system then possible killers like Adnan would be free in the public to do what they please. Overall I believe that Adnan is guilty for the Murder of Hae Min Lee.
For more information about the case of the murder of Hae Min Lee check out https://allthatsinteresting.com/adnan-syed-murder-of-hae-min-lee this site has all the information you need.
Fienberg, Daniel. “’The Case Against Adnan Syed’: TV Review.” The Hollywood Reporter, 1 Mar. 2019, http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/review/case-adnan-syed-review-1188823.
Margaritoff, Marco. “The Full Story Of Adnan Syed And Hae Min Lee’s Murder Only Hinted At In ‘Serial’.” All That’s Interesting, All That’s Interesting, 22 Mar. 2019, allthatsinteresting.com/adnan-syed-murder-of-hae-min-lee.
Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail is a story about self-discovery and all the challenges one might have to overcome in life. The author, Cheryl Strayed, talks about her life story and her personal trials and triumphs on the Pacific Crest Trail while trying to find out who she really is.
So far in the compelling novel, the reader figures out Cheryl’s life story. The real reason she is on the almost hundred day hike. The reader learns of the passing of her beloved mother, which leads to a serious downfall in her life. Strayed then lost her family, friends and husband. She turned to a life of adultery and drugs, leaving her in the worst conditions she had ever been in “I’d Think: This is not me. This is not the way I am. Stop it. No more. But in the Afternoon … I’d think: Yes. I get to do this. I get to waste my life. I get to be a junk.“(Strayed 53). The story gracefully incorporates her past leading up to the hike and the hike itself, both showing the struggles she is going through.
Interestingly, the novel doesn’t really give any clues to where the story will lead because it is purely Strayed’s story. The book has had a serious tone all the way through the first third of the novel. This leads to the assumption that in the end there will be a relief of that stress, and that the heavy-hearted topics will come to a fulfilling ending, where Strayed finds her true self.

Each character and event in the novel has been experienced by Strayed and this leads to authenticity in the story. In the author’s note at the beginning Strayed states “To write this book, I relied upon my personal journals, researched facts when I could … and called upon my own memory of these events and this time of my life” (Strayed xi) All the characters are relevant and provide meaning and a purpose to Cheryl and the plot.
The story resonated with me because it deals with the loss of a loved one, and explores how that affects your life and your relationships with others. Wild will resonate with anyone who has been through a loss. Through the first 100 pages Cheryl is coping with the loss of her mother, and realizing that her life was nothing without her mother. Her mother kept her family together, gave Cheryl hope, and inspired her to pursue her dreams even when she was dying. The reader is swept away with the pain that Cheryl went through when she lost her mother. “I howled and howled and howled, rooting my face into her body like an animal” (Strayed 26). This demonstrates the pain she went through and explains why overcoming this loss is the driving point for the novel.
During the parts of the first 100 pages of her on the trails, I was able to see how she truly was beginning to cope with the loss. During the time not on the trails you see Cheryl fearing what she is without her mother, husband and family and how she resorts to drugs and unhealthy relationships. While on the hike she tunes into herself and begins to fear the real world around her. Her survival is at stake and I think this makes her realize she is more than the people in her life, and that she can only really rely on herself. During her hike she begins to develop scars, bruises and physical pain, and to me that is a symbol of the pain she feels on the inside which is now being shown to the world. Her filth and state of despair, when finding the miners allows someone to finally sympathize with her “I’d go home with Frank, where his wife would feed me dinner and I could bathe and sleep in a bed”(Strayed 72), to me that was the first sign of her changing.
Overall, the first third of the novel left me intrigued to read more, and really demonstrated the personal struggles of overcoming loss, whether it is overcoming mentally or physically like Cheryl. The pain she endures and the desperation to know who she is without her mother captures the reader in a raw, emotional story. I cannot wait to see what the novel brings next because it is truly a special novel.
“Cheryl Strayed.” Cheryl Strayed – Wild, http://www.cherylstrayed.com/wild_108676.htm.
Strayed, Cheryl, 1968-. Wild : From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail. New York :Alfred A. Knopf, 2012.
On January 13th 1999 the murder of Hae Min Lee took place. For all of these years Adnan Syed has been charged with the murder of Hae and in the Podcast “Serial” they debate and try to figure out if he is guilty or not guilty.
This podcast was so informative and is personally one of my favourite ways to learn. One of the only cons of listening rather than reading is that you cant go back or “highlight” specific information. Podcasts involve a story or topic where everything can be laid out for you. This episode was spoken by Sarah Koenig and she was able to capture my attention throughout the whole episode. In journalism, I think podcasts could be seen as bias. Strictly because you are hearing the persons voice and their emotions can come through more in words.

Overall Sarah covered a huge amount of information and I felt well educated on the topic. I couldn’t help but to feel slightly uneasy though. The stories from Jay and Asia completely contradict each other leaving the listener still wondering if Adnan was ever guilty. The aspect of memory was something that never came to my mind. At the beginning the boys Sarah was talking to didn’t even remember what happen the Friday before. So how are the police supposed to trust Jay completely with his story. The police thought they had enough information to charge Adnan with murder but if Asia brought up the letters maybe an innocent man could of been set free. It is upsetting to know that some people will be put in jail for crimes that they did not commit all because of a lack of evidence.
The Baltimore case gained so much attention because of this podcast and I can’t think about how much that effected the family and the case overall. A report from the Guardian talked about the family and how the case doesn’t just effect Adnan. The trauma that the family faced was awful. Thousands of people knew who he was and what he had possibly done and since Adnan was not in contact with the world, his family got the backlash. However because of the publicity this case received maybe it will lead to more thorough investigations in the future.
Overall I think that this episode of Serial told the story and unraveled the mystery about who was really guilty. It went over all of the information but left me wanting to learn more. I personally think that podcasts are a great and intriguing way to learn. I would love to hear your comments on the topic!
Development, PodBean. “Serial Podcast: Free Listening on Podbean App.” Www.podbean.com, http://www.podbean.com/podcast-detail/zvpas-2ef3c/Serial-Podcast.
Heller, Corinne. “Serial’s Adnan Syed Denied New Trial, Upholds Murder Conviction.” E! Online, E! News, 8 Mar. 2019, http://www.eonline.com/news/923968/serial-s-adnan-syed-to-get-new-trial-court-upholds-decision-overturning-murder-conviction.
Ronson, Jon. “Serial: The Syed Family on Their Pain and the ‘Five Million Detectives Trying to Work out If Adnan Is a Psychopath’.” The Guardian, Guardian News and Media, 7 Dec. 2014, http://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2014/dec/07/serial-adnan-syed-family-podcast-interview.
Should grade 12 University level English be a requirement for entry into all university programs?
University is a building block to everyone’s careers and it has been taught that one must participate in university to be successful in the future. To get into almost any program one must have the grade 12 English credit. I personally believe that this should stay as a requirement.
English is Canada’s spoken language, and even though by the time you graduate you may know how to speak it, you may not know how to utilize it properly. All jobs will require you to either speak, read, or write, and taking English in grade 12 will ensure that you can thrive in a work environment.
Communication is such a huge part of life in general. It allows you to have an opinion and contribute to conversations. English allows one to strengthen one’s communication skills. Being able to use language correctly in conversation can help give the impression of being a well-educated person with relevant ideas.
English will also help you to succeed in university itself no matter what degree you wish to obtain. In university you must be able to efficiently take notes, study, and understand new topics. It will also help you to read and comprehend long and complicated textbooks.
This course emphasizes the consolidation of the literacy, communication, and critical and creative thinking skills necessary for success in academic and daily life. Students will analyse a range of challenging literary texts from various periods, countries, and cultures; interpret and evaluate informational and graphic texts; and create oral, written, and media texts in a variety of forms. An important focus will be on using academic language coherently and confidently, selecting the reading strategies best suited to particular texts and particular purposes for reading, and developing greater control in writing. The course is intended to prepare students for university, college, or the workplace.
http://www.edu.gov.on.ca/eng/curriculum/secondary/english1112currb.pdf
I believe that taking University English through grade 12 will help anyone to get into university and succeed in the workplace. Taking this course will deepen your abilities to understand, interpret and use new knowledge in all parts of your daily life.
I would love to hear your thoughts and opinions on this topic! Please feel free to comment down below.
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