The experiment I chose to do for the McCandless project was to go a full school day
without my phone and not tell anyone why I am doing that. The reaction I got
when I went a full day of school without my phone was people thought my phone
ran out of power at school. During the experiment I felt pretty bored when I
had any free time when I would normally be using my phone to text people so
instead I started reading during my free time because it was a pretty good
book. I also found myself constantly waiting for the school day to be over so I
could go home and get on my phone. I wasn't surprised by my reaction or other’s
because I my phone does run out of battery often at school and I do text a lot
during school so I wasn't surprised that I was waiting for school to be over
more than usual. Based on this experiment you are “free” not to conform but I
think that sometimes going against the social norm may be a bad idea and lead to
trouble like what happened to Chris after what he did.
Wednesday, November 19, 2014
Tuesday, November 18, 2014
Personal Quote Journal
My quote was "Love all, trust a few, do wrong to none." I chose this quote because I liked the message it was trying to send and I think this quote represents me because I try to not do anything wrong to anyone and to help when I can. If I lived by this quote 24/7 my life would be a lot more different and I would have to be extremely kind and understanding to everyone, only trust the right people, and never do anything wrong to anyone.
Thursday, October 9, 2014
Ulring 1
Ryan Ulring
Mrs. Belden
Honors English I
15 October 2014
(no
title yet)
As the last
pick was about to be announced my whole body tensed up, I could feel
sweat running down from my forehead all the way down to the
tips of my toes, and time
seemed to slow down. I had done so much to get here, would
it all be for nothing? I
closed my eyes and tried to calm myself down, I remembered
everything I had done just
to get to this very spot right now. I took a deep breath and
relaxed. “And for the final pick
of the 2015 NFL draft, the Indianapolis Colts select…”
I guess you
could say my football career started when I was a little boy. I lived in
downtown Detroit and I had no family members other than my
dad and my uncle who
stopped by our house on weekends or holidays or any other
special occasions like that.
My dad was very abusive, every time I didn't do something
perfect he’d be furious with
me. If each and every dish wasn't so spotless you could see
your reflection in it or if I
didn't make lunch exactly how he wanted it then he would
scream something like, “YOU
GOOD FOR NOTHING, ROTTEN, WORTHLESS, PIECE OF CRAP!” Then he
would
take out his whip and whip me as many times as he pleased,
shouting curse words at me
between every whip. I know I had it pretty bad but I’m not
going to complain, people did
have it worse then me and besides, I still had my uncle. My
uncle, unlike my dad, was a
very kind person. He was even nice to my dad when my dad was
cranky about
Ulring 2
something. But trust me, cranky is an understatement. One beautiful
dark and snowy
night on a freezing cold Christmas Eve it was just my uncle
and I, my dad always went
out to clubs at night. My uncle gave me a present for
Christmas and I wasn't used to this
because my dad never gave me presents for Christmas, I tore
away the wrapping and
underneath was a football. I had only seen a football on the
TV before, I ran up to my
uncle and hugged him. “You know,” he said, “if you practice hard
every day I’m sure
you could become a professional football player. You’d make
a fine wide receiver.” I
listened to him and I practice with that ball every single
day until I felt like I was going to
pass out. Then on weekends and holidays when my dad was gone
My uncle and I would
throw the football together for hours and hours until my dad
got back home. One day I
tripped and fell trying to catch a ball my uncle threw and I
scraped my knee and started
crying. My uncle offered me a hand and said, “are you just
going to give up or are you
going to keep on trying?” I know it was very cheesy but
those words meant a lot to me. I
grabbed his hand and got up.
A couple of years later my uncle
discovered he had lung cancer, the doctors told
us he only had a ten percent chance of living and surprisingly
my uncle reacted very
calmly to this news. He told me, “don’t you worry about me,
just go out there and do
what you do best and that's play football.” Since I was
given that football I had gotten
much better at catching the ball and, well, everything else
really. I was the starting wide
receiver for my high school’s varsity football team and our
team had won the state
tournament in Michigan. I already had scouts from colleges
around the country come see
me play and I had been given full scholarship offers from
several colleges. I made up my
Ulring 3
mind that I would be going to the Ohio State University and
the team already had my
locker and my jersey number and everything. It seemed my
dream, that had been given to
me by my uncle, was finally coming true. And that's when I
got the call.
It was
about three in the morning when the call came and when I woke up to the
sound of the phone ringing I knew exactly who it was and
why. It was the doctors telling
us that my uncle had passed away, who else would be calling
at three in the morning?
And sadly, I was right. I already knew what was coming but
when the doctor told me, I
dropped the phone in disbelief. He was dead, the only person
who ever truly cared for me
was dead. I started crying for what seemed like centuries. I
stopped practicing football for
months and then I remembered my uncle’s cheesy words, “are
you just going to give up
or are you going to keep on trying?” So I went outside and
started practicing again and a
few hours later my dad saw me practicing and screamed at me,
“YOU’RE NEVER
GOING TO BE GOOD AT ANYTHING! YOU CAN’T EVEN DO SIMPLE
HOUSEWORK SO WHY DON'T YOU JUST STOP TRYING!” He took my
football
and cut it open with a knife, making the football useless.
“There you go,” my dad said as
he handed me the football, “now go make me some dinner, I’m as
hungry as a pig.” As I
went into the kitchen I saw something, a slip of paper,
inside the football. I took it out
and it turned out to be my uncle’s will. The next day I went
to the police station and
showed them the will and one of the officers said, “it looks
like these are yours kid.” I
looked at what he was holding and it happened a pair of
football gloves with a signature
on the right glove. I looked at it and it read Jerry Rice. I
couldn’t believe it, my uncle had
gotten these gloves signed by the Jerry Rice, arguably the best football player that ever
Ulring 4
lived.
College
football went pretty smoothly, I started catching a lot better wearing those
gloves that my uncle had left me and our team played pretty
well, we were a top twenty
five team in all four of my seasons at Ohio State. After I
had an extremely good game
against Michigan, I was interviewed by some people and I was
able to tell them my story
about how I had an abusive father and he was arrested and
sent to jail for a long time, like
he deserved. I was starting to see that my uncle may have
been right, maybe I could
become a professional football player. And that’s how I
ended up here, waiting anxiously
to see if I would be picked in the NFL draft. “And for the
final pick of the 2015 NFL
draft, the Indianapolis Colts select,” the man paused for a
moment and said, “Todd
Massey, the wide receiver from Ohio State.” It was all worth
it.
Sunday, September 28, 2014
Some things that will help me to continue to improve my writing this year are double checking and rereading everything after I write it so I know I didn't make any mistakes, have someone check my writing so I know what I should change, and make sure I didn't misspell any words. I think I have room to grow as a writer by being more desrciptive and learning new words so that I can can describe things well and not reuse the same boring words over and over again. One goal that I have is to learn new words that I can use to desribe everything better.
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