Monday, November 30, 2015

Lilly Corrigan
Terror from the Sea
Imagine yourself with a flexible sheet of plastic conformed to your nose and mouth, a cloudy white window in front of your eyes, and a thin tube covered in salt and sand shoved into your mouth that you’re intended to breathe from. Now imagine that you’re plopped out in 40 foot deep water a 20-minute swim away from salvation with no means of flotation besides some old worn out ducks’ feet strapped to the bottoms of your legs. This is how I feel about snorkeling.
            Let me take you back a bit. In my family, when you graduated from high school, you got to pick a place to go on vacation that summer. My older sister chose to go to Ireland--absolutely beautiful, but a bit cold and rainy. When my time came to choose a vacation spot, I wanted a place that was more tropical. I ended up choosing the US Virgin Islands, a group of three islands in the Caribbean Sea. We planned out our trip in the months leading up to my graduation; we would stay a couple of days on St. Thomas, the more popular island, and then spend most of our time on the quiet and tranquil St. John.
We were very excited about snorkeling. All of the travel books my mom looked at talked about how it was some of the best in the world, “The Virgin Islands offer some particularly outstanding sites.” They raved about places “where fish swim around the reefs as you float downward,” and “fish dart about in colorful schools.” My parents and sister had all snorkeled in the past and really enjoyed it. I had tried it once, but was unsuccessful. I figured that now that I was a little older, I would do just fine. I mean, people talk all the time about how amazing snorkeling is; wouldn’t I love it just as much as them? I would come to find out that the answer is no, no I wouldn’t.
After months of planning and the hustle and bustle of graduation, the time finally came to get all packed up and get on a plane. Three planes actually; the trip took about eight hours of flying altogether. We arrived in St. Thomas on a beautiful June day, surrounded by water and cruise ships and native islanders. Our first couple of days on St. Thomas were very enjoyable; but the most memorable parts of the trip came after a ferry ride over to the smaller and more secluded island of St. John.
In St. John we rented a small cottage on a hillside. It was called Mountain Haven, a little place my mom had found online at VacationRentalsByOwner. It was absolutely gorgeous; very small, but we didn’t need much room. It was owned by a couple of very interesting people indeed. Thom (pronounced “Tom”) and Jackie were the owners, two Americans who had divorced their first spouses and moved here together to “get away.” They lived in another cottage down the street, made a living keeping up rental houses, and hadn’t been to a doctor in years because “it’s a scam.” Regardless, they were very helpful. They too told us about the wonders of snorkeling, and directed us to where we could rent our snorkeling gear.
We went to the local rental place the next day. It was at the bottom of the hill, a short drive from the cottage. It was a brightly colored and haphazardly built shack, with a sign on the front that read “Crabby’s.” There was also a sign on the door with their hours: 9ish to 5ish. As it turns out, 9ish is 10:45 and 5ish is 4:30. We drove around a lot on our first day waiting for them to open. But that’s good old Island Time for you.
When they finally did open, we went in to get four snorkeling masks and four sets of flippers. The flippers were in bins with labels like “Bigfoot” and “Cinderella.” The masks were kept in the back, where a rather crotchety man had to fumble around to get them for us, his attitude fitting the name of his place of employment. We got our gear, some basic instructions, and a couple recommendations for good snorkeling sites and we were off.
We went to a snorkeling spot that was supposed to be one of the best. It was called Waterlemon Cay and was a part of Leinster Bay. According to my mom’s Fodor’s Caribbean travel book, “Although just about every beach has nice snorkeling—Trunk Bay, Cinnamon Bay, and Waterlemon Cay at Leinster Bay get the most praise.” We decided to try it out. I got my mask fitted on and jammed my feet into my “Cinderella” sized flippers. I was ready to learn how to snorkel; I mean, how hard could it be? My dad proceeded to show me the proper snorkeling technique in shallow water; breathe through your mouth, let the flippers hold you up on the water. Once I felt pretty comfortable with this, I started to paddle farther out. At first it was fun; I could see everything underneath me, fish came and swam around me, and all of the equipment seemed to be working. There was a whole other world underneath me, a world of multicolored parrot fish, purple fan plants, and little schools of fish that ebbed and flowed around my fingers. Hey, I think I’m getting the hang of this!
After a few minutes though, my mask started getting cloudy. Drops of water started dripping in around my eyes. What if my mask is broken!? I stopped to tread water as I looked at my mask. My dad swam over too. Nothing was wrong with it; it was caught on my hair and water was getting in. I adjusted the mask placement and I tried tightening it, just like the crabby guy from Crabby’s had told me to do, but nothing seemed to work. I tried again and again, but water kept getting into my eyes. Not only that, but I started getting nervous. With my head covered in plastic and my face down in the water I felt like I couldn’t breathe, like the salty sea would suffocate me. I called it quits before the rest of my family that day. They stopped soon after. I would try it again, the sides of the mask were probably just wet and wouldn’t stay on well. I’d get the hang of it eventually.
 It only got worse from there. Every time we went snorkeling I had to stop multiple times because my mask was cloudy or I had salt water in my eyes. I would get so anxious that I would start crying while I was in the water, which really didn’t help the water dripping into my mask situation. Not only was I uncomfortable and freaking out, but I was getting frustrated. Isn’t this supposed to be fun? Why don’t I like this as much as people said I would?
My parents didn’t get my dislike of snorkeling at all. I explained it to them as well as I could: As they knew all too well, I’ve had reactive airway disease ever since I was little. It’s similar to asthma; it causes me to wheeze and have tightness in my chest when I’m around certain triggers like dust. I figured that since I’ve struggled to breathe before, I’m just scared that my mask will malfunction and I won’t be able to breathe.
“It’s that fear of not being able to breathe thing,” I said to them. “I just feel like if anything goes wrong, I’ll drown or something!”
“I know, Lil. You’ve been quite a trooper just trying this with us,” my dad responded. I thought that was promising; maybe it meant no more snorkeling! But alas, it did not.
My parents acted like they understood, but didn’t do anything about it. Every day they wanted to go snorkeling. So we did. I tried to go, each time with a ridiculous attack of nervousness and tears and having to stop early. Eventually I just started walking along the beach by myself while the rest of my family went out in the water.
I confronted my parents again about halfway through the trip. This vacation was allegedly my gift, why did we have to spend a good portion of it doing something that I hated?
“I just sit there and do nothing while you’re out in the water. Why can’t we do something that we all actually enjoy?” I asked.
“This is probably our last chance to go snorkeling in a place like this, so we’re going to do it. If you come to an island, you snorkel. It’s what you do,” was their reply. I allowed that to sink in; they were snorkeling no matter what and I was going to have to deal with it.
The last day of the trip, I didn’t even try snorkeling. I told my family to go in the water without me, which they did a little more readily than I was hoping. Still, I made up my mind to somehow enjoy myself. I walked carefully along the rocky beach we had come to; rocky beaches are better for snorkeling, another reason to avoid it. I made my way to a large red-orange rock.
I climbed up the rough side of the rock and looked out over the sea. We were in a small inlet, a place that travel books and locals raved about. It was called Haulover Bay, a place right off the highway but hidden by trees. According to the Frommer’s travel book, “The snorkeling is dramatic, with ledges, walls, nooks, and sandy areas set close together. At this spot, only about 180m (591 ft.) of land separates the Atlantic Ocean from the Caribbean Sea.” I looked over the water stretching out in front of me, clear blue-green that got darker as it got deeper. Impeccably clear, and teeming with life. Spiky purple sea urchins crowded the water around me. I had to be careful not to step on them. As I looked closer, I saw purple fans, salt water plants, little snails and fish. I could have seen a lot of these things while snorkeling underwater, but not with the same tranquility and clarity as I did above the surface. All of them lived quietly around me as the ocean water swelled in and out with each wave. If I sat just so I could let the water swirl up over my feet without disturbing the sea life around me. It was breathtaking.
The sunlight poured over the water and illuminated the world underneath. I pulled off my T-shirt and let its warmth soak into my skin, basking in the glow of the scene around me. The calming sound of the water put me at ease, the smell of the sea reminded me of the exotic location, and the beauty of it all made me realize how lucky I was. If I had my face pressed into the water right now I would have missed all this; the sun, the sea swell, the calmness.
A scuttling sound to my right jolted me out of my calm. A palm sized crab had decided to share my rock. It was about the same color as the rocks around me; it could very well have been there the whole time. As soon as I looked at it, it scurried away. It hadn’t been scared of me before I moved. That more than anything else made me feel at one with that rocky beach.
 Soon after that my family came in from their final snorkeling adventure. “Did you have fun?” my mom asked.
I realized that I had enjoyed sitting on a rock alone far more than I had enjoyed suffering through snorkeling with them. “Yes, yes I did.” That was our last day on the beaches of St. John.
Even at the end of the trip, my parents and I hadn’t come to an agreement on the snorkeling subject. They were still hardcore advocates, and I hadn’t budged on my position either. But that experience did teach me something. I was able to have fun by myself; I didn’t have to do what everyone else wanted to do. The travel books weren’t right about me, I didn’t get lost in the beautiful escape of the undersea world, or whatever flowery description of snorkeling they gave about the “Best Snorkeling in St. John.” I sat on a quiet rock, and that was more fun for me, believe it or not. I’ll leave you with a cliché: beauty is in the eye of the beholder. And sometimes you only find that beauty if you choose to behold it instead of going snorkeling.




Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Final essay

For my final essay, I will be describing the month I spent in Europe.  It was only the 2nd time I went overseas without my parents so I will talk about the confidence I gained by traveling without them and what I learned by having to advocate for myself.  I also want to discuss the differences among teenagers of different cultures and how I discovered that despite these differences, we all have similar problems and desires.  To do this, I will talk about specific experiences within the trip that made me come to these conclusions.  I will use characters such as my exchange student, her family, and random but other meaningful characters I met throughout the trip, to further the explanation of these experiences.

Final Proposal

For my final piece, I plan to expand my snapshot story. My family traveled to Grayton Beach, Florida, a frequent vacation spot for us. I will go into more detail about our adventures and use the snapshot story as one of many memories I describe. I plan to talk about parasailing, the jellyfish, and other beach activities we did chronologically, but I'm unsure about whether I'll begin telling the story right when we arrived or a little ways into the trip. The characters will be my immediate family, my mom, my dad, my siblings, and me. I plan to keep the same general theme as my snapshot story which is that the memories you make with your family stay with you long after they are made and everyone grows up.

Final Travel Essay Proposal - Becc

For my final travel essay, I would like to expand on my short write, "Hamilton." I would like to write about the entire trip, my dad and I as the main characters. I would touch on each of the following events: dinner at a hole-in-the-wall Italian restaurant in Albany; Hamilton; the B&B in Ithaca; my dad getting food poisoning; Taughannock Falls; and our final stop at Cornell. At different points in my life I've viewed this trip either as a failure or as a success, but I don't want to view it as either/or anymore.  Finally writing it as a cohesive essay, I think it's important to touch on both the disappointing/upsetting moments and on the uplifting ones. The theme is really going to be about my dad and I's relationship at that point in time, as when we went on the trip we weren't really getting along very well. I want my readers to take away that our relationship isn't about always agreeing, but that we can still have little moments of insight into why we're so different, which can help us appreciate each other. On our trip, our differences and similarities are highlighted more than in day to day life, simply because we were forced to spend so much time together.

Final Proposal

For my final piece, I would like to describe a trip that I took this summer with my entire extended family on my father's side to Breckenridge, particularly a day when we went white water rafting. This story would explore the physical struggles and joys of an adventurous task as well as the way it united my family, and the overall beauty of Colorado. I have a large family and so it is hard to find things on a vacation that everyone is excited about, and this activity did so in a unique way so I am looking forward to writing about it.

Essay Proposal

I have decided to write about my experience going to Hawaii this summer but in a more general sense. I will include the characters of myself as well as the group I went with but will also include secondary characters such as our tour guide for the trip and people we met along the way. I want to focus on differences between here and there, such as the different cultural experiences I had there and the different people and things to see and experience there. Overall I want to include dialogue to work on my use of it in my pieces and vidid imagery to try to convey the beauty that I saw while I was there. I think my biggest struggle will be to connect the different pieces of the trip together to make a piece that makes sense though it won't be one chronological story.

Final Essay Proposal

For my final essay, I plan to expand upon my "describe a place" assignment and describe my family's trip to Edinburgh and London last winter. I hope to capture the differences between the two cities, as well as describe how my family managed the conflict we encountered trying to decide if we should try to cram an enormous amount of activities into each day, or if we should just relax and take our time and really enjoy the trip. I also hope to focus on how different environments (for instance, different cities) can affect our mood and how we interact with those around us.

Monday, November 2, 2015

Final Essay Proposal


I am going to write my graduation trip I traveled alone to Budapest, Hungary. Each of us comes to this world by travelling alone, and I get the thrill of experience something by myself, far from the crowds. I want to deliver one thing: Travelling alone is a confidence builder as well.

Final Essay Proposal

I plan on writing about my family trip to Kansas City where almost everything that could go wrong did go wrong for my final essay. The characters in this story will be me, my sister Amber, my mom, and my dad. The setting will be a mix of places in downtown Kansas City. The theme will be that even if it seems like everything is going wrong, be patient and good things will come. My main goal is to be able to implement details and dialogue successfully. I hope my readers will see that it is important to always search for the bright side of a situation.

Travel Essay Proposal

I am planning on writing about my trip to western South Dakota in the summer of 2013. The characters include my immediate family (Mom, Dad, Mike, Peter, myself). The theme will probably relate to the superficial level tourists exist on at iconic landmarks like Mount Rushmore. I might also tie in ideas connecting the past and present landscapes of the Great Plains. I hope to make my readers recognize different perspectives about the land that commonly is only viewed in one light.

Final Essay Proposal

My final essay is going to follow a trip I took last year to "The Big City" aka Chicago. It will tell the tale of many follies along the way and a lack of planning, hopefully somewhat comical to the audience. It will follow my girlfriend, Rachel, many road-raged drivers, and myself as we try to have a great skip day from school at Six Flags Great America. The theme or premise will be about the many curve balls that can come your way during traveling and how you can embrace them and make for a memorable experience. I hope the readers learn to embrace unseen changes within their future journeys and take some advice from me.

Final Essay Proposal

For my final travel essay, I was planning to expand the story that I wrote about a conflict encountered on a trip. The setting of this story is on St. John in the US Virgin Islands, where my family took a vacation this past summer. The conflict I ran into on this trip had to do with snorkeling, something my family really loved, and I really didn't. The main theme of the essay will be that you don't have to force yourself to like things that everyone else does, and that you can find enjoyment in other things. The story will talk about characters like my family and a worker at a beach rental shack. Some places on specific beaches will be described in detail. The plot line will follow the story of how we prepared to go snorkeling, I realized I wasn't a fan, and how my family and I reacted to that fact. It will show how I felt about the conflict between my family and I over snorkeling, and how I eventually responded to it. That is my plan at this point!

Final Essay Proposal

My final essay will be a combination and expanntion of both my Snapshot and Cross-Cultural Encounter pieces. I'm going to add more detail and combine them so that they turn into one bigger travel essay. The characters will include myself, Miguel (a small Guatemalan child), and members from my work group (Elise, Silvi, Seth, Ian, James, Jack, Teddy, Caroline, Gracie, and Whitney). Potentially those are all the characters, but I don't think I'll be able to introduce all of them within the page limit. Finally, the theme of my essay is the joy of hard work, creating new friendships, and experiencing the world in a different way.

Final Essay Proposal

For my final essay, I would like to combine my Snap the Shot and Describe a Place assignments and build off of each of them.  The setting would be Puerto Penasco, Mexico, which is where I went on my one and only out-of-the-country vacation.  Thus, my theme would be experiencing a different country and a new culture for the first time, and the characters would be myself and the family members who were on the vacation with me.  I hope to employ many of the techniques we have worked on so far in this class, such as descriptions, dialogue, and even the cross-cultural encounter.

Sunday, November 1, 2015

Final Essay Proposal

For my final essay I would like to expand on my snap shot piece, Horse Trail Adventures.  In terms of characters my horse, Kona, and I will be the main characters with my mom and dad as secondary characters.  The setting will be in Maui but I want to add flashbacks to Iowa when I was still riding to fully convey my passion for the sport and the theme--the theme being overcoming your failures.  A goal is to better show my emotions and include moments on the trail that made me nervous.  I want to add little details about Kona and the actual ride to complete my story.  Another goal for this final essay will be successfully integrating flashbacks to my previous riding experiences.  I want to convey that even though it might take awhile, the feeling that accompanies conquering your failures is one of the best.