Monday, June 15, 2015

Dad as a Businessman

This year I made a story of my dad called “Dad as a Businessman”. I am going to share it with you.


Dad as a Businessman
Boom, dad locked the door. He was preparing for a speech to his boss. If his boss hated the speech, dad would be put back to a lowly job. If dad’s boss liked the speech, dad would stay where he was. If dad’s boss loved the speech, dad would become the CEO!

Soon after, my dad came out of the room. He told us that he would rehearse the speech to us. Dad studied his papers before starting to talk. “In these days, our company is amazing. It has become a million times better from when I started in it,” dad continued his speech.

“This company has never proved me wrong. Instead it has grown me in my career. In 1866, when our company started, we could never accept people for whom they were. Now in 2015, our lives have much changed. We all keep improving our company, no matter our skill.
Although there are still some known bugs in our company, nobody argues about who should fix them. In any way, this company has never lost. Even in our many fails, there was always a lesson. Thank this beautiful company. Without it, I would never be happy,” my dad finished his speech.

“That’s wonderful!” we all chorused together. “You’ll definitely become the CEO!” But my dad with a worried look, went back into his room to study. “Oh poor dad,” I told mom. “If just he’d get over all this worrying.” “I know what to do!” my mom yipped. “Lets make dosa; dad’s favorite!” So that’s what we did.

After dad had finalized what to say tomorrow at the speech, he went to bed. When dad woke up, he was all fresh and ready for speech day. Dad confidently walked to his office. But then dad realized that he had forgotten his papers at home and it was too late to get them. Dad was up first and tried to remember his speech.

Dad remembered it very well. Time passed slowly as the others gave their speeches. Meanwhile, dad was worrying that he hadn’t done a good job because he forgot his papers. When everyone finished their speech, dad asked his boss for the results. He madly groaned, “You’ll get them tomorrow.”

Another reason to be worried, dad thought. That night, dad couldn’t sleep. He was too busy worrying. But eventually dad got some sleep. When we woke up dad the next morning, he jumped out of bed and checked his bag for supplies. Dad found his papers he had needed yesterday.

If my boss saw this, another reason to be worried. Then dad saw the clock. He hurriedly got dressed and left. At work, dad was the last person there. I’m late, dad thought. Another reason to be worried. When dad was walking in, he dropped his bag and everything spilled out.

Another reason to be worried, dad thought. Dad’s boss saw he had his papers. “Well prepared, that’s good". Finally a reason not to be worried. Boss slowly said the results. “Everybody here is staying at the same level except Dum-Dum and my dad.”

“One of the two is becoming the CEO. The other is going back to a lowly job. Dum-Dum is going back to a lowly job. My dad is becoming the CEO!” 

“Dad’s becoming the CEO!” we all cheered when the news reached home. “Great job!” we said to dad. “Awesome! Glorious!”  We never had more fun than we had that day.

Newspaper headline the next day.


New CEO In New York!

My dad giving a speech!

Happy Father's Day!


Writing Girl (6-15-15)

Sunday, May 31, 2015

Sibling Rivalry

Sibling rivalry is “a competition between siblings especially for the attention, affection, and approval of their parents.” This means that siblings are having a competition against each other to get their parents to like them more. That is not a good thing. You should support your siblings. Well, what do you do if you have sibling rivalry?

One morning at home, I started thinking about my loss at the chess tournament. I thought of my brother who got all the good things, “won at the chess tournament,” “won at the writing competition,” “got a good teacher,” “got on the pre-swim team,” and “got on a really good basketball team.” I felt so unhappy that I decided to stop letting my brother use my Diamond Membership chess account. Obviously, my brother told on me. That morning my mom had a discussion with me about sibling rivalry. She told me that I had it. She said that I should let my brother use my account. You should support your brother. Not get jealous of him, she reminded me. Slowly I understood that even if I felt my brother had better things than me, I had to support him, encourage him, just like he did to me. I finally told my brother the changed password of my account. I definitely learned a lesson; never be jealous of a sibling.
If you are having sibling rivalry, a parent should have an open discussion with you. Just like my mom had with me. Also, think of things you’ve had that your sibling has not. We are all good at different things and get things at different time in life. Also if your sibling is good at things, it benefits you; you can learn from them. If your sibling has a problem, you can help them and they can learn from you! All of these strategies can inspire siblings to work with each other through learning, teaching, and having fun rather than being jealous of each other.

Here is the post I did on the day I was miserable after I didn't make it to the chess travel team and my brother did: My loss at the chess tournament.

Writing Girl (WG)

Monday, May 25, 2015

Memorial Day

Memorial Day is a day to honor all the military people who lost their lives protecting our nation. Memorial Day started when the Civil War ended. At that time, it was called Decoration Day and was on May 30th. On Decoration Day, people would decorate soldiers graves with flowers, notes, and tiny toys. During 1882, people started remembering Decoration Day as Memorial Day. In 1971, Memorial Day was changed to the last Monday in May.

Our family payed respect to the soldiers by walking through a Memorial Day parade. I’m also going to send letters to soldiers. Did you know that you can write letters or emails and send them to organizations who forward them to soldiers deployed in war zones? I’m sending mine to Kids4Troops. Go here for a list of organizations that can connect you with providing help, services, and thanks directly to our soldiers.

Dear Soldier,
      Thank you for risking your life to help our country. We all really appreciate your kindness. We hope all of you are fine. Today on Memorial Day, we are honoring your brave friends who lost their lives serving our country. We pause to remember their contributions and service. They will never be forgotten.

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-Writing Girl (WG)











Thursday, May 21, 2015

Should School lunch be trash-free?

                                                        -an opinion essay

          People are debating about whether or not schools should require kids to pack a trash-free lunch. Many people think that student lunches create lots of unnecessary garbage. Others feel that making a trash-free lunch is a big hassle. After considering both sides, I believe that kids should bring trash-free lunches.

          Packing a trash-free lunch can prevent 1.2 billion pounds of waste from ending up in landfills. If your lunch is in a reusable container, there is much less trash. Very little school lunch is recycled and ends up ruining the earth. Your lunch doesn’t reach recycling centers, instead it winds up in landfills where it takes centuries to break up. Trash-free lunches are not only a blessing for our earth, they also cost less money. Miniature packages, although convenient, are expensive.

          Some people complain that reusable containers are expensive. I disagree because pre-packaged snacks cost more than buying one or a few reusable containers. For example, a 16-ounce bag of baby carrots cost $1.50, but one 4-ounce pack of baby carrot costs $0.75.


          There is enough evidence that schools should require students to pack trash-free lunches. Parents would need to figure out the extra time needed in cleaning out reusable containers and in packing trash-free lunches. Kids can help with some of this extra work. After all, we all have a duty to protect our planet and doing some extra work due to it is all worth it for our future generations.  

-WG

Sunday, May 10, 2015

I love you the Purplest


-  a poem by Writing Girl 


Mom, I love you the purplest. 

I love you the color of a star shining in the dark night sky. 
I love you the color of the vast blue sea where dolphins swim peacefully
enjoying the day.   
 
The shimmer of a lake
The brightness of a full moon
The call of a bluebird

Happy Mother’s Day!

Love Riya
May 7, 2015