Welcome!!

So this is my journey to my English 102 Class. It's all blog work and such.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Things you didn't know about ADHD


In our generation, by which I mean, roughly college aged, we hear a lot of people claim to have ADHD. Half the guys I’ve dated and 90% of my friends tell me “oh, I have ADHD” as they bounce off the walls during a moment in class.
ADHD isn’t the joke that my friends make it out to be. It’s actually really dangerous to the thousands of children taking the medications for it. Adderall and Ritalin are not healthy. Those are the medications children are put on. Some quick facts:
• Adderall was a weight loss pill before it was used for ADHD.
• Both medications warn not to give it to children.
• Both say they stunt growth.
• Both say not to give to anyone for long periods of time.
• The FDA warns that they both can cause heart attack, stroke and sudden death.
Yet, these are the pills that are given to children specifically for long periods of time sometimes at a very young age.
Don’t take my word alone for the proof. There are tons of Doctors out there who speak out against ADHD and the medicines.
• First, there is Dr. Bose Ravenel. He feels he is “a rebel with a cause” (Bose). He’s a 70 year old pediatrician. He also wrote a book focusing on how ADHD is a disease that no one can give definition to. Ravenel says that he at one point was a supporter of ADHD medications. This all changed when he realized ADHD DIDN’T EXIST A FEW YEARS AGO.
• Another Dr. Mary Ann Block says that she has found out that children with allergies exhibit the same symptoms as a child with ADHD. No child she saw was ever given a physical to find out if they had anything wrong with them.
Doctors are backing up the parents that don’t want to give drugs to their children. Yet, some doctors are pushing the drugs. A lot of them will compare ADHD to diabetes, saying that if your child had diabetes you would give them insulin right? Well diabetes is an insulin deficiency that can be measured. Insulin, the drug used to treat diabetes, is a hormone that is needed for life. ADHD can’t be measured and the drugs used to treat it are not necessary to live.
Teachers and doctors are also using the threat of reporting parents to the Child protective services if they don’t give the children the medication. The child protective services has gone as far as to remove a child from his home after a teacher told authorities that he was not being given his medication. The funny thing about this is that the mother had given her son his medication before he left the house but instead of making things better it made him way worse. The mother had been threatened before that if she didn’t give her son the medicine the school would be forced to turn it over to child protective services. That very morning she gave his ADHD medication to him. When he got to class his ADHD symptoms were so much worse. The mother tried to tell the school she had given him the medication but they wouldn’t listen.
There is a story about a woman named Alice in one of the articles. She has a seven year old son named Nathan. After going too many different doctors and getting many different diagnoses from the time he was little, he ended up at Dr. John Breeding’s office. Alice was upset that the school her son had gone to as a child was now rejecting him because of his behavior. Like many parents, Alice had begun to feel it was her fault as a parent for not raising Nathan better. She was one of the many parents who refused to give her son the medications that all the doctors tried to force on her using the “if your son had diabetes you would give him insulin” arguments. She says that she did give him Ritalin in the end because she wanted to slow him down. It had worked and she was now calm enough to consider some sort of different treatment.
There are tons of different paths to go in order to avoid giving a child a drug.
• One way is called the four-step program:
1. Change the child’s image of themselves and make it so they see themselves in a positive light.
2. Get rid of electronic media because children get addicted to them.
3. Changing their diet to something with a lot of fish oil.
4. Don’t put so much stock in the education system. In our society, things a child use to know in second grade are now being taught in kindergarten. It sets your child up for failure.
• Another alternate is to get them checked for any allergies that may be present. As in the previous paragraphs, it has been known to cause the same effects as ADHD.
Nutrition itself is a huge problem. Food additives, like food colorings, can cause huge problems. The old saying “you are what you eat” comes into this. What we eat determines what our blood is made of, and what our blood is made of determines how our body functions.
Food additives aren’t the only problem. Another problem is refined carbohydrates. This is foods like white bread and anything made with white flour. It is already know that people who eat large amounts of these are known to have mental diseases. Refined carbohydrates make your brain fuzzy and it can’t seem to focus on anything.
Soft drinks are another problem. They contain refined sugars. Refined sugars are bad because they take away the nutrients that your body really needs. These include B vitamins and several minerals including Zinc.
Dr. Breeding says we can fix this problem with a few simple steps. The first is to focus on public schools. It isn’t good that children have pop and junk food so close at hand. Vending machines have got to go. Along with this, we need to educate parents on how to feed their children things that will teach them to eat right on their own.
The last big concern is that advertising companies shouldn’t be allowed to target children. It should be illegal to put sugary cereals on TV between the times that children are likely to be seeing it. This causes children to become obese and has been proven to be a rising health concern in America.
Many different opinions and many different facts have led me to two conclusions. The first is that ADHD does not exist and it is just used to make children be seen and not heard. It is used as a cover up for all our parenting problems. And the second is that there are better ways to deal with these problems such as watching what we feed our children and making sure they don’t have any alternate problems such as allergies to stand in their ways. With so many people claiming to have ADHD, maybe it’s high time someone actually look into it.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Second extra credit: Truu confessions

So, i was looking for a blog to post my extra credit on. I found one that lets you anonymously tell your true feelings. I have a lot of friends that have fallen out of touch with me, I live with someone I can't yell at, and a ton of other things. This is the perfect blog to post to.


http://www.truuconfessions.com/

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Random blog

So I got picked for extra credit. I'm really happy about this because I feel I have a good grasp on what it takes to make a blog. I still need to add pictures to my blog and I feel like I'm running out of time with the end of the quarter coming up.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Random post. Fot the blog

So after meeting with Miss. Kraft, I was excited about all the potential my blog is going to have. She had a lot of helpful tips on bulletin points and focusing on the story of the woman and her son. She told me to focus on the things that shocked me the most.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Why we write

For each of us, there is a different reason.whether it's passion or work.For me it's something deep in my blood. My mother wrote. When I was six.she started a story about a sixteen year old princess. That princess' name was Kaycee. My initials. My mother even had a name she wrote under. J lone feather. I was six at the time and can still remember the sound of the type writer and the warm glow of the room.

That must be why I write. My mother never finished her story and part of me must be trying to finish it for her . It has to be the reason that at the age of twelve I begged my grandma for a type writer of my own. It was huge, gray, and bulky but I can remember countless summer days spent in front of it. My thoughts strong onto the paper.

It seemed that the more books I read, the more I want to write. Other people s words inspiring my own. This is why I write. It's in my very soul and blood. It's no different then the wind beneath an eagle's wings.

Friday, May 7, 2010

Random blog Friday may7 2010

So I'm really excited about doing a blog. I always loved reading them and I've never written one of my own except for on here. I know were suppose to do them on what our research paper was on, but that makes me really sad. I already wrote a paper for that topic and find it draining to do another post on the same thing. When Miss. Kraft told us to look up a new blog article, I assumed that was going to be our topic and I was looking forward to writing about the Swype keyboard. I guess sometimes things just don't go our own way.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Wednesday 5/4/2010 HW

So we had to choose a blog to study. I choose to find one on Swype, the inventive texting tool that my new phone has. At first, I was a skeptic. I was trying to text during German history class and when I misspelled a word a loud beep went off. After finding a way to stop the noise and using Swype for a few days, I feel it has greatly enhanced my texting. The full keyboard on touch screen phones was always hard for me since I'm use to the regular phone pad. This technology made my life so much easier.

So the blog I found was focused on that. It made it seem like the blogger liked the technology but at the end he sort of bashed it.

http://blogs.sybase.com/wdudley/?p=628

Now to answer the questions:

1.What is the blogger responding to?
It seems he is responding to the new hype about the Swype keyboard. He uses other people's blogs as a reference.
2.What is their opinion on the topic? Do they agree/disagree with whatever view they're discussing?
His opinion is that there is too much hype over it. That it will never do for the texting world what T9 predictive text did. He seems to disagree with it all.
3.What are they trying to persuade their reader of? How are they doing it?
He is trying to give the reader a negative look on how big the Swype keyboard is. He does this by pointing out it's flaws and how it can't compare to the other technology.
4.How does this seem to be different from an essay in a book, or something you might read in class?
This differs from an essay in class because it is less formal. He doesn't cite any of his sources and it seems to be based purely on his opinion and not actually facts. In fact, he says that everyone but him likes it.