There are many people in the world who identify themselves in many ways. People can identify themselves by their race, religion, nationality, culture, ethnicity, gender and much more are all factors to create a person’s identity. Some factors may have influence someone's identity or some people doesn't have any influences at all. A person's interest is what sets people apart from each other. People do not have to share the same interests. People do not need to be told of who they can become or not but instead they choose their own path of the way they want to live. They would set out goals that they would achieve and accomplish during their lifetime. Everybody is different because each individual has their own way of living. You as a …show more content…
Next thing you know they did call my name. All my teammates were excited to see me play in the contest. They were 6 people whose name was called up including mine. The three point contest is to see how many three point field goals you can make from five positions in one minute. There are 5 stations and you only have 5 shots to shoot from each of those stations. Each shot you make is 1 point but the last shot from each rack is called the “moneyball” counted as 2 points. The first three people got a low score so I wasn't too worried about them. However, the next two people both got really high scores and the pressure was on for me. One of the two scored 17 points and the other 20 points. It was my turn up next. I was so nervous. I was shaking a lot and my heart started racing but when they hand me the ball, I was in the zone. I was making shot after shot after shot while my teammates were cheering me on. I’ve scored 25 points and won the contest. A week later after that happened, they gave me a trophy with my name on it saying three point champion. I still have that trophy today. This day was probably one of my best childhood memory ever. In my opinion, basketball is the most entertaining sport to watch on television. I like to watch my favorite basketball player who is Kawhi Leonard. He plays for the San Antonio Spurs. He is one of my biggest role models. He is one
Most people, unless they choose to be an outsider, want to be considered “cool.” Whether it’s to fit in with a peer group, or clique, or to impress someone in particular, like a member of the opposite sex, or a potential mate. Or possibly to gain something from an individual for financial or social gain (see “Scamming”).
My identity is something that that no one can take away from me. As I am still growing and learning, I can say that I have found many things that appeal to me. My interests will help define my personality and express myself in ways that I can’t express through words. I enjoy finding new things to do and doing my best in aiming towards my goals. I have many goals, but I know that I can only accomplish them through patience and perseverance.
Identity. What is it? Where does it come from? Where do humans get that sense of “I’m going to be this way” or “I’m going to believe in this” or “This is what makes me, me”. Everyone has a different identity, we all have dreams, goals, perspectives, and different personalities, and this is all what makes being human beautiful. Identity, I believe, consists on components that build character on how other people view you. Sometimes, stereotypes get in the way of this. You’re identity is part of how you live yes, but how you look and how you present yourself is not really a part of who you truly are on the inside.
My identity is something that has helped shape not only my personal being but also has influenced those around me. It is something that cannot easily be defined by words but rather it is reflected by my character. Race and ethnicity are prominent issues in today’s society and can be negative or positive influences on an individual’s self-esteem and identity. Due to government structures, socialization, and experience one develops a sense of belonging (or not) and this creates one’s identity. My identity successes and challenges have given me opportunities to defy society’s standards and allowed me to decide who I am as an individual. With this, I have also become more open-minded and sensitive to other cultures and ethnicities.
10 in the morning on a Friday, Veteran’s Day. Being as lazy as I would make this scenario none but imagination if it were not for one specific event of sorts. Sitting in a Starbucks, the only one among two other friends without a drink yet all three of us are more than excited for what the next hour has in store. The first signs rolled up in sight from the front door, lined up, and staring us right in the eyes. Flat fours, exhaust ranging from one tip to four, and badges encircling a familiar six star pattern.
"I don't cover my face because, I want to show my identity," I pick this quote because I personally think that you should always have confidence regardless of what you look like and most of all you shouldn't care of people think of you. But I've always learned that a pretty face doesn't mean a pretty heart.
The next topic of my course is about identity of US and UK. It is a new topic to me. But, it is our second presentation, so I read it carefully, and after that I understood it quite clearly. In Britain, people seem like do not really care about geography and family identity. Because of geography’s unimportance, they really think contact is an important part of their identity and their social life also. Furthermore, British shows excessive interest in of class differences. They find it difficult to make friend or talk to people from lower or higher classes. Even though they do not give prominence to family identity, but they heighten mother’s role in a family. Like I said in the second paragraph, in modern Britain, people separate politics and
When I was a little girl, I was taught to wear only feminine clothing such as dresses, skirts, etc. From that point on, that’s all I’ve known. This is because it is socially and culturally accepted when females only wear feminine clothing.
Nationality fosters identity. One’s identity is usually traced back to one’s culture and place of birth. But for me, nationality has fostered confusion. I was born in New York City and lived there for eight years; therefore I should identify as American. But when my family moved because my mother received a job transfer to Geneva, Switzerland, I was surrounded by a foreign language and culture. Living for the first half of my life among the diverse American population and spending the second half of my life surrounded by the homogeneous Swiss population sparked my curiosity. My exposure to two contrasting cultures shaped my perspective and allowed me to mature, as I learned to define myself and my ideals. My past allowed me to appreciate the value and privilege of learning–something that I had previously taken for granted.
We are who we are because of all our prior experiences and how we respond to those experiences. Identity creates a path expressing what you do, what you like to do and why you do it. Identity plays a unavoidable and central part in our lives on a daily basis. There is no way around pretending identity doesn’t exist or doesn’t matter. However, doing so could boost your self-confidence; it will not be able to numb the pain or existence of how others view you as an individual. Every single action or little value of importance we take, could not only affect yourself but also others around you. In saying so, it is favorable to practice being thoughtful of others and your surroundings to better your identity as a person.
I felt a lot better after locking all the thoughts behind. Eventually, I forgot about them because I was too busy studying with my school works. I moved to the United States with my family during seventh grade. At this point, these thoughts were completely out of my head. My mind was occupied with learning english and trying to adapt to the new country. I remembered that I wanted to maybe learn about myself and doing some research about my “disease” in order to found out what kind of “disease” I am dealing with, but there were too much going on that I have to deal with that I gave up. I started to enroll in school and all I could think about is mastering the english language. It was until my sophomore year during my high school year that I met these three individuals that spark my inner identity. I met two of my best friends from my Vietnamese class and the other individual in my AVID class. I gave each of them their own nickname: PhD, Babyboy, and Jessicat. I then introduce them to each other and we stuck together until now. I guess we all have something in common, something that bind us together because the moment we start talking, it is like grass meet fire. Non-stop conversation would be produce as we shared stories about ourselves. The one common thing we have is that us four all belong to that 2.5 percent that are either homosexual or bisexual. For the first time in my life that I felt safe; I felt fit in. There are
The issue of personal identity is one of the most rudimentary problems in philosophical thought. It can be thought of as the problem of explaining what makes a person at a certain time the same as a person at another time. Although it is generally, among non-philosophers, considered obvious that a person at one point in time is the same person as they progress through life (for example, few would dispute that the James Joyce who wrote Dubliners in 1914 is the same James Joyce that wrote Ulysses in 1922), attempting to elucidate why that is so complicates matters. Among the theories that aim to solve the problem of personal identity are the spatiotemporal continuity view and the psychological continuity view.
From day one of my life, I had begun to establish my own identity, or at least that’s what I get out of the stories that get repeated at family events when they talk about “back in the day”. From day one of my life, I was exposed to many different cultures and races. I guess you could say I am one of the more fortunate people who found themselves early on in life and knew exactly what I wanted to do. Many people my age have no idea who they are (identity problems) and have no idea where there life is headed. I feel sorry for these people for not being as fortunate as I, but like previously stated, I was very fortunate when being brought up.
If persons persist over time then by what criteria do we determine their identity at different times? This is the issue of personal identity over time which continues to plague philosophers. What is it that allows me to say I am the same person today as I was yesterday or I will be tomorrow? Am I actually the same person? There has been no general consensus on the answer to this question. However many have proposed solutions to this question. When it comes to this hard problem of why persons last or persist over time there are two opposing points of view points. There is the perdurance or four dimensionalism view, which maintains that objects persist as a series of temporal parts that are simply related to each other. The other view is that of endurance which states that objects endure over time by being wholly present at each and every time they exist and must be numerically identical to each other in order to be the same thing, in such a way that they are one and the same.
As a question, ‘who am I?’ poses many complications. Each of us are aware of being someone “with a past, a present and a future…” however, it is the fact that we are not “only aware of inhabiting a distinct personal world, but also…social and cultural…” which leads to confusion. This essay will therefore explore the Psychological foundations behind the question, in regards to evidence provided by the ‘Twenty Statement Test’. Analysis of this study made it apparent that ‘the self’ could be classified into three main groups; social, relational and personal selves, with each of these being readily related to the various theoretical assumptions. This essay will examine how each of these categories seek to answer the question ‘who am I?’, as