We all had to write a true story about something that made an impact in our life, I chose to write about the time I watched a scary movie. I got an A- on it.
The movie that changed my life
When I was around seven years old, my life turned up side down. One of my friends at that time showed me a movie that would scar me. I really regret my decision not to walk away the minute we started watching the movie. It was one of the scariest movie ever made, and it is called The Exorcist, and is rated R.
What was I thinking to see that movie? And the weird thing is that my friend's mom bought the movie for her daughter, and it was one of her favorite movies at the time even though she was only seven years old! She thought the movie was funny. I don't get it.
When I walked for dinner after seeing the movie, I was terrified, even in the perfect day light. I was shacking. It must have been one of the longest days ever, I was really dreading nighttime. I eventually told my parents about the movie, I was crying so hard. My parents said that I could sleep in their bed for the night, I was so relived. I thought it would be okay, I struggled a lot with nightmares already, and it always helped to sleep in their bed. But I couldn't be more wrong.
The dream I had that night wouldn't seem scary if I described it, but it was the worst dream I ever have had. I woke up a lot that night, sweating and crying. I imagined that demons would crawl over me and jump over me and always watching over my shoulder.
I didn't sleep in my own bed for over three months, and I dreaded for the nights to come. I now get scared of the smallest and weirdest things, and I will never be able to see a scary movie ever again.
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Thursday, November 17, 2011
April 25-28, 2011 Tornado outbreak
We have to write a blog about a natural distaster that is even going on now, or very reasently. So I chose the extreme weather here in US this April.
April 25-28, 2011 Tornado outbreack
Starting on April 19, the Hydrometeorological Prediction Center began to discuss this storm system, and the possibility of an outbreak of strong thunderstorms. A large area of possible severe storms for April 25–27 was forecast as the Storm Prodiction Center, a division of the National Weather Service, issued a moderate risk of severe weather for three consecutive days, centered over Arkansas through Tennessee.
April 25, 2011
By the late-afternoon hours of April 25, several tornadoes had been reported across a few states, including two which caused significant damage in Oklahoma and Texas. The Storm Protiction Center issued a particularly dengerous situation tornado watch for much of Arkansas and parts of Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas and Louisiana. Tornadoes were scattered that day until early evening, when an intense tornadic cell tracked near the Little Rock metropolitan area and a tornado emergency was declared for Vilonia, Arkensas. Tge tornado caused significant damage in the town. Reports says four people were killed. A strong EF3 tornado struck Hot Springs Village that evening as well, causing severe damage and 1 death. Another tornado caused extensive damage to Little Rock Air Force Base. Severe flooding continued across a large area from the Red River valley to the Great Lakers.
April 26, 2011
April 27, 2011
April 25-28, 2011 Tornado outbreack
Starting on April 19, the Hydrometeorological Prediction Center began to discuss this storm system, and the possibility of an outbreak of strong thunderstorms. A large area of possible severe storms for April 25–27 was forecast as the Storm Prodiction Center, a division of the National Weather Service, issued a moderate risk of severe weather for three consecutive days, centered over Arkansas through Tennessee.
April 25, 2011
By the late-afternoon hours of April 25, several tornadoes had been reported across a few states, including two which caused significant damage in Oklahoma and Texas. The Storm Protiction Center issued a particularly dengerous situation tornado watch for much of Arkansas and parts of Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas and Louisiana. Tornadoes were scattered that day until early evening, when an intense tornadic cell tracked near the Little Rock metropolitan area and a tornado emergency was declared for Vilonia, Arkensas. Tge tornado caused significant damage in the town. Reports says four people were killed. A strong EF3 tornado struck Hot Springs Village that evening as well, causing severe damage and 1 death. Another tornado caused extensive damage to Little Rock Air Force Base. Severe flooding continued across a large area from the Red River valley to the Great Lakers.
April 26, 2011
A high risk of severe weather was issued for April 26 for portions of Louisiana, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Texas. A large particularly dangerous situation tornado watch with very high tornado probabilities was issued that afternoon for that same area. Widespread tornado warnings were issued in that area later that evening, and tornadoes caused damage.
Tornado watches were also issued for the Lower Great Lakes in the afternoon, and supercells began to track across southern Michigan in the early evening. Several counties in Michigan were placed under tornado warnings, including Kent, Montcalm, Ionia, Kalamazoo, Cahoun, Barry, Eaton, Midland and Bay counties. A tornado was later confirmed in Allegan County. A possible funnel was spotted in Kalamazoo County, and seven people were injured by a lightning strike in Portage. Further east, severe thunderstorms caused scattered wind damage and large hail across Pennsylvania and New York. Two-inch-diameter hail was reported in Lock Haven, Pennsylvania. An isolated supercell moved across Central New York throughout much of the afternoon, producing golf ball-sized hail in Syracuse, and spawned a very brief EF1 tornado in Verona Mills, causing primarily tree damage.
April 27, 2011
For the second day in a row, it was a high risk of severe weather for the Southern United States, and late that morning the Storm Predicting Center increased the probability for tornadoes to 45% around Meridian, Mississippi to Huntsville, Alabama. During the afternoon, a tornado emergency was declared for Neshoba County, Mississippi as a large tornado was reported on the ground by storm spotters. This powerful EF5 tornado caused incredible damage near Philadelphia, Mississippi where homes were swept away, vehicles were thrown, and the ground was scoured out to a depth of 2 feet by the tornado. 3 people died in this tornado when a mobile home was picked up, thrown into a wooded area. A widespread complex of supercell storms overspread the states of Mississippi and Alabama and violent tornadoes began rapidly touching down as the evening progressed. Four tornadoes were officially rated as EF5 that day. These tornadoes impacted several counties in the states of Mississippi and Alabama, especially the towns of Smithville, Mississippi; Hackleburg and Phil Campbell, Alabama; Philadelphia, Mississippi; and Rainsville, Alabama. This marks only the second day in history (the other being the April 3, 1974 Super Outbreak) that there were three or more EF5 or F5 tornadoes.
A separate complex of storms occurred earlier that morning and caused communication and warning problems due to power outages, so people didn't get any warning of approaching tornadoes later that day. A squall line of severe thunderstorms packing strong straight-line winds and numerous embedded tornadoes impacted North and Central Alabama and parts of Middle and East Tennessee in the early morning hours. These storms knocked out power and telephone lines in a few areas, these outages would become much more widespread as the day continued.
The SPC shows 260 tornadoes were reported in the preceding 24 hours. It also broke the record for most tornadoes in 24 hours with 188 (53 of which were in Alabama), breaking the record of 148 set by the 1974 Super Outbreak.
April 28, 2011
Tornado watches were issued for the Atlantic Seaboard from Pennsylvania to Florida, but tornadoes were predicted to weaken and become more isolated. Even so, several people were killed across the region and tornadoes were reported in Pennsylvania, New York, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida and Maryland. In the wake of the tornadoes and severe thunderstorms, widespread flooding hit the Midwest, South, and Eastern Seaboard, with extensive flood and flash flood warnings issued. The last tornadoes of the outbreak touched down that afternoon in eastern North Carolina, but they were all weak.
Confirmed tornadoes
From: Wikipedia
Confirmed tornadoes
Confirmed Total | Confirmed EF0 | Confirmed EF1 | Confirmed EF2 | Confirmed EF3 | Confirmed EF4 | Confirmed EF5 |
336 | 119 | 146 | 50 | 23 | 11 | 4 |
From: Wikipedia
Friday, November 4, 2011
Art by Maria Björnbom-Öberg
Maria Björnbom-Öberg was born in 1985 in Sweden. She works as a tattooartist in Sweden, she has a long education with art, and work as a freelance artist on the side of her tattoo job.
She uses Trimarker and Promakes to draw potraits, but feel also comforable using aquarelle. In the last year she has been drawing potraits of blogers, and sent the pictures to them afterwards. She films under the prosses of a picture, speed it up and puts it out on youtube, it's so much fun to watch the making of a great picture.
The pictures are downloaded from her website, and the movies are from her youtube-profile
Promarkers
She uses Trimarker and Promakes to draw potraits, but feel also comforable using aquarelle. In the last year she has been drawing potraits of blogers, and sent the pictures to them afterwards. She films under the prosses of a picture, speed it up and puts it out on youtube, it's so much fun to watch the making of a great picture.
The pictures are downloaded from her website, and the movies are from her youtube-profile
Promarkers
Aquarelle
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Animal Farm Essay
Here is my essay about Animal Farm. I'm very happy about the grade I got on it, A+.
Animal Farm Essay
Animal Farm Essay
The two pigs, Napoleon an Snowball, play big parts in the book about Animal Farm. They both wanted to have the leader role at the farm, but they both realize that there is only room for one leader and that one of them has to step down. Napoleon and Snowball argue a lot, and Orwell wrote this about it, “Snowball and Napoleon were by far the most active in the debates. But it was noticed that these two were never in agreement: whatever suggestion either of them made, the other could be counted to oppose it.” Later the arguing gets more intense, “These two disagree at every point disagreement was possible.”
After Snowball has led a successful harvest, he wins the trust from all of the animals. Snowball works to improve the farm and only want what's good for the farm. He has a lot of good ideas for the farm, and his windmill becomes a huge problem for Napoleon, and he tries to turn the whole farm against Snowball. Snowball wants all the animals to build a windmill together so their work would be easier. All the animals are voting if they want to build the windmill or not, Napoleon means that the windmill is pointless and advises the animals not to vote for the windmill.
Earlier in the book, one of the dogs gives birth to a litter of puppies, but dies right after. Napoleon then take the puppies to educate them and make them his own guards. After a while all of the animals forget about the puppies, sensing they never were seen after the birth. When it becomes obvious for Napoleon that the animals will vote for Snowballs windmill, he becomes jealous and angry. The puppies come in to the meeting and attacks Snowball under the meeting, casting him away from the farm, and Napoleon uses them to take over the leadership.
When the windmill they have built is destroyed for the first time, Napoleon has no trouble blaming Snowball, “do you know who is responsible for this? Do you know the enemy who has com in the night and overthrown our windmill? SNOWBALL!” Napoleon only talks Snowball down, so he seems like a better animal and the leader, and all of the other animals believe him.
Napoleon is very self-centered, and sees him self almost as a God, in his head he was so much more important then the other animals. No one referred to him only as “Napoleon” after he became the leader, he was always referred to as “our Leader, Comrade Napoleon”, The other pigs also give him different titles such as, Father of All Animals, Terror of Mankind, Protector of the Sheep-fold, and Ducklings' friend. He always ate alone with the dogs guarding him, and made them taste the food in case someone tried to poison him. Napoleon also changes the commandments, so they work better for himself. For an example, he makes it acceptable for the pigs to sleep in the human beds. He means that it is not a violation of the old commandments since they do not have the sheets on the beds.
Snowball comes back to the farm, and a discussion starts about whether he was a traitor or not. Squealer, Napoleon's right hand, tries very hard to keep everyone against Snowball, and tries to convince them that Snowball worked for the humans all the time. Boxer argues against it, saying that Snowball was fighting too bravely in the battle to be a traitor. The other animals want to think good about Snowball, something Napoleon does not like at all. Napoleon tries so hard to get the other animals angry at Snowball, and tells them that Snowball poisened his food.
I think that Snowball only thought about the animals good and wanted the farm to succeed in the best way. It seems like Napoleon cares more about being the king, and keeping the farm as his kingdom. He brainwashes the other animals in a way, and uses Squealer to make it happen. Napoleon is more self-centered then Snowball. They have a huge disagreement, and are fighting hard for the spot as leader of the farm. Napoleon uses more violence than Snowball to get what he want, and he lies to the other animals for his own fortune. Although Snowball and Napoleon had a lot of differences, they also had a lot in common. They both wanted to be leaders so badly that they both were very opinionated and stubborn. They both refused to fail in their mission, and yet Snowball did 'fail', as he was cast out by Napoleon.
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