We`re GoinG Places - Literacy Partners
Transcription
We`re GoinG Places - Literacy Partners
We’re Going Places A Coll e c t i on of W r i t i ng B y Li t e racy Part ne rs St u de nts We’re Going Places A Collectio n o f Writing By Literac y Partners Students W e d n e s d a y, J u n e 1 9 , 2 0 1 3 The students, teachers, and staff wish to express their deep gratitude to the many wonderful volunteer tutors. Table of Contents Adult Basic Education Lanell Gardenhire . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Adult Basic Education Anne Ashton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Adult Basic Education Tutorial Center Sarajane Blair and Derrel Meade . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Pre-GED Sharon Griffiths . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Pre-GED Jasmine Acosta . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Pre-GED Mary Ann Lasky . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Pre-GED Tutorial Center Kenneth Fobi and Yinette Tejada . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 GED Prep Carla Jeanpierre . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 GED Prep Gerald Alexis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 ESOL Victor Edrosolan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62 ESOL Eduardo Go . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70 ESOL/Family Literacy Roy Villanueva . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77 Class Adult Basic Education Teacher Lanell Gardenhire The reason I want to learn to read and write and get my GED is to become a citizen of the United States. I want to read to my grandchildren and start my own business as a building manager. —By Thomas Akonnor I would like to get my GED and to do math a lot better. I like to learn new things like the world and reading and math. I will like to get better with the division and the word problems. I would also like to learn the computer. —By Tamar Cruiz I go to Literacy Partners to learn to read and write English. I can read and write Spanish but I need English because English is the language of America. I came to the United States at age 17. I don’t have a good education. I come to Literacy Partners and now I am reading better. —By Beatrice Ofori —By Agustin Baez Mother’s day is a special day for me. Mother’s day is a day for every lady. My Mentor If it weren’t for my mentor I wouldn’t know about this school. He brought me to Literacy Partners and signed me up. My mentor helps me with reading but sometimes I get lazy. He lets me know when I’m not focusing. He helps me with grocery shopping and he calls me in the morning to make sure I’m awake and ready for school. I feel lucky to have my mentor. —By Calvin Brister I love my sweet mommy. She does everything for me. My mommy is the best mom. I Pray to god to give her long life and blessings. I love my lovely family. I like my school. My teacher is the best. —By Sire Berete 4 We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students I heard about Literacy Partners from a newspaper. I come to Literacy Partners because my goal is to learn English language. I come from Africa. My country is Guinea Conakry. I came to the United States to find a better opportunity and I want to improve my education. I want to read and write English clearly and accurately. I want to have my GED and continue to college. I want to accomplish something in my lifetime and be able to help someone in need. I want someone to know that I have been in this world after I die. —By Alpha Diallo I was looking for a school or a program to get my GED. Then I found Literacy Partners. It is a good program and I know I can learn all I want. Thanks to the program I’m sure I can get a good job. Something that I learned from life is you need a good education. People can get all they want. You can learn to be your own boss and a better person with the capacity to help people who do not have the same opportunity. I want to get all that this country gives me because I want to use it in my country. I’m from the Dominican Republic. I know that if I get a good education I can change to teach all that I know from the same way Literacy Partners does with me. The perfect life is a complete education. —By Lissania Diaz I Am Happy that I Came to School I am happy I found a school to help me and my family. Education is very important. I hope that when I leave I will be 100% better than when I came in. I hope that God blesses me to be a better man in the future. —By Basil Dixon I’m coming to this program for my GED. I started in April of 2012. I been learning some things I still don’t understand it help me a little but I try to work on the things I don’t know. Mostly I really need help with the math. I needed to get this GED before but I didn’t I need it because I need a good job and it’s important to have in life and I know things I didn’t know before like my times tables and subtraction so that why I need my GED. —By Geraldine Dugue I heard about Literacy Partners from a friend and they told me to come to the school. Now I am learning how to read better. I also want to take the GED so that I can go to college to study business and then I can own my own business. —By Shervah Ingram We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 5 My Baby Brother My baby brother is a 4 Years Old boy named Jayden. He’s fighting Cancer right now. He’s my reason to Keep Moving Forward. And he showed me that no matter what happens in life you reach up and aim for the stars. He is the Main Reason why I went back to school. Everything I am doing is for him. And give him a reason to Keep Moving Forward and Keep On Fighting and not give up on Hope and Faith. He saved my Life from the dark and show me the light and now I get to show him the same thing. —By Margarita Espada I like to come to Literacy Partners to learn to read and write better. I want to help my family and I like to read with my grandsons Brandon and Luis. I wanted to learn reading and math so that’s why I came to Literacy Partners. I wanted to learn more about math so I would have more understanding about reading. I want to learn and I was asked do I want to go back to school to learn about getting my GED. I will be happy if I get my GED. 6 Right now.im going to an art school so I can be a comic book artists / painter. I’m also trying to get my GED so I can get a job. —By Willie James I come to Literacy Partners to learn to read and work on my math skills. I also want to learn how to use the computer. I hope to get a better job and help more people through volunteer work. —By Pamela Goodhope My Goals My goal is to learn as much as I can when it comes to reading and writing. Someday I want to go out there and fill out an application for a job. —By Herman Rosado —By Anselmo Figueroa —By Bernard Gavins I’m Willie James I was born on 1987. I grew up in Jamaica Queens. I love drawing . My Mother My mother was a great mother and she loved to help people. Everybody asked for her advice. When she was very sick she was asking God to help me raise my son. My son was seven at the time. Everyone would visit her in the hospital but she always asked for my son. —By Marie Jean We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students The reason why I don’t have my High School Diploma is because I dropped out of High School in the 11th grade. I attended Grover Cleveland High School in the year January 1968 then I dropped out in the year 1970. So this is the reason why I am attending class at Literacy Partners, Inc. I want to try and freshen up my skills to achieve my GED. I also want to move on to accomplish other goals. —By Evelyn James I came here to learn because I want to learn all things in my life; and in life. I hope that I get my G E D and go to college someday and become a smart person. I am thankful because I come to Literacy Partners. I hope that I learn a lot in my life as I’m in school. Learning in my life now makes me feel good about myself. I know that learning is going to the top in all things in life. —By Ricardo Lugo Why Did I come to Literacy Partners? Cause I was spending alone all day in my room doing nothing. I was alone and out of justice and reading things that I couldn’t understand. I think that in my program a student staff called my attention to Literacy Partners. —By Oscar Milligan Dear Journal, On Sunday it was mother’s day me and my mom were going to the movies but my mom was sick because she’s got a cold so I went by myself to see iron man 3. The movie is the third film where there is action there is a new villain name the mandian who is the bad guy and there is a new hero name iron patriot. Iron man was going to beat the mandian but with a help is his flying suits. And what happened pepper was in a fight she kicks butt and tony stark went back to normal. And I went home to fill out a mother’s day letter to grandma she liked it and it was the best mother’s day gift ever. I tell my mom about the movie and it was super and that’s why I celebrate mother’s day. —By Brandon Miller These are My Goals I want to run my own business. I want to help my daughter to learn new things. I want to get my GED. I want to be able to study more. —By Derrick Thompson My Goals for School My goals are to read and write better. I hope to accomplish something in these classes. I want to better myself. I met a lot of new people and my teachers are nice. —By Winfred Lane We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 7 My Goals for the Year I want my health to get better because my health is not good. I definitely need a job. I need to improve my school work. I also want to get my GED. —By Alice MacElree I’m Ricardo Mason. I’m from Costa Rica , I been going to a lots up and down in my life , bout always seems I was born I have a good protection in my life and a lot blessing because I m a person that think positive and try the hardest to do my best. I’m the younger of a 12 brothers. When I was one years old my mother gave fourth of us away because she could not take care of us to a shelter. When my father fine out, he came a rescue and take us to his house , were we learn how to survive in life and learn how to take care of or self. My father use to work a lot so he was never home , my brother wish was 10 years old was like a mother and father for us in such a young age, with no father or mother around my brother show us good values in life, how to be responsible , stay away from bad stuffs that terms to expose when you young . He is such inspiration because in moments that was no food at home he always find a way to make us happy and motivate us to be strong and get food for us. We work all types of different jobs, to keep the family flow and no matter what is going on in life we have to 8 dream big and enjoy life the fullers because nobody bout us can make it happing . To make this history short this is the reason why I take English class to be better and get better education for me and my family and go to the university and get my degree! I know people my say you can’t ! but I know I can because that’s what I want. I want more for my self J. My father used to tell us learn as much that you can because you never know what you going to be doing tomorrow and that all the materials stuffs can take away from you but what you have learn and the knowledge you have will stay always with you. That is one of the best things God gave us and with his help, we will be fine. —By Ricardo Mason I come here to learn how to better myself in Math and Reading. I come here so that I can move on in my own life with my two kids Shawnasia and Nevaeh. —By Alice Thomas DEAR TEACHER, I was not doing well in life coming here to get my GED was the best decision I made to do something for me for once. I learn A lot from Ms Lanell Gardenhire and I hope that I can complete this course. Thank you all that are apart of having me here. God bless. —By Michael Rock We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students The things that’s positive in my life is my family who’s always been in my life and who’s always going to be in my life is my family. Family is important even our ups and down, family is always with you. Family never leaves you. Well some families never leave you. Some family don’t care but my family We love each other no matter what even if we have our ups and down. I have the best in the world. Family believes in you. I don’t about you but my family believes in me like how I believe in them. And how we believe in each other family but you in the right direction if we did not believe in each other nothing would have gone good. Family is important I am glad I have a wonderful family. Lucky Me Do you know why I’m so lucky? I’m so lucky because I have special people in my life who care about me and want me to succeed. When I look at my daughter she makes me want to work harder. There is nothing that I wouldn’t do for her. My Mom knew that I had signed up for school and she was so proud of me. But later on she passed away. I tried to enroll my sister, but she had passed away. Now I have to finish school for my daughter, me, my Mom and my sister. My Mom had eleven kids. I’m the fourth oldest child. Sometimes I ask myself if my Mom was ashamed of her kids. Every time I asked myself that it always gave me the strength to do better. I lost three people in four month who were very important to me. That’s why I call myself lucky because it did not break me. —By Shaniqua Stewart —By Melissia Robinson Literacy Partners I went back to school for my GED, to read better and to understand what I read. All my children are not babies anymore so I went back to school. I would like a good job in the Emergency Room in the hospital or I would like a good job in the airport. I want to be a good “Mom” to my children and grandchildren and I like to read books to all the children in the family! —By Jean Stewart When I came to the United States of America I didn’t know how to speak English. When I got pregnant with my first baby my husband has to go with me to my doctor’s appointment because I couldn’t speak or write in English. When my son started Head Start I heard about LP English class. I went there to talk with the teacher and I started to go to the English class. From there to now I started to learned how to write and speaked English. I am continue to improve my English now I can go every were by myself I am grateful to LP program and the wonderful teachers I had. —By Mariam Traore We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 9 What have I learn this year this in school is it take time to get where you’re going because I thought it was going to be one, two, three but thing but it take time to do anything in life. The good things about my life is right now is my family because if it wasn’t for my mom I wouldn’t be here today talking about this today and think god for everyday just to see the next, everyday is a new begin so life is a story and the star of it what you make of it come from you yourself so to me I just start it and I think I have a long way to go so am keep pushing myself for the best for me. Am thankful for my family and friends they keep me thinking positive even at the bad times because to me I think life itself is a test and at the end you get to see it for yourself and everybody mess up you just have to learn from it. To me I think everything come in two, like good, bad, day, night, boys , girls rich, poor, peace , war all am saying is be careful of what you do like they say what monkey see is what monkey do all u see around u can go just like that, how can u play when u have nothing to play with it B.B.P business be for play time. Achieve My Reading My goal is to improve my reading. I want to excel in life. As soon as my reading gets better I can do more with my singing. —By Lenroy Stewart I can improve my life by coming to school. I am trying to get my G .E.D. I have wanted this degree for a long time. This will help me in my everyday living. I will be able to help my grandchildren with their homework. I will have a better understanding of the world. I believe in myself, and others do to. —By Bennie Walker My daughter inspires me to go to school. I would like to read to my grandchildren. I also want to help myself. I feel good when I go to school but I always wonder if I’m going to make it. I put my trust in God. —By Idarena Williams —By Tayirou Toure I want to read and write and better. When I read and write and better I can read a newspaper and a book. —By Gail White 10 We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students Class Adult Basic Education Teacher Anne Ashton When you fail to do something once, you get back up and try again. When you’re exhausted and worn out, the first thought is to give up and surrender, because you worry that your friends, family will think less of you, and be disappointed in you. Some of the world’s most famous singers, athletes, and dancers don’t always succeed the first time, but they get back up and try again. When I was in high school, it wasn’t the easiest time for me. Being a repeater in high school for few years was depressing, sad, and embarrassing. Often I would ask myself why I should even continue to go to school. My “friends” were always pressuring me and telling me that I should drop out. The negativity hit me and I almost actually picked up the pen and signed myself out of school. Then I started thinking to myself if I give up and walk off, where will it get me in life. If I look back on what the root of the problem was and why it has taken me so long to graduate from school, it would get me nowhere. The solution to my problem was I had to cut the crap, and get real with myself. I have never studied for exams, quizzes, and never completed any homework. A friend of mine had told me once that I have to take my education more seriously because I am soon approaching the age where I will be cut off from high school and I will have to be on my own. She said I would have to find a way to get my diploma and that was a wakeup call for me. I started to do my homework, participate in class, study for my exams, and the most important of all, the regent’s exam that determines if you graduate. I worked hard to pass the regents, passed English, Global and US History but failed to pass math. I found out that I have gotten all my credits but because of that one regents exam I didn’t pass, I couldn’t get my high school diploma. I got the IEP Special Ed Diploma that ruined my chance to go to college. I told myself I would not give up because of this setback. I will go to G.E.D. school, work hard, and earn my diploma, to show my friends and family that I didn’t give up. There is no reason why you cannot succeed. When you fall of the wagon, you must get back up and try again until you succeed. All you need is courage, conviction, and faith in yourself. Remember, no one controls you. You are in control of your own destiny, so try just one more time. —By Iris Yip We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 11 Class Adult Basic Education Tutorial Center Coordinators Sarajane Blair and Derrel Meade My name is Carlos Caban and I am a student at Literacy Partners. When I was younger, school was hard for me because I didn’t know how to read. My gym teacher was my favorite because he always encouraged me. Still I was motivated to go right after leg surgery. Stay strong and never give up. Learning to read is like learning to walk. You fall and you keep trying until you get it. Christ gave me the patience to fight cancer, learn to walk and learn to read. I had cerebral palsy and couldn’t walk. The surgery helped me to walk, but I had to miss a lot of school. When I got back, I was behind. In tenth grade, I dropped out because I got sick. Literacy Partners has helped me so much. When I go home after school, I can’t take that big smile off my face. My brother always asks how was school, and I say “beautiful.” Thank you. After that, I was always asking people to help me read the mail. I decided I needed help. My social worker called Literacy Partners for me. I thank Jesus Christ for His guidance. At first, I was nervous and too scared. There were so many young people. I didn’t know if I wanted to go back to school, but I needed to do it. I was fighting cancer and I loved school very much. My teachers were always looking out for me. Now I can read how to take my medicine and help my brothers to read theirs too. They are older than me and so proud of what I have accomplished. 12 My hope and dream is to go to college, and to be the first male in my family to go to college. —By Carlos Caban My Life My name is Jean and I’m so clean. I like to go to the movies and do different things with Danishea and my man G! I like to go out with my friend Sara. Her laugh makes me feel good. —By Jean Alcindor We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students About Me I am from Jamaica, West Indies. I live in Mount Vernon, New York. I do not have a pet. I like to eat oxtail for a meal. In my future, I would like to become a carpenter subcontractor. My son’s birthday is May 20, 2013, he kept it on May 19, 2013. I went to his birthday party. I met my sisters and my mother and daughter and granddaughter. My friends like to go fishing in the summer. Literacy Partners teachers are willing to teach all the time I come to class. I want to learn to read more frequency. —By Bernard Pink My Dream I dreamed of a love impossible to be true. I wake up to find, God gave me you. His blessing gives me a reason for living, a new look on life, a dream that came true, his grace I possess. Its real, I touched it. So for years to come I’ll be I am proud of my daughter because she is graduating high school. From high school she will go to college to study dental assistance in upstate NY. When she finishes college courses she will be doing her internship hopefully in NYC or close by home. She will be leaving for school in September and return in time for the holidays. —By Patricia Cortes About Me I came to Literacy Partners for class. My name is Terrance. I’m from Brooklyn. I don’t have at this point, but I’m doing job searching online. I like to go sightseeing, tour bus rides, cruising on the Circle Line boat and sometimes go to visit the Empire State Building. In the next five years I would like to work at Barnes & Noble bookstore. What are your hopes and dreams for the future? Working for the travel agency such as doing clerical work and also help people book their trips and vacations. If you could travel anywhere, where would you go? A cruise to Great Britain on the Queen Elizabeth for our honeymoon. Visit all the London sightseeing. —By Terrance Burks true and thank my God for giving me you. —By Matthew Brown We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 13 Hi Season The Most Interesting Person That I Have Ever Met We finally meet now that The author of this writing piece is Pauline Deane. I like to write about things in school that I learn every day I go along in life. My biggest desire is when I will accomplish my goal and I will become a writer, a publisher, a story teller and a books and magazines seller and that my name will be established all around the world. I want to be very famous in everything I do. People can pay lots of money to see my performance and the things I do in life as I go along day to day. At the end of my journey I can say, “Girl, Pauline, you came a long way but you made it and your established your name around the world and you became a famous person.” Thanks to you all, Pauline. we Have met lets discuss reason Do you know for every season there is a reason. This is my reason being here right now sharing being here right now sharing this with everyone. —By Dilcia Busano —By Pauline Deane Innocent My nephew was innocent but they took his life. Stream of Consciousness From the Tuesday Night Beginning Reading Class Boston runners were innocent but they took there life. On my way to class I saw a man. People in the World Trade were innocent but they got there lives taken. The guy jumped on a truck. —By Marlene Nunes And he was on my way to work. I haven’t seen him for a long time. My train ran late. —By Giovanni Leslie, Evrol Roach, Michael Stiff and Richard Toby 14 We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students My name is Yvonne Hoyte. I would like to say thank you for inviting me to the Gala. Now, let’s start my story. For years, I wanted to get my GED. But, I never did. Now, I am in a race against time. I have diabetes. And you know what else? I might want to write a book! I have many other stories to tell. I end this by saying thank you all for the donations from the bottom of my heart, and may you all be blessed in your journey. —By Yvonne Hoyte A few years ago, my diabetes got so bad that I had to have the toes on my left foot amputated. I had to quit my job. Then, it got worse. I had a stroke. I lost my sight in one eye. I didn’t know how Iwould make it. I didn’t feel like living any more. I thought it was definitely too late for my GED. Then, my friend saw a news story on TV about a woman who was like me. She didn’t want people to know that she didn’t have her GED. But, she studied hard and got it. That encouraged me that I could do it, too. At first, I was nervous, but I had patient teachers who encouraged me and I began thinking “I can do this.” And the more I attended classes, the more I wanted to learn. I started seeing things about myself and the fears that I had of letting people know about my challenges. Then, I began thinking: “I’m getting my GED and going to college.” My challenge now is with my eyes. It’s hard, but I’m going to get my GED. Now, I see a new journey that I’m beginning to have, encouraging myself to get my GED and then go to college to become a social worker for diabetics. I am going to be a very good social worker because I know what it is like to have diabetes. About Me My name is Pamela Davis and I live in the Bronx. I am a home health aid. I love spending time with my family. I have one daughter and seven brothers and sisters. I live with my daughter. —By Pamela Davis Dream My life Is a dream Sometimes I dream That dreams Are everything Some dreams hold everything In life So I dream. —By Carl Paul We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 15 I thought everything was gravy, Volcano Is it love I am feeling for you girl Until I fell out of You are like the sunshine you are my angel Love with “my lady” You are like flower the feeling “my baby” but I wasn’t ready Is getting stronger The thought of all of that Like a volcano building up love Was heavy, she still insisted You are my honeycomb Yeah! —By Marvin Phillip (DJ natural high) She wanted a lot from me including She begged later that night I went Home with a mind that was empty, Gone with the wind Gone with the clouds is words if the for if Dreams dis life is a broken winged bird Thoughts that were unfriendly although with Her beauty, she’s tempting The love she brings many, I still showed signs that A broken feather is a dream sometimes Were angry Between hate and anger sometimes Isn’t something that lies in the dreams die Don’t let the doors close D, I just move on in you I The pathway we’r the survival. “my zodiac sign” is loving —By Rene Santiago But anger When times are too over bearing And caring That I am Finally, I await the day where I can say, I washed “my hands”. —By Darin Ricks 16 We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students Happiness The Best I’m happy with what God has given to me. I’m I can be the best happy with what little I have. I make the best of in every thing I do it. I’m grateful for a second chance in life and what I do. because of God. I’m happy. I’m very happy. by doing my best and taking pride in who I am My fate will see me through. If I happen to fall short Even when someone makes me angry, I’m of the goals I have set happy. will bring me above this test —By Nadeeira Sookram my strength and determination so I can be the best in everything I do My family means everything to me. My mother means everything to me because she gave me life so for that I am thankful. I am thankful for my kids Princess, Kemiha, Takese and James. I love them. They mean everything to me because they give me life. About my family, we go out, we do fun things together like going to the movies. Also, I have three lovely sisters and two brothers who I love very much. —By Aleisha Williams who I am and what I do. My fate will see me through. —By Jackson Volmar AKA Soso I like to go shopping for fun. My name is Ann. I live in Freeport, L.I. My job is a home attendant that is my job. I like Literacy Partners because I can come and learn how to read and write. —By Celsia Hunter We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 17 Class Pre-GED Teacher Sharon Griffiths My Hardest Goodbye My Hardest Goodbye The hardest goodbye I ever had to say was to my grandmother. She passed away in 2008 and I didn’t know when to expect it. But I did handle it better than I thought. She was like my everything because I would talk to her about everything. Now I don’t have that connection with no one else like I did her. Now every day I am learning that she’s not here and accept it and live life. I know that I will see her again someday. And that she’s in a better place. My hardest goodbye was when I knew that my grandmother was in the ICU in the hospital. I knew she was not going to make it, so I knew I had to say goodbye sooner or later. So days passed and things got worse for her. I really didn’t want to see her in that predicament, so I was away for a while – and in those couple of days I was gone, I got the baddest news ever (well, not ever, but at that moment). My family arranged things for the funeral and got things done. The moment I had to say goodbye, it was real tough for me and my family, but I had to say goodbye to Shirley Quintero. —By Tonya Barr Love or Leave? If I loved someone deeply, I wouldn’t leave my family and friends. No, I wouldn’t move to a distant country with a person that I am in love with, because my family is my life. Friends are good, but I can make more friends. If that person loved me as much as I loved them, they wouldn’t make me leave my family and friends. I would hope that he could see how I feel and what that would do to me in my life, if I went to a distant country where I don’t speak the language. —ByTiffany Colon Tanya In 1989, a girl by the name of Tanya broke my heart. We went to West Side High. She broke up with me because I was seeing too many girls. I was very sad at the time. It took me months to get over her, but I did. —By Alex Ferguson —By Paulette Williams 18 We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students My Three Passions myself my kids my mother The reason I included myself was because I love myself. I go to school. I’ve been providing for and taking care of my kids on my own since they were in the belly. My kids are my little motivators and may passion because they push me. They call me to see how is school, did I go, what did I learn today? My mother is my last passion because she has helped me with my kids by watching them while I go to school, caring for them like they are her own when she has no obligation to. —By Carol Cruz New York City I love New York City. It is a beautiful city. I love when I wake up in the morning and I hear the birds singing and when you look out the window you see the sun shining. It makes my day. I hate when I come from work and the city is packed with people in the street. And when they see me they will not move because they are shopping or just walking. And they are drinking and smoking, that’s what makes me upset. But people are going to be people. —By Kathleen Fabian 3 Things to Live For My kids My money Would I Travel to the Future? If I know that I am going to die, yes I will take the chance to see on the future, because when I am no more I will not be able to know and see things that are happening behind me. I will go to places that I want to go, do things I want to do, help people that I want to help. Build my mother a house, open a school in my country for people who need it and do a lot of things for my brother and sister. Make a lot of friends and have one or two children for my mother to remember me. —By Mawrlee Dennis My food My kids because sometimes I think that I could have been a better father, so I find myself doing things better than I have in the past. I like saving money for a rainy day because I don’t want to be without in the future and I don’t want to ask people for anything. I love my food. It is my only get-away in my mind. I do things that I like to do, for example I had a big family and I always cooked for them. I miss it so much – when I get the chance I just love to cook. —By Gerald Farmer We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 19 My Family Brooklyn I really love my family so deeply that I have to move to California for a couple of months to spend time with them. I really miss them so much, because we all got separated when we were small. Thank God that by checking out the computer, I found them. I got in touch with them – a wrote them a letter and gave them my phone number and address. I was born in Brooklyn. People were always all over the place. My family and I loved to go to the park. My friends and I would be everywhere together. I like being around crowds of people because my house was always crowded with friends coming over. But then one day I wanted something different in my life for myself. I wanted to go places and see different things. —By Carol Fasolino —By Marguerite Hartman Love/Hate New York I hate and love where I live. I’m close by to where I love going and shopping. But I hate the noise of the main service road, Grand Concourse. The lady who screams every night at 2am. The busses that pass and I can feel the floor shaking. Also I love the salon right downstairs and that the trains are right at the corner. Spanish and Mexican restaurants all round. Almost everything is so close – that’s what I love. I love that I live with my best friend who I do everything with. I love that I live on the first floor. I also have a very cool neighbor. —ByAna Ferrer New York City Such a big, beautiful, ear-splitting city, packed with unfair, dishonest, crooked, muddy people. New York may be judged by others, but no one will understand. I appreciate everything I have, and am grateful for living. Living in New York City, you can find places that you never visited and make a change doing so. Why is there illegal things going on? Why do we have a black President? Why is the crime rate going up? Why are black people always being judged? Born and raised in this dark, congested, grubby, corrupted, deafening hood. —By Denise Graves 20 We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students A Lesson Why Patricia Left Home When I was going to grade school, I thought I knew the answers to everything. But as I grew older, I learned that life is a school itself. You keep learning new and challenging things all the time. But the main thing I was taught is that you are never too smart to learn something new and you are never too educated to keep on learning. I think Patricia left home because she wasn’t treated fairly and she didn’t like working at the Taco Palace. Also, I don’t think she had any friends to run with and talk to. It seems like her parents didn’t have a care in the world, so I just think she left to get a clear mind and see who would actually notice she was gone. —By Anthony Hamilton —By Shantel Gilmore Travel to the Future My Grandfather If I could travel into the future and stay for a year I would do it, because it would be fun for me in my opinion. Even if there was a 50% chance I would die, because it would be a cool experience and something no one else has done before. But the bad thing about it would be that I would already know what the future has, so when I came back to the present I would probably be bored here. Also most likely no one would believe that I was in the future. In my opinion, we kind of already live in the future. The year 2004 was the year that my grandfather died. He was sixty-eight years old. He was the had of the family, always speaking from his mind. He was born in Jamaica. He grew up learning trades, fixing cars. He had to take care of his mother, brothers, and sisters. My grandfather had to learn how to be a strong, independent survivor. —By Joseph Jones —By Anthony Hanton Power I never give myself power or control of my life, and now I see that. So now, I’m trying to give myself control and do more observation of me and the things I do to better myself. New York City New York is the noisiest city in the world, and also it is unclean. You can find a lot of rats in New York. We have subways that run express in the city. We have to most busy places like 42nd and Grand Central. It is quick and speedy. In New York, it is illegal to give money and have sex. —By Emmanuel Joseph —By Alberto Lopez We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 21 Central Park Central Park is my favorite place in New York. Central Park is a place I have spent lots of time from my early childhood to now. As a child, my uncle would take my sister and me to the park new the bridge right off 59th Street. When I got older, we ice-skated all winter. I became pretty good, and even learned how to speedskate. When I got older in my teens, I wanted to buy a bottle of wine and sit on a blanket on the Great Lawn reading a book, just like on television. I never did, because there is no drinking in the park. At my age now, I sit outside the Met museum and watch people sail their boats. I also like to walk from the East Side to the West Side. Each time I go to Central Park I discover something new. Oh yeah, and looking out on Central Park from up high is one of the most beautiful sights in New York. Looking out when it snows, it looks like a winter wonderland, like a picture. —By Carmen Murphy My Hardest Goodbye My hardest goodbye was when I decided to move to the US, because I knew it would be a long time to come back to see my family again, especially my mother. When I decided to move from Mexico my mother was heart-broken when she was me boarding he place. Going up the electric escalator, I turned back to say good-bye and my mother asked me again, “are you sure you want to go there?” I knew it would be a good move because I was starting to be a problem for my mother, bad friends and bad influences. —By Artutro Marcos —By Janice Martien 3 Things I Live For Big Girl School I remember when I was an adolescent, and it was time to go to big girl school. I was scared because of changing classes and seeing different teachers in each class. Not only that, but I had to start making new friends and getting to know the new rules and WOW, I wasn’t ready for any of that. That taught me I was not a child any more and that I had to learn how to be a young 22 lady. While the year went by, I began to feel good and I started to fit in. But life taught me another lesson in my big girl school. That lesson life taught me is for another time… The three things I would say that inspire me to wake each day. The first is my family, second is my education, and third is the hope that one day I am going to win the Lotto. For example, my family are the ones who are supporting me through all the hard times I am going through now. —By Joseph Smith We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students Natasha If I Could Travel to the Future At one time or another, I’ve always had what’s called crushes on certain women who I found very attractive. In this case at one point I’ve developed some feelings for someone by the name of Natasha. That will be a great time, or a lifetime adventure. I have to go to a future land where there is knowledge to educate humanity about loving each other. How can someone push another human being in front of a moving train? People with plenty of food in the houses, which they can not finish, but instead throw it in the garbage to be wasted instead of giving it to other citizens, who are moving on empty stomachs everyday. She is Haitian, and was raised here in the city by her uncle. Her parents dies when she was a child. I’ve developed feelings for her the last few years we’ve been friends. We’ve been out a few times, and I’ve had some good time with her. I’ve told her how I feel about her, but she rejected my advances. The reason is because she was in some relationships that have destroyed her self worth at one point and she didn’t want to suffer again. I’ve decided to stop trying, seeing that it’s getting me nowhere near her. We talk on the phone sometimes and always give each other advice. Maybe someday my feelings for Natasha will come true. The knowledge I will gain is to teach and make mankind understand what love is in the world. No matter how we pray to the Lord it doesn’t make sense if we still don’t love each other. Even if my chances to come back are limited, I will take every chance to educate people on Earth so that the future world will be of no races, no gender, but a world of equality, and take each other as one. —By Daniel Ndembera —By Pablo Martinez The Hardest Goodbye NYC New York City is my city. When I was younger, I loved to see the city in the summer–the beaches, the pools, the BBQs. Just laying in the sun and feeling the heat on my skin was all so great. The Bronx is the world to me, and it gets me hot, and I hate it and love it at the same time. —By Wilhem Rodriguez The hardest good bye was when my mom died in Columbia Presbyterian Hospital. When I went to see her in the bed, she did not look dead. I was talking to her and touching her, and no response. I was going crazy when they came and took her away. It was the hardest goodbye. —By Bertha Nesa We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 23 The Hardest Goodbye The Hardest Goodbye The hardest goodbye was saying goodbye to my cousin who was murdered on Thanksgiving Day. It was very emotional for me and my family because he was the first and only person in our family to be murdered. He was a sweetheart, and to make it worse, he was buried on my birthday. What got me though was being around family and talking about the great memories of him. It’s been some years now and the pain of his loss has gotten better, but I will never forget him. The hardest goodbye I said was before I came to the US. I didn’t want to say goodbye to my mother and my father. I was thinking I could go without saying anything to them – it would be better for me. My mother cried and said to me “be careful.” She was very sad. I couldn’t look into her eyes when she was crying. I couldn’t say anything except “don’t worry, I’m going to be OK.” —By Saeed Quhshi —By Duneica Moses In the City of New York People move quickly NYC This city is very grim and gallant. Just getting on the busses and trains is very difficult and frightening. You can get robbed and hit, and stepped all over if you don’t watch your boundaries or utilize your manners by saying “excuse me” or “watch out.” The beautiful part about living in the city of New York is that you have the opportunity to travel different places and sight-see. Also learn your history by knowing where to go and how to get there. This city is wild and great to know. Try living in it, it will drive you wild. —By Charmaine Williams to catch the train People are unclean sometimes People express themselves to each other People come from different countries People are busy at work and at home When people are in New York City they are full on the train Some people are unscrupulous to others —By Yesenia Rodriguez 24 We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students When I was a little boy I didn’t know the name that my parents called me. But when I grew up I started to hear my name, George. So I asked my father, “Daddy, where did you get my name from?” He said, “Son, wait.” And he called my mom, and they started telling me the story. They said when they were living in the castle with my grandfather, he was having a friend named Mr. George. They said Mr. George was a hard worker and a nice person, so my grandfather told my parents to name me George. —By George Sekyere POEM Walking and talking people screaming loudly and it’s packed, there’s no way to pass the noise is so scary but is so much fun The train passes though and people speeding to get there fast. Arguments on the way about who’s first, and who pushed me, and who did that? People on the sidewalk representing their teams with Take Time I can remember sitting on the bench with a million thoughts racing through my head. I closed my eyes and took a deep breath. I breathed in and exhaled out. I felt the hot sun shine on me, the energy penetrating. My hands got sweaty, my mind was slowly releasing it many thoughts. I felt so rejuvenated because the feeling was so intense. It’s so important for a person to take time out for themselves when things seem to be so shaky and the world seems to be collapsing in front of them. —By Lisette Pena flags, shirts, hats, and shorts. A lot of police surround to protect the area. Everyone having fun All kinds of people and races. At the end of the day, people leaving, taking their cars out of the parking lots and everyone calm and tired, exhausted and talking about the game and who won. This is a crazy place where people go wild. It’s very fun to be a Yankees fan. —By Elisania Rodriguez We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 25 A Lesson If I Could Travel Back in Time When I was five years old, my teacher taught me something important in school. Before, I thought when people used to travel, they walked from country to country. That was something I didn’t know. Then one day in class we did a history lesson. The teacher showed us how large the world is, and she told us how people used to travel before in the eaerly years, and how people travel now. Then I realized how people travel now, and I also know the importance of public transportation. During my adolescence, I learned the importance of staying in school. I regret not taking high school seriously. Now I am paying for it. I thought that getting a GED was easy, but I found out I was misinformed. If I could go back in time, I would stay in school and work with my teachers in passing tests. I now learned my lesson and think I could be a mentor to young adults. I would tell them to stay in school. Don’t drop out. Without a general education you don’t exist and cannot compete in this tough job market. —By Kamal Sourmaree —By Robert Storey 139th and Lenox 139 and 140th and Lenox are the streets of New York I was raised on. I love it because a lot of greats came out of these blocks. Rappers to street thugs. Rappers like Mase, Camron, Max b, Big L. A lot of street thugs have summer tournaments and raffles for the kids. This is where I was born and raised at, and everybody knows me there. The reason why there are mixed feelings, meaning love and hate, is being from here you are kind of labeled, always messed with by cops. In the way we grew up, it was like us or them, so we saw a lot and lost a lot. Too many friends lost to death or jail. Kids with good futures always getting caught up. th —By Dwight Tucker Lessons Learned As a young man, I was always into something. Sometimes good and not. I wanted to be in the know all the time. I knew that if I wanted to get ahead in this place called Earth I had to get a job and save most of my income (which I never could do). If I got a dollar it would be spent before I knew what I meant to do with it. I kept that up until I was way past a teenager. I cam to know about saving my money. This is the new Booker T., no more wish-wash thinking. I now believe in myself to do what I know will put me in a real good position where I can put my thoughts to work -where I can look back over all the things I thought were right but turned out not. —By Booker T. Wright 26 We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students My Grandmother Patricia’s Letter I recall my grandmother saying to my brothers and me that she will not always be around to take us by the hand and do things that we should be doing ourselves. She was teaching us how to be responsible, go to school, and make something of ourselves. Unfortunately, I didn’t get to finish High School, so I decided to go to Job Corp. The hardest time that I had to say goodbye was when she became ill and could no longer take on the responsibilities of being a grandmother and a teacher. When I would go to the hospital and visit her, I would sit with her and imagine all the good things and good fun I had with her. My grandmother was diabetic and had Alzheimer’s. The doctors came together and told my brothers and me that they wanted to keep my grandmother in the hospital until they found a placement for her in a nursing home. So finally they found a place and she was sent there, and there she stayed until she died. I, Patricia Benavidez, am leaving home because I can’t live with a father that hits me all the time. He comes home from work at night angry and hits me. I tell you, I can’t take it anymore. My mother does nothing to stop him from hitting me. I think she is afraid of him, or that she it going to get it from him too. My brother couldn’t take it, so he ran away. I was there to watch Dad beat him (he thought that I was asleep, but I was looking through the keyhole). And sometimes he did it right in my face so we could all know who was in charge. And Mom just watched and did nothing – what kind of a mother is that, why didn’t she help me, what’s wrong with her? So f**k them, I hope to never see them again. I think that I can have a better life in the streets than with them. Thank you for making me want to kill myself, Dad. —By Omar Vargas —By Carmen Torres Would You Travel to the Future? My Sister’s Apartment Walking through a new apartment is exciting and scary. It is the start of a new beginning. I remember helping my sister move into her new apartment. We went to pick out furniture for the apartment. The apartment was big and had a lot of detail. I was happy for my sister because she finally got her own place. I wouldn’t try it. I would like to see the future, but I don’t want to know my future. Knowing your own future can ruin everything. I would like to travel to the past and stop future threats like 9/11 or unexpected death, like Michael Jackson’s. But knowing the knowledge of the future can be a catastrophe. —By Torian Brown —By Nicolette Santos We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 27 My New York My Harlem I’m going to tell you how I feel about New York all around. New York is dangerous, fun, and scary. Dangerous because a lot of crazy bad things happen everyday in New York. Fun, because you have the bright lights, big buildings, and a lot of clubs. Scary because New York is wild and there are a lot of heartless people you meet on the streets. So it all depends on what you want to be around. My quiet place I like to be is home. Then nobody has to worry about the dangerous, fun, scary life in NYC. My Harlem, I once loved you for the one-color ocean you once was – —By Aaron Ward What Do I Like About the City? I like the Bronx because of the bright lights, the music is loud, the crazy people. New York never sleeps. The city is full of happiness and danger. the police are always around when people need them. 42nd Street needs to go back the way it was back in the 70s. Freak shows, peep shows, hookers in the streets of Manhattan. I wish it would go back to the 80s. Everybody was friendly and kind. Transportation was cheap back then. I wouldn’t was to leave the city for noting in the world. Now I’m luvin’ the mixture of ponds, lakes, rivers, and oceans you’re embracing. My Harlem, I love your night life, the rush, the love, hopefulness, memories, history, reminiscences. My Harlem, I’ve accepted the wages of the lows, in-betweens, uncertainties, tragedies, the foes, frenemies, haters – the fugly with the beauty, the bad with the good. But what I love most about you, my Harlem, is how you’ve been there with me thru it all – the negative to the positive and it’s all good. And now watching me grow up and get my life together, 2 get my L.I.F.E!!! I love you, I love you, I love you I do, my Harlem. —By Dorian Woodley —By Yvonne Tillman 28 We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students Class Pre-GED Teacher Jasmine Acosta Who Can I Be People need not waste me. Who can I be? Who is she? Or perhaps who is he? Who or what can I be? Could I be a tree, as in the last tree, to save a man, Falling down on the world-hunger, like a building now it›s deceased. Now I ask as I pass you by, Who can I be? I am as alive as the man on a life support machine on its last beep. Now i›m sleep. And live no more, so I wait patiently, and help him breath. for the angles who took my mother away from me to be free. Bare naked, disrespected, and stripped of its leaves. But as I wait i›m taken for granted. Could it be? Hmmmm Or can I be a breeze? Let me see. That blows in different degrees... Could it be that I am an entity that lasts forever- Firmly planted. Gathering up pollen that has traveled from Holland choking the violence from the bees. Bringing bickering among them to a halt over the male bee,- bringing peace. I will be around forever, authorized by God. I am Time dammit!!! That›s exactly who I be. I am no longer a mystery. —By Jerry Petrus We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 29 Class Pre-GED Teacher Mary Ann Lasky Hair Hair comes in all types of textures from straight to extremely curly. Long, short, thin, and thick, you can never go wrong. Hair along with many things plays a big part in everything in life. Humans have hair, animals have hair, and even some foods and plants. I look at hair like I look at skin, it’s like a defense mechanism that we use to protect ourselves. Skin keeps our body covered and protected, hair keeps us covered and protected as well, and just like skin, it’s always growing or developing. I love hair. I love to color hair, braid hair, try different hairstyles with hair and, especially with my hair, I love to cut it because I know it’s always going to grow back. I am black and Puerto Rican and my hair is a mix between straight and curly with baby hairs that love to be nappy and, if left alone, will remain nappy. I always used to wonder why a lot of black people had to use grease for their hair but just recently, I came to the realization that it’s because of the oils in the grease. The oils in the grease are some of the many natural resources we had and used way before any type of chemicals were created and then it was manipulated into our mind by the media to use it on ourselves. Grease is very healthy for the hair and the oils seep into your scalp which rebuilds and protects it. Chemicals and hair are dangerous and can be life threatening. A lot of men, and especially women, aren’t really aware of how dangerous because they’re so focused on changing their hair color, trying to grow hair in bald spots and, worst of all, applying perms to either straighten or make their hair curly. Every perm contains highly concentrated chemicals that can cause brain damage, tumors, and cancer, so you have to be mindful of how much you apply, how long you have it in, and the type of hair you have or are dealing with. Everything in life has ups and downs so never forget the same thing goes for your hair. —By Katrina Flowers 30 We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students How to Make Our Neighborhoods More Safe I live in a neighborhood where many people at night stay late hanging out on the street. I suggest that the police department should hire more police officers to walk around at all times. Police have to be conscious of what can be done to teach people on the street good manners. Teachers, parents, police should have some time meeting to work together and come with ideas how to improve the community. There should be undercover police working in the neighborhood to report any wrongdoing that the police are doing to the young people. These are my suggestions to improve my neighborhood. —By Raul Echevarria Someone I Respect The person who I respect the most is Ms. Emma. I respect Ms. Emma because she’s outgoing, has a good sense of humor, very outspoken. She doesn’t allow people to get in her way. She’s also a woman of details. She’s a proud black woman, stands tall and firm, keeps her head up because she doesn’t seem to forget her heritage and where she came from. She has a swagger when she walks and a beautiful tone in her voice. Very seldom does she get upset unless somebody is trying to step on her toes. She’s the person who I respect because she is herself. And she’s waiting for all of us to get our GED so that we can all move on with our lives like her. —By Angela Jones Faith Will Guide You Whenever you go somewhere or have a dream to get somewhere, always have faith. That is my motto. Have you ever thought about that? Think about it. It will have a great impact on your life. When you are in the worst situation, have belief it will be better, and it will be. It will help you in life. I know of a situation where there was a couple who were married for 15 years and did not have children. One day they already gave up, everybody said there is no hope. The next day, a good friend came over and tried to encourage them. He told them about a rabbi who does wonders for people. People have impossible situations and are hopeless. They go to him and he solves everything. When they heard that, it gave them a new hope. They decided to go to the rabbi. The rabbi told them to go home and everything will be ok. They went home and had complete faith that what the rabbi said will come true. “Everything will be all right.” After two months, she became pregnant, and after about a year, she had a beautiful baby boy. The doctors said it was a medical miracle. They were so happy, they went right away to that rabbi to thank him. The rabbi said, “Don’t thank me, thank G-d.” Sometimes it is very hard to have faith because the situation you’re in might look hopeless, but I am telling you have hope and it will be better. Faith is believing with all your might that everything will be better, even if it doesn’t seem like it. So have faith and it will help you. —By Chaya Keret We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 31 Summary of the Article, “An E.V. that wraps around a wheelchair.” Stacey Zoern is from Texas. She is a lawyer who is 33 years old. Ms. Zoern has a condition. She can’t walk and had a custom van that was destroyed in a crash. Feeling frustrated and stagnant, she decided to build a business for many others and herself in the same situation. Being a lawyer, not a businesswoman, Ms. Zoern got help. Ms. Zoern started browsing the internet for “wheelchair-accessible transportation” and found a company called Kenguru in Budapest. Since browsing the internet, Ms. Zoern received so much support that she was able to start her own business. —By Nikki McCoy Someone I Like The person I like is my grandmother. She is loving and caring. She dresses nice, is very outspoken, always willing to help people. She goes to church. She also raised me from when I was a little girl. She can cook her butt off. She is like a mother to me instead of a grandmother. She always gives me sound advice whether I like it or not. She raised most of her grandkids. She accomplished school, college, and now she is an RN. Like I said, she loves people and she always call me her baby. I like it sometimes, then I don’t because I’m too grown. I love to go to her house on Sundays. After church, we all have Sunday dinner. My 32 grandmother is always there for me. I love my grandmother. She means a lot to me. —By Satina McGee How to Make Our Neighborhood Safe First thing I would do is form a committee and ask every person to write an essay about the kind of problems they have in their neighborhood. Reading each person’s essay, the committee would have plenty of information on how to select and plan how to go about keeping the neighborhood safe. The youths should be the first ones to bring their essays. Why, because they have firsthand knowledge of all the neighborhood’s problems. They have firsthand knowledge of the police stop and search. The youths need to be hopeful, looking for a better future, not to be targeted and thrown into prison, and have hopelessness take over their precious future. Therefore, the government should listen to what the youths are saying. They are the future presidents, mayors, judges, senators, lawyers, and teachers, so please listen to them now. —By Daisy Taylor Someone I Respect The person I started respecting is myself. I have grown to be a self-respected, mature person. Over the years, I have been going through a lot of difficulties with life: negativity, selfishness, cruelty, immaturity, and laziness. We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students I never knew how much these feelings had brought me down, gotten me into trouble, created stress and made me frustrated. I held so many miseries all these years, and now I have changed my ways. I am a person who has a great sense of humor, out-going personality, love to dance, DJ, work, go to church, school and hang with close friends. When I DJ in my free time, I begin to dance to any type of music. Since I was a child, I always love listening to music and collecting records. As a record collector, I have 33 1/3’s, 45’s and 78’s. Music back then, had stories to tell. Half of the people I met told me that music back then was boring and puts them to sleep. The other half is amazed and shocked to see my collections. I tell them it’s a great way to have an imagination and think about what was going on. That is when we were starting to make things possible and fight for what we want for our future. After the years passed by, I lost great people in my life that didn’t deserve to suffer, but I had to move on. I still have them in my heart. In my teen years, I started hanging out with the wrong crew that had nothing to offer me just trouble. When I met my ex-partner in my mid 20’s, I left my parent’s house. My relationship with him was outrageous. I almost went to jail and go thrown out of our own apartment. When I had my own place again, this time I was alone. I was not thinking about my education. My so-called friends were nothing but trouble, noneducated, and not working. They just smoke pot, drank, partied and sometimes looked for trouble. I had nothing but negativity in my life. When I lost my job, I realized that I needed and education to move forward. When I called Literacy Partners, I waited for a response until they told me to come in and take a valuation test. When I had the results, I started class right away. I was frightened, but I closed my eyes and began to dance to a smooth tune. With tears streaming down my face, my heart said ENOUGH! I started going to church and prayed for a great change. I took a deep breath and wept to God. Little by little, everything began to change for me. In the summer of June 2012, I met Martha Wash from the Weather Girls. Very sweet and very protected from her security guards (beautiful singer) and Louise Robey from the series “Friday the 13th” as Micki Foster. I got on stage to perform a voguing dance. I didn’t know what I was doing, but I had a lot of great feedbacks. It was beautiful to hang with great talented friends. One day in the fall of 2012, my teacher called me aside and showed me something unexpected. She opened the school’s newspaper and what I saw. I saw a person that did something great for himself. I was very thrilled to see myself. In the beginning of November, I found a part-time job at a music store. Last New Year’s Eve, I was with close friends. I didn’t stay late because I had to work in the afternoon. Now I’m still here and ready for a challenge. Thanks to Steven Clarke, Gloria Fisher, Emma Davis, Sara Bloom, Pam O., Walter O., Lora Rosado and all the staff in Literacy Partners. —By Ismael Negrillo We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 33 Hair The prank of all pranks. It was the summer of June 2002. I was going to the barbershop. When I get there, I say Hello to everyone and wait for my barber to show. When he showed, I sat in the chair and we began to talk. I recall telling him how my brother and cousin pranked me and asked him how can I get back at them. The day before that, they pranked me by cutting all my hair off while I was sleeping. A couple of minutes go by and he helps me with a plan to prank my brother and cousin. It was to invite them to my house telling them I’m having a sleepover. But actually, it was to prank them. Later that day, I got shaving cream. I put some on the eyebrows of my brother and cousin. Then I shaved off their eyebrows. The next morning, they woke up complaining of a draft, not knowing of what happened to them. When they noticed, we all laughed and decided not to do this again. —By Joshua Ramos A Place I’ll Never Forget A place I’ll never forget is Colombia. I went with my mother and two brothers to Colombia for my brother’s wedding. His wife is Colombian. It was a different atmosphere, rough roads, stray dogs walking down the street. If you visited the beach, females would come up to you and ask if you want sun block rubbed on you and wash sand off your feet. That’s how they made money. 34 The hospital in Colombia is much different from the U.S. People were lined up outside with severe injuries with their heads wrapped up like a mummy, blood coming through the gauze. It made me think of the things we take for granted, subways, busses, taxis, even shoes. People were walking down the street with no shoes. One of the hotels was run down so bad that we went to a more upscale one that had a pool, a nice view, and room service. The last hotel was not up to par with my mother’s standards. My mother is a clean freak. Every trip, my mother brings this machine that shows you where dirt is even if it’s wiped clean. She also does not use the bed sheets, or towels, or rugs. She goes to the store and buys her own. But in Colombia, they know when you’re not from there even if you speak Spanish. Once you ask for directions, they know, and when you go to the bank or ATM, there will be a soldier in the street with an M16 machine gun that escorts you to get your money so no one will rob you. There are also a lot of car accidents in Colombia. The roads have holes big enough to stand in. The food was good and they also have good coffee because they grow coffee beans there. For the most part, the wedding was nice. My brother got married in a big house right next to a cliff. When you look down, you see water. I also saw a lot of snakes, spiders, scorpions, and the kids that live there could swim better than the adults. I would never forget trying to swim to the buoy. —By Paris Williams We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students Class Pre-GED Tutorial Center Coordinators Kenneth Fobi and Yinette Tejada Life is Candy Hindsight I think life is a candy because there are ways to make it better. We always try different ways to make everything nice and smooth. Even though we have too many challenges in life, there are many reasons to think positive all the time. There are also very important and special people to inspire you. Even though some people don’t know that they inspire you to do things in life. The first thing I wish I would have known growing up would be how to take your time and enjoy your childhood. The older you become the more responsibilities you have. I wish I would have known to pay attention in class, focus on my studies, work hard in every aspect to become who I now want to be; which is a lawyer. Sometimes our circumstances intervene and stop us from seeing the bigger picture in life. If I would have known, or was told as a youth, I probably would be where I want to be now. —By Martin Balbuena What is life? Life is like a book Everyone has their own story to tell Life can make you feel trapped and tied down Things you want to achieve can feel like a long line Years keep going as life keeps growing No one knows where the finish line is. —By Melissa Caraballo People have this thing; they wish themselves to revisit their past. Tweak a few things, change a few mistakes they have made (myself included). Another thing: I wish I would have known as a youth would have been how precious life is. How every moment you spend existing in the universe counts, every moment that passes. All the holidays you share can become a distant memory in the blink of an eye. Knowing is to have understanding of something or someone. We are born in the universe as children, and become knowledgeable as we grow. This is something I wish I would have known. —By Keith Brown We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 35 She said, “What happened?” Fable One day there was a frog who lived in the forest. He was always very lonely because he did not feel like he fit in with anyone. He tried so hard to make friends but no one gave him a chance because he was not able to do most of the things the other animals in the forest could do. But one day there was a lonely girl walking in the forest, and she bumped into a frog. The frog said,” I have never seen you come through here.” She said, “Yes, I have been here many times but no one ever notices me.” He said, “I noticed you.” She said, “I see you did.” He replied, “Don’t feel bad. No one notices me either.” She told him how she became the lonely girl: “I was once married to a prince but one day he decided he wanted to have someone else become his princess. So I had to move out of the prince’s castle and ever since then no one notices me. No one treats me like I’m an important person anymore.” The frog told her, “Well, I know how you feel. I used to be a prince.” She started laughing. She said, “How is that?” He said, “I was a real prince and I lived in a castle at one time.” 36 He said, “Well I had this young lady named Jasmin that I really loved a lot but there came along another young lady named Daisy who I really liked. So I chose to be with Daisy and let go of Jasmin who really cared for me. And one day I realized I had made the wrong choice. When I explained to Jasmin that I still loved Daisy she was upset. She said, “fine”, but before she left she said “you will remember me”. So one day Jasmin came back and said “let’s fix things”. But I said no. But then I saw there was a cup with my favorite drink that she would normally make for me. So I drank it. The next day I woke up as a frog and everyone around the castle was asking “where is the prince?” But I could not reply letting them know I was now a frog and ever since I have lived in the forest and no one notices me. Daisy said, “Wow, did you live in that big white castle?” The prince said, “Yes, why do you ask?” She said, “That girl you speak about, do you not recognize me? I’m Daisy! But ever since you left me I was never noticed, not even by you. So now I call myself the lonely girl but, guess what? I’m still willing to notice you and be your friend.” —By Cecilia Arroyo We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students Life is a Journey, this is my take: At times in many of our lives, we have taken wrong turns which have caused setbacks in our lives. These setbacks make us who we are today. There are so many people here of different ages. This is not a bad thing, because it is never too late to learn. Thank God for another chance at it. I call this my journey, personally, because there are a lot of twists and turns in my life. I dare not give specific details; I do not think they are needed. I did not have a good start, but I plan to have a great finish. The journey is going to be a sweet one and I am really looking forward to it! To be continued… —By Marylee Bryant I’m on the train on my way to work. At this point I have a lot of anger inside of me. Part of my anger is the way I’ve been mistreated by my family. I am hurt because my sister doesn’t believe in me. She wants to pick how to run my life, either raise my kids or choose a career. In my heart, I love to work with sick patients. At this present time I am working at Winthrop Hospital through a third party. I have a contract from an agency. My sister had decided for me to be a nurse, but I have other ideas. I would like to be a Radiology Technologist. I will be very happy with that because I will still be helping people because it still falls in the medical field. I believe I can make it if I put my mind into it. I have decided to continue my education as of today. I’ve been through a lot in my life. I lost my apartment and my children had to be placed with family members. Today is a new day; it is like I’m being born again. God has provided me with a new apartment and I am very thankful for that. My education is my next stop that I will accomplish. I am very blessed God didn’t forget about me. I will make it. I decided to start writing as of today… —By Yolanda Cadet-Smith I would like to write about my life since I’ve been in New York. Since I been in here in New York, it has been very hard to understand and hear a difficult language called English. I was feeling completely lost. Some things were hard to explain. There were so many different things I needed to learn. That is the reason why I decided to study English. Now, I feel free and I even have a better job. I feel like I’m the boss. Even though my English is better, I recognize that I still have to keep learning. That is why I came to Literacy Partners. I would like to thank the organization for all they have done for me and other students. Thank you very much! —By Teresa De Jesus We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 37 It was the beginning of summer, a warm evening. The date was June 27, 1973. It was Friday night. I had a couple of friends over my house in the Bronx. We decided to go out clubbing. I looked in the closet to see what I should wear. I picked out a pair of bell bottom pants, a nice shirt and platform shoes. I got dressed and we all left for the subway on 149th and 3rd Avenue. We took the 2 train to Fordham Road and got off the train. We walked down the stairs and heard the loud music. We followed the people walking towards the music. There was a large group of people. We asked if this was club “310”; it was. We got on line to get inside. The line started moving and soon we were at the front door. The man asked us for $5 each to enter the club. We paid the cover charge and then entered the club. This was my first time at a night club. I was so happy! I had heard of night clubs but I never thought I would go to one. We found an empty table and sat down. I just stared out towards the dance floor. I was too shy to dance, but I closely watched all the people dancing. When the disco ball came down, I was shocked and amazed at all the light bouncing off the crystal ball. It was near closing time, so we left. We went back on the train and went home. At home, I couldn’t stop thinking of the night I just had. I heard the music in my head and pictured all the people dancing. I didn’t dance that night, because I didn’t know how to. We went back to the club a couple more times. I watched all the people dance. I picked up on 38 a lot of good moves and would go home and practice them. I even added a few of my own moves. I could not wait to go back to the club and show off some of my moves! I went to the club once more. This time, I finally felt the courage to ask a girl to dance. I could not believe I was really dancing. I felt so good and so proud. The girl told me I was a good dancer. After hearing that, there was no stopping me. That night, I kept showing off my moves and dancing with the girl. I couldn’t believe a beautiful girl was interested in me. Eventually, we went out and became a couple. I was so proud to walk down the streets with her, showing her off to all my friends. I would tell them, “Look what I got”. They would respond, “You pig!” I said to them, “Don’t hate the player, hate the game!” —By Rafael Cruz The Collector I started collecting autographs about 15 years ago. My older brother passed on that hobby to me. My brother and I used to go and meet the baseball players at spring training in Florida to get their signatures. Getting autos is fun because behind every auto is a different story. One of the things I like the most is that my brother and I have a love for the hobby and bond while we are acquiring these signatures. We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students We have gone to hotels where they stay and mingled with famous people. It’s really great being able to have fun with famous people because some of them party like it’s their last party. Some of the people I have collected are Derek Jeter, Yogi Berra, Whitey Ford, Jorge Posada, Reggie Jackson, Hank Aaron, Dwight Gooden, John McEnroe, Venus Williams, and many, many more. —By Rafael Collazo My name is Irene Aku Djereckor. I am my parent’s fifth child from a village called Fiahor in the Volta region of Ghana. I started my elementary education at A.M.E School at the age of five till the age of eleven when I had to continue at Alakple R.C middle school. I had travel about ten miles every day, five days a week by foot. At times I had to paddle a canoe alone to school. When I was in middle form 3, my parents left the village to Togo for political asylum leaving three of my younger siblings with me. As fishing was the only occupation in the village, I had to go fishing after school and always sleep late which made it difficult for me to finish my school assignments. On Saturdays I had to go to the farm for firewood which I sold for our food. Oh, life was very hard! But, I managed to take good care of my younger siblings and also finished elementary school successfully, but nobody was there to assist me to go to college. In 1966, the late General Kotoka who hail from my village staged a coup d’état in Ghana before my parents were able to come back to the village. My parents had no money after they returned from Togo, things started getting harder. I had to go and collect oysters and sell them on market days before we eat. I then decided to leave for the city. I left my village to Accra and became a peddler. In the year 1991, I applied to be trained as a ward assistant in the hospital. The training lasted for six months and I started work. I had my first child at the age of twenty seven. In 1974 I enrolled in nurses training (LPN) and completed 1976. I worked for twenty years before applying for midwifery training school in 1996 which I completed successfully. I worked for ten years as a midwife and retired. I came to visit my son in 2010. I am now working as health aid and I obtained my certified nursing assistant at New Age Institute in 2012. I am now attending literacy class to obtain G.E.D. —By Irene Djereckor We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 39 The first time I felt proud of something I did was when I read out loud in class. When I came to Literacy Partners, I was scared of who would hear me read in the class. Why was I scared? Because I couldn’t read. My teacher told me not to be scared. What I started to do is read things that were in the train station. What I read was about where I was from. It was a poster about Honduras. That is how I learned how to read, because my teacher talked to me about not giving up on reading. That is when I just started to read. And I love reading. I am getting better at it. And I am very proud of myself for not giving up on reading. Now I read out loud in class. My teacher asked me to read and I asked her, “Who?” and she said “You Delmar”. I began to read and she said, “Good Delmar”. —By Delmar Downs How Failure Can Teach Us About Success Going out food shopping for the house, it’s just my little sister and I. I ask her if she wants anything while I’m out. She gives me a list which I forget at home. I know she has a sweet tooth so all I’m thinking is about her goodies, not even what else could be on the list. I come home with all these sweet cakes, cookies, and pies; nothing but a bunch of sugar. She helps me put away the food, and then asks 40 me did I get everything she asked for. I say yes without telling her I forgot the list she made for me and all I got was what I think she wants. An hour or so goes by and she asks me for her hair spray. She really needs it for the party she has to go to later on. I feel so bad because I forgot her list and if I would have just told her I left her list I would know the hair spray wasn’t even at the store I was going to at that time anyway. I failed to pick up my phone and call her to let her know, “Hey, Sis, I left your list. What else do you need from outside?” Instead I just went on thinking I knew what it was she needs. Next time I’ll tell the truth. —By Kamesha Dykes The Day I Became an Adult When I was a child, as far as I can remember, I remember waking up in the morning and watching my favorite cartoons and waiting to go to the park to play with my friends. I remember as a child we moved a lot and also I went to a lot of different schools. And all I knew was to take care of my grandmother who was raising me until she passed. I was thirteen. I can remember that day. My grandmother had been in the hospital for about two weeks and I was at home alone. I heard a knock on the door and it was my aunt and her husband and my biological mother. I knew it was bad news. I knew my grandmother We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students had died at that moment. I knew at that moment I had to become an adult. When my grandmother passed I had to go live with my biological mother and my two brothers. One was older and one was younger, so I was the middle child. I had lived with my grandmother since I was a baby. When I became a young girl I never could understand why my mother didn’t raise me. But as I got older I understood my mother was young. She had my brother and she was going through a rough time in her life and that’s how I came to live with my grandmother. I remember my grandmother like it was yesterday. She was 5’3” with an Indian complexion and black short hair. She was a strong traditional Puerto Rican woman who was easy to talk to. She had lots of friends and she liked watching horror movies. They were her favorite, but I didn’t like scary movies so I would go and play with my dolls. But as I was getting a little older my grandmother was becoming sick and spending time in the hospital. I was missing a lot of school. But I had to take care of her and that’s what I did. I was home alone. It was a weekday, I’m not sure what day but I know I had school that day. But I didn’t go. It was right after the Christmas holiday and New Year’s Eve. It was cold outside. My aunt’s family and I had spent the holidays with my grandmother who was in the hospital. To me, my grandmother was doing better. She was laughing, smoking, joking; I thought that she was coming home soon. It was early morning, about 7:30a.m, when the phone rang and it was the hospital. A nurse was calling, asking to speak with one of my aunts. From the tone of her voice I knew it was bad news. The nurse knew I was a minor so she said, “Please have your aunt call the hospital as soon as possible.” It was later that afternoon when my aunts and my mother came and told me that my grandmother had died in the morning. —By Charlene Hernandez My Apartment, A Place of Peace The place I feel most peaceful and protected is my apartment. Like people say, your eyes are the windows to the soul. I see my apartment as my commitment to the soul. It’s a place I can find God and relate to Him because He is holy. He delivers me from my troubles of people and myself. Most of the time, people take me where I don’t want to go. My spirit becomes loose and unconscious. My apartment is the place where God brings back my thoughts to encourage me as a father in His love. I live alone and I sleep in the living room. My apartment is light all day and it gives me a sense of peace. As soon as I come in the room from the street, one of the first things I do is pray. The peace I feel within is not the peace of the We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 41 outside world. The world tries to confuse the principles and morals of life, so I keep my composure until I go back to my apartment where pure living comes back in place. In my apartment, I have a picture of Jesus having the Last Supper with his disciples. I also have an electric picture with the sounds of a waterfall and birds chirping and which gives off a night light. My 30-inch color television also brings me comfort. I love law shows or the Words Channel, which is the Christian channel. Development-specific orientation with Arianne and ChristinaNow you can understand why I love my apartment because it is a place where I find my eyes are the window to the soul. The love of God and the peace of my home give me the comfort I need to sustain my life. —By Beverly Jenkins How Can Failure Teach Us About Success? As you would think, when you have been waiting for your success to come for so long, that when it arrives you’ve got it made. But the problem is this: It’s not what you have, it’s how long you get to keep it. We are always thinking about ourselves as we are moving up the ladder, not knowing that this ladder has other people on it, too. I noticed that some of these other people on the ladder were fighting to achieve the same place. 42 As we move up to succeed, sometimes we find things aren’t as great in the high-paying job as we had thought they were. I have failed at some things. This left me feeling angry. In time I found out that failing was the best thing that could have happened. Being on top isn’t always as pleasant as you may think. I can appreciate the peace of mind and relaxing surroundings I’m in with just two steps up. —By Diane King I remember back when I left my home town of Beer-Sheva back in Israel to come to the United States. I decided to take a vacation and possibly search for new opportunities with my bother. It wasn’t easy to leave Israel. I felt sad but excited at the same time. I felt sad because I was leaving behind my parents, my friends, my job and everything that I knew till then. But my heart told my head it was a good and exciting new journey that I have to take. When I told my friends and coworkers that I was going to travel to the big apple, almost everyone would say to me, “if you make it there, you will make it anywhere” or they would say “traveling is a great way to find yourself.” At that time in my life, I was only 24 years old and my brother was 27. I had never left home before but it didn’t matter to us. The excitement was unbearable. It was a new journey with my brother right next to me. We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students Now looking back after years of struggles, we have found our passions. In separate ways, we have made fulfilling lives for ourselves. —By Jeannette Kirsch Life to me is a struggle If life is so beautiful like people say, why do I struggle with slow learning disability? People constantly mock me and try to bomb me and stomp me like a roach They treat me with reproach They say I’m scary like a ghost When I was little, even as an adult They often said I was a punk, That would get slammed in a basketball dunk I would get sad when I heard that I use to date a young lady that I loved very much back in the 60s. She was good looking. We dated for about two years. We had some good times and we enjoyed our young life together. We would go to the movies, restaurants and the dance hall. We would go to the famous Apollo on a Saturday night. Otis Redding and Sam Cooke were our DJs. I was happy with her all through our young relationship. We still talk even to this day. I was a little bit insecure on my part and I just could not get my thoughts together. I was not sure of myself and that is why we are not together anymore. She was much more intelligent than me and it made a big difference between us. When I remember my sweetheart it keeps me here to learn some more. There are storms in life, but life can be beautiful. Just as the sun sets for serenity. —By Keith Knight I felt I was verbally being smacked Often mocked. But once I joined Literacy Partners I began to overcome my disability With tutoring, home schooling Never thought I would do it. But now I’m doing it My goals, I’m achieving Not retrieving Obstacles, defeating. There are a lot of things I felt proud of, but the proudest moment was when I first started pre-k. At that time, I was about 3 years old and I did not know anybody except my parents. One beautiful morning, my mom bathed me and dressed me up. She told me she was going to drop me off at school so that I can start pre-k. Initially, I felt highly displeased about it when she told me that she would leave me there until closing, but she said she would pick me up. —By David Garcia We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 43 Truly speaking, I was unhappy about it. The first question I asked my mother was, “how I am I going to eat?” She said they would feed me. I then asked if it would be the same food that we have been eating at home, she replied that it would be a little different. After my mom had left, the teacher brought up a big notebook and started calling individual names. He instructed us to raise our hand when he called our name. He called several of the kid’s names and finally he called mine also. I was so young that I did not know exactly how to raise my hand, so when the teacher called me I was still sitting down. One of the kids sitting next to me whispered to me to raise my hand. The teacher asked me to stand up. When I did, he asked me how I felt being there for the first time. I told the teacher plainly that I was so proud to be in his class with different kids from other countries for the first time in my life. I was only used to my parents. My first day at pre-k had been a remarkable and proud time in my life. —By Pierre Kolora My Perfect Place Is the Country Life A farm has always been my perfect place of contentment. The peace of living on a farm is a gift from the Gods. People are very friendly everywhere. 44 Life in the country is heavenly. The air is fresh and crisp. It makes us want to wake up early to see what life has to offer. I remember one time my family made plans to go crabbing when we had stayed up late the night before. As soon as the rooster started its crowing we were all up, wide-eyed and content to enjoy the early morning dew. There were chickens all over the place on the farm and cattle in the field. My grandmother would go to the market to sell what eggs she could spare. She had her own little store. We all took pride in what little money we earned. After feeding the cows, chickens, pigs, and horses, it was time to enjoy the great outdoors. No one can take that away from you. In the country everything is peaceful and calm. People come from all over just to buy what you have to sell. After long walks in the field, listening to the sound of the wind and the trucks driving by, you might hear a neighbor yelling out the window, “Did you see my child?” In the country people keep an eye on your child like it’s their own. The country life puts nature in perspective. Living in the country can be very affordable. Instead of going to the market you can go to your barn and choose your dinner. But if you become empathetic with the livestock, they can get the best of your emotions. Then you’ll find the supermarkets are very clean, the food is fresh, and the prices are affordable. We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students Everywhere you go country people are so friendly. Once they hear a person from New York is in town, they come running with greetings of good cheer. No matter where you go, if people are not your cousins, they’re your friends. The parties are fun and the nightlife on the weekends is spectacular. The sun goes down, the party lights turn on and everyone is dressed to impress. When it comes time to leave if you need a ride, just stand on the side of the road and you will eventually get a ride to your destination. As you can tell, the farming life makes my soul content. —By Kenneth Lawrence My Third Year At Literacy Partners When I was 8 years old, I was collecting charity for my school in Brooklyn. I was going around to different synagogues asking for donations where I lived in Queens, NY. My parents and my brother thought it was a great idea to raise money for charity, because it would help me become a good Jewish character. It would help me to understand how to become a better person. The way my school principal found out what I was doing was when my parents brought in the money. I raised one thousand dollars that year, which made my principal proud of me. The school principal told the whole school on Hanukkah what I did for the school. He allowed me to give ice cream cones to the whole school which made me proud as I proved to myself that I could become a great role model. —By Elliot Lieberman Thailand, A Land of Wonder Thailand is a place where most tourists would love to visit. I went there 12 years ago for a week and had the best time of my life. What do you think people say when they talk about Thailand? To me, Thailand was full of fun. You can go there alone or with a friend or family. I went with my mom and sister. We had a solid, full week. In the morning we would go around visiting the temples. Do you know that Thais actually worship their king and their Buddhist religion almost every hour of the 24 hours of the day? When the prayers are broadcast through the air, everyone actually stops all their work and listens. When the prayers are over all the people start working again, acting as if nothing happened. Another thing we did while we were in Thailand, and did a lot, was eating all kinds of food, like food sold by the hawkers along the street. There is non-stop serving of food, hot and cold, and exciting. My favorite was bird’s nest soup. Bird nest soup was very expensive during the time of my visit, but it is very common in Thailand. Almost everyone knows how to cook it. I had it every day while We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 45 I stayed there. The bird nest is not made of twigs. It is actually a nest made from an adult male bird’s saliva for a live baby bird. It tastes sweet. Eating it was one good experience. I also got to visit the Four-Headed Buddha that was in one of the hotels. Everyone goes there to make wishes. When your wishes come true, you go back again to show your tribute through your prayers. You will hire dancers to perform a dance, or buy flowers to show your appreciation that your wishes came true. It was wonderful getting a chance to visit Thailand, the Land of Wonder. I’m totally thankful for the experience. All the people there were so kind. It might be different now, but I was welcome during my stay. I wish one day I’ll be able to visit again. —By Lee Meng Lim One day, I went to see a band play. At that time I loved music and wanted to become a musician. However, I wasn’t sure what instrument I wanted to play. That changed when this band played that night. From the moment I heard the drummer, I knew drums was the instrument for me. The drummer that inspired me that night was Joshua Berrios. After the performance, I asked him for some tips and he offered to give me some lessons. He gave me his phone number and introduced me to other musicians. They were also helpful in getting me started in this instrument. 46 I started at the age of 18. That would be considered late to start, but that was the age that I started working and was able to buy a drum kit. I would practice for about 4 to 5 hours a day using instructional videos. I played with a few bands, nothing big, just playing with other musicians that wanted to have a good time. For me, it is not about the fame or money. It’s just something that makes me happy. —By Eliezer Mercado The Emerald Empire In life every human being has a place where one goes for a moment of peace of mind, to feel at ease or comfortable. For myself, I’ve created a world of my own and many times I astroproject myself there. This perfect place of mine is called the Emerald Empire. This new world, the Emerald Empire, is made up of green stones such as green malachite and others and all shades of green marble, with a road made of gold leading a path to my Emerald Castle made up of green malachite stone surrounded by many gold treasures that are guarded by green marble warriors. Also there are hedges and gardens with fountains spouting and growing peacock feathers instead of grass and trees. And within this empire, that also has a royal monarchy, I am myself, of course, the King. In this world of perfection, I visit often when I come across challenges in life or when I feel a We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students deity wanting to create a new life. My favorite stone is green malachite because it makes me feel safe and protected from harm. It also makes me feel a motherly feeing. Malachite is a “mother stone” to me. In this Emerald Empire there are a monarch, a warrior, and most of all families. Children in small villages surrounding the castle all made up of shades of green marble and peacock feathers. The world to me of family—paradise. The Emerald Empire is the world I created, to astroproject to. And now, once a fantasy world of mine becomes the real world to me. Preserving it, molding it, bettering it and evolving it. The real world. The Emerald Empire of peace. —By Raymond Mercado What a Man Does Growing up in Brooklyn, New York as a little boy was very hard with a lot of peer pressure to skip school with my friends to hang out and do nothing productive. Or to drink alcohol till one of us passed out. And not to obey my mother. She was a single parent with two kids and it was hard for her to keep up with both of us. At the age of 16 I started to get into trouble, fighting and staying out late. My mother was putting me on punishment but I would find a way to get out of it. My aunts and uncle had to get involved. They started lecturing us but it would go through one ear and out the other. The police had to get involved, too; my mother was using them as a scare tactic to get me straight—and it worked. After all the trouble I was getting into I learned my lesson and got a little wiser. One of the lessons I learned was to respect authority and my elders, people who wouldn’t lead me wrong. They told me how to learn and listen. I do not know it all, but when I pay attention I can get some of the answers. I always used to ask myself “what should I do to stay on the right track?” And the answer was to love myself and to keep looking forward. Now I’m looking forward to trying to keep straight. Now that I have a child, I can’t make any more mistakes. I want to be the best father I can be and help my daughter overcome the obstacles that people helped me to overcome. I will do everything I can to do that. Now I’m a man and that’s what I’m supposed to do. —By Kareem O’Brady My Name and What It Means to Me A name is a very personal thing. It’s a powerful piece of who we are. A name is applied to us, identifies us, it is the sound to which we respond. My name Victor is pronounced ‘Vic-tor. It’s of Latin origin, and the meaning of Victor is Champion. It was a very popular name in ancient Christian Rome. I find my name to be religious and, some time ago, I believe it helped me pull We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 47 through my most difficult times in my life. My name fits me very well. And, according to its meaning, I can accurately identify myself with it. My name really defines who I am, and my personality. My perseverance, my strength, my faith, the struggle, they are all there in my personality and characteristics. I can truly relate to my name, and its meaning, although I’m not completely there yet. However, I feel like a champion because I was able to conquer the fears that had paralyzed me. I don’t think I would have made it in the most difficult times in my life without my name. I am a victor in every sense of the name and its definition. —By Victor Perez Life Is What You Make It When you think about life, it is like a road. When you are driving, you always want to drive on the smooth road; you never want to drive on the rough road. Similarly, you choose which way you want your life to be. If you choose a rough and difficult life, that is what your life will be like. You must choose which way you want your life to be at an early age, so that will give you enough time to make your life right. You must think about all the challenges in your life and be prepared for it. School of Those Days My native country is Nepal. When I was growing up in the 1960s in Nepal Village, they were just opening the school. So, one of our village chief said “everybody should send their kids to school”. I was not able to go to school because I had to work in form. If my parents were rich they would hire people to work in form, but my parents weren’t rich, so I could not go to school. Every day, I used to go to the forest to gather fire wood for cooking or grass for the cows. On my way to the forest, I used to pass by the school house and I could hear the kids reading out loud. In 2008, I went to Nepal Village and I was surprised. It was so different. Rich or poor, all the parents sent their children to school and those young men and woman were teacher and nurses. In my time, my parents used to ask us, “Did you bring the wood? Did you plant the corn or did you feed the chickens and cows?” Now, every parent says “go to school” to their children. When I was a kid I used to blame my parents for not sending me to school. But, as I got older, I understood that they did not go to school and neither did their parents. I feel lucky to come to Literacy Partners and learn what I have never learned before. Thank you Literacy Partners! —By Gita Rai So life is what you make it. —By Navindranauth Persaud 48 We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students A Difference of Opinion Man, are families’ headaches! Thank God my family isn’t that much of one, though they become a headache when it comes to our religious beliefs. My family has a big thing about beliefs. My mom, my sister, my dad all believe in the same things as I do, but they make their beliefs sound real different from the way I see things. We have many different views on our same beliefs. Now, you see my family believes in celebrating Christmas and Easter means having to be in a church building. They believe Jesus Christ was born on December 25, and “that’s a day you have to go to church.” They also believe in Easter, and that is the day Jesus was risen after dying two days before (it was really three days, but we can talk about that later on). Lastly, they believe that you need to go to church and be a part of a church and praise and worship in a church, and if I stop going to what they consider as church for a week or two, they question me. My family are strong believers in these three points. Do I agree with them? Well, let’s talk about that. We do believe in the same God; but I don’t agree with their having to celebrate Christmas and Easter in church. Now, I do believe Jesus was born at some point; but he wasn’t born on December 25 because if you actually read in the text of the Bible it never says an exact date. It gives you a time more or less when he was born which is around the end of the summer. I would never judge my family’s beliefs because there is no reason to. It’s just two ways of thinking, accept it or not. As for Easter, I don’t believe Jesus rose from the dead on Easter because there is the fact that it was only two days from Friday when he was crucified. In the Bible it says it was three days, not to mention every four years the day of his actual death changes, so they are celebrating Easter every four years when Jesus actually rose the month before. Like I mentioned, this is just something I read while studying the Bible. Lastly I don’t believe you have to go to church—which I actually call service—because in the Bible it says that we are the church and the temple and God lives within us. So for that I don’t believe that you have to go to a special building in order to feel God if He already lives within you. Even though my family and I have our differences, we still have our common views. We both believe God does miracles and that He is all powerful and that He does things no one else can do. We both believe in reading the Bible and we both know how real the Bible is and how it speaks into today’s life. At the end of the day, we realize that we are still family and we still serve the same God. So, whether or not we see eye to eye, we still are going to love each other no matter what. —By Joshua Ruiz We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 49 Kicking Back in Barbados Barbados is the place where I am most content. It is one of the smallest islands in the Caribbean but, in my opinion, it is the most beautiful and breathtaking island. Once I get off the airplane, there is no place else where I want to be. I just kick back and relax. The island boasts two very different shorelines. The west coast is more tranquil, with bluegreen water. You can do almost every water sport but my favorite is snorkeling on the coral reefs and seeing the colorful fish swimming around me. The east coast of the island is the Atlantic Ocean side. It is windswept and has a more rugged shoreline with huge waves. I just enjoy watching the surfers and walking in the sea, looking into the rock pools. On Friday night when the sun goes down, everyone comes out and ends up at Oistin’s Fish Fry, an open air restaurant. You can get freshly caught fish hot off the grill. The smell of the fish or chicken is mouth-watering. The fish is served with french fries, bread, fries, rice or salad. There is nothing like being out under the stars eating good food with fun people, and listening to the sounds of Calypso and Reggae. One of the dearest parts of Barbados to me is Harrison Cave. It’s in the middle of a tropical forest with what seems like a thousand different types of flowers and monkeys all around you. The cave itself has underground pools, a waterfall, and stalactites and stalagmites with flashing red, yellow and blue electric lights to help you see. It is really worth a visit. 50 I love Barbados because it is one of the most beautiful islands, with polite people, the best food, the best music, fun activities, and nice weather. I can’t wait to go back! —By Judith Scantlebury What’s in a Name? I am learning the origin of my name, German. I am wondering what connection my mother had with German. Was my father German incognito? I’ll never know the answer, both my parents are dead. As a child, I didn’t care for my name because in my circle of friends Erwin was not a popular name. I would have preferred Mike, John, or Paul. But everyone in my neighborhood had a nickname and that’s what you were known by—our real names didn’t matter. When I became older, after my first job, I sort of gradually grew into the name Erwin. Today I can say I love my name because I hear it so much. I have grown accustomed to it. My name has a good ring to it. I love it, and after reading a profile of my name, I am even loving it more because I can attribute all these good things to my life! Let’s look at the meaning of my name: Strength. I can associate that with me. Image: Strongwilled, Magnetic. Wow! I accept! (Laugh) “Personality: Admired, Articulate, Good Communicator. Likes varied experiences, being on the move, exploring the world. Seeks to We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students excel. Follows his dream with great tenacity.” I love this. I must confess, it’s all me! Now my question: Who has been spying on me? —By Erwin Thomas Excerpt from the autobiography of Yuri Thomas One day my mother became very ill. When she was rushed to the hospital, it was then they discovered she had cancer. Dave heard the news a few months after he left her. My grandmother was in Canada, my aunts and uncles were living far away Iris was the only person my mom trusted enough to have look after me while she was in the hospital. She was released but needed a second opinion within 10 days, whether to undergo surgery or not. She decided to do the surgery, but on the 9th day her life was changed forever. She was rushed to the hospital not because of the cancer, but from food poisoning. No one saw it coming or even imagined who or why someone would commit such a heinous crime to a sick helpless person. Her best friend Iris tried to kill her. The same night the news got to Cool Lee and the neighbor’s, who moved in a few years earlier, about the incident. They once again came to our aid. They took me to see her in the hospital Cool Lee was already there. My mom stared at me and was helpless but not hopeless. Then the next day she had surgery but the cancer had spread further than they thought; they didn’t have the resources or the technology necessary to save her life. The news went from bad to worse she asked Cool lee to look after me and not to let me see her in that condition she wanted me to retain good memories of her. Not the thin dying person she had become. More and more she tried keeping me away, the harder it became for her. It was breaking her heart. The last day I spent with her she told me “Sos, Never hit a woman, be kind to people, be honest, don’t steal, don’t do drugs or do anything to make you go to prison or get murdered. Always walk away from trouble even if you’re right sometimes. Live and become someone special, I named you after the first man who went to outer space named “Yuri Gagarin”. Hoping you’ll use that name as a guide to greatness. Then she whispered in my ear ‘I LOVE YOU’. —By Yuri Thomas Last June at the Reading Celebration, Linda Hamptlon wrote and read a story about her ups and downs and the adversities that she had gone through in some part of her life. It was very emotional and inspirational. She was able to turn her life around and found a way to make a new life for herself. Also, she was able to jump on the learning train and not stop until she receives her G.E.D. Linda Hamptlon, you are my inspiration. —By Pauline Thron We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 51 My Father My father, Vincent D. Traver, Sr., was born June 24, 1929 at home on a farm in Ulster County, upstate New York. As a boy growing up his passion was animals—which led naturally to him becoming a veterinarian—and to his sports, and the great outdoors. Dad was very close with his mother and very protective of his brother and sister. Even as a young boy the amount of pride and loyalty he had for himself and his family amazed my grandmother from the stories she told. From what I understand he excelled at sports and had extremely good grades in all his school studies. Of course, everyone thinks their father is the greatest person in the world or at least I’d like to think so. My dad was a warm, kind-hearted, loveable father and a damn good husband. Mom knew he was a good father and a good husband 95 percent of the time. He was a hard-working man and provided for us very well with lots of love, support, and patience. Dad did have one real bad flaw of talking your ear off. He could talk all day and all night. My mom said he even talked in his sleep. Dad had an unusual sense of humor and wit. With us kids, he was firm but fair. He was disciplined, organized, and faithful with work and family. My mom did have a hand in keeping him that way. Around the town he was popular and very involved with the community. Everyone enjoyed his character, energy, and his way of helping others. He was known as being a hard-working, generous, family man. 52 Also he started a 4-H Club, cub Scouts, and helped build our school one hell of a baseball team. He was very fair with all the farmers with servicing their animals and also very reasonable with them financially. He had a good hand with the animals, even the meanest of them. People marveled over that quality in him. Sometimes at night as I close my eyes I see that loveable, warm, handsome face and it puts me at ease. Also, I sometimes can still hear him bellowing our names “Janice, Bea, Commie, Jeffrey, Glenn, and Vinny” to come in the house. I do miss his talks, his bad corny jokes, and the funny faces he’d make behind peoples’ backs. But most of all I miss his warm hands across my shoulders when times were incredibly tough for me. —By Glenn Traver An Agent of Change The place where I am perfectly content is my work environment. I have so many reasons why my job helps me mentally and physically stay grounded with myself and those around me. As a substance abuse counselor I come across clients who are resistant towards treatment as I was at one time in my life when I was being forced to seek treatment under one mandate or another. As an intake counselor I am the first person to meet with the client. My job is to assess the client and gather the substance abuse history We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students from the age of first onset as well as a family history of substance abuse, if any. When clients come in for services they are either mandated or self-referred. The clients who are mandated by an agency come in with different attitudes which at times, are directed at me. I understand their resistance not only as a counselor but also as someone who once sat in their seat and displayed the same attitudes and behaviors that they are now showing to me. My job requires me to show empathy towards the client and understanding of where they are with their emotions and feelings. As a counselor my job is to direct the client towards a positive change in recovery. That means moving the client from one stage to another in the recovery process and preparing them for change. When a client comes into my office with anger and attitude, my first thought is me. What I say to the client is “I understand your feelings and your behaviors are normal, but your anger is not with me. Let’s talk about why you are really angry and who you are angry with.” The clients often share their feelings on why they do not need treatment which is the denial stage. It’s everyone’s fault but theirs. I understand their resistance because we don’t want to look at ourselves and admit that a problem really exists. As time moves on I observe the resistant clients and watch how progress slowly takes over their lives. I sit and observe ever so eagerly how the clients mentally and physically progress from pre-contemplation to contemplation, to changing their lives from negative to positive, and to making proper and productive changes as well as choices for their new selves. When one of my resistant clients peeks their head through my door to just say hello and tell me, “Ms. Turpin, I got my children back!” or “Ms. Turpin, my toxicology is clean,” it makes my job worthwhile and a place where I’m perfectly content. Just seeing the change in their attitudes and behaviors puts a great big smile on my face. I know that they have been welleducated on the disease of addiction. —By Lorraine Turpin My proudest moment is when I read a book to my grandchildren. I remember the first time my grandchildren asked me to read a book to them. I told my grandchildren to go to their grandmother to read the book. It made me feel so bad. I told myself, I must improve my reading. So when I went to my social worker, I told her what happened and we talked about it. She asked me, “How would you like to go back to school?” I smiled and said, “Don’t you think I’m a little too old to go back to school?” She said, “No, would you like me to help you find a school to go to?” and I said, “Yes.” She got on the computer and searched for a school, and we came up with Literacy Partners, Inc. She called them up, explained who she was, told them about me and made an appointment to come in. I went in and they We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 53 interviewed me, gave me a test and told me they would be in touch. I was very proud and happy to be accepted in the school program. I’ve come a long way. The teachers are the best. God bless Literacy Partners and their teachers! —By Oliver Wright Something I’ve done that I am proud of… I am most proud of going back to school as an adult. I enrolled at Literacy Partners for GED studies. In 2011, I was approaching 26 years in the medical field. As a result of jobs lost, it became apparent that I may not have a job to retire from in the next 7 to 8 years. Staff reductions as well as layoffs, also known as forced staff reductions, were quickly becoming the norm in 2004. Literacy partners to find out information about their GED program and asked about enrollment. I was told that they would enroll me, so they asked for my name and told me that I would hear from them soon. I heard from them in 6 months and I was very excited to hear that I was accepted to their program. Then an appointment was set for me to come in for a placement test. Entering a classroom after 43 years was intimidating to say the least. At times I have had doubts about myself. However, I have kept myself focused on passing and getting my GED. Once I get the GED, I’ll be ready for whatever the future may bring. As an adult, I feel confident if I should have to reenter the work force to begin a second career. This makes me very proud of myself. —By Isabel Ynoa I realized that a change in the medical field was necessary if I wanted to be prepared for what the future may hold for me in my retirement years. The health field is not only appealing, but clearly the field most prominent and growing rapidly. I can remember the very first time I truly felt proud of something I did. I was 26 years old at the time. I always wanted to learn to ride a bike; I never learned as a kid. I would always ask my husband to teach me to ride a bike, but they would always say no to me, so I never did learn. I will choose Radiology, because if offers me several job opportunities and I already have certifications for, such as medical assisting, phlebotomy, EKG and laboratory technician. This field is in high demand today. One day I was on Columbus Avenue and 86th street, when I saw a bike outside an antique store for sale. I purchased it for $35, because my husband told me he would teach me to ride it. I first researched GED websites and found the telephone for Literacy Partners. I called 54 So, on the following Saturday, we went in back of City College so that he could teach me. We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students When it came time for him to do so, he backed out of the promise he made to me. I became so angry with him that I told him to let go of my bike because when I come back down the hill, I will be riding. You watch and see! As I started to ride, I looked up to see a group of young boys between the ages of 12 and 14 watching me; I was terrified. I thought they would make fun of me, but instead they encouraged me to ride. They began to yell out, “come on lady, you can do it!” and I did it! In the end, I thanked my husband because he made me angry enough to show him I could do it with or without his help. —By Denise Tucker We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 55 Class GED Prep Teacher Carla Jeanpierre Music Saved Sonny’s Life Being a musician myself, I know very well what music can do to an artist, and for an artist. Sometimes, it can be intoxicating. Music can carry you to marvelous places. It can transport you to a world you have never experienced -- a world of happiness and sadness and melancholy. For Sonny, music must have been engraved in his heart from a very young age, or perhaps, from the time he was born. I never even considered his story would end before he had the chance he deserved to experience his dream come true, or that he would be dead before his dream came to be. What struck me as quite amazing as I was reading “Sonny’s Blues” was Sonny’s determination against terrible odds. He was committed to changing his destiny. The 50s was a terrible time to be a kid in Harlem. It was a time when whites and middle class African-Americans had moved out of Harlem. It was almost like a death sentence, predictable and often tragic! The chances of an African-American kid making it in Harlem in the 50s was slim to 62 none. Sonny had no role models. He grew up among pimps and whores and gangs, crime and drug addiction and, of course, racism and segregation. However, it is important to understand that Sonny had to go through this journey to build his character and to become the amazing musician he grew to be. He learned that his pain was not a curse, but a hurtle that life puts in front of all of us. Having that understanding prevented him from wallowing in a life of bitterness and depression. Historically, almost all the great artists, from every area of the arts, had turbulent lives; it was almost a prerequisite for any successful artist to become a better performer. Judy Garland and Van Gogh used their pain to better who they were as artists. An artist can become anyone at anytime, almost like magic! Sonny practiced that magic by playing many roles in order to adjust as he grew up. This magic stayed with Sonny throughout his life and tribulations, and never left him alone. Sonny was a magician who always followed his instincts, who taught himself not to wait, not to be patient, or life would pass him by. He followed his own “yellow brick road”, which was We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students quite dark in the beginning. He followed his dreams to do magic, to play music! If Sonny had gone through life without ever having played music, he would have suffocated and eventually died of a broken heart. Fortunately, Sonny did not! BRAVO, Sonny!!!!!! —By Robert Figueiredo What Is a True Friend? A true friend is someone who always stands by your side no matter the situations you get yourself in or go through. A true friend never judges you on the mistakes you’ve made. During my lifetime I’ve gone through tons of friends. I used to hang out with 20 or more people and party every day. I stopped partying due to a situation that occurred causing me to stop, all of a sudden I lost the majority of those same friends. I started to feel as if I was hitting rock bottom and noticed I only have 3 real true friends who can count on me and who I can always count on no matter what. Although they support me in my decisions, they do not hesitate to scold me if they think I am making wrong decisions. However we have a strong friendship and are able to discuss whatever is on our minds without judgment. We consider ourselves like a family pumping the same blood. A true friend is someone who will not leave you in the dust because you’re going through rough times. They will help you and try to get you on your feet once again. A friend is a person who is concerned, and they would get angry if something happened and they weren’t called to help. We would call that friend a rideto-die friend. Meaning if there was a serious issue, whether it was a fight, need a place to sleep, or anything they would be there with you, and/or for you. A person who would defend you if you were not around, and speak good things about you. Otherwise if they don’t look out, that means they just may snake you. Basically, a true friend from my personal experience is someone who will look past all of your flaws. Ride with you through the blizzards and harsh weather that life can drop on your shoulders and help motivate you to do better. If we are both hungry, we are both going to eat and be supportive in positive ways. Showing loyalty to one another, for instance a friend won’t sit down and eat with an enemy and you at the same time. A friend is that person that isn’t afraid to kick you in the ass so they can see you do better in life. —By Garrett Mendez Personal Thoughts on Climate Change This climate change due to global warming, caused by burning fuel, coal, and nuclear nonreusable energy,is very alarming to me. I really don’t see any good, long-term advantages to this alarming situation. We may have cooler summers for the people that love the cool We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 63 weather,but it harms our planet. It will affect our future generations. Think about your kids,nephews and future relatives. What type of world will they live in? I live in the South Bronx, New York. I remember when winters were cold and summers were hot. My family used to be able to schedule camp-outs and other outdoor activities with time because the weather was stable enough. In winter,it would snow before Christmas and we would play with the snow Christmas mornings. The weather was not so aggressive. Hurricanes would never cross any New Yorkers mind. As I grew up I’ve noticed it wouldn’t snow on Christmas anymore. Unfortunately, winters became extremely longer. Therefore, Spring would arrive much later than expected. Summers were cooler and we would have to plan out out-door activities at the last minute because we wouldn’t know if the weather would be stable enough. Now that I’m older, I’ve learned what this weather is due to. I have a niece and a nephew. I worry about the type of world they might live in. I only hope that someone does something about this problem. We all have to step up and make changes in our way of life to reduce global warming. I want my young loved ones to see jungles, animals and all the natural wonders that our planet has to offer not a destroyed and abused planet. Shall Not Be Lonely Has God chosen a life of loneliness for me? Shouting to the heavens You see a young woman Yes! Yes! Yes! That’s me! Can’t bear this hole in my heart that feels so heavy like a million bricks in my tummy I scream. Oh why? Oh why? Lord, oh why? What have I done to pay this penalty of loneliness? I look to the sky. No answer. I drop to my knees Scrapes, then bleeds I can’t believe that God has forsaken me. I thought he loved me. Then, a soft touch on my shoulder It was Him. He said, “My child, you are not alone. I am here. Let’s go home.” —By Jasslyn Brown —By Erick Ramos 64 We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students Class GED Prep Teacher Gerald Alexis I am very proud of my individuality, but there have been plenty of times when I needed help from someone to achieve something. For example, when I was younger I used to love playing basketball but because I was a little bit heavier than my friends I would only want to play for fun because I didn’t think I could compete or keep up with other kids in tournament games. But many of my friends encouraged me that I could play and be very good I just needed to know how to use my weight and strength effectively instead of worrying about being quick and agile. They made me start watching professional basketball to see how smaller and slower players were able to still play and score by using their size and strength to get closer more high percentage shots and get to the free throw line. I learned the same way they would have an advantage over me by being smaller and able to run by me. I also had an advantage over them by being able to over power them. Once my friends gave me a couple of encouraging talks and I started to play the way they told me to and I saw the other players doing it I included it into my game and was very good. When I went for the tryouts not only did I make the team but I started. The coach figured with my size and skill not only would I be good to score, but I would be good for defense because the opposing player having to battle and bang bodies with me for the majority of the game would tire him out faster. Not only did I make the team, but I learned more than I thought I would. I learned how to use my body to my advantage, how to improve my game and skill set, and that my physical play would also do me well on defense. If it wasn’t for my friends pushing and encouraging me to improve and be better I would of never known how good I can me and I would of more than likely continued to just play regular pick up games in the park and never accomplished my goal of playing and starting for a tournament team. —By Pete Lewis We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 65 As a teen I was always a hot head, not wanting to ask for help or even admit I needed it. But now as an adult I’ve learned the hard way that I do need help and also need to admit it. After coming to the U.S. in 2003 learning how to live or how things work here was hard for a hot head like me. After eight months without finding a job I was ready to give up and go back home. I kept saying “I don’t need this.” My oldest sister was already living in New York for maybe five years, to me she was getting work so easy. Still as a hot head and not wanting to ask for help or even adbvice I keep trying on my own. On May 10, 2011 I was excited to start my new job doing construction. I’ve been out of work for months and had my first son on the way. I arrived on time and was excited to meet the staff that I would be working with remodeling this restaurant on West 34th Street called “Sweet and Savory.” Later on that day I began introducing myself to all the other employees and believe me they weren’t friendly. Most of the employees were immigrants from Mexico and Russia between the ages 30 and 45 and was not about to have some young 23 year old steal their job. After three more months I give in and ask her for help. She said that the first thing I need to do is “STOP BEING A HOT HEAD.” Next we need to start to look for agencies that is hiring for the job I’m looking for. At that time anything from waitress to babysitter or even housekeeper. So on days she had off we took the train to different places in Queens to different offices. And on other days she showed me how to look and where to look for places that might hire in clothes stores. Getting a job was the only thing on my mind. We walk the streets for hours went in every store even ones that did not have a help wanted sign. When she had to work I didn’t go into most stores. With my sister’s help and good planning after just one month of doing this I got my first job as a waitress. So I learned two things. 1) Asking for help is never a bad or hard thing and 2) having good family is also not a bad thing. During my first week it was a lot of hard work my boss taught me a few things but the other workers weren’t cooperative at all. Although we worked for the same company we weren’t working together as one to get the job done. The job site was more of a “dog eat dog” environment. Later I observed that the Mexican were really into soccer and would play during lunch, also the Russians were into sports and politics, so I gained interest and got involved with both groups. English wasn’t the language of choice for the Hispanic workers they could barely speak it and the Russian workers didn’t know a lick of Spanish so my goal was to seal the gap between the two groups so we can all communicate better and get the job site done on time. Together as one my boss began to observe the workers and notice a change on the site every one was focused and working —By Rayann Lezama 66 We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students as a team being that I was the only bilingual worker I translated a lot and helped everyone understand each other better. Weeks later we finished the job site on time my boss was pleased and work has been great ever since. Although we are proud of our individuality we often need help from others to achieve a goal. —By Matthew Raposo Everyone has at least one rule to live by. Something that guides them through life and steers them in a direction every day, whether they realize it or not. For me, that rule would be to always stay true to myself. Some might say it’s the most simple rule to live by. Some might very well disagree. In this day and age, most people don’t truly know who they are. They don’t know what they want, what drives them, or keeps them on the path they are on. I am one of the fortunate that knows each of these things. Not being aware of these things can make being true to oneself difficult, because you can’t be true to what you don’t understand. Nowadays everything is technology. People have stopped thinking and have let electronics think for them. Without realizing it, they are giving up their own voice, and giving in to a world filled with smart phones and unintelligent people. A world where people must have what has been shown in every commercial, regardless of expense or their own personal taste. They conform to what society says they should be, look like, and act like. Individuality has pretty much ceased to exist. It’s dangerous, because you end up with a lot of people who are blind to their own lives. People who are lost, walking around doing what is “expected.” Nothing good can come of being oblivious. It just leads to regrets later in life. In the end, you only completely have yourself. Your life, your decisions, are your own. In a life that only comes around once, there isn’t a moment to waste being what you’re not. —By Amanda Quirenes We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 67 Class ESOL Teacher Victor Edrosolan My Friend’s Wedding My best friend is planning to get married next month, and when she told me that wonderful notice, I feel so happy and sad. She is a great, reliable, friendly and helpful person, I could say many good things to describe to her. However, I’m sad too because of the distance, I mean that she lives in Mexico and I’m in the U.S. It’s difficult for me to travel next month. I wish that God bless her new life when she gets married and Thanks God ‘I have a great friend.’ —By Nancy M. Adame ( from Mexico) Why I Love This Class I’m a student in the morning ESL class at Literacy Partners. My class starts at 9:30AM but, I usually arrive at 9:15 or 9:10 because I don’t want to move to another seat because of my friends who talk with me in English when we have a break. Sometimes we talk about our children, our friends, our housewife’s life and our beloved husbands. Sometimes we tease each other and argue with each other. 68 Sometimes we bring some fruits or snacks and cakes to class to share with each other and our teacher Victor makes coffee for us during the break. Some volunteers also bring delicious foods to eat while we are happily talking. We don’t pay for the coffee, it’s free! We don’t pay any money for studying here either. But, we have to pay attention while Mr. Victor is teaching the lessons and we have to respect the teacher, as well as our classmates and volunteers. We also can’t hesitate to make sentences on the board even if they are right or wrong. That means we don’t want to lose any good opportunity to learn English. Mr. Victor teaches us English very well along with general knowledge. Every day we do a dialogue in class which supports our real life communication. One morning I saw a man doing something in the office kitchen when I went in there soon after I arrived in class. As he heard my steps, he turned to me and greeted me nicely. I also greeted him back. He asked me some questions while I was drinking the water. Actually I had never seen him before at school. He looked handsome so I was a little surprised and felt curious about how he was but, I didn’t ask him that question. Then I answered his questions We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students slowly because I didn’t want to make a wrong impression in front of this stranger. At that time I believed that my conversation was so cool even though he was not known to me. When he heard one of my answers he wasn’t surprised because he already knew about my country and our heroine. He also knew about my country’s current situation. Those answers shocked me because I was impressed with his general knowledge. I also felt good knowing that he was interested in my country. He gave me some fruit while we were talking. Eventually he told me who he was and that he was the new Director of Literacy Partners. He treated me not only nicely and was friendly but, also encouraged me to talk with him directly. Thanks Mr. I’d love to say thank you to my teacher Victor and all of the volunteers for their amazing teaching methods, their devotion, their time and their patience. Also I have realized that if I had not studied in this class, I would not have had such a good opportunity to write this letter. That’s why I love this class and I will try to study here continuously as much as I can. Thank you! —By Htwe Aung (from Burma) My Class is Generous Last year, Hurricane Sandy destroyed many houses in New York City. There are many people with no houses. Some people lost everything. Some people lost family members and we were very sad. My classmates and my teachers gave old clothes and some money for the victims of this hurricane. We asked our classmates if they know somebody who needs help and we gave some clothes to them. We also gave donation for the victims of the earthquake in Haiti, the tsunami in Japan and now Hurricane Sandy. I like this. It’s good my teacher does this with us. I think it’s very good to help other people that need help. —By Aracely Chavez (from El Salvador) Amazing Berber Tradition Before and After Child Birth There is an amazing tradition in my country (Algeria) for pregnant women. A few months before the baby was born, everybody in the village treats the mother very well. The people in the community help the mother do things in the house and make her feel comfortable before the baby is born. After the baby was born, the community prepares for a big party the week after to celebrate. This is also for everybody to see the baby. In this time, the baby is also showered with salt and olive oil so the baby will grow up healthy and strong. The family also cook all the cows for this big party. Everybody dances and wishes the family and the baby good life. —By Amirouche Chennit (from Algeria) We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 69 My Hobby Thank You, Literacy Partners I am a resident of New York City. Manhattan is very important for me to live. I need to go to Literacy Partners, Inc. because I have to improve my English. In the future I could find the better job soon. In 2012 I decided to move from Romania to the United States. The reason was that my wife lives here and the distance between us was so painful. I left behind everything in Romania: my family, friends and my favorite places. When I came here my wife tried to make me comfortable, but my English was a real hinder to my integration. Therefore, I started to look for an English course and I found an interesting program, Literacy Partners. I was wholeheartedly welcomed by my professor, Victor who introduced me to my colleagues and in a short time my fear about speaking, reading and writing in English disappeared. I learn everything in here. I believe I can be flexible to do my job, be honest to my supervisor and teacher and volunteer. I like the people who is respect me. I love my family, hats and pets. They make me feel comfortable and happy. It’s my good hobbies. I enjoy the special uniforms. That’s my favorite things. —By Alessandro Engler (from Taiwan) I study English as a Second Language at Literacy Partners where I have found an outstanding teacher and volunteers that help me to get better in my Pronunciation and Grammar. I also have met my classmates who are from around the globe. I learned a lot from them too, like the culture of the countries which I really enjoy knowing. Our teacher Victor always corrects us when we make mistakes as our volunteers do too. Every volunteer that we have is unique and very helpful. They have their way to teach that we like and appreciated because they dedicate their free time to come and help us to get better with our goal that is to learn English. —By Alex Espinoza (from Argentina) 70 Furthermore, I found here nice people, real friends. We go to soccer games, to dinners; we met each others’ spouses and kept in touch even after finishing the Literacy Partners class. Our professor, Victor and the volunteer teachers encourage us to develop social relationships by organizing Thanksgiving parties at their houses, as well as outdoor lunches. This way, our English improves in the most natural environment. Thanks to Literacy Partners I am now able to go to Nassau Community College and have a career goal, such as Physical Therapy. I am still returning to Literacy Partners class with great pleasure and I always feel welcomed here during my college recess. Once a Literacy partners student, always a Literacy Partners student. —By Dragos Filip (from Romania) We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students Meeting Patricia Cornwell Patricia Cornwell is a famous American writer. She was born in 1956. Most of her books are crime fiction. She is widely known for writing a popular series of novels featuring the heroine Dr. Kay Scarpetta, a medical examiner. Her books have sold more than 100 million copies. This Wednesday (May 1, 2013) at about 12:00 Patricia Cornwell and her group—one photographer and three bodyguards came to our English class. We had a wonderful day. Today the classroom was packed with more than 20 students. Victor had counted many times how many of us would be going to the class on today. We wanted to show our respects to him as he is a wonderful teacher so all of us arranged time for the class, even students from the afternoon class came in the morning class. I think it was very worthwhile coming today. For me it proved to be very valuable and a big profit. She said we should learn to see everything with our own eyes. I am lucky I could see a famous writer with my own eyes. It was a special and new experience for me. Some of my classmates asked her questions. She answered all the questions politely and clearly. Sometimes she gave us good advice and shared her feelings and her ideas. We exchanged our views and I asked a few questions. My first question was: Last night I went on the internet to research some information about you. It said you were a medical student. In my country some good writers were medical students. Why is it that medical students become good writers or famous writers, like you? She said she was not a medical student, but she did some research on medical issues for many years. She did not go to any medical college. To be honest, I was a little disappointed with her answer. I got the wrong information. My second question was: Which of your books is the best one for us to read? She said the first book of hers was the best one for us. But I missed the name of the book. I told myself: “Do not be bothered by missing the name of the book. You can ask Robin on Friday about it.” Lucky today Victor told us that the book is “Post Mortems.” My third question was: What do you usually do after finishing a book? She said she is going to do research about another book in her brain. I think she is not a common person. An ordinary person would take a rest then go on to the next step. I can not imagine how she does it? My fourth question was not from me. It was given by the photographer. He whispered in my left ear: “What does a normal Friday look like?” First I did not understand him. Then he repeated it again. I got it then and I asked the question. At that moment I felt like a parrot. Speaking frankly, I did not like this question because it was not from me. But after a few seconds I glanced at him and I thought he was a nice man. He just wanted to make the conversation funnier. I thought at that second I almost was falling in love with the tall and handsome photographer and I also wondered We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 71 why he only picked me? Maybe he had a special feeling about me? My last question was: Sometimes I write a little thing about what happened around me. When I am touched and moved I usually cry. Do you cry when you are touched by your own story that you are writing? She said it was a massive question. Crying is a good way to let off your bad or sad feelings about something. Actually she said that she does when she gets frustrated while writing a book. All of us took a picture with her, one by one. She signed her name for all who asked her. She is so nice and beautiful that I thought she looked younger than her age. She broughs us a lot of fun. —By Linda Ho (from China) Jury Duty This year, I went to jury duty for the first time. I was nervous in the beginning but my teachers say just relax and listen carefully. That’s what I did. I listen carefully and I understood many things. If I don’t understand, I asked them to repeat. I stayed for three days and then I came back to class. I was happy to do it. I was afraid my English will not be good but it was okay. Thank you to my teacher and my English class. —By Kuniko Itakura-Silverstein (from Japan) My Favorite Relative My third cousin Tan which is from my father’s side. He is 6 feet tall with dark brown complexion, an attractive smile and strong. He is generous, kind and care giving. In January, he invited all of the family members to the reunion dinner at his house. This is the time of the new year where all of our relatives meet. Each one of the family would bring a dish provide to the dinner. Cousin Tan caters food as well he cooked himself. At the dinner table there are variety of food. The aroma of food, desserts, sweets and drinks are well organized. The house was decorated and balloons were hung in every corner. Music was loud as well as all relatives meet and talk to each other. Some of the relatives I hadn’t seen them before. It is good to know our relatives. Food is served and each of us are having a good time. However, this is a big feast I ever saw in my life. Counsin Tan was well dressed with suits and his wife and children, too. They entertained the relative with hugs and warm welcome greeting. Everyone is with happy mood to see a crowd of family. Cousin Tan give a short speech. He mention no matter what situation get the touch of relatives and not to forget cousins. At the end of the day, dinner was over. Every family member went home happy. Furthermore, it was an enormous reunion family dinner. Cousin Tan is really thoughtful and care to reunite family value with love and generosity. I’m proud of cousin Tan. He is my guiding angel. —By Ooiyik Kee (from Malaysia) 72 We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students Hello. My name is Fatoumata. I am from West Africa in Burkina Faso. I would like to say thank you to my teacher Mr. Victor. I am very happy in my ESL class. I am glad my teacher is friendly. I would also like to thank the volunteers in my class. —By Fatoumata Ouedraogo (from Burkina Faso) This is My Time I started a family when I was very young and I became busy with my children. It was not easy with many problems. My husband and I helped each other to help our children grow up. Now, they are all in school. One is in college and I work full-time and I go to school too. Life is not easy because I don’t have enough time to spend with my family. But I think it’s okay. After my ESL class, I want to go to GED class, pass my GED and go to college. I want to get a college degree and then find a better job. I think I can do it now because my children are big. It’s still going to be hard but I’m going to do it. With the help of my teachers here at Literacy Partners, I know I can do it because this is my time for myself. My time is now. —By Damaris Scott (from Panama) Thank You Literacy Partners The first time that I started studying at Literacy Partners, I felt a bit nervous because I think I don’t know who I am going to meet and where are they come from and what kind of people they are. But after I got in class my feeling and my mind was changing every body were friendly and welcoming. Especially my teacher Mr. Victor he is a very good teacher and honest that I have ever had. He’s very funny and always made the students happy and enjoyed to study with him. He always gives good advices to me and my classmates. And then he always has delicious coffee for every body when we have break, some of my classmates usually bring some fruits, cookies, and the different kind of food from their country to class. We usually have party together in a big holiday or vacation. By the way we always have four volunteers in the morning and four volunteer in the afternoon. They’re the wonderful people very nice helpful honest and friendly. They’re always corrected all the mistakes that we have writing reading and talking. They teach us about the society in New York City, the international history the environment in the city and the problem that happen around us. They also teach us how to become a good people and do the right way and the right thing. Anyway I want to say thanks to my classmates that always love me like me and help me to practice speaking English every day they make me feel comfortable like family. Finally the time have We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 73 limited, so I have to end my writing but lastly I want to say thank you to Literacy Partners for giving me a chance to improve my English and meet a nice teacher, nice volunteers and nice classmates. I am really happy to have you guys in my life. Thank you I love you all. —By Sopheavattey Virak (from Cambodia) Winning the Writing Contest Brought Me “PRIDE” My name is Thida L. Virak, I am from Cambodia and I study ESL at Literacy Partners. One day, my teacher, Mr. Victor asked me to join the writing contest. It was a writing contest which is held at Literacy Partners and the topic was about WHAT DOES FAMILY MEAN TO YOU! I decided to join and started to write pre-composition about one week then I started to write the real one and submitted to my teacher before the deadline. It was hard to answer that question, because I had many answers in my mind and couldn’t choose one. Obviously, people have more than one meaning of FAMILY but I have only two meaning; and the first one is Father and Mother, I Love You! But when I read over and over the first prewriting, the other idea popped up in my mind. I was thinking about the people who walk into my life and who are close to me, so there weren’t only my parents who are my family but everybody, my parents, my grandparents, 74 my siblings, my relatives, my professors, my best friends, all together are a huge community who bring love and happiness to me. I try to put down all the meaning together and finally I got the answer. It’s FAMILY means a community full of love and happiness. They are my grandparents, my parents, my sisters, my professors, my best friends, and all the people who are really close to me. We always share the good time and also the bad times together. They also help me solve my problems, give me advice and direct me to the right way no matter what the situation is. They never leave me alone, they always stay by my side, raise me up and encourage me. They are a part of my life, and I can trust them. This is the reason that I mean family as a loving community where people share love and happiness. After I submitted it, I never heard anything from my teacher for a long while; so I thought my composition wasn’t good enough to win. But one day, when I walked to the class my teacher announced that I won the composition contest among the other writers. It did almost tear me down, my teacher, my volunteer and my classmates cheered me up with their happy, their smiles and their admiration. They gave me warm hugs and also took a picture of me with my certificate and award too. And one word I learned from them was “your parents must be proud of you,” it made me happy and I felt more confident. Then I went back home, I told my parents that I won the composition contest; they were proud of me and gave me an We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students advice. They said “I’m glad that you won the award but don’t be overwhelm and keep doing your great job. I know you can do it.” From that day on, I made a commitment to myself to keep doing that great job and make it alive. —By Thida L. Virak (from Cambodia) Literacy Partners and Me I’m hopping on the memory journey when I first arrived in New York as a new immigrant from the Orient to the Big Apple. Everything was new and interesting to me. But after awhile, I felt depressed and isolated because sometimes I had problems talking to people and they didn’t understand what I wanted. Although I had learned some English in my country, it was not enough if I want to live and find a good job here. Therefore, I tried to search for some English courses online assiduously and tried to attend some ESL programs but, felt discouraged as the courses were either expensive or not much help. However, my life changed when I found Literacy Partners. Because the study of English in my country focused on reading and writing, my speaking and listening skills were comparatively weak. At the beginning of class, I was self-conscious and embarrassed when the teacher asked me to read the paragraphs. I was also afraid to talk to people. The teacher and volunteer teachers always encouraged us to open our minds to this new environment and not be shy when talking to people. In the class, teachers taught us new vocabulary, dialogues, grammar, American culture etc., we even had activities sometimes. The things the teachers taught us were very useful and helpful in involving us in this new surrounding. Moreover, every time we have questions or problems, they are always there to instruct us patiently until we understand and solve our problems. Literacy Partners helped me a lot and I’ll even describe my personal experience as an example. I was looking for a job at Sears as a cashier and had an appointment for a job interview. It was a big challenge for me because I had never had a formal interview before. I really wanted this opportunity but, didn’t know how to prepare for the interview. I was counseled by a teacher and the volunteer teachers and they helped me by simulating an interview and gave me a lot of advice. As the case stands, I passed my job interview successfully and got the job. On the whole, I learned a lot when I was studying at Literacy Partners. Now I feel confident and comfortable when I talk to people and I have a better job. I even fell in love with the Big Apple again. All I want to say is “thanks to everyone at Literacy Partners, thanks for your contribution and kindness. It was helped me a lot and I really appreciate it.” —By Raymond Yang (from Thailand) We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 75 Class ESOL Teacher Eduardo Go I am Rehab Alghazali from Yemen. I came to the United States 8 months ago, I came with my mother and my sister and my brother to meet my father, we didn’t see him for 3 years. He works at the embassy of Yemen in South Africa and he was not able to come to Yemen because of the problems that happened recently. I like the system of everything here as the transportation and the traffic and the learning at any age and I like the law too. I like everything almost except the weather and the apartments. The weather is very cold in the winter time and I think it is very hot in summer. Also the apartment is narrow and expensive. In the beginning I didn’t like to live in New York because I didn’t have friends and I stayed at home all day, I didn’t know what to do. When I wanted to go outside I couldn’t go by myself, I didn’t know where I was going, I didn’t know the places and how to speak with others, I felt depressed, my husband was at his work 12 hours daily. So I thought to go back to CA, but I couldn’t leave my husband. Then I decided to learn English. Now everything has a changed for the better, that’s because of my school. It’s made me feel 76 like I am among my family. We have a nice teacher. I like him so much and I like Andea and Miss Evans and Marcos. All of them like to help the students and I like my friends in my class. Now I like to live in New York. I don’t like to move at any place. This school is a golden opportunity for me and for all the students. —By Rehab Alghazali Living in New York I am Yuliany Arrendell. I was born in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. Before I came to New York my parents immigrated here a long time ago so one part of my heart was very happy because I moved to the United States. Also I came in a good season for me (spring) and I live with my family and I have some relatives living in this city, the first three months in the USA were very strange, hard and completely different from where i came. It was like starting again a new life. I never thought that learning English could be so difficult and confusing for me. I remember the first day of English class, since I live in Brooklyn it’s too far from English school and We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students I take the train daily, I did not know that the train can change the map route and skip the stops like they did this day, I just heard something in English by the speakers however I couldn’t understand the advice and of course I got lost on my way to school and like two or three times more. Even though I do not speak English perfect yet now I can understand most of the advice and many others things. Living in New York hasn’t been easy especially when you don’t know English but like everything it has a good side there, • New York is a beautiful and big city • There are a lot of people from different places or countries • It doesn’t matter where you came from, everybody has rights and responsibilities • There are a good public transportation • Some kind of food from other cultures • Free speech • freedom of religion and many others things To Conclude if God Wants I hope to begin college soon and know English like a second language . —By Yuliany Arrendell Funny Short Story In my country, Ethiopia everybody shares with everybody else, but in 2010 I took a class at the International Center in New York. I had a shock. I was in the cafeteria. I had just started my lunch. One student asked if he could sit next to me. I said, “ok” I offered to share my lunch with him. Then he ate my whole lunch!! —By Roman Asmerom I came to the U.S.A. in 2005. I didn’t know anything about this country. I didn’t speak English. I came because my husband decided to come to U.S.A. So I faced a lot of problems such as jobs, money, communication with others. After three years my brother and his wife came. I started to work also I start to have friends also to know everything little by little everything about this country and things are getting well with me. —By Eman Ayad My Journey to the United States I came to the United States from Guinea (Conakry) in May 2012. I came by airplane to New York. It was a beautiful day, sunshine but a little cold. When I arrived at the airport I found my family. They were waiting for me outside. Then I went to take my paper, the people were talking English. It was so complicated for me because I didn’t know anything that they were talking so I took a deep breath and I went to the We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 77 parking where my family was waiting for me and we hugged each other and then we got inside the car. My uncle was driving. So on our way home I saw the building it was so amazing. Suddenly my son said “mom look the bridge” and I said “oh wow it like I am in the New York!” We all laughed. Finally we arrived home and I found that they cooked a lot of food for me like chicken, plantain, meat. And I went to take a shower when I came back my family from here called to welcome me. When we finished talking on the phone we started eating with my family it was a beautiful time ever in my life. After eating I went to sleep because I was tired. And in the morning everybody in Africa called me. I told them that the weather in Africa and here is not the same and Africa is more hot and here is colder. However I started to adapt to the new land. Finally now I started to know English too. —By Haby Balde I came to the United States from Honduras on 9/9/2000 on a plane and landed at JFK airport. My reason for leaving my country was due to a severe hurricane that caused many loses of all types. When I arrived in New York, everything was different and I felt disoriented I said to myself My God what am I doing here? But with the presence of my family and friends, I was able to move forward, I had enrolled in school however I only lasted for one month. I did not understand my teacher, and I decided to look for work. I began to dedicate myself to 78 my job and now that I am no longer working I understand the importance of learning English. I have enrolled in English classes once again for 3 hours a day with my teacher Eduardo Go who is an excellent teacher. —By Feliciana Bernardez I am Elene Delices, I was born in Haiti. I lived there for a while and after a few years I moved to New York on October 16, 2012. When I first came it was cool but after when I started to go to school and work that has changed. When I came here I couldn’t speak English. The first time I went to work I was lost because my work was so far from house. I had to take a bus and the train to get there. The first day I was in a hurry. I rode the bus to the place where I supposed to get off to get the train. I stood in front the door. I was ready to get off. I looked at the driver and smiled. He smiled back but he didn’t stop he kept on going. He didn’t stop at the next stop either. I was upset. I was sure I would be late for my train. At the third stop other passengers got off and I got off with them. I walked all the way back to the train station. The train had already left, i was very frustrated. Later I learned that the bus has a special rope you can pull to give a signal to the driver that you want to get off. Then he will stop the bus. And I don’t like the weather in New York. It’s crazy. I really miss my country, my friends, everything in my country. We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students Now I am an English student I learn I know what to do when I go somewhere. In life you have to get a persistence to success. —By Elene Delices I’m Max Caleb DELICES, I was born in Haiti and later I moved to NEW YORK on October 16 2012. My arriving in the UNITED STATES was not a big deal for me because I knew already what was waiting for me because earlier in the past years I used to spend time here in NEW YORK. Like some other people who’ve immigrated to NEW YORK, it was a little difficult for me to be comfortable here with the weather and some other things that I did not like here, like staying home every day for the couple months. That was boring a lot because I had nothing to do just watching TV, reading some books and cleaning. A few months after when I started school that was a great thing for me for many reasons such as learn English; take a test so I can go to college and having a nice future with great plans and a good career like a lot of people have already. In my class I’ve learned a lot from the teacher and many students that I talk to. Learning English is a great experience for me by having a good teacher and some cool friends that make me laugh sometimes so I have enjoyed being in class every day I have to come in school. Also I have some stuff that I like about the city like, enjoying the parks by playing basket ball, soccer and a few other games. I enjoy the movies with my family. I like U.S.A. also because they give people a lot of opportunities, I appreciate that almost everything is not that hard to get, and everyone has the freedom of speech. I think every place or everywhere should be like here, where everyone is living the life positively. That was about my life in the UNITED STATES… —By Max Caleb Delices Hi my name is Gustavo. I came from Mexico, I live in Jackson Heights Queens. I have 23 years living in New York U.S.A. I came to this country in search of what my country could not give me “WORK” I found it and help me to be economical and as a person, decent, a safe work, what I wanted in my country and did not find. To reach this country I learned that loneliness and being away from friends and family is very hard, but with time living in New York is the best thing that happened to me and most importantly that in time I have not lost my custom or forgotten my roots, are stronger every day but I would not trade this city for anything. Here I have what I want and when I want, with hot or cold New York is my home now, “Porque como New York solo lo encontraras en New York.” —By Gustavino Ramirez We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 79 Today is Friday May 12, 2013. When I first came to New York I was very surprised to see that the trees had no leaves. I came here in February. It was very cold and the trees were naked. When I saw snow the first time it looked beautiful on the first day. After few days the snow was so dirty that you didn’t want to open your eyes to look at it. It is not beautiful to see anymore. —By Amoin Mana-Lou Hello my name is Cecilia Rubi Dominguez. My friends and family call me Rubi. My story is very interesting but very long. So I will tell you part of my life. I was born in Dominican Republic. My family moved to Puerto Rico where I grew up and had my two loves of my life, my children Angel and Angelica. Two years ago I met my husband who lives in my beautiful beautiful Quisquella (DR). We hope to have his first child. I’m here for two years in the United States with many plans, including setting up my apartment, my citizenship, changing my Puerto Rico nursing license for New York and applying for my husband to come here. I have tried other English classes and finally now I have an excellent teacher, who gives me confidence. I feel I have three nationalities: Dominican, Puerto Rico, and American. I am proud of my roots. I have beautiful family and friends, husband, kids. God never leaves me alone and always supports me. I told you my story is very long. 30 years of my life is not easy to reduce it in three paragraphs, but you know, Love, Peace, happiness, sadness, strength, fall and I rise again. What happens in the future I don’t know, and what sustains me is my children, my husband and my heavenly father. —By Cecilia Rubi Dominguez My name is Maria Rivera. 1) My teacher has patience, for every student in the class room 2) Everyone in the class room get along. And that’s why I don’t wanna leave my school. —By Maria Rivera I know it will happen. I have many opportunities here. 80 We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students Hello! My name is Esther. I got to New York on August 31, 2011. I came here for my husband’s work, our two children and I. At this time some things have changed. My son did not want to study here and returned to Spain. I am happy in this city. I’m really the happiest of my family, they do not like it here. I have a problem with the language because I always speak Spanish, my friends are Spanish and speak Spanish at home but I hope to go slowly learning. I have not really any hurry. I’m enjoying it much. I like the school and my teacher and all of you. For me to live here and be able to share with you is a pleasure to enjoy every day. I miss my country and my people but you forgot a little every day. Thank you. —By Esther Ramos I came to the United States of America in 2008 to progress and be a professional person because when I would be in Puerto Rico a lot of things happened to my families. A drunk driver hit my mother and she died. After that my two brothers got killed by a drug dealer. After that the war between drug dealers began and my two nephews and 3 cousins lost their lives too. That’s the reason why I came here. But that person who killed my brothers they came to the same medicine. They got killed too. In four years I learned enough English, but I need more to be prepared for my goal. I laugh because when I be with different people they are confused. They think I come from Africa, Dominican Republic, Honduras, different places, but not Puerto Rico. This is my history. That is the reason I had to separate from my suffering to be happy. —By Tito Santos There are many things I like about living in New York City. I like the opportunities for jobs. I like the easy transportation around the city. The police do a good job. New York City is very clean. I like to go to RED BULLS games. I like the people who work in the immigration service. I like studying English with my teachers. —By Nvaly Traore Changes In My Life I came to the United States two years ago. I moved to New York because I fell in love with a person who has his life here. He proposed to get married and come here because the United States has a lot of opportunities for both and the future for our family. Now I am here but it was so difficult to assimilate to my new life because New York City is different from my country in many things, weather, language, food, culture, people and everything else. We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 81 The first month I felt depressed because I didn’t have here my family, friends, good job, big house, church, pet, etc. but the bad days are gone. I took the opportunity to know New York City and I can say that it is a beautiful city, it has many museums, theatres, parks, restaurants, stores, islands, many things to enjoy in each season; I don’t like winter however I loved to play with the snow in central park. Another favorite activity in winter time is ice skating; I never did before I came here but I love it. I know it is difficult to live here if you don’t speak English very well, many times I feel 82 intimidated because it is hard to communicate or understand someone but I think the important thing is not to give up and try and try. We are here and we have the opportunities in our hands; just us can make the difference in our life, just have to be focused in our goals. Don’t worry if you think that your English is not good, every day we will learn differences things and improve our English. If you are here in the school, you are in the correct path to achieve your dreams. Remember we can do all things through Christ who strengthen us. —By Grethel Suazo We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students Class ESOL/Family Literacy Teacher Roy Villanueva My son ‘s name is Samuel. He is tall and young. He has black hair and black eyes. He likes music and he likes to read. He is very smart and he likes to go to school. —By Mary Achiaa My daughter’s name is Eman. She is five years old. She is in kindergarten. She plays. She is smart. She is beautiful. My daughter is happy. —By Arwa Alrawhani I was born and raised in Mexico. I lived with my parents until I was twenty years old. I have two brothers and three sisters. I am married. I have lived in the United States of America for ten years. I have one boy and two girls. I like to cook and eat together with my family. In my free time, I like to learn new things. My favorite sport is soccer. I enjoy playing soccer with my family. —By Gloria Cortes My name is Amy Diakite. I am from Bamako, Mali. I have a big family. My life in my country is very good. Our family in Mali and in the USA has a very good education. I have five children and we thank God for everything in our life. I have three brothers and three sisters. I came here with my husband. I like to be good, read and write. —By Amy Diakite My name is Teresa. My family is big. I have six siblings, four sisters and two brothers. Most live in NJ. I have one sister in Texas. Only my father lives in Mexico City. My husband and my children have lived here in NYC for eleven (11) years. My daughter is eleven (11) years old. My older son is eight (8) years old. My smallest child is almost two (2) years old. We love New York because New York has many opportunities for my children and I am a good mother. —By Teresa We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students 83 My name is Rosa Rivera. I have five sisters: Lilia, Maria, Lourdes, and Lucia. I have two brothers, Gerardo and Daniel. They are in Mexico. I do not have siblings in the USA. I have been married for fourteen years. My husband’s name is Ariedy. He works in Manhattan. I have four children. My oldest child is Lizbeth. Lizbeth is a 7th grade student. My son is ten years old. His name is Edwin and he is in the 5th grade. My daughter, Wendy, is eight years old and she is in 3rd grade. My little daughter, Vianey, is two years old. Vianey is always with me. I hope to visit Mexico as it has been fourteen years since I visited Mexico. —By Rosa Rivera My name is Benita Ramos. I am from Mexico. My family lives in Mexico City. I have one brother and two sisters. I live in USA with my husband and three children, two boys and one daughter. —By Benita Ramos My daughter’s name is Ashley Valenzuela. She is seven years old. She is in second grade. She is smart. She loves music. She dances. She sings. She likes to play with her sister. My daughter is very sweet. Her favorite character is Bell, the Disney princess. She has many friends. —By Mitxy Valle My daughter’s name is Miriam. She is a very good student in school. —By Belqis 84 We’re Going Places: A Collection of Writing By Literacy Partners Students