Monday, September 2, 2019
muddle In A Puddle: Comparison Of Essay To My Life :: essays research papers
 "Muddle In A Puddle": Comparison of Essay To My Life           While reading the essay "Muddle in a Puddle," some very colorful images  came to my mind about what I have done in my life that compare to this  particular piece. Of all the times I have embarrassed myself by sticking my  foot in my mouth, or by making a fool of myself by playing with a strange toy  in the toy department, only to my surprise, everyone in the toy department was  laughing at me. As Robert Herrick mentions in his poem "_O how that glittering  taketh me!" (100 Best Loved Poems, 12) That's how I felt at that time. All  of us have experienced things like this in our lives, and it is strange what  makes it so interesting to watch people make fools of themselves, as mentioned  by Baker in this quote, "...and any one could could have spoken out as one  human might speak to another....not one had said that." (156)       Yet another piece really spoke to me about the ways people communicate  on a daily basis. "I led the Pigeons to the Flag" was very exact to the  feelings I have of miscommunications and mishearings. I can remember times in  which I have done the very same things that were mentioned in this essay, like  singing a tune over and over out loud, then looking over the lyrics later. Only  to my knowledge, my version of "Cannonball" was actually "Panama." The way we  hear and say things is also very influential in the way others hold us in their  standings. If someone catches us slipping up, they might think we are weird, or  stupid. It could also be a good ice-breaker for a good friendly relationship.  Sometimes not. It just depends where the people are from, and what the  situations are at the time of the incident.       I can remember a time, while at work at the funeral home, I was  discussing school with a bereaving individual. I was trying to comfort this  person, as I noticed she was very disturbed over the loss of a friend. It was  around the time of finals, and she asked how they were going. I said "they're  killing me!" Immediately I realized that I had said the right thing the wrong  way. A million thoughts passed through my mind at that moment, as Baker had  also mentioned. What was I to say to recover from this terrible thing. Change  the subject? Repeat the phrase replacing killing with another mourning-friendly  verb?       Its hard to know what you can say around certain groups of people, or in    					    
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