In the author of this article, Alice Walker reveals her struggle against physical deformation caused by an unfortunate "accident". In this article, she seems that her "peace" does not last long, but she remembers that she calmed her deformities. First of all, after decades of deformation life (due to the wounds left by BB particles penetrating her eyes), she is still aware that her eyes are not straight - this is because her lover slowly It is to let her remember her before she learns She lived with her and she was living in peace with her deformities. But I know well that the innate shame still plagues her childhood. As we all know, many people care about their appearance and how other people see them. According to Walker's experience, the previous evaluation seems to be correct. When she begins to live in an anomaly, she suffers from isolation and insults of her companion. She began to be bullied, finally hitting a boy called "scorpion of one eye". In the years before puberty, she became the purpose of praise and worship, and became one of the purposes of hatred and abuse. These early experiences seem to have had a major impact on how Walker sees the rest of her life on your own. Her eyes had "water droplets" of scar tissue, so Walker even questioned the confidence she discovered newly. Many of the superficial "outcomes" are due to scar tissue removal. After explaining how she will be happy after the removal, the author repeated the line of "You have not changed" referring to whether or not the mother and sister thought they changed after the accident . Here I think that Walker may imply the fact that attempting to "restore" social and emotional complications caused by the accident rather than myself, did not change after the accident . Also, I repeat the same path even after saying "I do not pray for vision, I pray for beauty." This is where I think the main problem, and why I do not think that she will get peace because of her deformities. It is worth noting that Walker included her childhood childhood experience in her article. It seems to be only "cute", and by default she is accepted by anyone. As the whole article evolves, she seems to want to return to that memorable moment, or at least to the emotions she is related to. That is why it seems that she became popular and became a queen (Queen of Prom). Mind Decades after her accident, while taking a picture of the cover magazine, she encountered the problem of not turning her eyes on others yet, but she accidentally believes that she managed to manage her mistakenly Cruel to the thought "physical difference". However, Walker did "no change".
In Alice Walker's "Beauty: When other dancers are self", Walker believes that the concept of beauty is based on one's own perception. As Walker 's view of beauty evolved through a lifelong trip, and because the right eye of the child was blind and distorted, she finally accepted her appearance in a tragic accident. Through a self-discovery journey, she was born out of a lost and concealed child by a young woman who suddenly felt shy and self-esteemless feelings. And her injuries already made her feel uneasy. . Suddenly when her harassment, rejection, and confrontation of multiple life changes, her overall view on life changed negative. "That night I was watching almost every night, I was crying out for a carnival in front of a mirror, because of her negative opinion she appealed for self-destructive behavior." Before morning Please clean it.
"" Beauty: When other dancers are self "I said to myself when I started reading. "This is going to be the most beautiful story I've ever read the most cute," but after about 5 minutes I thought like this "This is what I have read so far The most terrible and sad story. "We know she is the most beautiful girl in town, her life is perfect, but when her brother shot her eyes it turned out to be a nightmare CF graduate After a negative speech in the ceremony, I felt her frustration and anger, and in fact the rest of the article thought that she was just about assimilating everything she just heard However, my perceptions and stories have changed, she found hope after Henry Reed's moving speech "MH