Thursday, November 12, 2015

Wolverines Take Down Bruins (BYU-Idaho Football, November 2013)

The Wolverines beat The Bruins 29-27 in the Competitive Football Championship game November 23.

In the race for the win the Bruins were the first to score in the first quarter, which was closely followed by a Wolverines touchdown and two-point conversion.

Before the first half was over, the Bruins’ attempted field goal missed and the Wolverines scored another touchdown and two-point conversion, putting them in the lead 16-7.

The second half brought a number of interceptions and fumbles on both ends, resulting in a Bruins recovery in the end zone and a Wolverines interception and touchdown near the end of the third quarter.

The Bruins were the last team to score a touchdown, setting the game at a close 29-27 in the fourth quarter battle.

“I thought the fourth quarter was awesome,” said spectator Derek Rodriguez, a junior studying biology and vocally supportive fan of the Bruins.  “Both teams definitely tried their hardest but, you know, anybody can win on any day.”

“The Wolverines had more luck today,” Rodriguez adds, “but that’s okay because the Bruins fought and they both had a really good fourth quarter.”

Both teams started on even playing grounds with the other competitive football teams, and Saturday’s championship game was the deciding factor for the season champions.

“I think the biggest thing was how we responded to adversity,” said Wolverines receiver and outside linebacker Trevor Schmidt, a sophomore studying agricultural business.  “When we made a mistake or something we didn’t let ourselves get down.  We just came back and made the plays.”

“We just continued to get better every day,” adds Schmidt.  “Coming out to practice…working hard (and) fine tuning all those little things.”

Although BYU-I does not have a competing collegiate football program, the school’s competitive football league does include, according to the Competitive Football page under www.byui.edu/activites/sports, pre-participation requirements, namely, a physical, attendance at the registration meeting, a signed assumption of risk form, insurance verification, and met eligibility requirements.

The page also notes that icebreaking and team-building exercises are included in mandatory team combines, and that football is highly dependent on team players working together.


“We just grew together as brothers,” said Tyler Broadhead, a sophomore studying accounting and special teams wide receiver for the Wolverines.  “It was a great experience to grow together as brothers and enjoy this game.”

Learning Discipline Through Jiu Jitsu

Learning Discipline Through Jiu Jitsu

Twice every week, fifteen to twenty students make their way to the wrestling room inside the Hart building to participate in the BYU-I Jiu Jitsu club, instructed by student Dave Ramos.

Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, which is the form students learn in the campus club, is a composite of martial arts such as classical Japanese Jiu Jitsu and Judo and has become a prevalent form of the martial art today.

“This semester, what I’m trying to do is build a good foundation of basics,” Ramos says, adding that while in past semesters teaching more complicated moves has proved ineffective in giving the students a base knowledge, currently a great focus is put on “controlling position and setting up moves.”

Ramos tells the students that the real dominating technique in Jiu Jitsu is leverage instead of power.  
The student must focus more on the actual maneuver rather than muscling through it.

He continues by saying that many athletes, citing wrestlers as a specific example, go into Jiu Jitsu thinking that they can muscle their way through it, and while many of the techniques are the same, the point to Jiu Jitsu is that “the small guy can beat the big guy.”

According to www.shenwu.com, this fighting style is designed to give the weaker of the fighters “an effective method of defending against a larger and stronger attacker.”

Much of Jiu Jitsu consists of ground-fighting and “grappling,” and the ground position, or being held under the attacker, is often the desired position in eventually putting the other fighter into submission.

He goes on to say that a key component to learning the martial art of Jiu Jitsu or really any martial art is that one disciplines oneself to become a good student, and one simply has to go in and commit to learning.

Students attend to learn something new and useful, as well as for the basic knowledge of the martial art.

“It was kind of like a personal dream (for me) to learn it,” says BYU-I student Cameron Akana, who has been attending the club for a little more than a month.

Ramos, a BYU-I junior majoring in elementary education, has been practicing Jiu Jitsu for just under three years and has been instructing here at school for a little over a year. 


The club, which is held in Hart 101, meets on Wednesdays from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. and Saturdays from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.

Indexing: Thinking About Your Folks (6-7-2013)

Indexing: Thinking About Your Folks
Joe Stay

The United States is a country with a rich heritage of hobbies.  Baseball is its famous pastime.  You make think of others—hunting, fishing, football, shopping.  The list goes on.  One thing you tend not to think of is family history.
                And yet a recent survey shows that it is the second most popular hobby in the nation.
                Why the interest in family history?  What is so fascinating about it?  Why has the U.S. General Surgeon, as of 2004, declared Thanksgiving as National Family History Day?
                Perhaps it comes about through the search for meaning, the search for identity, the proverbial little orphan Annies racing to find their heritage, the gazing in one’s own reflection and whispering, “Who am I?” but any way you want to explain it, the drive for family history research is indeed on the rise.  One of the ways to work on family history is through the online database FamilySearch, “a nonprofit organization established by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints,” according to its home page.  Here, you and other volunteers can participate in the practice known as “indexing.”
                Indexing constitutes the organizing and arranging of individual records from all over.  According to the FamilySearch website, “The documents are drawn primarily from a collection of 2.4 million rolls of microfilm containing photographic images of historical documents from 110 countries and principalities. The documents include census records, birth and death certificates, marriage licenses, military and property records, and other vital records maintained by local, state, and national government.”
Elder Miller, a service missionary for the LDS church who works in the Family History Center on the Brigham Young University-Idaho campus, is one of many volunteers that not only participates in indexing, but offers help to anyone looking to get into it.  In helping to get you started, he would take you through the indexing process for a hands-on experience.
                First, you log onto www.familysearch.org and sign up for an account.  The site asks for a simple username and password, after which it takes you to a page where you may download the free software whereby you can access the indexing files.  It is a quick, safe download that will take you right to the program’s Setup.  You are free to choose the various languages in which the names may appear and upon finishing, the program opens right up and you may begin anytime.
                Now that the program is open, to begin indexing you hit the button in the top left labeled “Download Batch.”  A window with various Project titles will appear, and you are free to choose whichever you want to index.  For instance, you may receive Projects with such titles as “US, Iowa—1905 State Census” or “Canada, Quebec—1911 Recensement”.  In the description the Iowa batch, it will say “English—1905” and for the Quebec batch it will say “French—1911”.  Say you don’t speak French and you aren’t confident in your ability to accurately read French documents.  In that case, you can click on the Iowa batch and be on your merry way.
                The next screen that comes up has a black and white scan of a document at the top.  It can be anything from a Census record to a death certificate, but in the Project titles the type of document will be specified.  At the bottom half of the screen there are a number of different fields for one to fill out based on the information given on the document.  In the bottom right corner there is a box reserved for instructions on every step of the indexing process.
After indicating the state of each of the documents in the batch (whether it be normal, blank, a duplicate, an image with no extractable data, or an unreadable image) in the bottom left hand corner under the “Header Data” tab, you click on the “Table Entry” tab and begin filling out the specified fields.
The program will highlight the different parts of the document on which you are working to help you locate each field.  It will ask you for the data of such things as the certificate number, the given and surnames of the people indicated, the place of birth, information on the parents, etc. all depending on which type of document you are indexing.
                As you begin indexing, you will discover something that many—including Elder Miller—have discovered.  You will find that some of the documents are quite the challenge to read.  Remember that the images on the screen are scans from microfilm, a now outdated technology that can be compared as the VHS of movies.  You are not guaranteed to get perfect handwriting on the original recorder’s part either.  Do not get discouraged.  If you are unsure of a name or a place, try researching your different possibilities online.  If you are still left clueless as to what has been written, give it your best shot if it is under a required field such as a given or surname, or do as the instructions tell you, and skip it or mark it blank.
                Indexing is a method of bridging the gap between the data collected with older technology and the new system that is used these days.  According to the FamilySearch website, its purpose is “to create searchable digital indexes for scanned images of historical documents.”  The information transferred by volunteers like you from the microfilm images to the FamilySearch database is used for genealogical and family history research.
According to a 2005 poll conducted by Market Strategies, Inc., 73 percent of Americans are interested in learning about their family history.  A more recent survey, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services website, shows that 96 percent of Americans know that keeping a family history is important.
So make the country’s second most popular hobby yours as well.  The records of millions that have gone before lie at your fingertips, ready to go digital.  In the words of little orphan Annie:  “Close your eyes, think about your folks.”


Battles from the Inner War - On Clinical Depression (6-21-2013)

Battles from the Inner War

Joe Stay

Alissa Davis wakes up early today, very early.  The darkness seems to be weighing down upon her like a thick blanket that does not comfort her nor does it keep her warm.  It is smothering.  The daily battle of bed versus work commences in its usual hopeless way.

The year is 2010, and the place is Portland, Oregon. 

Alissa doesn’t know which side of the battle will win today, but she does know this.  Whichever side reigns victorious, she is still losing the war regardless.

If she could have her way, Alissa would remain in bed.  She would never leave, not today, not any day.  But she has to get up for her job at Target, where she works every day early in the morning as a stocker.

She dreads having to go today.  She always dreads having to go.

Alissa finds that at her job, she gets down on herself over the very simplest of things.  In the mindless work of moving boxes and organizing products she has plenty of time to think and to dwell on the unhappiness that is consuming her.  She has little to no energy, and has trouble keeping up with her coworkers.  What’s worse is that the supervisor’s dominant opinion of her was that “she’ll never do anything right.”

“I was failing, losing my ability to live,” Alissa says now of those dark days three years ago.  “I was never suicidal.  I made that choice.  (But) everything was shutting down.  I didn’t feel like anyone could help me.”

Alissa had suspicions that there was something terribly wrong with her way of thinking, and that it went beyond simply feeling “blue” or “down.”  It wasn’t until she was fired from Target, however, that she took the matter seriously enough to go see a doctor about it.

It was then that Alissa, then and now a college student, was diagnosed with clinical depression.

Being Diagnosed

Being diagnosed with clinical depression, also known as major depressive disorder, wasn’t a surprise to her or to her family.  She had had these feelings for some time, and they had only been amplified when she was working those early mornings at Target.  As for her family, the women on her mother’s side were almost all manic depressive.

According to the Department of Health and Human Services, major depressive disorder is characterized by biological, psychological, as well as social factors.  In spite of her struggle, Alissa says she is very grateful that she is not at this point haunted by manic depression, which is a genetic commonality on her mother’s side.

It has been difficult with friends and acquaintances however, she says.  “They think that somehow I will pass it on to them,” she says.  She adds that because of the erroneous thought that depression gets passed around as would a cough or pink eye or some other contagious illness, her clinical depression alienated many friends and acquaintances.

Alissa admits that being around a depressed person can instigate depressive moods merely by suggestibility, but also laments the indifference and opposition she has received from some people around her.

Since being diagnosed, she has been regularly taking three medications to help her fight her battles and win her war:  Azomdal, Lexapro, and Anamectal.  Unfortunately, as medicine goes, they are not little magical pills that go in and kill the depression right away.  To this day it continues to be an ongoing battle for her.

“It is very easy to think down on yourself,” Alissa says of her daily struggle.

She also noted on some of the many ways that her depression can be triggered.  In the quick-paced academic life she leads at Brigham Young University-Idaho, she is constantly bombarded with the expected presence of homework, tests, papers, etc.  If she does not do as well as she would have hoped on any of these, if she does something wrong or not the way she intended to, she will come down on herself.  Hard.

Her frustration and depression then outlets; she says that she will get angry at the people around her for nothing that they personally have done.  She will get extremely worried about what will happen and the consequences for having done so “poorly” on her assigned work.  She will begin talking a lot but hardly being conscious of the words that are coming out of her mouth, or if they even make sense.
Sometimes her depression can come on the way back from a positive experience.  If something amazing happens to her one day, it is not uncommon for her to sway to the other extreme the very next day.

“What goes up must come down,” she says.  “It’s like a high and a low.”

The people around her have influenced her negatively as well.  She tells of a semester in which all she could do to keep herself afloat was to lock herself in her room and bawl her eyes out when her unsupportive roommates were not around, or to simply disappear for a small period of time to go walking, driving, or simply to be alone.

“My room had become a prison,” she says.

Fighting the Battle
Alissa notes happily that this semester she finds herself surrounded by good friends and incredible roommates that not only are supportive of her, but know what she is going through.  Some of them experience the same type of depression that she does, and all of them at least have had exposure to the life events characterized by highs and lows.  In fighting her depression, Alissa claims that “the influence of people around you” is a huge factor.

She also has little things that she does for herself, what she calls “self-care” projects, that in addition to her medication she uses to fight the depression.

“I work on positive thinking,” she says, “like happy thoughts.”

Some of the things she does for herself besides remaining cognitively optimistic is to eat at regular times and not let her mood convince her to eat less or more than that, to have a consistent and early bedtime, do uplifting things before going to bed such as reading her scriptures and avoiding looking at a screen, and listening to calm music.  If she slacks on any of these, she says, she is likely to have horrifying nightmares, which also plagued her before she was diagnosed.

Alissa has also participated in counseling, and has had both good and bad experiences with this treatment.  She despised working with her counselor from family services.

“He told me it was all in my head,” she says.

She emphasizes the importance of having the right counselor, a counselor tailored to her needs.  She found hers in the weekly counseling she receives at the BYU-I campus.

“Here I have exactly what I need,” she says, asserting that visiting with an LDS counselor assures a spiritual value added to her treatment.

She says that her doctor also has good advice, and that some doctors are better than others.  The one she is seeing now, for example, speaks to her on her level and helps to keep her uplifted.
Especially, Alissa emphasizes that happy people around her makes her happy.  She notes that even her roommates who have depression choose to be happy and so help to uplift her.  People who care and people who listen when she needs to talk have been her salvation, she says.

Winning the War

Though major depressive disorder is a lifelong struggle, Alissa says she is confident that things will get better.  She has come up with many ways to edge the depression out of the picture as much as possible.

“Never ask that stupid question, ‘Why me?’”  she says.  “There’s always gonna be hard times.”

There are other things one shouldn’t do, she says.  Outlets that dwell on the poor emotional state, such as writing dark poetry, watching depressing movies or listening to sad music, are a sure-fire way to never make one feel better.

“The little pity parties don’t help any,” she says of this.

She further adds that taking little steps and remaining positively social is a major factor.

“Don’t let people tell you that it’s not real,” she says.  “Don’t keep the people around that get you down.”

She adds that negative and sarcastic people are a poor influence on those who suffer from depression.

For her, God has been the greatest source of all.  In her life, she says that He has made Himself manifest as she studies the Atonement of Jesus Christ, searches and studies the scripture, and keeps meaningful, positive journal entries.

“Never give up,” she says, “and never give in.  Don’t stop helping (people.)  Every day is a new day, even if it feels like it’s never going to change.  God is on your side.”


The ASL Assocation at BYU-Idaho (5-31-2013)

THE ASL ASSOCIATION
Joseph Stay

There are a number of diverse groups and clubs that BYU-I offers, striving to reach out to a large number of people from various backgrounds and with various interests.  One of these is the ASL (American Sign Language) Association, which meets every Wednesday night from 7:00 to 9:30 p.m. in the Hinckley building, room 381.
            Austin Davis, president of the ASL Association, is very excited about the growth that the association has had in recent semesters.  According to Davis, there has been substantial growth since fall semester of 2012, and it continues to expand this semester.  And though forty to fifty students attend every Wednesday, Davis responds to any consideration to attending the Wednesday night activities with an emphatic, signed, “Yes, please!”
            In fact, the ASL Association is still relatively new on campus.  Though it has existed in the past, it was reformed as it is now in 2012 by Austin’s sister Kayla Davis.
Although becoming a certified ASL Interpreter takes up to years of training and practice, the campus ASL Association teaches students the basics of sign language, or “signing” as it is commonly referred.  Though it is not guaranteed to qualify one for doing ASL interpretation at devotionals or firesides, it allows students to be able to maneuver a meaningful conversation with the deaf and to join in their culture, according to their website, “via fun activities and games.”
Participants in the association attest that the deaf community’s culture and language is just as rich as that of any spoken language or foreign country, and that the association serves as a wonderful communal activity.
            “I love being able to connect them to the hearing world,” says Katherine Gottfredson, former President of the ASL Association and current coordinator with all the campus language clubs.
            Davis adds that learning ASL, albeit the basics, is a great way to communicate with a lot more people on all levels, that all are “sons and daughters of God” and the Association is yet another chance to diversify and enjoy being around another culture.
            Short video tutorials teaching various words and phrases in ASL are available on the school’s website at www.byui.edu/associations/asl.


Response to "Is Google Making Us Stupid?"










Google Analysis
Joseph Stay
Brigham Young University-Idaho














Abstract
In “Google Analysis,” Joseph Stay—student at Brigham Young University-Idaho—examines the use of Nicholas Carr’s use of ethos, pathos, and logos in his essay “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”  He extracts specific quotes and strategies from the text that Carr uses to prove his point and answer the question explicitly stated in his essay’s title, and analyzes the strategy used in each section to conclude whether or not it is a useful ploy in getting his point across.













Google Analysis
            In the early Christian era, an apostle wrote “a double-minded man is unstable in all his ways.”  (James 1:7, Bible) Now whether or not scriptural application can also be geared toward a scholastic analysis is, of course, subjective, but the principle holds some merit.  When making an argument, one takes a stand on either the right or the left.  Of course, this does not mean that the other side is to be completely ignored or invalidated.  A good argument consists of a conscious recognition of the other side’s opinion and respect toward said opinion.  Perhaps in this sense the condemnation of a “double mind” does not mean we are to be ignorant of an opposing view, but steadfast in our own while considering the points made by the other.
            Nicholas Carr, in his contemplative essay “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” makes it very clear the point he is trying to get across.  Through the use of statistics, anecdotes, examples from popular culture, and quotes, he examines this new phenomenon that has gripped the 21st century world which is the Internet search engine “Google.”  While all these methods are vessels, the real argumentative strategies are found in his use of ethos, pathos, and logos.  I found, overall, his use of these methods to be instrumental in creating a well thought-out, observational essay that helps the readers to liken themselves to what is being said and to self-examine oneself.  However, there were also some faults in Carr’s logic that—despite my desire to not be critical of an essay that to me caused me to reflect on my own use of the media—I wish to examine in the hopes that both a writer will not fall into these traps and a reader will not be tricked into thinking any certain way.
Ethos
The ethos strategy used in this essay—that is, Carr’s maneuver in appealing to the general morals and values of his audience—are well in play.  As his essay focuses on the specific habits of our culture in using the Internet to “power brose horizontally through titles, contents pages and abstracts going for quick wins…(going) online to avoid reading in the traditional sense” (Carr, p. 2) one might argue that the whole entirety of his essay is written with ethos in mind, trying to play to our new set of values and what is versus what culture used to be.  To state it more explicitly, Carr himself explains the following in establishing a premise for his essay:
Thanks to the ubiquity of text on the Internet, not to mention the popularity of text-messaging on cell phones, we may well be reading more today than we did in the 1970s or 1980s, when television was our medium of choice.  But it’s a different kind of reading, and behind it lies a different kind of thinking—perhaps even a new sense of the self. (Carr, p. 2)
This statement plays to our sense of culture as well as to what we as a majority do to not only communicate but also get our information.  The widespread use of both the Internet and cellular devices in our culture help us to realize what Carr is saying, especially to the newer generations.  Those slightly older will be able to identify with the statement he made regarding television being the medium of choice in the 1970s and 1980s.  He also plays us up, helping us realize that indeed we may be reading more than we did before, which is different than perhaps other commentators’ statements regarding this generation.  Carr then clarifies that the point he is making is that the reading is different than it used to be, that perhaps the amount of reading is not negatively affected, but the way we interpret the content, and the way we internalize what we read through the media.
            This begs the question of what Carr was referring to in the very title of his essay, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”  I would suggest that in this method, Carr, though perhaps trying to make a point with his use of the word “stupid,” misled his audience into thinking that he indeed was also one of those commentators that condemns the use of the Internet in these times.  Admittedly, that is what I thought he was getting at when I first examined and thumbed through the essay; it took a deep-reading and annotation to realize that there was something more to his purpose.  In this aspect of using the ethos, Carr was misleading and it was upon his own image that the negativity was reflected.
Pathos
            Carr, like any good argumentative or persuasive writer, attempts and succeeds in playing to the emotions of the reader.  This strategy hits home to the way the other mode of persuasion ethos works, as our personal emotions often go hand-in-hand with the way our cultural morals and standards are organized.  Carr uses a different approach however, and validates his own use of the pathos in the following reference to a quote given by Google co-creator Sergey Brin:  “Certainly if you had all the world’s information directly attached to your brain, or an artificial brain that was smarter than your brain, you’d be better off.”  In response to this startling statement made by Brin and quoted by Carr, Carr himself adds: 
“Their easy assumption that we’d all be ‘be better off’ if our brains were supplemented, or even replaced, by an artificial intelligence is unsettling…the human brain is just an outdated computer that needs a faster processor and a bigger hard drive.”  (Carr, p. 6)
Carr does a good job in his own stance on the issue in this point, noting that the quote given by one of Google’s creators is unsettling to him.  The worry I have with Carr’s use of pathos here is that he proceeds to lose the impact in a steady stream of logos, which I will discuss further in the next section; but for the sake of this context, I will give the example from the text.  A few paragraphs down from his last statement, after indeed a short amount of time building on this “unsettling” issue, Carr redirects his pathos-driven argument into a logical analysis regarding “the arrival of Gutenberg’s printing press, in the 15th century.” (Carr, p. 6)
            Before we get too far into the logos of Carr’s essay, however, there was another method that Carr employed that worried me somewhat, that was “unsettling” to me in a word.  In the midst of the previously mentioned argument of Carr’s pathos leading into logos, he throws in the small yet significant statement “Maybe I’m just a worrywart.” (Carr, p. 6)  Perhaps this is where we may return to examine the introductory statement made by the early Christian apostle.  Carr is making a rather compelling argument, and could have given his point of view with precision and confidence had he not included this footnote.
It does, in fact, open an issue of criticism.  If he notes that he is indeed perhaps only being a “worrywart,” one might assume that he would follow that up with some evidence to the contrary of what he is stating.  Instead of examining the other side of the argument, however, he continues with “Just as there’s a tendency to glorify technological progress, there’s a countertendency to expect the worst of every new tool or machine.” (Carr, p. 6)  Without missing a beat, he is back into his own argument and his own point of view.  To me, above all, this was the most evident fallacy in Carr’s argument.
This also wasn’t the only instance of this type of fallacy.  He gets his own foot in the door of his argument—not a bad thing in analyzing both sides of the argument—when he makes the statement, following a series of anecdotes reinforcing his thesis, “Anecdotes alone don’t prove much.” (Carr, p. 2)  However, instead of allowing, at least for a moment so as not to stray from his momentum, the reader to accept that a few anecdotes from the lives of his own friends and colleagues do not necessarily reflect the attitude of position of all literary buffs, which the subjects of his anecdotes are, he swings back into the essay as he does in the previous case.  He follows this statement with a brief, hopeful sentence of how research on Internet effects on cognition are yet to come, as if to validate his point, and then back into his argument.  If anything, it works as a good transition, but with the reader feeling hanging, as if the reader wished to interject but the writer would not stop talking.
With that being said, Carr does use pathos to his advantage, but in my opinion, a few faux paus like he employed were a tad distracting and depleting from the power of the essay in disallowing the other side of the argument to have a say.
Logos
The fallacy also sneaks its way into Carr’s use of logos, or the appeal to logic, in his essay.  In an essay ripe with statistics and information used to back up his claim—as if remembering all too well how prominently he started out his essay with a batch of anecdotes and waxing apologetic for it—he creates a few problems for himself and for the reader.
Despite the early claims to having had his attention span and reading capabilities altered by use of the Internet, such as in his statement “…what the Net seems to be doing is chipping away my capacity for concentration and contemplation…once I was a scuba diver in the sea of words.  Now I zip along the surface like a guy on a Jet Ski” (Carr, p. 1) he goes on and provides a dizzying amount of logos in a language rather unsuitable to readers with his same incapacity.  The following is a statement he uses later that for me took a few readings to partially comprehend:
When the Net absorbs a medium, that medium is re-created in the Net’s image.  It injects the medium’s content with hyperlinks, blinking ads, and other digital gewgaws, and it surrounds the content with the content of all the other media it has absorbed.  (Carr, p. 4)
Using context clues, and struggling through the remainder of the paragraph, the reader can understand what Carr is trying to say here.  And perhaps it is the author’s intention to write in the very manner that he himself has claimed to be unable to read as he could before, but in his effort to be clever and to use symbolism, he has successfully proven his point:  the reader is left to skimming and glossing over this portion of the already slightly lengthy (a mere seven pages, which according to his essay is bordering on being a tome) essay and missing some actually fascinating insights.
            Another indication in the loop of logic that Carr uses is his reference to the invention and development of the steam engine.  Though tying together all loose ends at the conclusion of his example, his transition into the example proved to be somewhat vague in its logos.  He builds off his earlier marvelous example of Friedrich Nietzsche, allowing the addition of a steam engine example on the basis that they were happening at the same time, goes into an intricate introduction of the example, and finally gets into the heat of things with the following statement:  “More than a hundred years after the invention of the steam engine, the Industrial Revolution had at last found its philosophy and philosopher.” (Carr, p. 5) Again, further reading of the essay proves to clarify the point that Carr is making, but to the “Google” generation of skimmers that Carr is writing to, this strategy could prove problematic.


Conclusion
Is Google, in fact, making us stupid?  The answer, of course, is left up to the reader.  According to Carr, it is not a matter of us becoming less intelligent or less capable of receiving information.  It is actually the mark of a new way of internalizing the information that we read, an effect on our ability to focus on a large amount of text, and how we retain or utilize information.  Through Carr’s use of ethos, pathos, and logos he expresses this idea and in my opinion, he does a very good job at it.  For my part, I agree with what he is saying.  There were, however, fallacies to the methods he was using.  The ethos he used misled the reader into thinking that Carr was perhaps more biased than he was, the pathos struck close to home but was kept from its potential due to Carr’s failure to incorporate how the other side might approach the topic, and the logos often defied the very point Carr was trying to get across.
Overall, the most detracting thing from the essay was Carr’s inability to properly employ the “double mind” referred to at the beginning of the essay.  Whether it was all part of his plan or not, he could not convey his point while portraying the two contrasting sides of the issue, starting with the title and going to the way he attempted to get his point across and to his failure to engage his audience.  Carr’s argument, though good, was kept from being great due to these simple errors.




References

Carr, Nicholas.  (1 Jul 2008).  Is Google Making Us Stupid?  Retrieved from Google.

Recognizing the Exercise of Control












Synthesis:  Recognizing the Exercise of Control
Joe Stay
ENG-201
June 11, 2013










            Over the years there has been a lot of emphasis and movements concerning the freedom of thought and the idea of individuality.  Popular phrases such as “Be yourself” and “You are special” have been thrown around in everything from popular culture such as music and television to self-help and confidence programs.  Perhaps one may ask, with all these messages floating around, how do I do this effectively, or how do I know if I need these messages or not?
In his essay “Propaganda under a Dictatorship,” author Aldous Huxley comments on the exercise of control over the masses by a demagogue, citing the example of Hitler during World War II in Nazi Germany as a specific example.  He first speaks of this particular dictatorship as the first in the modern era, employing modern technology to be able to control the masses.  The term later used and that could possibly define and illustrate the theme of the essay is the idea of “herd poisoning,” that is, the behavior of an individual in the context of a mass.  Huxley concludes by acknowledging that Hitler was correct in his assumption of human nature in a crowd and the loss of individualism and morality that takes place, but asserts that an individual that is intellectual can escape the effects of herd poisoning.
            College professor at Brigham Young University Thomas G. Plummer makes a similar advance toward the idea of individualism and the effect of a controlling power over it in his essay “Diagnosing and Treating the Ophelia Syndrome.”  Though he cites various examples to illustrate his overall theme—that the expectations and demands of an authoritative figure can be used to eliminate individual thought in a student or learner—he uses the character Ophelia from Shakespeare’s “Hamlet” as a backdrop.  He compares her inability to think or make decisions for herself with an effect that takes hold upon my learners who merely parrot what their educators teach them without doing any actual learning themselves.
            Both writers make fascinating observations on the effect of an external controller in the lives of individuals, and while Huxley focuses on the influence it has on individuals acting in a crowd, Plummer zeroes in on how it affects an individual by him or herself in a learning setting.  As I read these two essays, I asked myself the question, how do we recognize the exertion of control in our lives from another source?  I also feel that in drawing up an answer to this question, a solution to this problem will also be reached.
            In the examples used, the authors introduce different abstractions of the idea of the control of one party over another.  Huxley relates the account of Hitler’s Minister for Armaments Albert Speer and his post-war court testimony on the effects of Hitler’s manipulation over an entire mass of followers, including both Nazi soldiers and those sympathetic to his cause.  He confirms that through the use of modern technology employed and ruled by this one man, “eighty million people were deprived of independent thought… (subjected) to the will of one man” (Huxley, 1958, 247)  Huxley’s first claim, accompanying this statement and quote, is that it was the use of modern technology, which had never before been available to the same magnitude to any other dictator before Hitler, that was the controlling factor over the eighty million people mentioned by Speer.  While Huxley eventually specifies his topic more on that fact that such a massive amount of people were subjected to control, Plummer makes a different assertion from the beginning.  In “Diagnosing and Treating the Ophelia Syndrome,” he similarly references perhaps a symbolic representation of what Huxley addresses.  He quotes the interaction between two players in “Hamlet,” being Polonius and his daughter Ophelia.  The latter states honestly, “I do not know, my lord, what I should think,” and Polonius responds, “I’ll teach you.  Think yourself a baby.”  (Plummer, 1991, 1) Here he gives the model for what he calls the Ophelia Syndrome, and what is described in both essays as the unrighteous influence of one person over another.
            Another common point is the observation of an individual in a group.  Hitler had a sound understanding of what a natural man may become given the anonymity of being a single part of a large group.  Huxley explains it this way: 
“To make them more masslike, more homogenously subhuman, he assembled them, by the thousands and the tens of thousands, in vast halls and arenas, where individuals could lose their personal identity, even their elementary humanity, and be merged with the crowd.” (Huxley, 249)
Hitler exercised a gargantuan amount of control over the people by simply placing them together, taking advantage of the mere proximity of human beings together to rouse them up and get the blood flowing, as it were.  Once he could do that, he had less of a chance of one individual rising up in protest, because the fever of dehumanization caught a hold of the majority of his audience.  Plummer makes a similar, if less foreboding, observation.  Using the characters Polonius to describe the teacher and Ophelia the learner, he proscribes: 
“The Ophelia Syndrome manifests itself in universities…The Ophelia wants to be a parrot, because it feels sae.  The Polonius enjoys making parrot cages…I worry often that universities may be rendering their most serious students…vulnerable to the Ophelia Syndrome rather than motivating them to individuation.” (Plummer, 2)
In this particular example, Plummer notes that the same type of thing may happen to the individual while in a group learning environment.  The student becomes a puppet, or “a parrot” as Plummer describes, to the teacher because that is how perhaps the universities are organized.  They tell you what to study, how to study, and what information to recall for a test, and students, in the hope of a good grade, go along with what the teacher says because, after all, the teacher determines the grade.
            The point is to discover what type of control is being exerted over us as individuals, and as we discover that see what we can do to prevent it from happening and removing our individuation.  The authors make a few suggestions.  Huxley first assures us that “the moral imbecility on which he relies when he goads his victims into action, are characteristic not of men and women as individuals, but of men and women in masses.”  (Huxley, 250)  He notes that “herd poisoning” is the method used to inflict such “imbecility” upon us, by getting us into large groups to think as a lawless, animalistic entity as opposed to the “rationality and interest in facts” (Huxley, 250) that “intellectuals” share.  Huxley clearly supports the efforts of individuation in his essay by condemning the act of herd poisoning, by attributing much of the atrocities under Adolf Hitler’s reign over Nazi Germany to this method.  Plummer also gives six “treatments” to promote individuation and the freedom of authoritative thought control:  1) Seek Out and Learn from Great Teachers, Regardless of What They Teach  2) Dare to Know and Trust Yourself  3) Learn to Live with Uncertainty  4) Practice Dialectical Thinking  5) Foster Idle Thinking  and 6) Plan to Step Out Of Bounds.  (Plummer, 3-8)  Whether it is the Ophelia Syndrome or herd poisoning by which one loses his or her individuation, these treatments, and understanding the effect they have as well as the consequences of disregarding their potency, promote the freedom of individual thought and subsequently the greater learning.
            Personally I share in these two authors’ views.  Not only in the classroom or in psychopathic fascist agendas, we see the issues of herd poisoning and the Ophelia Syndrome at play all around us from weighty subjects such as politics and religion (Plummer cites writer S.I. Hayawaka in saying “As Republicans, we think what other Republicans think.  As Catholics, we think what other Catholics think.  And so on….” (Plummer, 1)) to fashion styles and other facets of popular culture.  And so when we jump on the bandwagon and participate in the herd mentality of an issue, we cloud our own judgment and warp our own perceptions of what we actually feel or think.  I agree that Plummer’s six treatments at overcoming the Ophelia Syndrome are useful, and that they can also prevent us from falling into the trap of herd poisoning.
            Upon deep thinking and pondering on these two essays, I feel that it is first necessary for one to overcome the presence of the Ophelia Syndrome before one can avoid the pitfalls of herd poisoning.  We do this by recognizing whether or not we are following popular political, religious, or cultural trends, and if so, is it because we actually adhere to that based on our innerness, or are we merely an Ophelia at the hands of a Polonius?  When one discovers his or her own individuality and learns to think for him or herself, I believe that one becomes one of the “intellectuals” of which Huxley speaks in his essay.  According to him, intellectuals possess a “critical habit of mind (that) makes them resistant to the kind of propaganda that works so well on the majority” and “are the kind of people who demand evidence and are shocked by logical inconsistencies and fallacies.”  (Huxley, 250)  While I assert that one may go by faith as far as it brings one and those around him or her inner peace, I agree that this definition of an intellectual is the definition of one immune to the mind-molding intentions of the powers-that-be.  Then and only then we can defy the advent of the Ophelia Syndrome individually and herd poisoning collectively, and think as an individual who is free according to his or her own conscience.










References
Plummer, Thomas G.  “Diagnosing and Treating the Ophelia Syndrome.”  BYU Magazine.  5 April

Huxley, Aldous.  “Propaganda under a Dictatorship.”  Brave New World Revisited.  1958. 
www.byui.edu/ilearn


Why The "Eagles" Are The Most Overrated Band

Watch the video presentation here.

Why the “Eagles” are the most overrated band
Purpose: To convince all within the timbre of my voice that the Eagles are not nearly as good as people think they are.
Thesis: The Eagles are the most overrated band in the world because:
1.       They cease to be relevant as musical influences, but won’t go away.
2.       All the songs on their first “Greatest Hits” album, the highest-selling album in North America, are essentially the same boring song.
3.       They have become the big corporate sell-out that they used to despise.
Introduction
                (Attention Getter) On a cold, miserable day in February of 1976, a subpar country-rock group called the Eagles received an unfitting yet notable distinction. Their first greatest hits album, which was also called “Their Greatest Hits,” became the first album to sell one million copies and was the best-selling album of the 20th century. [Liscu] To date, this 10-song compilation has sold 42 million copies worldwide and remains the single best-selling greatest hits album ever to be released by any recording artist in the world, and the seventh best-selling album of all time.
(Relevancy) This distinction, of having one of the greatest-selling album ever, is understandable for some in the list: Whitney Houston is up there as well, and Michael Jackson, the king of pop, with his classic “Thriller” is number one. But the Eagles? How did that happen? It is undeniable that the Eagles have talent. Their lineup has included Joe Walsh, a distinguished and virtuosic guitarist, and Don Henley, who had a rather successful solo career in the 80’s.
(Reveal Topic) But I submit that the Eagles are the single most overrated band in the history of popular music.
(Credibility) As an avid fan, listener, and reviewer of music and especially of the classic rock of the 60’s and 70’s….
(Thesis) I make this claim based on these three reasons: they cease to be a significant musical influence and yet are still heralded by fans and critics as one of the greatest rock bands to ever take the stage; the songs on “Their Greatest Hits” are all boring and all essentially the same song; and they epitomize the money-hungry corporate machine to which they used to be so opposed.
(Preview) In fortifying these claims, I will compare this group with other contemporary acts as well as explore the history of the band.
Body Paragraph I
                The Eagles are often branded as classic rock – are played on classic rock stations and listed by fans as one of their favorite “classic rock” groups – but the truth is that however much they wanted to rock on numbers such as “Life in the Fast Lane” and “Those Shoes,” they were something much less fierce. If anything, they can be considered “country-rock,” as evidenced by their mellow hit “Desperado” as well as their liberal use of banjo, slide guitars, and relentlessly consistent shuffling quasi-cowboy beats. Perhaps what may make them hesitant to be labeled as country-rock is that it is a genre that has absolutely no relevance in more recent music. Many country acts have adopted a more “rock” oriented sound to appeal to the masses, perhaps, but those are acts already rooted in country and influenced by straight country artists. The fact is, the Eagles stopped influencing bands a long time ago, probably since they were still together, which was only between 1971 and 1980. Musicians are inspired by inspiring musicians, and despite scoring hit after hit and having a wildly successful couple of albums, their bland harmonies, their uninteresting songs, and the hypocrisy of their bitter infighting against a backdrop of songs like “Take It Easy” and “Peaceful Easy Feeling” all prove to be terribly uninspiring.
                And yet fans and critics still adore them. At least, most critics. The words of renowned music critic Robert Christgau reviewing the band’s debut album in 1972 speak to me: “Another thing that interests me about the Eagles is that I hate them. "Hate" is the kind of up-tight word that automatically excludes one from polite posthippie circles, a good reason to use it, but it is also meant to convey an anguish that is very intense, yet difficult to pinpoint. Do I hate music that has been giving me pleasure all weekend, made by four human beings I've never met? Yeah, I think so. Listening to the Eagles has left me feeling alienated from things I used to love. As the culmination of rock's country strain, the group is also the culmination of the counterculture reaction that strain epitomizes.” [Christgau]
                While it is true that a distaste for a band can sometime elude exact words and description, I think it is appropriate to claim that the Eagles, despite being wildly popular, have ceased to inspire current musicians.
Body Paragraph II
                In December of 1975, the Eagles made an excellent decision in adding well-established guitarist Joe Walsh to their lineup. [DeRiso] In addition to penning and singing on some of their later hits, such as “In the City,” he added a rocking flair which was notably absent from the country-rock flavor of the band up to that point. There would have been no “Hotel California” without Joe Walsh, or at least it wouldn’t be to version we know it today. More than likely, it would have sounded just like any of the other songs the Eagles had made up to the point of the 1976 “Hotel California” release, because every one of those songs – all included on “Their Greatest hits” – sound exactly the same. To understand what exactly I mean, I would encourage you to listen to brief clips of these four songs: “Tequila Sunrise,” “Take It Easy,” “Lyin’ Eyes,” and “Peaceful Easy Feeling.”
                A lot of people, both fans and nonfans alike, really hate the song “Hotel California.” I proudly dissociate myself even amongst people who can’t stand the Eagles by saying that this is the one song that I most likely won’t skip over if I hear it on the radio. Yes, it is overplayed, and yes it seems a little pretentious, but the fact of the matter is for once it is something different. It is still the Eagles, but it is not that same boring, dry-toast flavor they’d been playing for five years. It took me a while to come to terms and admit that I could see some appeal in that song. But that is basically the only exception I have made, after hearing numerous of their songs, and not just the hits.
                This is not to say that all Eagles songs sound the same: but the ones that made them famous all sound the same and are all huge snoozers. And that is another reason why they are overrated.
Body Paragraph III
                One accusation I could never lift against the Eagles is that of their excess. Not to say that it wasn’t true, but as the comedian Bill Hicks said in a much more comedic way than I, most of those groups we love from the 70’s were really high on drugs. [Hicks] The Eagles’ excess bothers me in a distinct way: in the fact that as they grew in popularity, the pompousness in each of them came out (by the way, drummer Don Henley insists that their group is called simply “Eagles” as opposed to “the Eagles,” a detail I realize I have paid absolutely no attention to during this speech [KSHE]), there was bitter infighting amongst the band that led to threats, comically dramatic encounters and confrontations, and eventually the breakup of the band in 1980 [Rolling Stone]. But, unlike most breakups, this didn’t mean the end of the cockroach-like Eagles: after reuniting for their popular “Hell Freezes Over” tour in 1994, they have constantly been coming back for reunion tour after reunion tour, releasing little new material and nothing as popular as their older stuff, and charging their fans $150 for tickets [Daily Vault] to see this band that gives, in my opinion, a lackluster, bored, uninspired performance every time. Additionally, band members have filed lawsuits against one another, accusing each other of withholding royalties, and overall squabbling relentlessly over money and power and breaches of contract [Leeds]/[Rolling Stone]. To me this utterly decries the nature of their country-comfort, return-to-roots credo from their original years as a band: which can be summed up as “life is good so relax and enjoy it.” Again in the words of Robert Christgau: “Brillaint stuff – but false.” [Christgau]
                The Eagles therefore epitomize what they once used to oppose: “the man.” For however else I feel about them, especially the tracks that appear on their absurdly popular greatest hits album, the Eagles were at first a sincere group of guys who wanted to make music together. They found a sound that they liked and they wrote songs in that vein, they shared songwriting and singing responsibilities, they were tight-knit, and their songs were typically easygoing. They fulfilled the American rock star fantasy dream, in writing a bunch of songs, releasing albums, playing shows, and getting paid to do what they loved. But as is so often, and infuriatingly so in the case with the Eagles who remain inexplicably popular, they lost touch with those humble beginnings and became “the man.” I don’t want to preach about conformity and non-conformity, selling out and staying true, but I will apologize to the post-hippie demographic by saying that these guys are no longer the guys you listened to and loved in the 70’s. It started then and has become starkly evident recently: they are only in it for the money. They play the same boring songs over and over because that’s what brings in the money. They sue each other for millions of dollars in damages, usually emotional. They charge outlandish prices for tickets because they know their fans are more sincere than they are and will pay that much to see them. The Eagles are not at all what they used to be, and that is another reason they are overrated.

Conclusion
                So in summation, this is how I see it, that the Eagles are overrated for three overarching reasons: they cease to be a significant musical influence and yet are still heralded by fans and critics as one of the greatest rock bands to ever take the stage; the songs on “Their Greatest Hits” are all boring and all essentially the same song; and they epitomize the money-hungry corporate machine to which they used to be so opposed. And on a more personal note, I just simply do not like their music. Perhaps in another lifetime, being a kid during their heyday I might appreciate them a little more, but the fact remains that now, I feel no inspiration from them, I am bored by the repetitive nature of their songs, and am put off by the hypocrisy with which they have conducted themselves against the backdrop of their peace-loving credo. And to the passive listener, enjoying the Eagles is really just fine, but I think it important for all within the sound of my voice to understand that they perhaps are good, but they are not great. They may be talented, but they are not among the most talented to come out of that era. And they may have inspired, but they and their music are no longer inspiring. Just know that not everything that used to be wonderful still is, and the musicians that were so incredible to us once upon a time are not frozen in time. Thus it is with the Eagles, and that is why they are the most overrated band.

References

“The 10 Messiest Band Breakups.” Rolling Stone. 14 February, 2013.
               
“10 Things You Might Not Know About The Eagles.” KSHE. 22 June 2015.


Christgau, Robert. “Trying to Understand the Eagles.” Newsday, June 1972. Retrieved October 20, 2015.


DeRiso, Nick. “39 Years Ago: Joe Walsh Joins the Eagles.” Ultimate Classic Rock. 20 December

Deusner, Stephen. “Quit Defending the Eagles! They’re Simply Terrible.” Salon. 8 August 2013. Retrieved
19 October 2015.

DV Staff. “Why the Eagles Suck.” Daily Vault. 2015. Retrieved 19 October 2015.

Hicks, Bill. “Drugs Have Done Good Things.” Relentless. Warner Brothers, 1992. MP3.

Leeds, Jeff (December 8, 2002). "Reborn Eagles Lose Peaceful, Easy Feeling". Los Angeles Times. p. C–1.
Retrieved November 18, 2012.

Liscu, Jenny. "The Eagles: Twenty-Six Million Served". Rolling Stone. 20 January 2000.

Wile, Rob. “11 Reasons Why The Eagles Will End Up In The Dustbin Of Musical History.” Business Insider.
15 August 2013. Retrieved 19 October 2015. http://www.businessinsider.com/11-reasons-why-the-eagles-are-overrated-2013-8

The Evocative Nature of Smell

Watch the video presentation here.

Purpose: To inform the audience on the functions of smell and its ties to emotion and memory.
Thesis: We will explore the science behind smell and the sensory nature of the nose, we will discuss the positive and negative emotions associated with it, why we associate smell so strongly with memories, and our subsequent reactions to the smells with which we have familiarized ourselves.
        I.            Introduction
1.     Attention Getter: You have arrived at your grandmother’s house. It is the first time you have been there since you were very little, maybe five or six years old. The scenery of the trees and the buildings and the streets look vaguely familiar as you ride in the backseat of your parents’ car. It looks familiar but it doesn’t warrant any feelings of nostalgia. Of course, you are glad to be able to see her. But perhaps the excitement has worn off, because it has been so long and you are older now and have in part outgrown the excitement of seeing someone you are related to but don’t really know. You arrive at her house and the feelings start to stir a little more dramatically. You recognize this place. Scenes from your last childhood trip out here start to come back. Your grandmother meets you at the door and you are moved by your memory of her, and of her voice. But then you step inside and she approaches you for a hug and your senses awaken. The smell. Not only of her perfume, but of the house. The walls and the baking and some plant that she keeps replanting. The potency of the memories and of your affection for your grandmother heighten and once again, you are five years old. This is a fresh reminder of that fleeting yet disarming moment in the mall, one week earlier, when you passed a stranger who wore the same perfume or cologne as someone you had dated for several months, and thoughts of that person once again occupied your mind for the better part of that day.
2.     Relevancy Statement: Something has happened here, in both these cases. You know who your grandmother is, and you know who your old flame is. You have seen them, in pictures, in your thoughts, in your memories. You have seen things that reminded you of them. You may have even heard them in videos or over the phone. All this time you have been reminding yourself of these people. But it never quite hits you until you are introduced to, of all things, their aroma. So what is it about the sense of smell that is so powerful?
3.     Credibility Statement: Although some people lack a sense of smell, this is a familiar topic for most people. Isn’t that true? Isn’t smell a finely honed way for us to recognize something we have already known? Do not several species of animals both detect danger and find food based on nothing more than smell?
4.     Reveal Topic: I wish to inform you on why it is that the sense of smell is so evocative.
5.     Preview: In doing so, we will explore the science behind smell and the sensory nature of the nose, we will discuss the positive and negative emotions associated with it, why we associate smell so strongly with memories, and our subsequent reactions to the smells with which we have familiarized ourselves.
      II.            Body Paragraph
1.     Anatomy of Smell: Neuroscientist Dr. Howard Eichenbaum has said, “There’s something very interesting about the anatomy of the olfactory system and the memory system of the brain that probably explains why it has this unique power to transport one back in time to a particular phase in their life or a particular day.” According to him, the olfactory system, that is the system dealing with our sense of smell, has direct access to the temporal lobe, where our memories are organized. While other sensory systems like vision or touch or hearing have multiple synapses, or connections, to go through in detection, the olfactory system is directly connected to the hippocampus, amygdala, and parts of the hypothalamus. These parts of our brain deal with memory, emotional, and certain decision-making processes.
2.     Anatomy cont’d: Smell is a telereceptive sense, like vision and hearing. It does not require bodily contact, but rather gathers information about our environment extending beyond our body. The olfactory process is unique in the fact that it includes fewer synapses than vision or hearing, and that is why we smell and register things unconsciously, almost so much as breathing. Previously, experts believed that humans were capable of sensing up to 10,000 smells. Recent studies have adjusted that number slightly, to one trillion. That is because we are always, always, always smelling things. We will continue to discuss the biological processes behind smell as we examine, right now, some of the evocative affects that smell has on the body and mind.
    III.            Body Paragraph
1.     Intro: Our sense of smell has a direct influence on the amygdala, which is the part of your brain that deals with emotions. According to psychologist and writer David Ludden, interpreted information that comes through the eyes and ears can be influenced by smell because it happens. We form associations based on what we see and what we hear with the smell that accompanies it, which is why, in grandma’s case, we see a house, we see a car, we trees, etc. but these things don’t act as emotional instigators quite as powerfully until they are accompanied by the smell of grandma’s house. A smell is a much more specific interpretation of an event or a thing, while we see things like cars and houses all the time and derive from a larger database to access.
2.     Scientific smells: Some smells scientifically are emotional triggers. According to Jeanette Haviland-Jones of Rutgers University, “floral odors” are mood manipulators and can increase one’s general happiness as well as productive social interaction. Other aromatherapists will suggest an innumerable number of products that increase your well-being. Conversely, some smells affect more than just the olfactory system, but also the somatosensory system, which includes the nerve endings in our nostrils that are sensitive to temperature and pain. Thus, according to “The Smell Report,” some unpleasant odors can actually cause us physical pain.
3.     Anecdote: One afternoon in high school, my friend and I were at the mall and with a loss of anything better to do we were wandering around, looking at stuff, and we eventually wound up in the Yankee Candle store. We spent a good deal of time there smelling the different candles and air fresheners. I ended up getting an air freshener I used for that following summer, whose smell I now associate with everything I did that summer, including things I have a hard time recalling when I just think about the sights and sounds involved. And when I smell a Yankee candle, regardless of the scent, I think of the things we did on that typical high school day.
4.     Drive it home: The stories I could tell are endless. Smells evoke a particular time and place and we associate an emotion with it based on the speed by which we process stimuli through our sensory systems. Smell acts as the perfect emotional companion for memories of what we see, hear, and touch because of its direct link to the amygdala and how it helps us process more complicated senses.
    IV.            Body Paragraph
1.     Rats: Smells are an aid to us in not only the long-term nostalgic memories, but also in our short-term memory, and our sensory memory. Dr. Eichenbaum performed an experiment with rats having to do with smell and memory, and discovered that a rat could remember where the food was based on the smell that they used to accompany it, and they could remember it for up to a week.
2.     Us: Though an animal’s sense of smell is scientifically proven to be much more acute than a human’s, we still use our smell in the identifying and memory process. Studies show that people and specifically women are quite adept at identifying their romantic partners based on smell. In one study where men were asked to rate a woman’s attractiveness while being exposed to different odors, the women were rated significantly less attractive when the men were exposed to the smell of, believe it or not, women’s tears: this proves a humorous example of how our stored memory associates the use of smell.
3.     More: I ask you to consider, what is your favorite smell? Or what is a smell that you love? Why do you like it so much? When was the last time you smelled it? Can you remember the first time you smelled it? What people or places come to mind when you smell it? Your answers, based on memories, indicate the powerful ability of smell to, as Dr. Eichenbaum explains it, “transport us back in time.”
      V.            Body Paragraph
1.     Intro: My girlfriend has a huge aversion to lots of different types of foods. This is unfortunate for me because I’ll eat basically anything, and a lot of my favorite foods are on her blacklist. What smells do you have a strong dislike for? Why, do you know? Also, and more importantly, do you know that you have a particular smell; a smell that is unique to you?
2.     Body odors: My best friend growing up lives in a house pretty close to mine. I would go over frequently. To this day I can identify exactly the smell of his house. And the funny thing is, he can do the same thing for my house. I didn’t even know my house had a smell. That is because we are oblivious to our personal smells. An eye-opening experience happened when I was a missionary in Mexico and living with almost exclusively Mexican young men like myself. One of them told me that white people have a distinct smell. And it’s true, it’s true for every race and ethnicity. Genetics have a large part to do with our smell, and when we seek for a compatible mate, for instance, we do not seek one with a similar smell to us. This is all done unconsciously. Reproduction is often defined by experts as producing “fresh genes” in the next generation. There is a great article about this by David Ludden titled “You Smell. And That’s a Good Thing” that I highly recommend.
3.     More: Thus we see that our likes and dislikes have a high correlation with our sense of smell. Smell also affects your decision-making processes performed in the frontal lobe of your brain. A smell is interpreted and you judge it as either being good or bad, thus influencing the amygdala which associates an emotion with it being good or bad.
4.     And more: Have you ever tried to describe an indescribable smell? According to Dr. Eichenbaum, we usually attempt one of two different methods to describe these: by judging the smells as being “good” or “bad,” or by comparing it to things that smell similar, thus presenting an association.
5.     Like the present: Even now, you are creating judgments. And you are creating memories, both of which are unconsciously based on what you are smelling. You can react to these memories in a couple different ways. Some memories will be discarded, some will come back to you when you least expect it and some you may be unable to identify. But you’ll know it from somewhere.
    VI.            Conclusion
1.     Conclusion Summary: Thus we see, from all of this, that one’s sense of smell can be extremely powerful. It recalls memories of places, people, or things long (or short) past and can reach farther back than we can probably ever determine. Smells we may be blind to are part of what define us. They dictate what we eat, where we go, with whom we associate, and how we feel as a whole. Grandma’s house became such as soon as you stepped in and those familiar scents washed over you. The scent of that stranger in the mall may have been a nice trip down memory lane, but soon the smells to which you are oblivious today will be another nostalgic trigger. While these particular examples may not be specific to you, your sense of smell and its connection to memory and emotion are undeniable and scientifically confirmed. More importantly, however, you may now understand the importance of your sense of smell in its relation to brain processes such as memory and emotion.
2.     Closing Statement: This sensory program never ceases to amaze me, and I will continue to seek to understand even more just what about it attracts me so. 



Works Cited Page

Koerth-Baker, Maggie. “The Surprising Impact of Taste and Smell.LiveScience, 2008, September 30,
2015.

Ludden, David. “You Smell. And That’s a Good Thing.” Psychology Today, September 23, 2015.
September 30, 2015.

The Smell Report.” Social Issues Research Centre, 2014. September 30, 2015.

Suzuki, Wendy. “Totally Cerebral: What’s That Smell?” 2015, Podcast, PRX.

Welsh, Jennifer. “Smell of Success: Scents Affect Thoughts, Behaviors.” LiveScience, September 30,
2015.

Whitlock, Eric. Personal Interview. 1 October 2015 (scheduled)

Williams, Sarah C.P. “Human Nose Can Detect One Trillion Smells.” AAAS, October 14, 2015. March