Monday, March 11, 2013

The Assessment


“Instead she just looks at me.  My feet my legs my arms my head, her eyes keep sliding over my whole me like she’s counting.  ‘What?’  I say.  She doesn’t say a word.  She leans over, she doesn’t even kiss me, she just touches her face to mine till I can’t tell whose is whose.  My chest is going dangadangadang.  I won’t let go of her.” (150) 
Donoghue, Emma. "Dying." Room: A Novel. New York: Little, Brown and, 2010. 150. Print.

        Room is a story about five year old Jack and his mother.  Jack’s mother was kidnapped and kept in a small room, where she eventually gives birth to Jack.  Room describes the lifeline of their struggle to escape their caper and how they deal with the aftermath.  After seven years of being locked up, Jack’s mother has had enough and comes up with an escape plan based upon the book, Count of Monte Cristo.  The plan involves Jack pretending to play dead in order to get out of the small room and get help.  The plan works.  Adjusting to the real world is not going to be easy for both of them, but they have each other and the incredible mother-son bond to keep them strong in any environment.  That is what the passage is describing above; the unconditional love between mother and child is so incredible powerful that nothing, not even the change in environment, can change it.  
Emma Donoghue, author of Room, wrote an amazing survival story about overcoming your fears and the bond between a mother and her child.  The passage I chose above clearly shows that bond between Jack and his mother right before he is about carry out their escape plan and how much they rely on each other.  At first glance this bond can seem rather strange because most parents aren’t as close as Jack and his mother are in the story because of different circumstances.  Donoghue is showing the reader that environment you raise your child in can make all the difference in forming a good bond with them.  Granted the small room that Jack and his mother were locked in is not an ideal environment, but Jack’s mother made sure to make it a kid friendly environment that would help Jack grow and flourish.  That bond between Jack and his mother is tested, because Jack finds out relatively quickly that the things done in the real world are done differently than they were in the small room.  But I feel that only makes the bond between Jack and his mom that much more special because Jack must now rely on his mother for support to understand the norm of society.  This is important because it helps you understand why certain things happen in the book.  Like why she would risk Jack’s own life to escape, and why she would overdose on her pain killers.  
This model capstone project has been very fun and entertaining.  I really liked reading the short story, the non-fiction and fiction book.  What made it enjoyable was because the books and short story were spread out throughout the whole project.  The short story was a nice way to start the project.  I absolutely love the blog.  It is a very creative way of keeping all our assignments organized.  Plus it allows us to express ourselves.  There was nothing about this project that I disliked.  I did learn that there is more to the environment than global warming and the ozone.  It is really crazy how many different types of chemicals we are exposed to on a daily basis and there is really nothing we can do to ignore them.  I can’t wait to do it with on a topic that I am really interested in learning more about! 

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Slow Death by Rubber Duck


My reaction to the book Slow Death by Rubber Duck: The Secret Danger of Everyday Things was very eye opening and intriguing.  I knew about all the toxins that could be in your body because of the everyday things that we do, but what really fascinated me was the fact that the authors made themselves the test subjects.  The authors poured themselves into this book and it just goes to show how passionate about the topic of pollution they are.  This book also opened my eyes to the historical part of pollution and how pollution has been with us for many years and will stay with us for many more.  It was cool to learn about how different countries handled pollution and how they overcame it; Like in Europe when they came up with sanitation for the water ways.  What also surprised me was how no country really wanted to be the first to address the BPA issue in baby bottles and plastics.  It just goes to show you how grey of an area the issue of pollution is and why many government officials won’t address it.    
Online I found many different reviews of the book, Slow Death by Rubber Duck: The Secret Danger of Everyday Things.  Some readers on Amazon have said that this book is eye-opening and very well put together, while some think the complete opposite.  One reader commented by saying “the authors mean well, but it is very poorly written and they don’t approach the problems in a scientific way”.  On goodreads.com a reader commented that this book was funny, thought-provoking and incredibly disturbing.  The Oprah Magazine wrote a review for this book saying how far pollution as come through the years that we can no longer see it and how it should be a serious concern to all of us. 

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Can BPA be responsible for Asthma in Children?

Smith, Stephanie. "Study Finds Link between BPA and Asthma." The Chart RSS. N.p., 1 Mar. 2013. Web. 02 Mar. 2013.

BPA is found in the lining of many different plastics.  Now after the latest study done by the Colombia Center for Children's Environmental Health, there is a strong possibility of a link between BPA detected in children and later breathing problems.  There was a study done on a group of 568 mothers and their children by taking urine samples.  Researchers found that a child's chances of having asthma were increased if BPA was found in their urine at ages 3, 5 and 7.  Also if BPA was measured in the urine at age 3, the chances of wheezing by ages 5 and 6 were increased.  From the study, the researchers concluded that there is a positive association between BPA and breathing problems.

A quote from the article, "BPA is believed to be present in almost everyone in the United States because the chemical is in so many products".  Now this doesn't mean we all are going to have breathing problems, it just means that when you stop and think, we probably have a lot more than just BPA floating around in our bodies.  Harmful chemicals are in many household products.  Companies try and eliminate exposing us to these harmful chemicals by not making their products with them, but the alternative chemicals they use instead may also hurt us.  For every good thing there are consequences and we just can't avoid these chemicals completely; it is our lifestyle now.  

Intensive Care Linked to BPA Exposure in Newborns

Raloff, Janet. "Intensive Care Linked to BPA Exposure in Newborns." Science News. N.p., 22 Feb.  2013. Web. 25 Feb. 2013.


This article was about neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) that may be using devices that expose newborn babies to large doses of BPA.  Many of the devices used in the NICU like, breathing tubes, intravenous drug delivery lines and enclosed incubators, are made of plastic.  Many different types of plastic can contain BPA.  One of the best theories of BPA exposure was the level of care the baby received and the number of devices used to give the care.  A nurse and exposure-science researcher Susan Duty and her team studied 55 infants who were in the NICU in Boston.  They found out that the babies treated with four or more devices in the NICU had three times as much BPA as babies treated with three or less devices.  The team also discovered that the babies born prematurely had higher BPA levels because they aren’t able to break down the compound.  

This article only further concludes how dangerous BPA can be.  We send our newborn babies to the NICU to save them, but when we send them there, they are being exposed to BPA and further affecting their situation.  I felt this article only further concludes that there are harmful chemicals in everything, even the things that help us.  This is scary because that means there is no way to avoid becoming exposed to them.