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Personal Narrative: The Ridge County

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The part of town I live in did not exist twenty years ago. It is known as the Ridge, and all thirteen thousand residents occupy a small space on one hill. Compared to over 650,000 residents in Seattle. Homes are crowded with almost no land. It is a breeding ground for children. There is no privacy, because you don’t need it if you have nothing to hide, right? My neighborhood is an unfriendly place that is very individualistic. It is every person for them self. The town has employed so many police officers that almost every time I am on the main road I see a bored officer driving up and down it. The most action a lot of the officers have seen in real life was an attempted burglary a few months ago. Who they never caught. The general public …show more content…
She works in Seattle, as a nurse taking care of patients with cancer, as do all of her coworkers. A man named Bonnie, his girlfriend, and his child attended. When leaving, in his bright gold mercedes, he noticed a police car behind him. After a few turns, the police car was still following. Bonnie pulled into the local gas station, parked, and got out of the car. The police mimicked his movements. He asked the officers if there was a problem. Bonnie suspected that they had been following him because of the color of his skin since that had happened before. The officers asked seemingly innocent questions like “Are you lost?” and “Do you need help?” to try to hide the real reason they followed two non-white people driving a mercedes. Towards the end of the encounter, Bonnie was tired of beating around the bush and asked them “Do I have a taillight out or something?” then continued with “Or were you following me because I’m black?” to which the officers could only try to stutter a no to both questions. The majority of people that live in my town are white, seventy six percent, and people of other ethnicities tend to stay together and out of the main part of town during the …show more content…
I have been to many houses, and get the inside look on just how different families can operate. However, there are still many similarities. For instance, when I babysit at a house for the first time, parents often take about ten minutes just to explain what the child’s diet is like. Some are gluten free, some can only eat at certain times, others have specific foods they need to eat everyday at each meal. When I look in the pantries and refrigerators of these homes they are filled with organic foods, fresh fruits and vegetables, and Annie's cheddar bunnies, (a healthier version of goldfish, and are considered a treat). The children’s closets have nicer clothes than I do. There may be Ivivva leggings and shirts for older girls, then for all different ages: Tom shoes, Ugg boots, and Hunter boots. As for television, the screen time is often between fifteen and thirty minutes a day, and most parents say only turn it on if the children need to be calmed down before bed. In my particular neighborhood, which is less than a block of houses, it is not quite as

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