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Yellow

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Submitted By simon2306
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Yellow
Sometimes life can be hard. Sometimes life can be inhuman. It depends on how you look at it.
We are all humans, but all as different as night and day. Especially when it comes to how we live our lifes. Jon, Berto and Brian, three very different persons who is together about the same thing. It could be a big success, but Jon doesn’t like the idea one hundred per cent. That means he is the biggest challenge, booth for the team and for himself.
Jon seems to be dynamic and brave, but when we are looking down in the story, he is not so perfect as we thought. His relationship to alcohol is problematic and his love life could be better. He works on a magazine, but it isn’t sure he is a journalist.
Jon is sending away on a barrier- breaking trip, which is very demanding. But the trip can’t be a success because Jon neither has the courage nor the desire to carry through. He shows that many times in the story, and he shows too that he is pressed against his will. But we have to look at the title yellow, it tells us much about the story! Yellow means something like cowardly. Every time Jon hears yellow in his head, he feels like a scared person.
So in fact he has a bit of self-knowledge, it is just hard to see.
Breaking boundaries is something we all have to do, especially when we have bad luck in our lives. When we come out where we can’t swim and where other people can’t reach us, there we have to show strength and will!
The things Jon does are big for him, but that does not means that it’s big for everyone else for example not Brian and Berto. We all have our own fight to fight, the strength we find in ourselves.

The storyteller gives in the beginning the impression that Jon is a person with much self-confidence. He goes with apparently big determination against the diving school. First when he meets with Brian and Berto he begins to feel unsure of himself.
Later we learn that it’s his boss who has sent him on the course, maybe because he thinks Jon needs finding new sides of himself.
New sides about himself learnt Sir Edmund Hillary too, when he climbed up to the top of mount Everest with his friend Tenzig Norgay. That was big for Sir Edmund Hillary, but it’s very interesting that he didn’t see this experience as the biggest achievement in his live. At the moment when he stood at the top of the world it was fantastic. But many smaller things means today even more for Sir Edmund Hillary.
Sir Edmund Hillary stood at the top of the world. Jon picked the deep blue water. As I see it, Sir Edmund Hillary can be most proud. He did a big thing without any pressure from others. Things we as humans always will remember are when we can help other people. Exactly as Sir Edmund Hillary did, when he built doctor clinics in Himalaya. When we hear about some one who becomes a dad, we easily get a stereotyped image of the person. Our brain finds some old-fashioned pictures. But when we hear about something really unusual it gets the fantasy starting.
For example David Fredrichs painting from the polar circle. A picture that is painted from an idea of how the place looks. David Frederich compared the painting with his own bad experience. His brother died when he as young fell into an icy sea. Maybe that is why his thoughts about the north/ west passage are so dark and rebellious.

Excerpt from a student's diary from a London excursion
Today we waked up at 7.30 a.m. and we got up quickly, because there were many things we had to do. At first we washed ourselves in the little bathroom, and afterwards we went downstairs to the basement for breakfast, which - to everyone’s surprise - consisted of tea, toasted bread and orange jam for the seventh time in this week.
At 9 a.m. we met for a short briefing about to days program, and then we set out.
We went down stairs to Earl's Court underground station. After buying tickets we went to the escalator, which leads the passengers down to the metro. At the platform the usual Pakistani walked around gathering waste.
There are lots of black people here in London, and they are actually the only people we are talking with.
It looks like they have employed black people as unskilled workers most places we come, that is in the metro, department stores, cafeterias and the hotel reception.
Otherwise we haven’t seen many poor people, actually only one blind, who was begging outside a church.
At 10 a.m. we arrived to Old Bailey and attended among other things a case, where the accused confessed to have killed his wife, because he was mad at her Boxer. According to the will of the deceased the dog inherited all her belongings.
After that case two black people were entering the court. They were accused for having stolen 30 cars. Unfortunately we didn’t get the end of this case, because we also had to se the Stock exchange at work that morning.
There and in Old Bailey we saw among other things where the naive English people work. For the first time the white people were in the majority as the only black people we saw were the two young men with the stolen cars.
After lunch we went to St. Paul’s and spend the rest of the afternoon there. Of course we should up in the Whispering Gallery and to the very top of the cathedral from where there is a great view over London - but what a lot of stairs there are.
In the evening we were in the theatre watching “ The Death of a Salesman”, and we got astonished that it isn’t only old and rich people who visit the theatre.

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