Identify at least 3 unpacking the self, happened with Amanda. What characteristics do you think Amanda made when she set her free from her own pain?

Ciccarelli: Psychology_5 (5th Edition)
5th Edition
ISBN:9780134477961
Author:Saundra K. Ciccarelli, J. Noland White
Publisher:Saundra K. Ciccarelli, J. Noland White
Chapter1: The Science Of Psychology
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 1TY
icon
Related questions
Question
  1. Identify at least 3 unpacking the self, happened with Amanda.
  2. What characteristics do you think Amanda made when she set her free from her own pain?
Story of Amanda Taylor
I'm a mixed chick born and raised in Gainesville, Florida. No one ever thought l'd be anything,
no one graduated high school in my family. My mother worked at Taco Bell and my father fled
the country on criminal charges when I was three.
I rew up in an abusive home with my two younger brothers. By 12th grade, I had been raped,
molested, abused, homeless and hungry. I remember every detail of my childhood very vividly,
every man my mother brought to the house, every one she left us for, and the one who tried to
drown my brother in the bathtub while she ran to the store.
I remember living in a trailer with no electricity, a tarp for a wall and a piece of plywood where
the floor was supposed to be. I remember moving every single year from one project to another.
I remember seeing so much violence as a child that I became desensitized to it. It was just a
part of life.
I remember being homeless, walking miles as a child, bus after bus with my bothers, just to get
to the free food lines. I remember waiting in the food stamp line for what seemed like forever
just so my mother could hand us all a brown food stamp dollar to spend at the ice cream truck.
I remember sneaking out of my window at night just so I could sleep in a quiet place, so I
wouldn't be tired the next day at school. I don't know what it means to be broken or weak
because growing up, survival meant I had to be strong and vigilant. They told me to drop out of
school when I was 15 to learn a trade, but I didn't.
I was the first person in my family to graduate high school. Until I was accepted into the
University of Florida, the teachers, the career counselor and my mother told me that I wouldn't.
They said I couldn't be a doctor, so I said, "watch me!" I feel at home in the struggle, it motivates
me like nothing else. From the mud I was formed and out of the mud I grew.
I lost my best friend in 2010, I've been divorced twice now at 32, and I am a single parent with
two toddler boys. My story isn't sad, it's real. This is real life! Nothing sugar coated about it just
like me. I don't need your validation. I'm not swayed by your opinion. I know who I am and the
value that I possess.
Every struggle that I have endured I've strategically mapped out so that I can share it with you.
My father from Kingston and my mother from New York both grew up in poverty as I did. So,
what did I become? What I always was buried deep beneath the mud. A diamond, too tough to
Transcribed Image Text:Story of Amanda Taylor I'm a mixed chick born and raised in Gainesville, Florida. No one ever thought l'd be anything, no one graduated high school in my family. My mother worked at Taco Bell and my father fled the country on criminal charges when I was three. I rew up in an abusive home with my two younger brothers. By 12th grade, I had been raped, molested, abused, homeless and hungry. I remember every detail of my childhood very vividly, every man my mother brought to the house, every one she left us for, and the one who tried to drown my brother in the bathtub while she ran to the store. I remember living in a trailer with no electricity, a tarp for a wall and a piece of plywood where the floor was supposed to be. I remember moving every single year from one project to another. I remember seeing so much violence as a child that I became desensitized to it. It was just a part of life. I remember being homeless, walking miles as a child, bus after bus with my bothers, just to get to the free food lines. I remember waiting in the food stamp line for what seemed like forever just so my mother could hand us all a brown food stamp dollar to spend at the ice cream truck. I remember sneaking out of my window at night just so I could sleep in a quiet place, so I wouldn't be tired the next day at school. I don't know what it means to be broken or weak because growing up, survival meant I had to be strong and vigilant. They told me to drop out of school when I was 15 to learn a trade, but I didn't. I was the first person in my family to graduate high school. Until I was accepted into the University of Florida, the teachers, the career counselor and my mother told me that I wouldn't. They said I couldn't be a doctor, so I said, "watch me!" I feel at home in the struggle, it motivates me like nothing else. From the mud I was formed and out of the mud I grew. I lost my best friend in 2010, I've been divorced twice now at 32, and I am a single parent with two toddler boys. My story isn't sad, it's real. This is real life! Nothing sugar coated about it just like me. I don't need your validation. I'm not swayed by your opinion. I know who I am and the value that I possess. Every struggle that I have endured I've strategically mapped out so that I can share it with you. My father from Kingston and my mother from New York both grew up in poverty as I did. So, what did I become? What I always was buried deep beneath the mud. A diamond, too tough to
break, too beautiful to ignore. Love – I became love – unconditional, unwavering, strong and
pure.
I've been through hell a time or two, but your hell doesn't scare me. I am never blind. I know
where I am going, and I know why when it's dark or when there's light. At the top of the St.
George Museum on the 14th of July, I looked over the skyline in Paris, France, that little mixed
girl from the hood who they said would be nothing more. One thing I am is free because I love
who I am and what I am meant to be.
Life isn't always pretty, but if you keep going with purpose you will see more. I did graduate from
UF, learned French, saw Paris. I graduated with my master's degree to help people cultivate
hope when they feel like giving up. I've faced eviction, I've had my things repossessed, I've
been incarcerated without just cause, I've been homeless with the anger and heartache of
knowing I couldn't provide basic necessities for my children. Yet, I ask for nothing from no one
because my faith is that God has a plan for me and moves people as he sees.
So even as my partner put his hands on me, lied to me, cheated on me, stole from me and tried
every which way to sabotage me, I still made it. Three years into my PhD, I stand here. I've
learned a whole new career and became a mother times two. None of these are small feats.
So, what I want you to learn from who I am is how powerful it is to know you who you are and
what you stand for regardless of anyone else. Who do you want to be?
"I am not what happened to me, I am what I choose to become" - Carl Jung
Transcribed Image Text:break, too beautiful to ignore. Love – I became love – unconditional, unwavering, strong and pure. I've been through hell a time or two, but your hell doesn't scare me. I am never blind. I know where I am going, and I know why when it's dark or when there's light. At the top of the St. George Museum on the 14th of July, I looked over the skyline in Paris, France, that little mixed girl from the hood who they said would be nothing more. One thing I am is free because I love who I am and what I am meant to be. Life isn't always pretty, but if you keep going with purpose you will see more. I did graduate from UF, learned French, saw Paris. I graduated with my master's degree to help people cultivate hope when they feel like giving up. I've faced eviction, I've had my things repossessed, I've been incarcerated without just cause, I've been homeless with the anger and heartache of knowing I couldn't provide basic necessities for my children. Yet, I ask for nothing from no one because my faith is that God has a plan for me and moves people as he sees. So even as my partner put his hands on me, lied to me, cheated on me, stole from me and tried every which way to sabotage me, I still made it. Three years into my PhD, I stand here. I've learned a whole new career and became a mother times two. None of these are small feats. So, what I want you to learn from who I am is how powerful it is to know you who you are and what you stand for regardless of anyone else. Who do you want to be? "I am not what happened to me, I am what I choose to become" - Carl Jung
Expert Solution
trending now

Trending now

This is a popular solution!

steps

Step by step

Solved in 3 steps

Blurred answer
Recommended textbooks for you
Ciccarelli: Psychology_5 (5th Edition)
Ciccarelli: Psychology_5 (5th Edition)
Psychology
ISBN:
9780134477961
Author:
Saundra K. Ciccarelli, J. Noland White
Publisher:
PEARSON
Cognitive Psychology
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
ISBN:
9781337408271
Author:
Goldstein, E. Bruce.
Publisher:
Cengage Learning,
Introduction to Psychology: Gateways to Mind and …
Introduction to Psychology: Gateways to Mind and …
Psychology
ISBN:
9781337565691
Author:
Dennis Coon, John O. Mitterer, Tanya S. Martini
Publisher:
Cengage Learning
Psychology in Your Life (Second Edition)
Psychology in Your Life (Second Edition)
Psychology
ISBN:
9780393265156
Author:
Sarah Grison, Michael Gazzaniga
Publisher:
W. W. Norton & Company
Cognitive Psychology: Connecting Mind, Research a…
Cognitive Psychology: Connecting Mind, Research a…
Psychology
ISBN:
9781285763880
Author:
E. Bruce Goldstein
Publisher:
Cengage Learning
Theories of Personality (MindTap Course List)
Theories of Personality (MindTap Course List)
Psychology
ISBN:
9781305652958
Author:
Duane P. Schultz, Sydney Ellen Schultz
Publisher:
Cengage Learning