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Social Devience

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Essay title: Social Devience

Reality is defined as “the quality or state of being real” Everyone perceives reality in a different light. Reality is a result of the upbringing and surroundings of an individual and as a person matures, they are exposed to more ideas, thoughts, and events. The actions and events that a person is exposed to are communicated through language, which defines reality by allowing people to become receptive to different ideas. While language can expand ones reality, language also places limits on that reality. Society, geography and language simultaneously expand and limit an individual's reality.

From the moment a person enters the world, his or her reality is different from that of anyone else's. Everything that a person sees, hears, smells, touches or tastes will add to his or her wealth of knowledge. This collection is thrown into a mashed pile of sayings, images and life experiences that is regurgitated when a person experiences the next object or thought. Richard Rodriguez explains how much he has changed in his essay "The Achievement of Desire", included in the collection Ways of Reading, "It will be harder to summarize what sort of life connects the boy to the man" (622). The road to any position in life is long and filled with unique obstacles, all of which shape a person into a well-rounded individual. It is nearly impossible to come up with a short summary of all of the experiences that one encounters in life. Life experiences are different for each individual, making each individual's reality unique.

Reality for any given individual is a direct result of their upbringing and surroundings. In his essay "The Banking Concept of Education", which is included in Ways of Reading, Paulo Freire comments that "The world which brings consciousness into existence becomes the world of that consciousness" (356). The environment that a person lives in dictates how the person looks at the rest of the world. For instance, if a native of a small tribe in the middle of an African jungle were brought into modern America, the two realities would be very different. The instruction of "The keys are on the table, take the car to the store and get a gallon of milk" could be preformed without much thought to the average American. However, to the native, the entire phrase would make no sense, starting with the word "keys". The natives reality does not involve taking a car to the super market to get milk, he has no concept of a car, or anything involved with the car, or even what constitutes a gallon of milk. All experiences in an individual's life are felt and shared using language. As children grow up, they first are given words to define objects and feelings. Secondly, child reuses the words they were given to communicate their feelings, wants and desires. The more a child is exposed to, the more they can share. Freire remarks that the world or area of the world a person lives in affects how one looks at the rest of the world:

People develop their power to perceive critically the way they exist in the world with which and in which they find themselves; they come to see the world not as a static reality, but as a reality in process, in transformation (356).

Surroundings affect reality, and therefore reality is constantly redefined as the world changes. An individual's perception of reality will never stay the same from one moment to another, because everything a person reads, hears, or sees changes his or her perception. Freire expands on the concept of a constantly changing reality; people are "unfinished, uncompleted beings in and with a likewise unfinished reality" (357). The interpretation of reality for a given person is constantly changing, and is related to what a person has been exposed to.

As a person matures into an adult, individual experiences are reflected in how they interpret reality. Freire explains how people build on previous experiences to discover new things,

As women and men, simultaneously reflecting on themselves and on the world, increase the scope of their perception, they begin to direct their observations towards previously inconspicuous phenomena. That which existed objectively but had not been perceived in it's deeper implications begins to "stand out," assuming the character of a problem and therefore of challenge. (356)

People take in objects around them and "reflect upon them", categorizing the objects into "their action and cognition" (Freire 356). Then, the people use everything they have been exposed to in defining their world.

Coupling abstract ideas to reality requires the use of language. Changing seasons are an abstract way of talking about a group of separate events. Take spring; green grass, flowers, warm breezes, all of which can be associated in

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