My American Dream

1233 Words3 Pages

As a child, most of your life is mostly lived through influence. A young child may be influenced by a teacher, or by their fellow classmates or their favorite TV/book character. I, however, believe a child is influenced most by their parents. A parent's love is incomparable to anything else in the world. I feel that I have my parent's love wherever I go, and I am truly grateful and appreciative of their unconditional love and constant support. They are the reason why I wake up every morning and count my blessing and try my best to make the world my own. My parents, more soecifically my mother, are my heroes.

As a child of immigrants who hail from the Dominican Republic, they have very high expectations of me. Growing up in a developing country …show more content…

She replied very simply. "I am living my American Dream. This country, although I am an immigrant, has given me so much opportunity. I raised my family here. This is my American Dream". I think about her response a lot. It really impacted me in a way that I am still not sure how. Maybe someday when I am much older, and I have a family of my own. But I do not believe I will ever truly comprehend her point of view. Born and raised in America, I am living a much different life than my parents did growing up. I am so grateful to have many things available to me, such a technology, food, electricity, education, etc. I am able to go home everyday after school, relax, use my cell phone, or go on Netflix. I believe that I am the embodiment of the American Dream for my parents. I go to an American school, I can speak both English and Spanish fluently, I hang out with my friends. It's an odd concept really. They lived in different times, but it's the lifestyle, and the culture. That is really the only difference between my adolescence and my parents'. They grew up where the electricity in their houses went off at least once daily, or they had to carry buckets of water to their families for miles, or walking miles to and from school everyday under the scorching hot sun, or not even having television sets in their

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