Thursday, April 30, 2020
Summary Essays - Soups, Chicken Soup, Traditional Medicine, Soto
  Summary      Objective Summary:  The story is about a child's expectance of a family  life filled with love and comforts, which is contrast  with his real working class family life.  Subjective Evaluation:  Soto, back to his age of nine, dreamed to live in a  family life that was uncomplicated in its routine. In  reality, Soto lived in a working class family; he  tried to change his family to imitate the perfect  families he absorbed from television. I think many  people have done what Soto did to fulfill the dream of  a perfect family they wanted. I am not excluded from  this either.  I have an experience of attempting to change my  family life. It was one year later after my family  first came to the US in 1995. I learned many new  things in this country that I never knew in China, and  I appreciated some living styles in American culture.  As I tended to like the styles of American life, I  expected my family like them, too. The thing I wanted  my family to change was the cooking style. I hated to  cook Chinese dinner because it took so long to  prepare. There are four kinds of food which are  considered essential parts of Chinese dinner: rice,  soup, vegetable, and meat; they are usually cooked  separately. I was not the one who was good at  cooking in my family, but I did have to cook when I  came home earlier than my parents and two sisters  still at work. One day, when we were sitting together  at the dinning table for dinner, I suggested to my  family that we could have sandwiches and precooked  food from the supermarket as our dinner since many  American families do. My parents looked at me in  bewilderment. Son, you must be kidding, right?  Those sandwiches and precooked food do not give you  enough nutrition for growing up, my dad said. And  precooked food is not good for your health, my mother  kept on. My elder sisters showed no interest in my  idea. I grew frustrated from their reaction, but I  did not give up. Evening after evening, I kept  bringing up the idea at the dinning table. My mother  finally permitted me to make one American dinner for  the family. That day, I went to the supermarket to  buy bread, ham, and chicken soup right after school.  I planned on making ham sandwiches and chicken soup  for the dinner. The dinner was ready and served at  our usual dinnertime. My mother tasted a spoon of the  chicken soup and said, It tastes like brine, nothing  but salty. Why don't they put some shark fins in it?  She refused to have another spoon. My sisters only  had a small bite of their sandwiches and then put them  down; my father barely finished one. Even I could not  have another one after finishing two. That night, my  parents and sisters had instant noodle for dinner.  Such a result was out of my expectation, but I had to  accept it. From then on, the subject of changing  cooking style is never brought up to the family  conversation.  I think Soto had the same feeling as I did when he  found out that there was no way to change his family  to be the perfect family he expected. When he  realized that, he went out to look for work; being  different from him, I tried to bring up another  subject to the family conversation.    
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