A rebel for taking a different way with school pictures is what the story suggests and illustrates basically. Well its true. This high school student wants to do whatever he wants and can petition for it. He has the right to free speech against school authority, school yearbook team authority specifically. He's American with the first right, the First Amendment, you know from the Bill of Rights, to put his photo up there for a reason. I mean this guy is a legend for doing such a thing. He sticks up against the traditional output of classics scene for senior portraits. Yep, those beach, out in the wild, on the farm photos that almost every senior has. He petitions for future attacks that his school my enforce, but they hadn't done so yet.
This is the preview or hope to be photo of the yearbook:
Wouldn't it be so cool to add a photo like this up there. Well I'm a true nerd who likes Star Wars or a drama movie watcher who likes the Godfather, so therefore I'd put themes of those topics onto my background. Its something that I would love and aspire. Heck, I'd put my favorite dance crew, Jabbawockeez as the homies for a cameo. I think putting something up there will define what kind of person you truly are. I haven't considered it before, but can't we put whatever we think is the things we actually care for, endure so heavily to become it, to cherish its everlasting memory in the high school yearbook. I want to remember myself and get remembered for being that oddball with the goofy photo.
We are humans and we can do whatever we want. Why are we restricted to the things that occurred in the past? We are restricted by other people, giving us a sense of direction they want you to go for. Its not a bad idea, but many other people follow their own protocols, their true self-direction. Just yell it out, "I can do whatever I want!"
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