Intellectual Discovery Essay
Curiosity is something that is used to control our minds into deciding what is worth
learning and what is not. Throughout my life, I have noticed the choices I have made and how they affected me to become the man I am today. The simplicity of curiosity leads you to do something you have never done before and ultimately can be helpful or harmful. The best part about curiosity is that you always learn whether it may be a mistake or not, but on the upside, you learn to decide for yourself about how your actions are a good or bad thing. The beauty of curiosity is that, in the end, those bad mistakes are what lead to shaping your characteristics. My life has been impacted by curiosity, and many of us take away important lessons from them.
I have dealt with curiosity through various situations, but some of the most meaningful ones that
stick with me are the time I encountered a beehive, learned sign language, and my time at Saint Mary's.
My life had been a whirlpool before I arrived at Saint Mary's. There had been good choices made, and there had been bad choices. Always let social pressures guide me on what to do; there never really was a single choice I made on my own. Curiosity pushed me to do a lot of things, and some of the biggest mistakes were made because I wanted to know what would happen if I chose to do so. When I was in third grade, we were playing out in the schoolyard for recess, and my friends were playing baseball. When I approached the field to go and sit out in the dugout, there was a particular sound resonating behind the dugout wall. I stood up, walked around to the opening, and saw none other than a beehive attached to one of the tree branches.
Yelling and screaming, my friends ran over to see the commotion and stared at the beehive with fear. We started to poke at it and laugh as we saw a couple of bees coming out and getting into what I recall as a defensive position. They seemed annoyed but not bothered enough to actually attack. After a while, I walked away for all about five seconds, and when I came back I had a baseball in my hand. Everyone began to grin and ran behind me knowing what my next plan was going to be. My friends and I started discussing what was going to happen and everyone came to a consensus that the bees were going to do the same defensive stance as when the kid was hitting the hive with a stick. I released the ball and knocked the hive right out of the tree onto the floor, and about ten seconds later, hundreds of bees flooded out of the hive and swarmed us as we began running away, leaving the baseball equipment on the field. It was a time of bad intellectual curiosity because all of us were stung about ten times over, and we even had to send a friend home because he had an allergic reaction to bee stings. That was one of the worst decisions I ever made in my life, but things seemed to get better as I got older.
When I was in high scho...