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Narrative Essay About Fear

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She screamed, “WHERE DID THE BUG GO?” He yelled, “I’M NOT CLIMBING THAT LADDER!” I asked, “Am I ready for college?” President Franklin Roosevelt once said, “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” Throughout my elementary school years, multiple teachers asked me to write a poem. I wrote my first poem in kindergarten with Miss Maggee at Collegium Charter School. Surrounded by white walls and colorful posters, I put my pencil to the paper. She asked me to write a fear that I had. Mrs. Buckley asked me to complete the same task in fourth grade at Starkweather Elementary School. Fear. Fear is included in a biography poem. For years, I would write the most common fear my classmates had, whether it was heights, bears, or clowns. Why couldn’t I think of a fear? Why did my classmates each have a specific fear? What do I fear? As I asked myself these questions, I found my answer. I am afraid of failure. The …show more content…

My sister, for example, screams whenever she sees a bug. A stink bug, a bee, a butterfly. She grows nervous the closer the bug gets. Eventually the bug goes away. Failure is not a tangible object that I can juggle with my hands. Failure is my fear and my fear is failure. Franklin Roosevelt, a Democratic president, was in office when the US Social Security Program was introduced. Established in the 1935 Second New Deal of Roosevelt, the Work Projects Administration (WPA) allowed unemployed citizens to apply for work in public service areas. At the time, the United States of America was struggling from a financial crisis known as the Great Depression. Millions of dollars were lost. At the time, people were terrified. Roosevelt aimed to provide assistance to the poor and elderly, especially those who were unable to find work. Instead of following the citizens in their terror, Roosevelt overcame the fear of the country’s economic failure with a series of acts under his Second New

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