Final Draft
Its early morning, all our bags are packed, and we are saying our final goodbyes as we depart to our new life, thousands of miles away. For little kids, a new home across the country can be an amazing adventure. But, for teens, a move this big can be devastating. Because I would be moving thousands of miles and leaving all my friends, a move to Seattle would be unbearable.
First, a move to Seattle, WA would be difficult. Leaving my friends would be hard. I wouldn’t know anyone within 1,000 miles. People have grown up with their friends and wouldn’t know anything or want to know anyone else. There wouldn’t be anything fun to do. Everyone there could be better at sports than you and you may not make any of the teams. The weather in Seattle isn’t that good either. There aren’t may sunny days there. There is lots of rain and plenty of clouds.
On the other hand, moving to Seattle, WA could be exciting. You can start veor and be anyone you want to be. If you were a bad student before, you could be a good one now. If you were a trouble maker, you can be a better person now. It would be a great chance to make new friends. No one would know you, so you can be a new person. You have no reputation, so you can hang out with whom ever you want. The family would have more money from the job promotion. There would be an easier home life, with a new bigger house. More money would be available to spend on clothes and school.
In the end, moving to Seattle wouldn’t be a very good thing. All of my friends would be left behind. I’d have to make brand new friends. There is very little chance that I’d see my old friends. Adjusting to a new school would be hard. I’d have to find my way around a new big school. New teachers would be hard to get used to. The only upside is I can be a new person. I can get new clothes and have a new look. I can change a bad reputation to a good one.
The Business plan on Good to Great Why Some Companies Make the Leap and Other Do Not”
All 11 of the featured companies had this type of leadership, character multi-year research projects and works with executives from the private, public, and social sectors. Jim has served as a teacher to senior executives and CEOs at corporations that include: Starbucks Coffee, Merck, Patagonia, American General, W. L. Gore, and hundreds more. He has also worked with the non-corporate sector such ...
The bottom line is, moving to Seattle would be horrible. Leaving my friends for the rainy West Coast is not for me. For me as well as my family, moving to Seattle Washington would be a let down.