The correct answer to this open question is the following.
You ask to examine the impact of risky behavior on different spheres of well-being(social, emotional, physical, and spiritual)
For that to happen I had to interview a couple of young people to know their answers and could conclude something appropriate to answer the question.
Regarding social behavior, one of the risks is to behave differently from what people expect of you. This means that society has a predetermined expectation of the way you have to behave in public places and what to do in different circumstances, When you behave differently, people criticize you and judge you.
Regarding the emotional and directly related to the physical, the risk is to engage in day-to-day drama in the family environment, at school, or with your friends. Yes, that you are caught in the trap of receiving the effects of other people's drama and that you can not leave soon enough to stay out of the drama.
Finally, the spiritual perspective. The risk is that you get lost in different religious and belief systems that make you doubt what your family and church have taught you since you were a child. Today, you are exposed to too many ideas and belief systems that can alter your own.
The revolution brought the colony to a state of insurrection and civil war. As slaves killed their masters and occupied and burned their plantations, white people defended themselves, then fled. The social order of the island crumbled and in an attempt to stop the violence, France abolished slavery.
<em>Hope this helped!</em>
<em>-</em><em>Namida</em>
42 is the answer I’m going for
River. The largest and most important river in North America, the Mississippi held ... Spanish Intendant Juan Ventura Morales closed the port of New Orleans to ... United States to make Louisiana part of the federal Louisiana Purchase, western half of the Mississippi River basin ... go not only the growing and commercially significant port of New Orleans ... A treaty was signed on May 2 but was antedated to April 30.
Chris McCandless is the main character of the book <em>Into the Wild</em> by John Krakauer.
In this book, we learn that McCandless is the product of his father's second marriage. However, McCandless also learns that his father had not yet divorced his first wife when McCandless and his sister were born. Therefore, the father led a double life. This realization profoundly affected McCandless. This knowledge made him felt betrayed and angry. To some extent, this sense of betrayal and anger explains why the choices in life of McCandless are so different from the choices his parents wanted him to make.