Monday, December 16, 2013
Decmber Writers
Check out our December writers. You won't be disappointed! Comments are due Saturday, December 21st. Also, don't forget to vote!!!!
Trevor
How to “Woo” a Woman
I have lots of experience with women. One gave birth to me, another is my sister
and I have studied enough women here and there to compile a list of 5 sure
proof ways to “woo” a women.
1.
Look
for various signs and actions that tell you if a woman likes you or is
interested in you.
Ex: It’s a general rule of thumb that
if a woman brushes a lock of hair out of her face and then slaps her knee
twice, she wants to talk to you. If she
sweats a lot, she likes you.
2.
Maintain
eye contact. Even when you blink.
Ex: Challenge her to a staring
contest. Stare the woman you want to
“woo” in the face until she starts to awkwardly move away. Women enjoy it when other people stare at
them. Why else would they wear so much
makeup?
3.
Women
love it when you try to solve their problems.
Ex: The next time a girl, whether it
be your girlfriend or your sister, is unloading their hormonal personal
problems onto you and expects you to listen, what they really want is for you
to stop listening and to solve whatever is wrong. Trust me; they’ll thank you for it.
4.
Pickup
lines are your best friends.
Ex: “If you were a booger, I would
pick you first!” –personal favorite… I wooed Taylor Swift with this one. Then
we broke up.
5.
Women
love it when you flex your muscles and use every excuse you can to show them
your manliness.
Ex: Sometimes the best outfit to
where at school, work, amusement park, museum, etc. is a Speedo. It properly displays all of the muscles the
ladies want to see. I haven’t personally
tried this but it’s supposed to work…in theory.
*Note: I’m not serious, or trying to make you laugh, but these
are things that literally flow through my mind on a daily basis. Just thought I would give you some valuable
advice on such an important matter.
Angela
My 20/20 Experience
It
all started with just a piece of paper that had a list of concert events
throughout the month of September. So my mom’s friend had given me a piece of
paper in order for me to see my favorite music artists in concert. When my mom
had shown me the list of artists playing at Jimmy
Kimmel Live!, from Paul McCartney to Celine Dion to The Lumineers I wasn’t
even interested but when she had said that Justin Timberlake will be performing
on September 24, I was speechless! My mind was thinking. “Oh my goodness I can
finally see one of my favorite music artist sing live in concert!”
After
begging my mom and dad every day, two weeks before the event that I really want
to go with my friends, they repeatedly said, “No, it’s a school night and we
probably be working that night.” I told them that it was okay (sarcastically) because
since education is first they did not want me to go out on a school night. That
entire week was depressing and my parents definitely noticed me but ignored
what I am feeling in such a way which seemed unusual. I have started to feel
like I will never accept a once in a life time opportunity like that ever
again. Throughout that time I prayed every day they can finally say yes.
Yes!
Finally! It’s Tuesday the 24th of September!
When
I woke up that morning, my head began to discombobulate, feeling that it was a
Friday but sadly, it didn’t. I literally just ignored my parents for breakfast
and just waited to see what they would say whenever I repeatedly said, “cough*
cough* so what about tonight mother?” Mother replied with nothing to say but
rather, just drank her brewed hot coffee and ate her breakfast continually
after I left the kitchen to get ready for school that morning. I deliberately
began to wonder why she was doing this but I just said to myself that,” I knew
this was coming, I will just cancel my plans tonight.”
I
don’t remember what happened in school that day but all I know was that 5
minutes before the bell rang for the school day to be over, my mom randomly
texted me saying that she will let me go to the concert! I was shocked and
didn’t know what to expect of how last minute she finally said it to me. I told
my best friends later that morning that it was cancelled, but now I had to call
them right away in order for us to leave for Hollywood.
“Run,
run hurry before it starts!” shouted my friend.
We
were already there at Hollywood thinking that it won’t be crowded since the
entire Boulevard shut down completely because of JT’s amazing performance, but
we were most definitely wrong! So we all began, to hurry as much as we can in order
to not miss his performance.
“Ladies
and Gentlemen, Justin Timberlake!” – Jimmy Kimmel
***********************Screaming
of fans****************************
When
he started singing his first song my heart began to beat faster than normal, my
mind was blown to unexpected realness. The fact that we did not have the best
standing view we had a great view in seeing him perform. My three friends and I began to scream and
danced to the beat. One of my friends had analyzed one of his songs in a way
seemed very accurate. The bad experience was that since I am averaged height
and my friends were shorter than me, so many tall people were in our way
holding their phones up which made it worse than ever. Throughout the hour and
a half of his performance we began to walk closer to the stage as much as
possible. His songs for his second album showed the different level he really
is becoming in the industry being that over the top hard working renowned
artist!
I
realized at that moment that after that long day, I should just say thanks to
my parents because without them they would have to struggle a lot through life.
These type of once-in-a- lifetime opportunities are so random that I am unaware
what will happen in the future. I just have to wait patiently and behave
properly towards your parents. I just hope that my next concert experience
would be even better and also no traffic! Although we didn’t meet him in
person, it was the best last minute concert I have ever experience!
Cassey--Nice Guy
She
only dates bad boys. Yes, the most attractive men to her are those who live on
the edge, on the very cusp of danger, at the brink of exclusion by society’s
upstanding citizens. She likes men who smoke, who get into drunken brawls, men
who flagrantly disregard traffic laws. She prefers men who drink black coffee,
who hate children, men who do not read books. The best candidates of all are
the ones who treat her poorly — men who stay at night and leave in the morning,
men who never return her calls, who bruise her body, bruise her heart, the ones
who never bring flowers. These are her men.
Alexander
is a nice guy. He met and fell in love with her at the local grocery store
where she works as a cashier. Every week, Alexander goes grocery shopping and
waits in line for her register. He speaks sweet words and offers to take her
out to dinner. She never accepts. Though she enjoys and looks forward to their
grocery store encounters, she could never see herself falling for Alexander. He
is clean-shaven and handsome. He dresses well and uses proper grammar. He makes
her feel special. He is simply too nice.
Still,
Alexander would not be discouraged. After months of flirting and asking, he
finally convinced her to go on a date with him. She only agreed in order to
prove to him that they would never work out.
On
Friday evening, he appeared at her front door with a bouquet of flowers. Then, he
drove her to a restaurant in a part of town with no graffiti. She had never
tasted food so delicious. They even ordered dessert. She took note of how much
cream and sugar Alexander put in his coffee. They ate and laughed and discussed
everything from grocery store coupons to the local news.
“Did
you hear about the Tiffany’s on Main Street?” She asked.
Alexander
smiled. “Yes, I heard someone broke in and looted the place.”
“They
say whoever did it is very good. Nothing was ruined, no broken glass. The thief
very neatly, almost politely, stole millions of dollars’ worth of jewelry.”
Alexander
smiled again. “Fascinating.”
“What’s so funny?” She asked.
“Nothing. Oh, by the way, I wanted to
give you this.”
She watched Alexander pull a small
rectangular case from inside his coat. He set it on the table in front of her. She
did not react at first. No man had ever presented her with such a gift. She
felt heat rush to her cheeks. Reeling from shock, she slowly opened the box. It
contained the most beautiful bracelet she had ever seen — diamonds the size of
teardrops embedded in glittering gold. She did not know what to say.
Then, she read the inside of the box: Tiffany
& Co.
Suddenly, she knew. Alexander is not a
nice guy after all.
Hannah
A Little Girl’s
Christmas
She woke up
a week before Christmas in her hospital bed asking everyone around her why she
didn’t look as “pretty” or “healthy” as all of the other little girls she knew.
Her mother did not know how to answer that in a way a seven year old would
understand, so she simply said,
“Your white and red blood cells are not getting along, but
you’re always going to be beautiful and perfect.”
The little girl was able to go home for
a week to celebrate the greatest time of the year. But this year was different. She did not feel the same Christmas spirit
that she did every other year. Her
family tried everything to make her feel better and normal. Cooking her favorite meals and getting her
everything on her Christmas wish list, but nothing seemed to work. The house was decorated beautifully with
lights and angelic features surrounding every inch, adding a positive vibe to
their home, but it still did not feel right to the sick little girl. However,
she kept a brave face and a smile for her family.
On the
night before Christmas, the little girl knew what was wrong. She told her
family how weak she felt and they rushed her to the hospital already knowing
what was going to occur on this sad Christmas Eve. They were forced to say
their good-byes and the family went home with a piece of their life and love
stripped from them.
It was
Christmas morning and the parents and two sisters of the little girl were all
together, lost not knowing how to celebrate Christmas and where to put her
gifts. A vision appeared as if it was a
dream, but it was impossible to be a dream because all of them had seen the
same exact vision. It was her. She
started speaking to her family. She told
them thank you for giving her a happy life and not to mourn for much longer
because she isn’t suffering anymore. The family bawled and felt a sudden ease
in their pain. One sister noticed a new
Christmas decoration that they have never seen or bought before. It was a little angel that looked just like
the little girl. The family knew their
little angel was with them and it suddenly felt like a normal, merry Christmas
again.
Dominick
Happiness/Success
Happiness
is a confusing subject to me because it can be experienced and interpreted in
so many different ways, but when I think about it, what really bothers me is
the materialistic value that society has instilled in us as people. For
example, have you ever noticed that anything that is considered fun in the
world today requires money, and the more money you have the more activities and
fun you can experience? We then become people who begin to look to
materialistic items to make us happy, and once that happens we fall victim to
the process that I like to call the “American Dream” format. Isn’t it funny how
if you ask any teenager what they want their life to be like, it all begins to
sound the same? They say they want to
grow up, go to college, get a good job that makes a lot of money, have kids,
get married, and die happy. They don’t say that they want to grow up and
experience true happiness, and explore life to its fullest potential because
they are already in the maze of what everyone believes and tells them success
is. In this day and age, your success is judged on the amount of money you make
correct? I feel that success is something that cannot be determined absolutely
and it coexists with happiness, because the more success you have in life the
happier you are. Success should be determined on what you believe it is. If
there is something that you really enjoy doing and truly makes you happy, you should
feel successful for doing it. Don’t worry if others think your ideas or what
you like to do isn’t important, lucrative, cool etc. Do what makes you happy, and in my opinion
you will have lived your life to the fullest and it was a success. (The definition
of the word happy is “an emotional state of experienced pleasure”). To round up
my idea on defining true happiness, I will use this assignment as an example.
At the end of the day, my paper will be judged by my peers on how they feel.
With that being said, and with the most respect to each reader, I truly feel
that whether my work receives many votes or none, I was just happy with getting
the chance to talk about my own ideas (right or wrong), and since doing this
brought me pleasure, it is a success and I now get to experience what my
interpretation of true happiness is. Thank you for reading my abstract idea.
Thursday, December 12, 2013
November Results
WOW!!!! What a month. I absolutely LOVED reading all of the comments this month. Finally got to hear from some of you quiet ones:) Great job, writers and bloggers. Our favorite read this month is Victoria. Way to go!!!! Stay tuned for the December pieces. You will have some more great reading for the weekend.
Sunday, December 1, 2013
Kristine--Vitality
A bird crashes on the sun kissed island, the ocean is long emptied
yet sand continues to shift towards land like how when waves ages ago, rushed
loose grains back and forth. Every second it reminisces the days when currents
flowed in blissful reverie. But distracted by nostalgic sorrow no one
immediately mourns the foul sight: black, gradient feathers-strewn across the
rocky sand, half-buried in sand, or desperately dressed on the mangled limbs of
stunned game. The animal rests on his back-his position displaying disoriented
agony. His eyes reflect surprise and utter disappointment as if someone shouted
at him in the sky, there would be no more V formations during this trek of
winter. Gradually his spirited form escapes his body and he is reborn, invisible,
without flight, left as a shade to roam the island.
He waits for the island inhabitants to arrive and have
emotional tears over his untimely death.
Three years pass.
Still no grievers.
His physical body is becoming a horrid sight.
But then the procession
comes, languished from having to mourn the sky bird. They had meant to come
sooner but were taken back by the sun’s courtship of the island. Thus, when Tropical
Wind delivered news of his death occurring on the other side of the island, the
islanders would, in the words of the Gloomy Horse, “get to his resting place in
less than 5 years”. They got it in three which was great progress to the rest
of the islanders.
The bird spirit’s spirit sinks lower when he hears this.
Creatures of all colors and skin textures walk/crawl/slither
on the blushing island and fashion a proper mourning line, slowly approaching the
bird. Some carry respect in their hearts; others taint theirs with twisted
gratification. The waterless ocean-a sea-less sea and the delight of a paramour
sun causes death to be mistakenly endeared by the mourners.
A wiggly Worm wiggles out from beneath the sandy sand, worms
near the decaying corpse and smirks at his late passing; he was not early
enough. A sage Sardine whose scales did not give away age nears the body with great
poise to observe the fallen casualty. He immediately recognizes the
supernatural presence of the bird but cannot see him, so he begins to converse
with empty, humid air. His fellow islanders deem him demented.
It was Tropical Wind that noticed the somber spirit nested
on sliced bamboo shoots. A great creature of flight regressed to a burial
contradictory in his aerial nature, something the tropical wind took pity of.
She had seen the gruesome accident as she was traveling towards the west, on
her way to piss off Californian residents.
Tropical Wind decided to lift the spirit’s spirit by sending
his spirit on a flight for eternity. The bird roamed the earth through breezes
and gusts and whirlwinds, content with his new life
. He was reborn and given the best homage in all his
lifetime.
Bianca--Split
Split by Tara Moss features Makedde Vanderwall, a
young Canadian model working her way to earning a degree in forensic
psychology. Instead of entering with a warm welcome, she wakes up in the middle
of the night with reoccurring, horrific nightmares, and is soon greeted with
fear of a killer that targets female students on campus. With the assistance of
an ex-boyfriend who had previously saved her life before, detective Andy Flynn
is determined to find the killer, but most importantly, to save Makedde who is
instant prey. He remains in Vancouver, Canada to attend a convention on
psychopaths but as soon as he and his mentor land, they are asked by local
police to help, and is more than obliged into the case unfolding at the
university. Makedde makes it clear to him that she is moving forward with her
life by finding a new romance and doesn’t want to repeat the past. In an attempt
to avoid him, she ignores his warnings and soon finds herself back in danger.
Andy is still infatuated with Makedde, but somehow their relationship just does
not progress until something else happens and they both return to their
respective designations.
The theme of the importance of conquering fear for survival
is visibly displayed throughout the novel. Makedde learns the hard way that
ignorance and too much pride doesn’t solve anything, but results in
catastrophe. By rejecting Andy Flynn, she unknowingly puts her life at risk and
makes herself accessible to the killer. Her new boyfriend Roy Blake works as a
campus security officer but cannot always be there to protect her. Makedde
struggles to balance her school life with her modeling job, along with making
it home safely. The end of the novel consists of an unexpected twist that
introduces the next theme that Moss establishes which is to always stay alert.
The usual saying of “keep your friends close and your enemies closer” does not
pertain to this novel when you don’t know who the enemy is. In this case,
Makedde must know the true identity of the people around her.
Moss uses a strong sense of imagery to leave the reader in
bewilderment and a fast pulse. Normally, I don’t read thrillers because of
their predictability (or perhaps I haven’t picked up a great thriller), but the
curiosity as to what happens next is almost excruciating. Losing her mother in
her teen years, Moss had experienced a strenuous time gap. She puts forth these
emotions of losing a loved one in her work to create what I believe is
phenomenal. Makedde’s nightmares are extremely vivid and depict the strong
emotion Moss may have felt to make the reader feel mutual connection. Such
diction makes the reader feel frustrated, content, perplexed and astonished in
that order. Split is the second novel in the Vanderwall series but can
still be read without reading the first book. However, if you do not prefer
reading novels that cannot be critically analyzed chapter by chapter, this may
not be your read, but I would still recommend it to anyone who seeks a rapidly fluctuating
thrill.
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