Pat yourself on the back, for you completed your very first cold read this week. We have all observed the many personalities that arise during such a competitive discussion.
America is not only obsessed with body image, but stereotypes seem to be a common fad as well. Thus, as an American myself, I decided to stereotype the three personalities I have observed that sprout during socratic seminars.
1. First, there is the "I'm-Going-To-Talk-Just-To-Talk" and maybe by some chance I will spit out something significant and recieve a "wow" from the teacher. Where is my gold star?
2. Staring blankly down at his desk while teetering a pencil back and fourth, he is a "Mouth-Not-Matching-Mind." His thoughts are existentually beautiful, but the distance from his brain to mouth is too far for thought transportation. Because he lacks this communication bridge, you take his points away; however, he will keep his true treasures tuckered away safely in his tinker.
3. And lastly, we have the "Wow-Nice-Yeah." This person knows what to say, what not to say, when to say it, and when not to say it. He is at equilibrium between numbers one and two. Grade? A. But still not on the market for Yale eggs.
Sunday, March 30, 2014
Sunday, March 23, 2014
WANTED KILLER VEGGIE 5 DOLLA REWURD SAVE THE PLANTS
A blood curddling scream pierces the air as she gnaws on Teddy Gram's left leg. Nibble nibble nibble nibble nibble. Right leg. Munch munch munch munch. Left arm. Crush crush crush. Right arm. Crack crack. Head. Chomp! Teddy's petite torso is all that remains. Motionless on the butcher's table, he never had a chance against the vicious, cannibalistic vegetarian.
Not yet satisfied, she tears open a bag of gummy worms and peaks in at the little buggers. They tentatively eye her back. You guys never had a chance at life, she spits. A long thread of drool bungees from her lip and lands on Wilson the Worm. Right from the beginning, I knew you were destined to fill my hungry belly. She reaches in equipped with claws like a teradactyl. Come to momma.
She murders dozens of living, breathing, photosynthetic plants each and every day. Innocent creatures, they desired nothing but to absorb the sunlight on a sunny Sunday. Charlie the Chive, Petey the Potato, Eleanor the Eggplant... all victims of vegetarianism.
If we don't step in to stop these killers, the following creatures will soon go extinct:
1. Animal Crackers
2. Peeps
3. Juju Bees
7. cAntaloupe
13. Cow Tails
25. Nerds
Twenty five species threatened from a single lifestyle. We need to stop these cereal killers before it's too late. Yes, they even murder cereal. Specifically, Fruity Pebbles. My pet rock would not be happy about that. Rocks have feelings too, ya know! THEY CAN FEEL PAIN. EVEN ASK PETA.
Not yet satisfied, she tears open a bag of gummy worms and peaks in at the little buggers. They tentatively eye her back. You guys never had a chance at life, she spits. A long thread of drool bungees from her lip and lands on Wilson the Worm. Right from the beginning, I knew you were destined to fill my hungry belly. She reaches in equipped with claws like a teradactyl. Come to momma.
She murders dozens of living, breathing, photosynthetic plants each and every day. Innocent creatures, they desired nothing but to absorb the sunlight on a sunny Sunday. Charlie the Chive, Petey the Potato, Eleanor the Eggplant... all victims of vegetarianism.
If we don't step in to stop these killers, the following creatures will soon go extinct:
1. Animal Crackers
2. Peeps
3. Juju Bees
7. cAntaloupe
13. Cow Tails
25. Nerds
Twenty five species threatened from a single lifestyle. We need to stop these cereal killers before it's too late. Yes, they even murder cereal. Specifically, Fruity Pebbles. My pet rock would not be happy about that. Rocks have feelings too, ya know! THEY CAN FEEL PAIN. EVEN ASK PETA.
Friday, March 14, 2014
Existence
I do not live in a bedroom. I do not live in a house, a contraption of claustrophobia.
I am the offspring of Mother Nature.
I rise each morning with Sun. The green blanket of Earth tickles my skin, soft as Squirrel. In the hug of a warm willow, wee Owl rests. Camoflauged beneath the web of dewy maple limbs, my alarm chirps Sunrise. I pick parts of my earthy pillow out from my fawn-colored hair and my morning shower, a spontaneous drizzle, decides my natural scent has become too much for the Robins to Bear. I wash up and attend to the melody of my stomach.
There is a wall of trees, but I do not suffocate. The air still breathes and the sunshine peaks though the maze of leaves in the sky. Rather than bound me, the maples and oaks and willows and birch hug my existence in the open meadow.
I am the offspring of Mother Nature.
I rise each morning with Sun. The green blanket of Earth tickles my skin, soft as Squirrel. In the hug of a warm willow, wee Owl rests. Camoflauged beneath the web of dewy maple limbs, my alarm chirps Sunrise. I pick parts of my earthy pillow out from my fawn-colored hair and my morning shower, a spontaneous drizzle, decides my natural scent has become too much for the Robins to Bear. I wash up and attend to the melody of my stomach.
There is a wall of trees, but I do not suffocate. The air still breathes and the sunshine peaks though the maze of leaves in the sky. Rather than bound me, the maples and oaks and willows and birch hug my existence in the open meadow.
The sun drops on the horizon, night covers my eyes.
Time.
The sun rises on the horizon, morning lifts my eyelids.
The harsh sun disturbs my sleeping solace. The grass blades cut my skin, now texturized with a hellicious rash. My allergies begin their daily tantrum. An owl, fatiqued with darkness, succumbs to circadian rythyms on a protruding branch. Tweets pierce the atmosphere, though no bird nest exists in the trees, but rather atop my head. My hair, tangled with twigs, is an animal within itself. Thunder rumbles in my stomach, and the cumbersome quest for food commences.
Saturday, March 8, 2014
Puzzle Paragraph One: Daughter of God
Once upon a time, I was the scum on your bathroom tub. I was the jam between your wart-infested toes, the lint in your chubby bellybutton, the sweat under your unshaven pits. Always trailing ten steps behind my male counterparts, I walked under a cold shadow, longing for the kiss of sunlight, even if the exposure burnt my fair skin to a rosey pink. I was tired of playing the insignificant mouse. I yearned to be the elephant: substantial, important, and dominant. If my wishes were to be granted, I would bask in the sun as the great pink-skinned elephant that my heart tells me I am inside.
Submissive me, I prayed to Jesus Christ for guidance. But it struck me like a lightning bolt across a midnight sky: Jesus has a chiseled face, defined muscles, and a beard. Testosterone courses through his veins. Jesus is a man! We do not call him the Daughter of God. My mother is the Daughter of God. My neighbor, Ms. Indepene, is the Daughter of God. My sister is the Daughter of God. Jesus is the Son of God. He walks in the sun as the Son, and here I am, kneeling beside my bed, asking a man to lead the women of my generation out of the slums, the shadows, the Red Sea, and into the light. Even in my prayers--my personal thoughts--a male rules over me.
I unclasped my pale palms and stood up next to the end of my bed, where a quilt my great grandmother sewed for my thirteenth birthday lay disheveled in a pile. I ran my fingertips over its raised fabric squares; each was a different pattern, yet they were sewn together to create one coherent piece of art. I could not rely on myself alone for change. One square does not create a quilt. In fact, it usually ends up in the scrap bin without hesitation. Women needed to create one united power for feminine progress, with everyone's individuality weaved together to foster strength and in turn, change. We needed to become persuasive together, our words needed to drip with rhetoric, to drown out the deep voices of the men, to wash them away in the flood. We needed to build our own arc and sail to a New World, accompanied by all the pink elephants of the land. We needed to write our own history.
What we do today influences what we accomplish tomorrow.
(Holy snicker doodle, they really do exist.)
I unclasped my pale palms and stood up next to the end of my bed, where a quilt my great grandmother sewed for my thirteenth birthday lay disheveled in a pile. I ran my fingertips over its raised fabric squares; each was a different pattern, yet they were sewn together to create one coherent piece of art. I could not rely on myself alone for change. One square does not create a quilt. In fact, it usually ends up in the scrap bin without hesitation. Women needed to create one united power for feminine progress, with everyone's individuality weaved together to foster strength and in turn, change. We needed to become persuasive together, our words needed to drip with rhetoric, to drown out the deep voices of the men, to wash them away in the flood. We needed to build our own arc and sail to a New World, accompanied by all the pink elephants of the land. We needed to write our own history.
What we do today influences what we accomplish tomorrow.
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