Sunday, August 14, 2011

The Forming of Words



     I have always thought that English was an ugly language.  It was awkward and uncomfortable to the tongue, rough to the lips, and hard on the ears. I wished that my language was a young, beautiful lady like Italian, chosen as the national language for being the most beautiful of available native dialects. It was to be admitted that English and myself did not have the best introduction, being raised on an old farm with a big redneck family of thick southern drawls.  I disliked so much about it, the way my mother’s S’s whistled, the way the men’s voices crackled from the smoke and tobacco deep in their lungs, the way Grandma’s vowels strained with her missing teeth, and the way my own voice was pitched so unusually high in contrast. But everything shifted in perspective one sunny Kindergarten day when our small private school taught us how to read.
                Suddenly everything was so beautiful when it was reverberating from the pages of the well-worn books overflowing from the bookshelves of our modest country home; making its way into my young mind.  I was reading books far beyond my appointed reading level. I was in love with books, and constantly reading something. I moved in third grade to town, where all the fancy people and their high expectations of perfection managed to force me into a somewhat antisocial lifestyle as I buried my nose deeper into my books than one would think possible. My closest friends where my relic of a PlayStation One and any book I could get my hands on, and it was about this time that the public education system began to fail me.
                “No Child Left Behind” always seemed like a silly notion to me.  I never fully understood why I somehow never managed to learn my multiplication tables (an exclusion of curriculum that would later hasten my learning ability immensely), but my AR was over 300 points of the required. Also, somehow, in my primary education, although my reading comprehension advanced proficiently, my writing proficiency was never legible enough to be comprehended or evaluated.  My fourth grade teacher exploited this, but never corrected it. One day she called me to her desk after a journal entry that we had been assigned.  It was some silly, impractical narrative we had been required to write about some nonsensical topic, of which my fourth grade mind had produced a page long story. She asked me, “You are in fourth grade, didn’t your third grade teacher ever teach you how to paragraph?” I skittishly replied that I was not sure what she meant. She sent me back to me desk with my tail sunken heart, convinced I was good at nothing. How could someone who claimed to love books possibly not have known how to paragraph?
                In sixth grade I joined band. This would seem unrelated to literacy, at least, perhaps, to the normally wired mind, but it would be an assumption that you may deem incorrect if you consider what it did.  Learning how to play an instrument rewired my brain, completely changing the way I thought and turning it inside out.  It began to majorly alter the way I did anything and everything.  It was as if I had learned a language that was in a constant state of grace and beauty, and I desired to make the only other language I could fabricate and understand to be in such a state of consistent eloquence and perfection. As my comprehension of music grew, my understanding of literacy continued, and they slid together like corresponding shapes; tessellations that somehow fulfilled each other. I took honors classes with some of the best teachers this public school system has to offer, all of which helped me closer to achieving my lifetime goal of making the English language beautiful; as melodious and complicated as the poetic, musical words that flowed so easily from paper into my mind or to my instrument.
                Maybe all of this has just been an attempt to justify my path to becoming what one might consider a “Grammar Nazi.” I was recruited into an army of rogues, considered by a majority of the population to be a ruder, lesser type of people with too much time on their hands to do anything but criticize the slightest fault in grammar, making elaborate attempts to glorify themselves in the process. But, somewhere along my path to make the rough, Germanic language that is my native tongue as beautiful as I could manage, I became fond of these rogues. The reason being, words have never been more beautiful in any language than when eloquently inscribed upon the paper for only one’s imagination to hear; the same inner ear that they taught me to listen with for carrying out a pitch or frequency of perfect harmony.  It is in this way that band and my music education was always the strongest influence on my writing career; English, commonly flawed in the public school system, was only secondary to this.  I have continued my quest to make beautiful a language that is as flawed as the methods of teaching it, and, because I have still come nowhere close to achieving this goal, I have made a decision to continue upon this path throughout high school, in both the language of music and of English.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Dear football,

Dear Football,
     I am not really a fan of you. At all. And I know that I went to all of my high school's football games for the past two years, but, honestly, I only ever used you for marching band. I'm sorry, but it is not going to work out. Now I can watch all your commercials on Youtube, which I love.
See you next fall,
Bee.

Monday, January 31, 2011

Internet Relationships

(I want to start this post by letting you know ahead of time that I apologize sincerely for my absence, although I am not going to say anything sincere in the following piece of literature. So with that understood, I will continue with things that someone might actually want to read. Thank you.)


      I never understood the "in a relationship, and it's complicated" relationship status, until I tried to diagnose the problems in my relationship with the internet, and realized that "in a relationship and it's complicated" is the only way to truly explain it. For the most part out relationship is just dandy. It is always there for me when I need it, it always cheers me up when I'm sad, has made me LOL as a strong exhale from the nose and LMAO is the form of falling out of my swivel chair and hyperventilating until I am so tired I just lie there with my laptop and let it sing me to sleep. It's a good relationship. It has helped me fall in love, I've been broken up with over the internet multiple times, and guess what. There was a cat video to make it all better.

      Of course, like any relationship, we've had out downs. Like when my parents forget to pay the bill and I can't see it for a week, and also when it get's all ticked at me and won't talk to me or even let me see my homepage when my router is being a slut. But, every time after it realizes that I'm sorry and I do really care, it is there with a mixtape it made just for me, and a bouquet of roses on sale for $12.00 on the shaded in links of Google.

     But really the real issues of out relationship is that I am horrible at commitments. Not commitments like being committed to one person for as long as they wish to remain the object of my affection, that comes naturally to me. Commitments like blogging are very difficult to me. I ran diagnostic repair on my brain, but it came up with an error message.

     It isn't that I don't have ideas, as a matter of fact for as long as I can remember, I have pretty much had conversations in my head that are about perfect models of your average blog. I have a BAJILLION things to say...I just forget them. It is kind of like "I should write this down" is some sort of taboo that makes my brain do an immediate memory wipe of all my short term memory, including everything from whatever class I was zoning out during at that time. I call it emergency reboot, but I believe in layman terms it is "brain fart."

     I told my self I would start vlogging, so I did okay for about a week, then one day I procrastinated, then I felt bad so I waited longer, and longer, and then it was just too late to make another video.... The same thing occurred with blogging, but I recalled one of my friends that enjoys indulging in my literary poop, so I decided to type this. You're welcome.

     So I have set a date for my next blog. It will be up by the day after this Saturday. I was going to say this Saturday, but just in case, I'm giving myself some wiggle room. Like Jello, I am putting a little wiggle room in my internet diet. That was lame.


     I am just now noticing that typing this on a sizzle-fried brain was a bad idea, by paragraphs most certainly are not meeting their length and intelligence quotas, and if you hadn't noticed, there has not been a single MS Paint masterpiece to attract your attention away from these letters, or the lack thereof. This is because my older human relative, John, has gone back to college in Boston, and has taken his netbook with the touchscreen, much easing the pain of creating a masterpiece of MS Painting. I am planning on getting, or borrowing a tablet as soon as possible to aid in the creative process. I will also make a whole post for random art with no real context or relation to anything.


      But for now, adios alligator. (Yeah that didn't work out quite how I hoped.)


*Lick* <3 Bee.