Nearly everyone's been faced with the surprisingly difficult question "What superpower would you most like to have?" As a kid, I would always answer with something reasonably normal, like invisibility or flight or the ability to turn into an animal. Once I might've said I'd like the ability to turn into a navigable pink bubble, but that was only during my extensive Wizard of Oz phase. Anyway.
I've been thinking about that question a bit lately and I've realized that my answers have gotten less standard and more...situationally convenient. Sometimes I think a Cullen-esque ability to see into the future would be ideal, but I'd mostly just like to know what people are thinking. These past few days I've come to realize how nice it would be to have a bubble that automatically deflects potentially awkward situations. And some days I'd like a Super Metabolism. The answers vary.
It's pretty pathetic how most of these powers would really only fix my life, not improve it. Being painfully awkward is my fault...as is being worried about my future. I guess everyone has to deal with metabolism, but not being able to fly? Definitely not my fault. And I'm fairly sure that no one can turn into a cute little animal at will. So for now I think I'll try working on the negative aspects about myself that can be fixed, and maybe next time I'm asked what power I'd like I can jump ahead to the really cool ones, like bubble morphing or super speed.
the dashboard melted but we still had the radio
Sunday, January 30, 2011
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Because we are in the midst of probably the most redundant time of year, dull days are bound to happen. School's routine, Christmas is a distant promise...and Thanksgiving? Over a week away- a bit too far for me. So I've composed a tiny list of strange activities specifically designed to sustain a sense of spontaneity/trick me into thinking it's a different time of year. Here we go.
1) Visit places that pride themselves on insanely early Christmas festivities. Like Bass Pro. I'm not usually an advocate of redneck apparatus but boy have they got some nice lights.
2) Partake in outdoors athletic activities like going on walks or playing soccer. Georgia heat will inevitably catch up with you and you'll fool yourself into believing it's summer in no time.
3) Don't apply to college. Don't even think about it. Then you won't have that SeniorFallStress thing going on.
4) Constantly tamper with the seasons on Animal Crossing. Don't bother pulling the weeds.
I'll be updating this list quite a bit. Hopefully.
1) Visit places that pride themselves on insanely early Christmas festivities. Like Bass Pro. I'm not usually an advocate of redneck apparatus but boy have they got some nice lights.
2) Partake in outdoors athletic activities like going on walks or playing soccer. Georgia heat will inevitably catch up with you and you'll fool yourself into believing it's summer in no time.
3) Don't apply to college. Don't even think about it. Then you won't have that SeniorFallStress thing going on.
4) Constantly tamper with the seasons on Animal Crossing. Don't bother pulling the weeds.
I'll be updating this list quite a bit. Hopefully.
Monday, August 30, 2010
On Grammar
I developed an acute dislike of subjects I found especially boring in middle school. I discovered that, as my cynicism and disinterest with my education grew, so did my imagination and I soon became the Spaciest Person Ever. Hear something you don't like? Ignore it and ponder the theme of good versus evil in Teen Titans. Don't understand fractions? Doodle smilies and kittens on the worksheet. Mom yelling something about your messy room? Smile and nod while looking over her shoulder and playing your favorite song backwards in your mind. Such was my existence. What a rude kid.
So while most teenagers retain a firm grasp on subjects repeatedly hammered into our skulls since third grade, I remain completely oblivious to remedial things. Like grammar. Where do commas go? I usually just leave them out because I think they have potential to look pretentious/dumb but I'm finding that a general knowledge of the comma enigma would be helpful in life. Right now grammar's like this annoying kid in my neighborhood that's always banging on the back door asking to borrow some markers. I've learned to ignore it. But what if it actually turns out to be something important, like a notification that my house is on fire? Or my future as an Overall Successful Person? What if I spend way too much effort on this one college essay only to have the reviewer sit down and say: "Oh, this girl's pretty ambitious and uses some nice words, but her comma placement is atrocious. We can't have her littering our campus with her dirty run ons." What if the one thing I have absolutely no patience for turns out to be my only downfall?
Needless to say, I think it's about time Grammar and I make amends. I'll try to color inside the lines a bit as long as I'm allowed to jump off the page every once in a while. Because grammar is boring and some rules are just meant to be broken.
But I refuse to memorize any more prepositions.
Needless to say, I think it's about time Grammar and I make amends. I'll try to color inside the lines a bit as long as I'm allowed to jump off the page every once in a while. Because grammar is boring and some rules are just meant to be broken.
But I refuse to memorize any more prepositions.
Saturday, August 14, 2010
Rainey Road
I have a distinct memory of a younger me- probably seventh or eighth grade- being fascinated as Mrs. Marxsen recounted some odd incidents on a ride home. Apparently Rainey Road, located in the suburban purgatory bordering Macon and Lizella, is home to many eccentric animals with tendencies to startle unsuspecting drivers. Peacocks and chickens in the road. Strange. Turning on this street, she slowed down to point out these unconventional pets but couldn’t quite find them and I, being a skeptical and easily distracted middle schooler, wrote it off as silly and eventually forgot the whole ordeal.
Fast forward a few years- I am sixteen and still basking in the glory of my newly acquired license when my mom walks in and I catch a very strange sequence of words: “Oh, and I almost ran over a few chickens today.” Wait, what? On Rainey Road? Really. Since then, I’ve wasted shameful amounts of gas avoiding the usual four way stop and reaching Thomaston by driving through this winding street which does, in fact, happen to house quite a few roaming chickens.
With a tendency to get frustrated in traffic and a growing sense of wanderlust, I find myself consistently drawn to such strange detours. I still get where I'm going, but in a longer and more indirect way. Honestly, I'd probably take you around Lizella and back again before giving straightforward directions to my house simply because I don’t know how. It tends to get me in trouble- I am always late, sometimes lost and I've had way too many close encounters with cute and reckless animals. But I really think this roaming does more good than harm. I have more time to think. I see some weird things and am reminded that even streets can have personality, that “cookie cutter suburbs” are really just the opposite. Each place has an opportunity to be special unto itself. In a way, I’m able to regain that childlike sense of wonder I lost as I matured and became more familiar with the world.
As a teenager with increasingly limited time and money, I’m discovering that this deviation from the main road isn’t necessarily the most practical thing. Summer is coming to a close and I’m surrounded by all the pressures and privileges associated with senior year and really, I don’t have the opportunity to look for such curious things anymore. It just isn’t priority. But why shouldn’t it be? Why shouldn’t we take a moment to step aside and notice the strange things life offers? Like a group of chickens hanging out by a stop sign. I think it’s pretty essential.
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