Thursday, May 23, 2013

The Key to Life

Author's Note: I really actually think that this quote is kind of the key to life, I mean like you and everyone ought to be happy. Oh wait . . . I didn't tell you the quote! Well, it's the one right below the author's note. Mmmmmm k? Yup. Yeah. So this is kind of a more unprofessional piece for me. We're internet friends! #jennamarbles #rofl #life #key #appriciation #yay #hashtag #thatpower #jb #william #love # song #concert #lovin'it #mcdonalds #lol #hashtag_train #MKECountry


“Happiness will never come to those who fail to appreciate what they already have.”
-Unknown
"Short Famous Quotes. Short famous quotes about love, life and friendship for your Messenger nick." Famous Quotes, Quotations and Proverbs in Proverbia.net. N.p., n.d. Web. 23 May 2013. <http://en.proverbia.net/shortfamousquotes.a

This quote is true and the key to being happy in life. If you never appricate what you already have been given whether it be your situation, looks or body. Unless you take a moment and look at yourself in the mirror and truly be happy with what you see, you will never be happy.

Author’s Extras (which are more unprofessionally written, more like if I were talking directly to you):  Well, I suggest watching the episode of Modern Family where one of the characters Phil Dunphy talks about “philsosphy.” He explains that you will be happier once you lower your standards. I think it was meant to more funny and jokingly than anything else, but I honestly believe it. Sometimes people set high standards (and I’m not saying it’s a bad thing) but sometimes it’s too high for you to reach like running a mile in two minutes when the last time you ran a mile a week ago your time was ten minutes. However, if you set high standards for the far off future, it may be attainable but as for right away, it requires work. So, going back to “philsophy,” it’s true. You just gotta be happy with yourself and if you’re not check again. If you’ve checked twice and really need to change go get plastic sugery or work out more or change what you can to be happy. Once it’s all said and done with, you should appreciate what you’ve got.

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Sweet Retelling Redo!


Author’s Note:  This is a retelling redo of Sweet Venom by Tera Lynn Childs.


A set of triplets, unkwown to one another, find each other in the middle of a big ctiy. Discovering their history and fate, and conflict amongst the sisters is done and over with. Now they must band together to follow their destinies, despite their diverse personalities.

Friday, April 12, 2013

Cigar Factory Girl


Author's Note:  For a Social Studies assignment, we had to write a RAFT which stands for Role (little girl in working in a cigar factory in the mid 1800s), Audience (I suggested that it would be a small excerpt in the MAPS test), Format (short story) and Topic (Child Labor life). I ended up writing about a little girl who works in a cigar factory who is forced to work long hours for a small pay. We studied how some of the kids in the 1800s had harsh bosses who forced them to work faster, little pay, horrible conditions and long hours. That was my basic inspiration to tell about a  part of her life.


     “Listen up, imps,” Boss commanded, “Get in line for pay.”
     The sight of him made me cringe; Boss was a malicious cheapskate who didn’t pay well. He had a long gray beard and had a ring of hair that surrounded his huge bald spot atop his head. Us children were petrified when he came to check in on us while we were working.
     I fell into line next to my best friend, Madeline, taking her hand to comfort her. She’s even more terrified of Boss than I; she has not quite gotten used to him.
     There were five children in front of us. Then there was four. Then three. Then two. Then one. I gulped, trying to make my fear disappear.
     I let Madeline go first. Holding out a shaky hand, Boss dropped a few coins in her hand. She walked stiffly back to the hallway to wait for me.
     Watching her, I knew she wasn’t alright, which worried me. My hand was quivering and I reached out until I was an inch away from his wrinkled, bony hand. The cigar smoke smell reeking from him made my stomach queasy. As soon as those few precious coins dropped in the palm of my hand, I bolted out the door.
      My brother Jerry was also waiting for me. Tipping his cap he said, “Hello, sister. 'Tis our day off; shall we go to the food market?”
     I smiled. I was glad to have my brother with me, since we’re under both under 10, don’t have to work on Sundays. Jerry will soon turn 10, so he will be working 7 days a week before I know it.
     Sunday is the one day we do not have to work in the cigar factory where Boss punishes us severely if we are working too slow. The thought send shivers down my spine as I touch the bruises that blacken my arms from leather whips.... It is reliving to be outside the factory because the smell of tobacco leaves often overwhelms my lungs, giving me awful head pains and the smoke is utterly horrible, invading your lungs, nearly suffocating them at every breath you take of the intoxicated air. There are not outhouses, so it gets messy and we don’t really have the time to clean or bathe. Really, we’re living in our own filth, it's disgusting.
     The factory is made up of barns that hold tobacco leaves and the workers. There’s a small shanty for all of the children who are sent to work who never see their parents, like Madeline, Jerry and I. My and Madeline's job is to carry the tobacco leaves in big woven baskets to the men and women who roll them into cigars. Jerry helps unload the tobacco plants when they arrive from the farms.
     We have two older twin sisters, Lillian and Geraldine. They work at a cotton gin factory a few miles away; we hardly ever see them, we cannot write, for we have no money left to send it on the wagons. It saddens me, if only my sisters could tell me what Mother was like before she had fallen ill.
     With no parents to provide for us, my sisters, who were already working at the time, sent us to work regrettably, with no choice. Now with the little money we are given, we find discounted spoiled food from the store. The owner of the factory, thankfully, gives us one very small meal a day; however, it’s barely enough to suffice my 14 hour days. I eat a little, work from seven in the morning to nine at night, eat the leftovers from breakfast, sleep and restart my day.
     Sometimes Madeline and I talk about what it would be like if we were wealthy enough to live and play at home. I told her that I wished that as Father worked, Mother made hats in a beautiful boutique and my siblings and I helped about the housework and even went to school. I know if I had my dream life, I would be well off, able to start and support family.
     Madeline, Jerry and I combined our money to buy two large stale bread loafs that we got cheap, for the baker pities us. We knew we cannot eat the bread today; we must save it to help our appetite this week.
     Settling down into my bed of hay tonight, I can't help but think about my future and what it holds for me. Will it be good? Will I get married and raise a family? Perhaps one day I can earn enough money on my low wages, just enough to run away, the three of us.

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

The Path


Author’s Note:  I wrote a poem and then drew a picture to tie in my Art Portfolio. It’s a girl walking in a muddy stony path (I didn’t make that clear enough). Up ahead of her walking is “paridise” like a little oasis. It’s the sun rise to represent the beginning of her journey and her shirt says “wish, dream, believe achieve,” which is hard to see in the picture. In the poem, I tried using a little bit of Figurative Language.

The path you’re taking is the one less traveled by,
It’s the one just as worn out as a new pair of shoes,
This path is running parallel to the worn down street,
Where most people took it just because it was easy,
People don’t realize what making a new path is all about,
Working hard that will get you farther and take you places,
Be prepared for hardships and challenges and obstacles,
For it’s about as easy as Taylor Swift picking a boyfriend,
This path is fufilling to anyone who’s willing to take it,
Because it’s the path less traveled by

Her Chosen Heart


Author's Note: This is an essay about Ridley from the Beautiful Creatures series by
Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl where I discuss my opinion regarding Ridley's behavior. I try to comprehend her character and try to answer some questions I had.



Her golden yellow eyes seek havoc and destruction; they give away her true nature. She has the ability to influence others in the worst possible way. At one point in her life, the girl was a weakling, just a powerless, feeble, tiny mortal, not capable of what she is capable of now. Evil thrives in her heart, taking her over, but she didn’t choose this:  her nature, emotions, life. She is Ridley, a dark Siren, in the Beautiful Creatures series written by Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl. Due to her complex nature, is Ridley really affected by her maleficent heart chosen for her, or is it just her own decisions that makes her evil?

In the series, Ridley acts like nothing could stop her, or bring her down; she thinks of herself as invincible with the power to induce people to do her bidding, or even to fall in love with her. There’s a part in Beautiful Creatures, the first book, where she seduces the main character’s best friend, Link, with her Siren abilities. Though she really does love him, and he really loves her, Ridley ends up letting him go. According to physiology research, one who might be harsh to mortals and men, like her, may have had a traumatic past with them that could affect her decision. This is in fact, true, she does hate mortals, which comes to surface in Beautiful Darkness.

If Ridley used to be a mortal herself, why would she detest mortals so much? In one of the books her cousin, Lena, explains her and Ridley having a tough time in school when they were younger; the kids used to exclude them and treat them like freaks. Perhaps her hatred for mortals influenced her behavior towards Link, for he is one. Or maybe she’s had traumatic experiences with other men, that may have also impacted her leaving Link.

What if Ridley wasn’t evil, but good, and didn’t break off from Link? After all, her fate between being light or dark was chosen for her, her family’s curse. Perchance she could have been good, inasmuch that Ridley never wanted to be a sinister Siren, but perhaps it was fate; now Ridley can’t get enough power, what represents strength to her. She perceives mortals to be insufferable weaklings, once like herself, helpless and impotent. The authors never say if she was bullied in school, though if she was, it comes through in her personality at points in the book that show vulnerability.

She may act all strong and tough, but at her core, she’s vulnerable and willing to still love Lena and Link. The authors demonstrate that Ridley indeed possesses a susceptible side to her and there have been moments she hasn’t been malignant, but good hearted. If she wasn’t claimed for the dark, Ridley would be full of light and laughter. It’s just her powers that affect and morph her personality in to her Siren self so much that she is an unrecognizable great person hidden in the depths of her soul.

Beneath the surface, Ridley is a good person despite being vile and odious at times; it’s only to protect herself and her powers from her hatred for mortals and men. Of course, loving someone, such as a good person like Link, affects her loving and caring side as well, which would come to show more if she wasn’t chosen for darkness by a family curse. Ridley is a difficult person to understand, but mostly, she is affected more by her unwanted evil heart, rather than herself.  

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Love

Author’s Note:  I’ve been really in to one word poems using figurative language, so I wrote one about love!


Love is easily difficult to understand,
Love forms the tie between you and another,
Love is a bumpy, twisted road,
Love has ups and downs and turns,
Love is about as easy as breaking a rock,
Love lies in all of our hearts somewhere