Sunday, December 17, 2006

- Essay by Meghan Chamberlin

I can't remember the color of his eyes. Does that make me a bad great-granddaughter? The harder I reach into my memory the more difficult it becomes to recall. It makes me wonder, did I ever pay enough attention to him to notice the color well enough? As a little girl I sat on his lap thousands of times, glaring into them, like a child glares into an empty cookie jar, searching for something. I know that whatever color they were it must have been a soft, sweet shade inside his eyes like almonds. Still, I cannot recall the color and it breaks my heart.
I know that I could just ask a relative but it wouldn't be the same as if I had remembered myself. It is strange how the brain works. Choosing to forever grab hold of certain memories and at the same time letting others fade away into the background. The dull, lifeless background of what we want so badly to hold onto but just can't.

Perched on top of his skinny legs as he scratches his rough white beard, I am five years old again. The world is one big candy coated dream and I will forever be the princess that sits on top of the grand King's lap. I gaze at his face and examine the wrinkles that sit patiently around his eyes and mouth, knowing that they will only deepen in time. I am still very young and I know that he will get older each year but I never believe that he will fade away from me. He will never drift from my sight and I will always be resting on top of his lap. He wraps his arms around me and it is as if he is pouring a big pitcher of love into my tiny body.
He tells me I am his little treasure and I picture myself hiding in a golden chest at the bottom of the deep sea. Looking up from the bottom, I can see the sun glaring down on me illuminating everything. I am at home sitting on his lap in the crowded living room. His wool trousers scratch against my pale legs and make them itch. That doesn't matter though because I am here with him and not even a giant cookie could slew me away from sitting here. I look down at his signature suspenders that he puts on every morning over his thin white t-shirt and flannel polo. They have tiny roses on them and green vines wrapping around each tiny flower bud. The roses float up to his face, bringing me back to the eyes which I cannot recall the color of.

I am no longer five and I no longer sit on his lap in that same crowded living room. When I visit my Nonny I look at the room with its cold emptiness. His spot on the couch still sits there, looking miserable and empty. It makes me think. Is he looking down on me from heaven? Is he proud of his little treasure? Does he know that when I think of him I sometimes cry from missing him so badly? Can he recall the color of my eyes?

 

I try not to acknowledge the emptiness I feel when I sit down in his usual spot. It has been empty for many years now but I can still feel a little piece of him, a bit of his warmth. He is always with me and I will always remember the hours spent, sitting on his lap, waiting for our legs to go numb. I just can't remember the color of his eyes.

This is the 7th piece of student writing in a string of two straight weeks of student writing!


Check back every single day 'til Christmas to see if your writing gets posted!


# #
StudentWriter    Posted by
StudentWriter
on 12/17/2006
2:18 PM
 Saturday, December 16, 2006
The following story is an interpretation of the 1,000 Words image in the October, 2006 issue of Writing Magazine.
 
The Ingul Jungle
- Story by Jordi Menard
 
“Please try not ruin the house tonight you two,” said Brittany and Brooke’s mother. The two were constantly getting into trouble and wrecking the house.
 
“Okay,” said Brooke in a tone that meant, “sure, whatever.” Their parents were going to a party that night and would be gone from 5:30 to about 11:30 which, to the two girls, meant six hours of unsupervised fun.
 
Once their parents left, Brittany and Brooke immediately started discussing what they were going to do. Most of their ideas involved at least a 75% chance of something being broken.  Unnoticed, the ghost of the house, Joe, appeared and said, “Hello,” startling both girls. “I see you are trying to find something to do.” He had assisted the girls in most of their adventures.  “You might be interested in these,” he said, holding out two pieces of paper and a compass.
The girls took the items, and he vanished. 
 
One paper was a page out of some very old book describing a green crystal orb that could repair anything. The other paper was a map of their house with an X in the middle of the living room. The compass didn’t point north, but it seemed to be pointing to the spot in the living room where the X was on the map. The girls went to that spot. All of a sudden, Brittany said, “Look at this!” indicating a pattern on the wood that looked like an X. 
 
“I’ll get the shovel,” suggested Brooke, running off to the garage. When she came back, they started digging. After about three minutes, they broke through. On the other side seemed to be a thick jungle. Fifteen minutes later, the hole was big enough for Brooke to fit through, so she went in with the flashlight while Brittany made the hole bigger. Once in the hole, Brooke saw a light through the trees and decided to go see what it was.
 
Before she could reach the light, a bunch of short, pale skinned, big-eyed people jumped out at her. Before they could get to her though, she accidentally shined the flashlight at a few of them, and they cowered, covering their eyes. Another one ran up to her and knocked the flashlight out of her hand before it could be used any more.
 
At that moment, Brittany arrived and was also attacked, which caused her to drop the compass Joe had given her. As soon as the natives saw the compass, they stopped attacking the girls and asked them where the got the compass. They told the natives about Joe, and the natives said that Joe acted as their shaman, and a friend of his is a friend of theirs. They told the girls that they were Ingul and said they were sorry for attacking them like that. The Ingul then led them to the treasure to make up for attacking them.  After twenty minutes of walking, Brittany asked, “How much farther is it?”
 
“Chest there,” said the leader of the Ingul, pointing to a previously unseen pedestal with a small chest on it. Brooke and Brittany ran to the box, but it was locked. It was then that they noticed a key next to the box. The key didn’t work on the box, but Brooke recognized that the shape of the key was the same shape as what she had previously thought was just an unusual hole in the attic floor.
 
The Ingul lead them back out, and the girls used the key on the hole in the attic. A compartment in the wall opened, revealing another key. This key worked on the chest. In the chest was a glowing green orb. The orb rose from Brittany’s hands, and there was a sudden, bright flash of light. Once the light dimmed, the girls realized the house was totally clean and, when they went downstairs, they noticed that even the hole in the living room was gone!
 
They looked at the clock and, with horror, realized that it was already 11:15! “Let’s keep tonight a secret, okay?” said Brittany, already moving to hide the chest, keys, and papers.
 
“Agreed,” stated Brooke, going to help her sister hide the objects.
 
When their parents returned, they were extremely amazed that the house was still “in one piece,” as their father put it.  “What were you two doing the whole time we were gone?” he asked.
 
“We were watching TV most of the time,” said Brooke, hoping her dad wouldn’t see the key hanging out of Brittany’s pocket.
 

This is the 6th piece of student writing in a string of two straight weeks of student writing!

 

Check back every single day 'til Christmas to see if your writing gets posted!


# (2)#
StudentWriter    Posted by
StudentWriter
on 12/16/2006
4:07 PM
 Friday, December 15, 2006

-Fiction Snippet by Julia Weaver, Grade 8

I am running down the main deck, with a bucket full of salty sea water in my hands. "Man over board! Man over board!" Bosun, the captain's assistant, keeps on shouting. I run faster. The storm is raging; our ship is filling up fast. All around me, strong sailors are being swept away by the storm. The captain is blowing his whistle and shouting orders. I scoop up a bucket-full of water and dump it over the starboard side. Out of the corner of my eye, I see a white flash streak across the otherwise blackened sky. My heart pace quickens and I worry for a split second about would happen if I lost my grip on the panel. I try not to think about it as I continue filling my bucket.

 

This is the 5th piece of student writing in a string of two straight weeks of student writing!

 

Check back every single day 'til Christmas to see if your writing gets posted!


# (2)#
StudentWriter    Posted by
StudentWriter
on 12/15/2006
4:54 PM
 Thursday, December 14, 2006

- Poem by Katie Wilsdon, Grade 8

 

As I spring up

And out of the ground

I am blinded by the scorching sun

For only a mere moment

The sun beats down

On me day after day

I start to wonder when rain

Will fall to quench my thirst

 

As the wind picks up

A storm is near

I sway back and forth

Side to side

Rapidly picking up speed

Losing some petals

The rain starts to fall

Gracefully coming down

Drop by drop by drop

 

After the storm has past

And my quench has been cured

I start to feel myself becoming

Tall, taller, tallest

Rising above the rest

I look up as I follow the sun

It seems to me that

I am reaching for the sky

Towering over all plants

Like I am king of the world

Or at least the sunflower patch

 

This is the 4th piece of student writing in a string of two straight weeks of student writing!

 

Check back every single day 'til Christmas to see if your writing gets posted!


# (1)#
StudentWriter    Posted by
StudentWriter
on 12/14/2006
3:47 PM


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