My other half.

There is a day, just a single day, where school is unbelievably fun. It is a day found within Spirit Week, which is either an enjoyable experience or a train wreck. Before I tell you about this unbelievably fun day, though, I’ll give you a little background info about the Spirit Week of this and last school year. Spirit Week is meant for the enjoyment of the students and torment of the teachers, based on how much the former enjoy it, the latter condemn it. Its date is decided by Student Council, of which I am a member of, and the theme of the days are also decided by SC. Last year, my once-goth friend Aubrie and I decided, for Spirit Week, we would swithch places.  I would be all goth-y, she would dress all preppy, like me.  As soon as I figure out how to import pictures, I will put those pictures on my site.  I didn’t go overboard, just wore a fun but shocking outfit for Crazy Day.  Not at all like this year.

   This year I went all out.  I wore the creepy red-and-black plaid shorts, black shirt with odd white marking (when you see the picture, it’s from the Legend Of Zelda series, just so you know), clunky black shoes (which I will take a picture of since they don’t show up in the picture), fingerless red and black striped gloves (forgot to put those on; I’ll take a picture) and the gothest makeup Aubrie could apply.  Now, considering my usual preppy self, you might think my little costume wouldn’t be very “comfortable” for me to wear.  In reality, however, it ROCKED.  I had the time of my life.  After my first few hours of uncontrollable giggling at peoples’ reaction to me, I was all business.  I aced the uninterested, hostile zoned-out look.  I’m a good starer-downer under normal circumstances, but the mascara really amplified it.  I can’t even COUNT how many people told me what an awesome goth kid I make.  I was like, “Well, the look does match the seething anger boiling in my soul.” Not really. I just said thanks. I was flattered, regardless of how backwards a compliment that seems.  Well, that was my crazy day.  I wanted you readers to know.  Bye bye now!  I have a Bowl-A-Thon to get to.

Published in: on May 18, 2010 at 6:45 pm  Leave a Comment  

Alright, I have my shaky password situation figured out.

As I’m sure all you loyal readers have noticed, my posting went up dramatically a few weeks ago the abruptly plummeted 18 days ago to date.  That is because, yet again, my stupid password escaped its cage.  I thought I had locked up nice and tight in in the Password Log-In box, but it somehow, craftily, switched itself with a password strikingly similar to itself.  Try to understand that confusingly insane sentence, yeah?  Anyways, the WordPress.com password replacement system works in mystical ways that no mortal can possibly comprehend.  When I say that, I mean the password changing system is confusingly  with archaic instructions which only Stephen Hawking could decipher.  (Note: Stephen Hawking is my hero.)  But finally, after a massive quest for the truth, I finally got a new password.  One that I can remember.  So, yay!  I can finally get this raging inferno of creativity out of my head.  That’s all. Just thought you readers should know.

Published in: on May 18, 2010 at 6:25 pm  Leave a Comment  

I’ve found a sport I might actually be decent at!

It was P.E.  Fourth Period. I was finishing up warm-up’s, bored out of my mind, when Mr. Corwin, the P.E. teacher, announced what we would be “playing” today in P.E. (I put playing in quotes because half the class openly refuses to participate, and 2/3 of the remaining half just poke around. Sad to admit, but I’m all too often a member of the second group.) The sport was soccer. At first, I was “unenthusiastic.” However, it occured to me that I really am okay at soccer. I have next to no training, the last time I seriously played being around 8 years ago.  But I do have the next best thing: speed, a talent of sorts, and incredibly long legs. We divided up into our teams, and I was with a friend of mine named Ally. We kicked a** (those asterisks were my mom’s choice) and took names, seriously. We won, but I didn’t truly care about the victory . I was impressed that I only awkwardly flailed my legs a few times, didn’t fall down ONCE, and made a few goals (See? I even know the terminology). Such news is incredibly encouraging for awkward old me.

Allow me to explain to you why it is such big news that I found a sport I’m at least semi-decent at. I have been stuck in what many call the “awkward stage” for, (on April 22nd) 13 years, 7 months. My age, coincidentally. When I was little, my mom signed me up for gymnastic lessons because I couldn’t, honestly COULD NOT, climb play structure ladders. My parents have video tapes (that’s how old I am) of me plodding around in big, red, dumpy sweats on the soccer field. In more current times I hit my head, trip, and even fall over on a regular basis. So the discovery of an activity that requires a reasonable amount of coordination I do fine at is a cause for celebration indeed. I’m thinking about dropping subtle hints to my parents for a congratulatory gift, which hopefully means 50 dollars. I don’t think it’s very likely though.

In the few times my class has played P.E. since I started this specific post, I have consistently kept up with the best players on my team, so I know my sudden burst of soccer finesse isn’t just a fluke. At least, I really really hope I’m as filled with potential as I think I am, because soccer practice starts this Monday and I don’t want to embarrass myself. Bye bye now.

Published in: on April 22, 2010 at 3:14 am  Comments (1)  

Math is great and all, but no Math is REEAAALLY great

As you might have guessed by now, I am what many consider to be a child prodigy.  No, I can’t play an instrument or decipher Homer in archaic Greek.  However, I can read a book in a matter of hours, I can smart-ass your socks off, and do MATH.  Yes, you heard me correctly.  The dreaded, hated, necessary class for graduation of middle and high school.  I’m 2 years ahead of all but 5 of my mathlete colleagues.  One of which is a year ahead of me, even.  Hm.  He might eventually have to disappear…

Anyways.  Last year, when I was a seventh grader, I was in the single algebra class in my school.  I had a tough time, what with all of the quadratics, exponents, binomials and reverse calculations and such.  I had to make a point of studying with Maddy, or we both likely would begin to fail.  However much opposition we received from our math text, Maddy and I passed with straight A’s.  We moved on to dum dum duuuum…. GEOMETRY.  AT THE HIGH SCHOOL.  WITH ACTUAL SOPHMORES AND SOME JUNIORS.  Needless to say, for the first week or so I was pretty sure I was going to be killed by some overly aggressive senior.  Regardless of what I thought, Maddy and I survived our first trimester at the high school.  Our new math class was tough.  For one, we were going by sophmore work standards.  For another, the class was a whole 70 minutes long, as opposed to 45.  Math was tough.

However, I enjoyed myself in math.  After the first week of abject terror, of course.  Math is what I excel at.  Plus, I love shapes.  Geometry and shapes go hand in hand.  The formulas I could memorize and learn to apply.  By the end of the trimester I had a very solid A.  Now, we had the option of going straight back to math with no break for second trimester (Geometry is a now a 2 trimester class, you see)  or we could take a break for a trimester and go back 3rd trimester.  I wanted to go back 2nd and eventually converted Maddy to my mindset.  I had a variety of good reasons for my decision.  One, we wouldn’t forget anything.  Two, we wouldn’t have math for 10 or 11 weeks at the end of the middle school year.  Three, we wouldn’t have to keep our big dumpy math textbooks in our locker for the end of the year.  However, most importantly, was reason 2.  No.  Math. At first, the end of 2nd trimester seemed like an impossibly distant dream that would kill us in the attempt to reach it.  But Maddy and I made it!  Finals came and passed, with us A-(ing? cing?) them and then, it was done.  In the void math had filled, Maddy and I got a third survey class!  Wood shop, in fact.

Shop is eeeeeaaaassssssyyy.  So easy, I don’t know why I even come to school before lunch.  My schedule is now the following:  first period is got book; second period is shop; third period is Physical Education (P.E.); fourth period I’m a teacher assistant for P.E.  Can you believe it?  I can’t.  It almost seems unfair that my mornings are so facile.  The shop teacher plays no attention to the classroom behavior.  I’ve had breakfast 2 or 3 times already in the 3 weeks I’ve had the class.  The rest of my year is just going to glide on by.  WEELP, gotta go do the homework I DON’T have now!  *laughs manically* Bye!

Published in: on April 22, 2010 at 2:41 am  Comments (1)  

I hate my hair.

I struggle with my hair.  I really do.  Every morning, I would get up, see my hair was a horrible bed-head wreck, and sigh.  It took a lot of hair gel to tie my hair down.  (The problem was, I move around quite a bit my sleep.  You would not believe how odd my hair would look.  It was almost like I was putting it that way for a reason.)  Finally, about a year ago, I figured out that a morning shower would put my head in a much more manageable state. There is also a conflict in interests.  I love, love, longer hair.  My mom hates it.  I can’t count how many arguments we’ve gotten into over that subject.  She has always won.  Her main point of argument is, I don’t really bother to actually fix my hair.  Oh well.  She totally has me there.  In the 6th grade, she finally let me grow my hair out.  Train-WRECK.  Problem was, I hadn’t grown my hair out then for looks.  I had a huge mole on the side of my head.  It was incredibly dark, noticeable, and embarrassing.   As long as it was covered up, I didn’t care.  Mom did.  My hair was returned to its pitifully short state.  I did eventually get the mole removed.  It was possibly cancerous, so bye bye, evil mole.  Except not enough was removed the first time, so I had to go back.  It was horrible.  But, that is over now.  However, I still want long hair.

I am now quite a bit more responsible.  I am sure that I can handle the incredible responsibly of long hair now.  My mom still doesn’t trust me, however.  I think that she takes her kids as direct reflections of herself.  Sometimes, when we are having our bi-monthly argument over hair, I ask her, “If you like short hair so much, then why don’t you shave your own head?”  That usually signals the end of the argument.  Even though the comment is a blatant stab at disrespect, I feel that it is also a very valid point.  Apparently she does too, because then she either says, “We’ve gone over this before,” “Go upstairs,” or  ”Do you want me to completely shave your head with Clark’s butt clipppers?” (Those are the clippers she uses to trim the hair on my dog’s butt when it gets too long.)  I use the “Shave your own head” comment when it is obvious there’s no chance of me winning the argument.  It causes a sort of tie between us.

I said before that Mom sees her kids as direct reflections of herself.  Not just reflections of her parenting, but as reflections of her very soul. Mom sees long hair as very untidy, messy, disorderly, and possibly the sign of a drug dealer.  Maybe.  Short hair, however, shows class, order, and the sign of the pinnacle of humanity.  And yet, she can talk about how “cute” she thinks Zac Efron is without batting an eyelash!!  How can one human conceal that much burning hypocrisy?!  Her final point is, “You look so much cuter with short hair.”  HOW WOULD SHE KNOW THAT!?  I HAVE NEVER, EVER HAD LONG HAIR!!!!!

Mom tries to tell me about how cute and neat I look with short hair, and how I would just look like some middle school kid. Uh, I would rather look like a middle schooler than an Air Force graduate.  I said before that I hate my hair.  Let me correct myself.  I hate my hair short.  When your hair is short, there is just so little you can do with it.  Long hair for guys really only has one style, unless you’re interested in putting it in a ponytail.  Do you have any idea how simple it would be to just wash and brush my hair in the morning instead of having to mess around with hair gel?  I love my hair color just fine.  I really would like to see it longer.  And if I hated it, I would get it all cut off and never complain about the length again.  Something that really bothered me, however, is that this summer, when my brother asked to grow his hair out, he immediately got a yes!  He didn’t need years of petitioning, just his title of Best Boy.  His hair was worse than mine, yet he still has it long.  Bryan’s hair is very stiff.  He had an afro.  An afro composed of the finest, softest (to the touch, that is), goldenest hair imaginable.  Stupid Best Boy.  When school started again, he had to start fixing his hair.  He just gelled it all down and to the side, making a comb-over.  Yet, his hair is still quite long.  I just burn with the injustice of it all.

At this point, I really have no idea how to get the prize I have yearned for for so long.  Debates, arguments, and being a good little boy hasn’t worked.  I have been flawless-ish in my behavior all of my life, but that has gotten me nowhere.  I don’t know what to do.  I would rather not “act out,” so that’s off the list.  The only thing I can do is chain myself to the fridge every time we go get hair cuts.  *Sigh*  If you get any ideas for swaying my mom’s opinion, leave them in the comments box.  Until then, I will be sadly staring at my reflection in the mirror.  Bye.

Published in: on April 15, 2010 at 1:06 am  Comments (3)  

Passwords are incredibly inconvenient

You are probably wondering why I haven’t updated my blog or added any new posts in such a long time.  It was partially because of school and a computer game called Spore, but mostly it was because I forgot my password.  User name is easy.  It’s my name.  If you forgot your user name, you need some help.  Back to the password.  You always know when you’ve forgotten.  The cursor sits blinking in the password box, and you sit there, staring blankly at the screen.  You try anyways.  ”Incorrect password.”  [I really hate it when it says "incorrect user name or password."  If it would just tell me which one it was!]  Then, different variations of the first attempted password are tried.  Finally, we have to stop and think, because eventually the computer will say that the maximum amount of password tries had been reached, and you’re blocked for a day.  If that happens, all of the previously wrong passwords are forgotten, and you’re blocked again for trying them  a second time.  Day three.  This time, instead of desperately trying the names of everyone you’ve ever know and the date of every event of importance, you stop and think.  It goes from”I probably chose the name of my chicken,” to “Well, I like sweet potato fries, so….”  Absolutely ridiculous.  After day five of exceding the maximum password attempt limit, you give up and vow to never blog again.  Until you realize that you’re still logged in on you’re mom’s laptop.  Pitiful, I know.

If I ever want to become famous, I really need to start remembering my password.  Number passwords……. chuh, piece of cake!  Word password, easy.  If it has to be at least seven letters, a little harder.  A password that is both letters, numbers, and at least one symbol…… *horrified screaming*  Obviously, I’m not good with them.  Otherwise, I wouldn’t have had a three month lull in blog posts. And I promise, the whole time, every day in fact, I thought of my poor blog.  I knew I should be trying to remember the password, but I was just so discouraged!  Guilty was I, for leaving you, the pitiful readers, starving for a good post.  But, I’m back now.  So don’t worry!  However, I do have to leave for school now.  However, I’ll make sure to stay logged in, or you guys will never hear from me again.  Bye now!

Published in: on December 4, 2009 at 12:00 am  Comments (2)  

The three things that make me maddest.

There are three things that make me furious beyond belief.  I hate, hate, hate, hate, hate, HATE these three things!  The earliest of which angered me in the fourth grade, and I am honestly still seething.  I will list them in the next three paragraphs. My friend Haley Corwin is involved in one of them.  She’s the only person who could possibly feel as strongly as me about this.  I will start with the least of my enemies.

#3: The Inkheart Movie.

We watched the Inkheart movie last night.  August 19th.  2009.  I will never forget that night.  I’ve read all three books in the series, and really liked them.  Not the movie.  Can you spell terrible?  I sure can.  I can also spell, “This-movie-would-be-terrible-even-to-someone-who-didn’t-read-the-book.”  The budget apparently couldn’t allow a Mo or Meggie who could read out loud particularly well, an Elinor who was built like a wardrobe, or a Capricorn who wasn’t bald and didn’t look permanently jolly.  They had time to freakin’ put strange word ruins on the people who were read imperfectly out of the book by Darius (who was certainly un-owlish looking), but they couldn’t include the escape from the sheds?  They added a stable full of creatures from books, they gave Capricorn a castle, and added the Wizard of Oz tornado, but couldn’t seem to include when Meggie discovered her power, which actually happened?!?  This movie made me so mad because it was 2 hours of unnecessary and confusing add-ons, and they took out a huge amount of important events.  Plus it was really corny.

`                                                                                           #2: The Charlie Bone book.

It was the summer between the 3rd and 4th grade.  There was some read-ten-books-and-get-a-prize thing going on.  Nobody told me it was another book.  But, I digress.  One book my mom got me was…. *hissing voice* CHARLIE BONE. Supposedly, if you liked Harry Potter, you would like Charlie Bone.  What they forgot to mention was if you liked Harry Potter, and were looking for a complete copy right violation that wasn’t even good, THEN you’d like Charlie Bone.  I hate Charlie Bone.  His Dad was some quidditch-er, piano, prodigy, and Charlie was too.  I believe he had a scar.  Some mysterious guy had 3 bright red, yellow, and orange cats, kind of like a pheonix.

My Aunt Mindy wrote an unpublished book while she was working (she always finished really quickly), as a sort of personnel project.  I want her to get it published and become a famous author.  Then, she can contact J.K. Rowling, and she can sue the probably copy-righted pants off of the Charlie Bone writer.

#3: The Eragon Movie

I love the Eragon series.  I really do.  It embodies everything I love: magic, mythical creatures, and *giggle* elves, specifically Arya.  But the movie….  A-b-s-o-l-u-t-e  heartbreak.  When we found out that the our favorite book, Eragon, was being made into a movie, my friend Haley Corwin and I were SO EXCITED.  How could something so pure and good like Eragon possibly be corrupted by some film maker?  Weelll, apparently, Mr. Dream-crushing director had a part time job as a butcher, because that movie was hacked!  What the profanity was that guy thinking?!?

First of all, what happened to the Urgals?  They are a key component to the books.  They made the Ra’zac into freakin’ insect swarms, with little to no resemblence of their true forms.  Not only that, but they commited the unforgiveable evil of killing not one but both of them off, even though technically this was the first book.

Another atrocity that was commited is they cut Solembum the werecat.  And Angela the herbalist, who saved both Arya and Eragon’s life.  You might be thinking, “Get over it.  They have to cut some things.”  Yes, I know that.  But they cut Tronjheim, City of The Dwarves.  GGGGGRRRRRR!!!!!!!!!!!!!!  That means they also cut Isidar Mithrin, the Star Rose!  Gosh, that movie made me mad.  They had to time to put the Shade, Durza, on a huge smoke bat, but they couldn’t kill Brom the right way.

After the movie, neither Haley or I could talk.  I didn’t want to launch into an enraged monologue and insult Haley, and since she wasn’t talking either, I figured the damage was already done.  But she actually felt the same way.  The monologue was launched.

*Sigh*  Oh well.  Point is, don’t ever come to my house to engage in a pro-Charlie Bone discussion.  I will destroy you personally.

Published in: on August 26, 2009 at 3:18 pm  Comments (5)  

Why I always feel guilty when baby sitting my Aunt’s kids.

I’m at an age now where I can watch children without the threat of accidentally burning the house down.  I’m also a bit of a homebody, so there’s no threat of any secret parties, an added bonus for my employers.  For now, my main and for the most part only client is my Aunt Mindy.  She has two kids, Avery and Jack.  Or, if you’ve been reading Mindy’s blog, the bike spoke rider and the punishment.  The first time I baby sat, ever, I discovered some of the perks.  For one, the freezer is your oyster, and the contents within, the pearl.  It rocks when there is an Xbox, and when Avery (thank God) knows how to set it up.  Finally, the very expensive jewel in the crown of baby sitting: bedtime!!!

Bedtime is really like the end-of-shift for baby sitters.  You can play the Xbox uninterrupted, and don’t need to worry about the questioning looks you receive when you back out of the freezer, ice cream filled bowl in hand.  Some dishonest baby sitters might smudge the bedtime an hour or two, sending the kids to bed early.  I would never dream of doing something so devious as that, even when the 6 year old wants another round of Chutes & Ladders, and Mr. 2 year old realized with sobbing horror that mom is gone.  Okay, maybe once or twice bedtime was smudged a little for the young one, but never for Avery!

I might be a little lazy when I baby sit.  Avery is mostly gone, playing with our cousin Sophie or some neighborhood friend.  When she is home, she helps me a ton with Jack, and entertains herself.  When she wants me to play with her, she isn’t creepy or bossy.  She just quietly plays along.  Jack is a little more difficult.  Most toys will only hold him for so long.  He likes his storybooks read multiple times, but that isn’t bad, because I like reading and he’ll just point out random pages, never the whole book.  I know that he isn’t entertained anymore because he will start walking around the house saying, “Momma?”  The smoke before the fire, I suppose.  Most of the time, I play with them outside and bring out board games.  Sometimes though, I’m surprised that I’m not putting Jack in the bath tub, so I don’t have to change any diapers.

The first time I baby sat, I had my first little bout of guilt.  For one, their garage freezer was STUFFED with ice cream bars, and I had, like, um, 3?  I, uh, can’t remember, especially since Aunt Mindy and my mom will be reading this.  None of the ice cream cost them a penny, though.  My Grandpa was helping tear down a gas station, and saved a huge garbage bag of the bars for us.  I was guilty because I only let the kids have one or two, while I periodically snuck out to the garage to snark one down when they thought I was in the bathroom.  I also found their chocolate covered macadamia nuts in the pantry.  I was weak.  When the kids were in bed, I burned with shame as I ate my who-knows-what-number ice cream bar.  It wasn’t as bad as it could have been, though.

Aunt Mindy swore up and down that Jack would not poop.  Except Jack didn’t get the memo.  It wasn’t pretty. I still felt kind of bad, though.  Until Avery had a night terror.  A night terror is like a mix between sleep walking and a nightmare.  You wake up, but you don’t wake up from the nightmare.  It’s like your mind is blanking out what your eyes are seeing and replaces it with the nightmare.  I was just sitting at the table, probably eating an ice cream bar, when I heard honest-to-God shrieking. At first I thought Jack had woken up and the baby monitor made him sound louder than he really was.  I held fast to that theory until I went to turn the monitor down.  Not only was it silent, I’m not even sure I had the other one on.  I ran into Avery’s room to see her with her eyes wide open, staring at some point on the ceiling, pointing steadily yet shakily at it.  I ran to her bed, eyes half turned to the ceiling.  I couldn’t get her to respond, but I eventually got her to sit up. When she wouldn’t talk or even notice me, I grew concerned.  The senseless mumbling didn’t help.  I carried her to the living room couch, which was kind of difficult since I was making a cross with my fingers and watching the ceiling at the same time.  When Aunt Mindy got home, I sort of babbled what happened in some high-octave scared voice.  It probably sounded like I thought Avery had seen a demon while at the same time I was losing my mind.  I might of cracked if she hadn’t come home only about ten minutes later.  The moral of this story is, your aunt will pay you a bit more than necessary if her daughter scared you into buying holy water off of the Internet.

Published in: on August 21, 2009 at 12:54 am  Comments (4)  

Matt Selby, on: Why It’s So Hard To Look Tough Walking My Dog.

Dog walking is one of the great American past time.  For the people who have dogs, I guess.  I love walking my dog.  We live near a dog park, so I walk him often.  Luckily, no one really goes there, so except for the homeless and occasional making out teenagers, it’s pretty quiet.  I hate running into people there who have dogs, though.  For one thing, my dog is sure he’s the toughest canine on the Earth.  Apparently, he thinks he’s a werewolf. He isn’t.  He’s a shitzu-poodle. With big foofie ears and a little pom-pom tail.  His hair is long, curly, and black, and his back legs skip on every third step.  What he considers a threatening bark, I call a deepish yip.  I hate running into people with dogs because he turns into Mr. Short and Aggressive.  Until the other dog responds.  Then he suddenly feels rather curious, and the area behind me holds a lot of interest for him.

The most embarrassing time to walk him is after he goes to the groomer.  If the words, “He looks like a girl” rang true before, why, they’re gospel now.  He loses all of the shaggy-ness that might have hinted towards him being male.  The groomer (who we call “The Pretty Lady”) shaves his sides, fluffs his ears, fluffs his tail, too, and wa la, you have an effectively ladyfied poodle!

It really wouldn’t be as bad if he really was female.  I see someone, say a girl I know from class, and the dialogue goes something like this:

Girl: “Ah, you’re dog is so cute!”

Me: “Oh, thanks.”

Girl: “What kind of dog is it?”

Me: “Shitzuh-poodle.”

(This is where the awkward part starts.)

Girl: “What’s her name?”

Me: *shuffling uncomfortably* “Well, you see, his name is Clark. He’s a boy.”

At that point, they give me a look that means, “Sicko.”  In some cases, the person I’m talking to is particularly “thick,” and they just can’t get it is that Clark’s a boy.  If they’re older, I just let it slide.  Otherwise, I just lift Clark up with his legs in the air.  That’s what you would call a “quick fix.”

We got Clark in the first place as a guard dog.  I’m afraid though that if you have the words, “shitzu” or “poodle” in your name, you just aren’t cut out for guard work.  When I was in the fourth grade, my mom read an article about how robbers were funelled towards houses without dogs because otherwise, the owners of houses with dogs would call the police when their dogs woke them up.  So mom was stricken with the paranoia that every time a dog barked, some villain drew closer to our house.  She didn’t want a big dog, though.  The dog she was looking for would have to be smaller, a good lap dog, friendly and nice to its family, vicious and heartless to suspicious people, and very intelligent.  (Poodles are one of the smartest dogs.)  Well, I guess that Clark and Lewis missed the memo on that last one.

My mom found out about him in the newspaper.  After a few weeks, when Clark was finally old enough to be away from his mother, we would get him.  (My aunt Mindy would also get a dog.  Mom spread the paranoia to her, along with the article.)  For names, Mom wanted to name them after famous people.  My class was doing a unit on Lewis and Clark, then explorers, now my dog and his brother’s namesake.

Finally, we got Clark.  He proved to be the least threatening, friendliest, dumbest little dog I’ve personally ever met.  He will do this thing that we call “heebies,” which involves him either grabbing a sock or one of his toys and running around our table, through my dad’s office, around our living room, and stopping behind our coffe table.  Until one of us takes a step in his direction.  Then he’s back on his heebies route.  His only vicious barks are towards friends and family, and only because he’s so excited to see them.  Once, some over-condident salesman actually stepped into our house uninvited.  Our guard responded to that by actually putting his head in the guy’s hand.  In his credit though, at night, he sleeps on the stairs if someone isn’t home.  He actually waits for them.  Other times though, he just patrols until someone goes to bed.  That signals the end of his shift.

Even though Clark’s looks really girly, and he’s too prissy to sleep on the ground without a pillow, he’s a really great dog.  He’s a super lovyn little guy.  I would trade dumb and affectionate for smart and aggressive anyday.

Published in: on August 15, 2009 at 1:37 am  Comments (5)  

Allow me to clarify my nerdiness.

If you’ve read my first post and you’re of average intelligence, you will have realized I consider myself “nerdy.”  And in a way, I really am.  (But there’s hope for me.  No true nerd would start any sentence with “and” or “but.”  Or use as many quotation marks.)  But my nerdy is not the stereotypical nerdy kid reading their dictionary and math book.  And nerdy is NOT geeky.  Geeky is bringing a doctor’s note to P.E. to avoid running the mile, and going into the library during lunch break to use the computers. Geeky is also buying cheat books at the book fair, and talking fanatically about World of Warfare.  (If you noticed that I seem kind of disliking of geeks, it’s because even nerds need something to despise, social-pyramid wise.)  I’m not sure what this next thing is, but I also do NOT make paper booklets in class and draw swords in it. “This is the sword of the Cursed Warlock, neeyuh neeyuh neeyuh!” You might think I’m kidding, but I have had contact with a kid who did that.

I am nerdy because I am what I consider a “prodigy” at math.  Not quite Einstein, but at least better than my mom.  I love to read, and tend to do nothing but, if I like the book. I finished the 7th Harry Potter in 2 and a half days, if that’s anything for you to judge by.  I like to use words like “maelstrom,” “malevolence,” and “permeate.”  My favorite word is debacle. All of these things should have cast me into the socially chaotic pit of nerd long ago.  The only things that saved me were my sense of humor, height, and slight athleticism from running- oh, sorry, now it’s swimming.

While on the topic of nerdiness, I should explain my blog’s title. It’s ironic I am so condescending because the common belief is the nerdy kids should just quietly lay down in front of those above them.  I, however, am openly scornful of the “jocks,” per se, and the popular.  That is my way of combating the belief of nerdy obedience.  I can guarantee you, I am doing no big kid’s homework for him.

There are a few who are actually pretty nice people, such as my friend Maddy. The same Maddy, in fact, who commented on my first post.  There are also several guys who are pretty cool, despite our social differences.  The thing about these people that I think is cool is they aren’t snobby and out-of-reach to people.  They just try to be friendly, but the thing that gives them big points in my book is they don’t support their friends’ attitudes towards others.

Well, I’m going to log off now. I’m tired of my mom’s snide comments on my typing skills, and I want to go outside. Bye!

Published in: on August 10, 2009 at 5:03 pm  Comments (4)  
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.