Before you read: Ana
Moran serves as a fantastic, non-judgmental writing partner. Readers should not
take this piece of writing seriously.
The
dreaded seventh period hovers around the corner. I wish sixth period would last
forever. I guess I missed the shooting star last night though, because the bell
chimes three times, signaling for all students to continue on with their day. I
drag my feet along the hallway carpet, thinking that maybe if I can create
enough friction and then touch Ms. Serensky’s door handle, I can electrocute
myself so that I do not need to endure another day with my writing partner. I
inhale deeply and flash-forward a few months. There I stand, gazing up at the
ceiling of a brilliant hall in Harvard University, accompanied by other
teenagers able to understand the theory of quantum entanglement. I snap back to
reality and take my seat in the semi-circle. Across the room, the boy with the abnormally
large head and UNC t-shirt laughs as he makes a sexist joke. I do not think he
would laugh so hard when he hears that his fellow female classmate plans on attending Harvard next year. Ha! Such
short-sightedness. And then he walks
in. Him. How could fate turn against
me so that I must endure him for a full semester as a writing partner?
Actually, how could Ms. Serensky turn against me by pairing me up with this
oaf? I make a note to myself not to include her in my speech after winning the
Nobel Prize. He walks next to me. Goodness! I cannot become accustomed to his
height! He would give Frodo Baggins a run for his money. Lol. Good one, Ana.
He struts casually into his desk wearing a college logo t-shirt and gym shorts
with black basketball shoes. Whoa Derek! Try not to step too far out on that
limb! Maybe tomorrow he will decide on jeans…probably not though. Ms. Serensky
asks us to begin discussing a chapter from Watchmen with our writing
partners. Derek turns towards me, with concentration written on his face, preparing
for an in-depth comment, and states, “So…I really thought that Laurie was
like…super sexy.” Wow Derek, your insightfulness never seizes to amaze me. Ms.
Serensky goes around the circle, passing back in-class essays. I fold back the
corner of mine to glance at the AP Rubric score: 10+. Not bad. I sneak a quick glance
at Derek’s paper and find him grinning from ear to ear at his 5- score. Atta
boy, Frodo. Congratulations on scraping your way to a passing grade once again.
The three “dings” from the bell cause everyone in the classroom to throw their
belongings in their packs and race for the door. An innocent bystander would
think the bell acted as a fire alarm, not a normal “beep” that signaled the end
of classes. I follow in the wake of the students, eager to rush home and shower
after another day with my writing partner.
I really enjoyed reading this and now I really wonder what your version of Ana would say when I met her. Also, I really like your use of exaggeration and the inclusion of your fellow classmates enhanced the poem. Good luck with Ana for the rest of the year (just kidding, of course).
ReplyDeleteEven though you wrote this blog pretending to speak as Ana, I find your self-depreciating humor on one hand funny, but on the other hand a tad concerning. I found your creative allusion to Tolkien a tad bizarre as the height difference between you and Ana cannot truly prove comparable to that of a hobbit and a person. Finally, the "lol" added a nice, little humorous kick to an already amusing blog.
ReplyDeleteFirst of all, I sincerely hope no one ever views me this way. I found this blog extremely funny but kind of sad, as Andrew said, since you spend the majority of the blog somehow making fun of yourself. Particularly, the line "Atta boy, Frodo" reminded me of someone praising their dog. I kind of felt bad for laughing as I read the blog, but overall I found it entertaining.
ReplyDeleteAlthough most people used this blog topic as a way to jokingly mock their writing partner, you took the opportunity to turn the sarcasm and criticism on yourself. I found your hyperbolic claims and anecdotes humorous but sort of sad at the same time, as Ana pointed out in the "Atta boy, Frodo" comment.
ReplyDelete