Thursday, February 28, 2008
Memories in the snow blog 5
Where Home is... blog 4
Thinking about the differences between what makes a home and what makes a house has me thinking of my childhood home. It is an old house in a small town. It has been in this small town since the town's been founded. The house has white siding that is trying to fall off and green shutters that are now brown from neglect. Looking from the side street you see the backyard and the garage. Scanning the backyard you can see a huge elm tree that would take three full people to wrap around its trunk. You would also see a big rose bush that will be full of large red roses in the summer. As you continue to look you see a one car garage that is the same color as the house with two large green doors that are man gates. The doors can stand up to anything, even cars running through them; they are fully functional but are ugly as sin. You can see the back door that leads into the kitchen. Everyone that knows my family walks in through the back door never the front door. Going inside you see where my family always seemed to center. When I walk into that room now and breathe in deep, I smell all the old scents and hear all the laughter from the giant family of six that used to dwell there.
Just thinking of my dad’s house makes me very nostalgic. I can only really think of all the Christmas mornings where we sat at the top of the stairs, waiting for mom and dad to wake up, trying to see our presents. I remember having to share a room with my siblings because there just wasn’t quite enough room for us all. I remember the fights my brother and I got into over nothing. I remember chasing the panther of a cat and then being chased by him in return. I remember all of this so clearly and I long for the past and for simpler times. I long for when my parents weren’t separated, when my brother wasn’t over in Japan, and when I could just be carefree. But then I look around me now and I realize that I don’t need those things. I now have a place I call home with MY family, and I am going to start those memories with them.
My House
My house was similar to the cold feeling. The house was a manufactured ranch style home. It was very plain. My mother only went outside when it was absolutely necessary. There were no flowers or perfect little vegetational arrangements at my house. My house was a boring looking house with white siding and black shutters. The structure was just as boring as the color. A rectangle with a triangle sitting on top of the house.
I recall being jealous of the other houses in my neighborhood. It was an older neighborhood for my little town, but new houses were springing up all the time. Beautiful house built with bricks and high ceilings. My favorite house had a large wrap around porch and gingerbread trim around the top. Why couldn't we live there?
Although we lived in town our house sat on three lots. There were no houses to the left or the right. This made my house look smaller than others in the neighborhood. Some people might like having all that space but, I only saw it as more grass for my brothers to mow and more sticks and walnuts for my sister and I to pick up.
We had a deck on the back of our house, but it was a waste of lumber as far as I was concerned. We had a table on the deck, but no one ever stepped foot on it unless we were sneaking out for the night. I wished my family would have sat and talked or anything on the deck. I felt sorry for it always having to be alone.
The inside of my house was about as inviting as the outside. My mother was boring with the colors of the inside as well. Mauve and country blue was pasted all over the house. The manufacturing company had offered many different colors and designs. I remember how I wanted her to choose something different for every room,but I should have known it would be droll and boring. The front room was the first room you see when you walk in. It was the biggest room in the house. It was kept company by my mother and her second husband. Like the dining room where my siblings and I ate alone, the house had one feature sat up for a reason. The master suite and our bed rooms were on opposite ends of the house.
Seven Again
My First Philosophy Lesson
my childhood home
This house has so many memories and emotions for me. I loved the fact that my brothers and I always had playmates. There were a lot of kids that lived on my street, and near my street. We were always outside playing. We were the only house that had a pool, so there were always kids over at our house. My stepmother babysat a bunch of little kids so we “big” kids would hide outside with the other kids that we played with. I think besides myself there were only two other girls, the rest were all boys. The other girls and I were little tomboys running around. We would play football, go fishing for crawdads, play cops and robbers, and other silly boy-type games. We would spend hours in the pool. My stepmother had to set time limits because we would sleep in the pool if she let us. From the between the time when we woke up and when we went to bed, minus the times we were eating and whatnot, we would stay in the pool. We had a big deck on the first story and the second story of the house. You wouldn’t know this now, but my dad worked in construction as an electrician and was very good with his hands. He built the deck by himself while we kids would try to help, but I think we actually just got in the way.
We had a pretty good sized backyard, especially for living in Indy. The yard was about an acre and I think we used every inch of it. Besides the pool being back there, we also had a big wooden play set thing. It had a slide and the top was like a fort. The bottom of the “fort” had a sandbox. There was a rope for us to climb on, and to hurt ourselves. The top of the “fort” had a yellow tarp to help protect from the weather and sun. There was also a shed in the yard. The shed was used for storage, but there wasn’t much in there. My brothers and I took it upon ourselves to turn it into a clubhouse. I guess we decided that having must of the yard wasn’t good enough. My brothers would move the stuff in the shed to make room for us to move around, and I would clean. Have you ever tried to sweep dirt off of a dirt floor? Let me tell you it is impossible. But still, everyday after school we would be out there. One time, while we were taking a break, we started to dig a hole. Our plan was to get to China. I think we got about a foot or two deep and we ran into really hard clay or something, and we couldn’t dig any further.
I could go on forever about the house that I grew up in. A couple of years ago a tornado went down the street and a bunch of houses were destroyed. The house I lived in was totally missed by the tornado though. The house itself wasn’t that important to me. In fact, I drove by the house a month ago and even though the house still pretty much looks the same, I don’t get the same vibe as I used to when driving down the street. Now all I have are the memories that I keep close to my heart.
3. My Toy Room
When I was eight years old my mom and step dad told me I was going to be a big sister the following spring. It was very excited to be a big sister and very hopeful the baby would be a girl. I expected a lot of things would change with a baby in the house but I did not dawn on me that I wouldn’t be able to keep my play room. At first, I was obnoxious about having to sacrifice my toy room. I could not fathom having to cram my favorite toys in a small toy box to keep in my room. There were many toys I was not allowed to keep. The giant chalkboard was one of them, along with the play kitchen. They were just too big to have in my room. My mother and I went through my toys one by one. I surprised myself at how easily it was for me to sort through them, discarding some, and giving many to charity. I have to tell you though the bribe I received made it very easy. My mother told me if I would not throw a fit about not keeping the toys they would get a TV for my room.
I immediately changed my tune about the toys. Almost instantly I was too big for toys. It seemed in the matter of one line spoken from my mother I had grown in years. I was definitely big enough to take care of my own TV. I was going to be a big sister after all. I didn’t need toys now, I would be busy taking care of my younger brother or sister or watching my new TV. My world shrank to those two options as if I would never want to pick up a Barbie Doll again, or my giant chalkboard would not be missed when the neighbor kids came in to play school if it was raining.
When my little brother was born I did stay busy helping and I took pride in being the big sister. I am sure I had my moments at times about not having my toy room, but being the spoiled brat I was I am cure my parents gave me something to keep my mind off of it.
My wonderful home! Blog 8
Childhood Home
When it first started out it was nothing more then molded walls and small pools of water with shattered tiles and nails all across the floor. There was no real lighting save for the lamps I brought down, and the old dusted shelves in the adjacent room were coated in dust and web. All of this visible through a wall that had quite literally rotted into the floor. A single pillar in the center of the room manages to hold the heating ducts up from the floor and looked as if it was the only thing keeping the floor above from coming down.
Off to the side of the room was an old pool table who's matted playing area and worn pockets made the game a little more entertaining when I needed a distraction. This brings to mind the old cracked pool balls that I used to play with. Whenever my little sister got brave enough to come into the bomb shelter, as I jokingly called it way back when, we would usually just talk or toss chips of old broken tiles across the room.
One Christmas that all changed, and while me and my sister were gone at our Grandpa's for several weeks my mother and father were busy hiring contractors, painters and designers. On Christmas when we returned we had come to see a surprise, my sanctuary had been drastically changed. A new ceiling was now in place with lights that lit the room up spectacularly. The floor was now a single color tile and spanned the entire room. The walls separating the two rooms from each other suddenly had a fresh coat of paint and a reinforced structure to go with the new basement. The pool table whose cracks and old finish had been revamped with new carpeting and pockets and even a stamp on the end of it declaring it as our own.
While the rest of the family celebrated the new entertainment room I became worried that I had lost my hideaway from the world, that I would find no peace anymore within the darkness. I had no need to fear, for today while I wait to find my own home, in and of itself my hideaway, I am alone. The basement with all its fresh paint, lights, mirrors, sofa, chairs, tables, TVs, Pianos, the pool table, and weight bench is all mine once more. No one comes down into it anymore and I am alone, save for the knock of my sister at the door once in a years time. I sit down here and work, writing and designing, planning and building for my future in my own way, away from all the distractions that hunger for other's attentions. I sit here in my sanctuary able to be free of mind and spirit and not have to worry about the thoughts and deeds of others. This is my childhood home.
My Home as a child
The inside of the house was decorated very nicely. I remember that our kitchen had hard wood floors, the walls were tan and bordered by country apples. The kitchen cabinets matched the floor almost exact. Everything in our kitchen was done in country scenes and apples. I think this was kind of a fad a few years back. I had my own room. It wasn't big, but I liked the idea of getting away from my younger sisters. The two of them shared a much larger room.
Our house was located on the out skirts of Indianapolis in a small, but crowded neighborhood. We had neighbors all around us. Ones behind us, in front of us, and on both sides of us. My favorite neighbor was Ed. He was an older man and had two big dogs that I liked to play with . I loved playing with his dogs because I had always wanted one of my own, but my parents wouldn't ever let me get one. I remember that Ed used to always bring my sisters and I box turtles and frogs. I have no idea why this amused us, but it did. The funniest memory that I have about playing with the turtles is when my younger sister, Brittany, kissed it and it bit her top lip. She was screaming and the turtle wouldn't let go of her lip. When it did finally fall off she had a triangular shaped mark on her top lip.
I loved living in a neighborhood because I always had other kids to play with. I used to go play baseball or whatever kind of game we wanted to with some of the neighborhood kids that were around my age at the time. Most of them were boys, but it was still a good time. I used to go on bike rides through my neighbor hood and I remember learning to ride my bike at the elementary school nearby.
When my parents told me that we were moving to the country I was devastated. I loved living in the city. I was a total city girl and now I was being forced to live out in the boonies. When we first moved out this way I absolutely hated it because I missed everything about out old house. My friends, my school, and most of all our house. Now that I have lived in the country for five years I don't think I could ever live in a city again. Its weird to me that I went from hating the country to absolutely loving it.
Monday, February 25, 2008
Roy Hoffman Essay
There have been a couple of times that I have almost bought a journal to carry in my bag or purse in case there was that one time that I would need it. However, when I look at them I always think to myself the last thing I need is something else to put in my purse, so I put the journal back on the shelf and force myself to walk away. Honestly, the only reason I really want the journal is because I think it is cute, which I know is a very “typical girl” response.
I never have been one to keep a journal. I am not religious at making entries and sometimes it is a month before I write in it again. Then I have so much to put down on paper that I feel I can’t get it written down fast enough, or after a couple of pages I get the “who cares” attitude and just quit. Then my arm and hand always starts to cramp about that point, which is not comfortable at all. Roy Hoffman wrote in his essay that by reading back through his journal entries that he felt he was meeting someone else, like a younger brother. I really liked how he wrote that because I never saw it that way. Whenever I would make journal entry I would read the previous one and it was indeed like reading a story about me or something. By reading this essay it reminded me of something I did in school once.
When I was in seventh grade we made a little time capsule thing. Everyone filled out this paper that asked us what our favorite song was, who was our best friend, what was the fashion trend of that year, and so forth. We also included notes, pictures, drawings and whatever else we wanted to put in there. The teachers put them back in our files or something to hold on to then for us. When we graduated from high school they gave them back to us. To be honest, I had completely forgotten about the project. When I opened the package I was so surprised. Just my handwriting had changed so much that I couldn’t even recognize it. I couldn’t believe how much I had changed in just four years. My favorite song had changed, of course, and even my best friend was different.
After reading this essay I think I will get a small journal to carry with me so I can record my thoughts and observations, and look back at them at a later time and see how much I have grown and improved, whether it be just my writing or my hairstyle.
Thursday, February 14, 2008
Keen Eye
Though from those warm images no life resonates, no hope that the dead plants within will suddenly spring back to their former glory. The pot much like the plants within it, is cold to the touch. They just sit in there, limp with their long dried up leaves hanging over the lip of the pot like an octopuses’ dead tendrils. Even when the wind blows across them there is no life, no movement, not a single sign of hope.
The way the plant is treated isn't much better, what with the half smoked cigarettes and the chewed bubblegum littering its soil. It just seems to make this damned wind even colder then it had been before. The thing looks so depressing and now looking about there isn't much else that would bring any looks of warmth save for the brushed aluminum doors that I am resting against.
Perhaps it will soon be time to go inside. Maybe I should say something about getting the college some evergreens to make the entrance feel more welcoming during the winter season. In fact I think it would really make the place look a little more appealing to be in. College may be far different from High School but damned if this particular building doesn't try its hardest to make it more depressing.
My Observation! Blog 10
My Observation
When I look at the horse trailer suspended in the air it brings me back to the times me and my family shared. All the times we spent together going to different horse camps in the middle of the summer. I can just smell the camp fire and the horses. Looking at the trailer sends me back into time. The time when there were no worries and everything was just a game. I wish that I still lived in those years. Although I'm not old by any means, there's nothing like child hood memories. My sisters and I would all tell scary stories before we went to bed. We usually ended up scaring ourselves and not being able to go bed. Every noise we heard from frogs, to branches breaking in the woods sent us running to our parents even though we all knew there was nothing really there.
observation of John Deere
Observation is something we do everyday, however, most people probably don’t take the time to “really see” what they are looking at. We had observation time in class and we had to go out in the freezing cold and observe any object we wanted. As I stood outside watching rings of smoke form from my breath, I listened to my surrounding sounds. The only things I could hear were the sounds of cars in the distance on the highway and the wind blowing. Then when I looked around I found the object I didn’t know I was looking for. What caught my eye was the John Deere sign located right outside the front doors of Ivy Tech.
I believe it to be a pretty tall sign, but that also could be because I am pretty short and everything is big to me. The smooth poles of the sign are a green metal that hold up the actual sign. A yellow profile of a deer is the main and most important part of the sign. The deer appears to be running or jumping with its front legs up in the air. Mr. Brewer asked me how many antlers the deer had, and I have no idea; I guess I didn’t look that closely. To be honest, I wasn’t right next to the sign, and I was too cold to get closer. Behind the yellow deer there is a gray background. That is the only thing on the sign that isn’t green or yellow. The rest of the sign is green. At the bottom of the sign are the words Wright Implement Company. I have no idea what that means. Is Wright the name of the person who owns the business? Does the word Implement imply that more than just John Deere tractors are sold there? The sign is really an advertisement. I don’t believe that the sign can be seen from the road though. I think the sign is pretty big, but I don’t think it is big enough to be seen over the distance to the main road.
The only other thing located next to the sign is some bushes. The bushes are brown and not very attractive at all because of the cold and bitter weather. The wind alone is enough to knock them over. The sign however does not say John Deere Tractors. The sign is popular enough that people don’t have to be told what the sign implicates, they just already know.
Even though the John Deere sign isn’t that interesting to talk about, I know that the next time I see one of those signs I will take an extra second to appreciate it.
The Air Conditioner
You might know what the air conditioner is but you probably don’t know how it actually works. Usually you will see a square or circle unit sitting up on some kind of pad. What is the pad for? The pad it sits on is the unit can sit level and not sink in the mud. As you look closer from the top; you will see a big fan through a grill looking thing. This is to draw the hot air from the coil that surrounds the entire unit. The coil consists of copper pipes running through these little aluminum fins. The coil is surrounding this black cylinder that sits in the middle on the bottom. This is called the compressor; it all starts here. A compressor is more or less like a pump. It has to different size copper pipes running out of it. The compressor pumps a gas called refrigerant through these two pipes which go inside. Each pipe takes the refrigerant in a different direction.
From the outside unit these copper lines bring refrigerant to an inside coil also known as a furnace. The gas changes into a liquid before entering the inside coil. This is where you get your cold air from.
2. Observations
Thursday, February 7, 2008
Roy Hoffman's essay blog 2
The essay that we worked on in our books was a very interesting and thoughtful essay. We used the double entry process on it, but the way I like to work is to read the whole thing and then take notes on it. The essay was about how everyone should try to keep a journal, diary or notebook with them so that they can write down how they feel or what they see at any given time.
When reading this essay the first word that popped out at me was the word notebook. The writer said he started carrying around a notebook when he and his friend started a trip to Alaska. My first thought was, what kind of notebook was it. But then I started thinking about how he started journaling so late in life. I was always told that I should keep a diary or a journal of some sort, but I could never get into it. I guess you just need the right experience to want to write out your thoughts and feelings.
So I continued on with my reading and I found a phrase that really popped out at me, the younger me. The writer was talking about looking back through his notebooks and seeing a different person then he was today, and I can relate to that. I have been out of high school for 3 years, which to some isn’t a long time; but amazingly, it is in terms of maturity and experience. No, I am not saying that I know everything now. There is no way to know everything and i wouldn't want to know everything. But i have been through a lot in the last three years that has totally put a different focus on things and i don't think like i used to. I am not as easy-going as i used to be. It is amazing how much you can change in a short amount of time.
The writer kept going on about writing out all of your experiences. He kept stressing that you should write down how you feel about pretty much everything, but i have never really been able to do that but i will try to do it every now and then. I know that it is a good way to look back and remember how you used to feel about a certain event that is now fuzzy.
There was something that the writer put in the essay that really stuck out to me. He wrote, and i quote, “honesty wilts when a parent, teacher, or a friend looms up in your imagination to discourage you from putting your true thoughts on the page.” i have personally found this to be true. That is the thing that gets in my way when i write. I always hear a voice telling me not to write this or that. When you learn to control that inner voice and to find a place where you wont be distracted; this will help anyone become a better writer.
By keeping notebooks is the last phrase that struck my mind at the end of this reading. The writer continues on and tells us to write like no one is going to look at what we wrote. He tells us that notebooks will help link us to the past if we ever look through them one rainy, cold day. I agree. I have looked at letters i have written or saved and i remember that exact day. How i felt reading the letter, or the private jokes my friends and i shared. Writing will keep your memories down so you don't forget and it will also help you in your writing process. It helps you to loosen up and just express yourself.
Wednesday, February 6, 2008
My opinion of Roy Hoffman's Journal: Blog 4
I think that Roy Hoffman started keeping a journal a little later than most people. He started this his freshman year of college. That would make him about eighteen years old. From what I have observed it seems like most people start to keep journals at young ages, not in their late teenage years. I suppose that it's never too late to do anything, unless you're dead. It's a good way for him to remind him self that he was once young. His journals remind him of the faintest details of his life ranging from a girl he had a crush on to students riding by the library on squeaky bicycles.
I don't totally agree with Hoffman's idea that every college student should keep a journal or diary. Some students don't have tome to keep a journal. I know that I barely have time for the necessities of life like working, going to school, and trying to find time to study. I do think that in the long run keeping a journal will make you a better writer. If I did keep a journal I would be able to write my true thoughts and feelings down with out being embarrassed like I would be if I told someone in person.
In my opinion Hofman kept a journal because he enjoyed to do so. Writing in his journal was something that he did as a leisure activity. If you like to write and read about your memories and things from the past then keeping a journal would be a good idea. A journal would also provide information about your life that could be passed down generation to generation. The journal would speak for you when you couldn't.
Friday, February 1, 2008
Double Entry Log
When Hoffman talked about carrying a journal around college, I thought he started doing it at such a late age range but agreed that it was a great idea. I could tell that he wanted to be a writer by writing down his surroundings, thoughts, and ideas instead of taking pictures and having to explain it to everyone that he showed. It also showed that he was sort of a sensitive person in not telling other people of his problems, but by writing them down so he could look at them later and think to himself on how he fixed it or what else he should have done.
The idea of the galumping moose and garrulous fisherman was a great idea of using an analogy to compare the world around him being full and rich with the material he needed for his journals, and notebooks. It showed that there is a lot of material around him that he could use as there are a lot of materials for the moose and fisherman to use for their everyday use.
The idea of his life being like a portrait, to me, showed the Hoffman really missed home while he was away at college. With everything that Hoffman came in contact with, reminded him of home also, and helped him get through everyday with the happy memories. Hoffman also said that he kept going each year by the previous semesters and knowing what was coming his way the next.
I agree with Hoffman all the way when he stated that, "Everyone should carry around a notebook or journal." It helps people to remember what they've come across and to have some privacy so they can dance, sing, muse, wander, perform handstands, and even cry and know that no one will ever judge them.
He also said that carrying a notebook, which I believe as well, helps your writing ability by increasing your capacity to communicate with yourself and others. You can then learn from your mistakes and fix them, so you have something to look back on for future reference.