Sunday, March 1, 2009

Final Draft Memoir

"My Paradise"

It is one of those perfect late August evenings. The sun was just setting in the horizon, giving the sky that pretty orange glow you'd want a special date to see. Friday night meant high school football in Galloway, Ohio, a suburb of Columbus ten minutes away from downtown. This place has a small town vibe to it however. The whole community is centered around these football games. and the worst part about it is to say the team is bad would be giving them too much credit. This is the west side of Columbus though, and there isn't much else to donate your pride to. We don't have a lot of big fancy buildings. There isn't any major crime, but you wouldn't guess it by the way the local kids carry themselves and the horribly drawn graffiti that inhabits the corners. Losing your virginity at 13 here isn't that big of a deal. Also, sense the team was bad, it only made the game more of a social event, because a majority of the people outside of the parent community didn't pay attention to the game. This wasn't the case for me though. I was a Westland Cougar all throughout little league, went to Westland High School all four years, and now back for the first game as a Westland Alumni. This game of football was more than a social gathering to me. I live 3 minutes away from the stadium, and could hear the announcer every home game as I walked up the street towards the stadium in middle school. Now I'm 2 weeks away from going to college, and pull up in my Cadillac Catera to an overly crowded parking lot, my 16 year old brother Garrett occupying the passenger seat. Back then we used to walk through the practice field and hop over the back fence, because this was a west side school, and the stadium reflected that, unlike the gigantic brick walls surrounding the neighboring rival Hilliard Schools stadiums. Now we walk through the front and pay our 3 dollars to get in like everybody else. There is a line as long as the Great Wall of China to get in. I take me and my brother to the front however. I used to run this school I think to myself, and I'll be damned if I have to wait in line like everybody else.


All the kids know me from the school, and all the parents know me from being on the football team last year, and everybody shows the love. My brother splits off and goes to hang with his current high school friends. We grew up in a dysfunctional family, and it showed at school. Numerous people didn't even know we were brothers. The source of the problem was we were just complete opposites. There wouldn't be 10 minutes that went between us that we didn't argue about something ridiculous. Major fights too, not the make up over dinner type. It must have been my fault. He was the most caring and friendly 6 '3 250 pound individual in the tenth grade anyone could ever meet(he was the only one this big).  Too friendly for his own good a lot of times. He turned anything into a laughing matter, even a disaster. I was the total opposite. He looked at me with a sense of pride throughout the 48 minutes of the football game though, glad to be my brother. He didn't know it, but I took a lot of pride the fact he looked up to me.

As I walk by all the turning heads, I find a nice spot on the fence to lean on with the rest of the Westland High school alumni. Memories of the past are running through my head as I witness the younger groups of kids with the green and white school colors on, trying to show all the school spirit they had. How cute I think. What they don't know is this will probably form the foundation for the rest of their lives. High school will probably be one of the greatest times of their lives. Everything is so perfect here. The problems and troubles of the world seem like they can't penetrate you. Your flying under the radar here. They need to soak up these bright lights while they still can, because they will miss it when its gone. Most of the parents graduated from this place themselves. This stadium is Mecca to this west side religion, and all of us were prophets while we resided here. I closed the chapter to this holy book on my graduation day, but I will always be a Westland Cougar. After the game all of us will find a party to go to and continue the great times we started in 6th grade. This is my paradise, and this community will never show me the ugly side of it I never knew before. Nothing can go wrong here. If only I knew how wrong I was at the time, as I turned to the field after a roar from the crowd to see those green uniforms run out onto the the middle of the field.


"The Moment That Changed a Lifetime"


A week later, August 30th, 2008, and of coarse I was planning on going to a party, or chilling with a couple of people. Didn't end up finding anything to do, so I stayed at my friend's house. It's about 1:30 am, and I call Garrett to see what he was doing. Me and him weren't doing very good lately, so I thought maybe I could go to wherever he was to chill, or at least make sure he was home. Considering the fact it was 1:30, he should have been home, because my mom makes him come home at 12. She is a very overprotective mother, but only because she cares about her children so much. She would do anything for us. Raised us almost singlehandedly because my father wasn't around much, and besides my grandmother currently dying in a hostile, we were all she had. I call. There's a dial tone, but no answer. That was strange to me, because he always answers, or at least calls back. So about an hour or two goes by, and I decide to go on home. That night it seemed more quiet than usual. It was that ill type of quiet that gives you the impression your not the only one around. There was also a fog as dense as a rainforest that hovered over the ground. Somethings wrong with tonight, but I don't know what. As I drive down deserted Broad Street to the red light, I'm debating on turning left and going to one of the usual hang out spots we all knew. He's probably there playing xbox. I make the right though, get home, go upstairs. and open his door. He's not there. It's 3:30 am.


 "He must be spending the night with wayne", I thought. My mothers already asleep. So I get all comfy in my bed, turn the lights off and start to dose off. Nobody ever knows the exact time they fall asleep. So I drift off for who knows how long, and I hear this voice in the distance. Sounded blurry, so I thought it was apart of my dream, even though I wasn't having one. I hear it again. It's saying my name. I wake up and realize it's a distressed call from my mom downstairs. She said the cops are here and to come down, you might want to hear this. So I grab my pillow for reasons I still don't know, but I think it was my unconscience mind telling me to get something you'll be able to embrace. I walk downstairs, and there are two policeman standing at the door, and one in a suit, kind of heavy set, with a thick mustache and glasses. "Is Garrett in some type of trouble, did he get caught for curfew, you'd have to call his dad about all this because he's a police officer and I don't know how to deal with any of this", my mom is rambling. "Describe your son Ma'am" She describes him, and their heads dropped to the ground with a quickness, like the floor had an answer to get out of the situation at hand. "Ma'am, do you have any pictures of Garrett" he then replies. "Well sure, right here, but what does that have to do with anything, tell me what the hells going on with my son". Those words lit a short fuse to an atom bomb ready to explode and destroy any normalness we once knew. What came next was like the secret password to open a door in hell full of demons whose purpose was to come make my mind the terrible place it is today. "Ma'am, Garrett's been murdered"


"Home Going"


I open the giant wooden church doors for my mother and the rest of my family. The red carpet below us led down a slight incline. At the end lay a beautiful blue coffin in cased by flowers all around. We are not ready to take this walk yet. This would be the hardest day of my life.  I take two deep breaths, and my father leads the way. We walk down that carpet, out into the opening of the stadium like church, tears streaming, cries escalating, surrounded by the 3,000 people that came here with the same mission as us. We are here to make sure we send Garrett Phillip Burton home right.



The Good Die Young - 2Pac

"The Perfect Family"


As if the loss of my brother wasn't enough, there is another family member issue that I am forced to struggle with. As I sit across from my 93 year old grandmother, it feels as though time has just stopped. "Where's Garrett?", she asked every time me and my mom go to visit her in the nursing home. Every time it gets harder to lie and avoid eye contact so she doesn't see the glassiness that inhabits our eyes. My grandmother had a tumor removed May 13th, 2008, and has been immobile ever sense. This was also my brother's birthday, which is weird because they were like best friends. I was more of the rebel of the family. When I say family it applies to me, my brother, my grandmother and my mom. We all lived in the same house together. I have a Dad I don't see that much, and more family that I don't even know the names of, so in reality when I think of family I used to just think of the four of us. Now we are down to three, and one is laying in her doctor predicted death bed. After the surgery she only had 6 months to live. It's the beginning of December now, and she's continuing to prove the doctors wrong. She also unknowingly intensifies the grinding of me and my mothers insides every time we go visit. It's hard lying about something big to a loved one, especially a loss. My mom couldn't tell her yet though, because we were worried that this news would be the only motivation she needed to finally leave this world after fighting for so long. Another funeral was something my mother and me could not deal with.


My mother was the strongest person I've ever known. She has an amazing personality, and her smile brightens up any room that is blessed by it. She worked as hard as she could to provide everything my family needed. Me and my brother had the best brands of any item you could think of. She took in my grandmother when she couldn't pay her bills. She took care of all our business that needed to be done, like school issues and tax reforms. All the things she did was motivated solely for the love she had for us. I was more independent than my brother was, and she recognized that and gave me my space. My brother however, was her baby boy, and he definitely played that part. And one of the worst things you could ever do to a mother is take away her baby boy. "If you find yourself at the end of the rope, tie a knot and hold on"-unknown. I've adapted the role of the knot in what's left of our family, and there isn't a day that goes buy that I don't play it. I was there holding her hand when she finally found the courage to tell my grandmother about Garrett. The phone call I give her every night from college is the only thing that picks her up from the floor from crying. I keep her going everyday, and she's the only motivation I have to keep going myself. A relationship is probably the strongest it can possibly be when survival is based on it. I guess I have the perfect family.

"Welcome to my Nightmare"

I'm back at home now, in my beloved home in Galloway, and all starts with the curling of my toes and the rubbing of my feet against each other, the anxiety in my body having no other way of expressing itself. This action never stops at night, but what will determine if I have a bad night is if that's where the anxiety stays. It doesn't though. The green lights on the cable box read 2 30 in the morning. As I lay on the cool leather of the couch, I look around my brightly lit living room to the other couch, and its emptyness. Visions from the past play in my mind of all the fun nights me and my brother had in this very room, staying up all night watching t.v. Now it is just me, in this empty, quiet room. It's starting to happen. The anxiety creeps up my legs and I have to sit up. It goes from the wiggle of my toes to a full blown leg jitter. Tears start to stream down my face and cries of sorrow escape my mouth as a rock back and forth. All the memories of a past life ripping through my brain and wrecking my present state like a tsunami. My mom is upstairs sleeping. I don't explain to her this nightly routine that I know all to well. She has enough on her plate, and to add to the constant worry about me would be selfish on my part. So each night this fear induced insomnia takes its heavy toll on me uninterrupted. Fear induced because the hour of chaos is coming up. 3 o clock is when I lost my other half. 3 o clock is the anti-hour if your religious, which is when the demons like to play. 3 o clock exactly is when I woke up screaming from the all too real nightmare three weeks before this night. I haven't slept right since. 3 o clock is when my panic attack hits its climax. When I feel tingles in my face from crying so much and the anxiety and stress is to the point that I dig my fingers into my head, wishing it would stop. I'd give anything to calm down right now, but i know this is a wish that only a genie could grant me, and there is no magic lamp in sight. Thirty minutes later this madness hits a calm. However, sadly, this is the calm before the storm.


Post traumatic stress disorder and insomnia is not the bulk of my problems. "Major depressive disorder (depression) is not just a temporary mood, and it's not a sign of personal weakness. Depression is a serious medical condition with a variety of symptoms. Emotional symptoms can include sadness, loss of interest in things you once enjoyed, feelings of guilt or worthlessness, restlessness, and trouble concentrating or making decisions. Physical symptoms can include fatigue, vague aches and pains, headaches, and changes in weight or sleep patterns. For some, depression can include thoughts of death or suicide", is the technical definition of clinical depresion. It is the script to my life at the moment, however. I go upstairs and lay in my moms bed, quietly so I don't wake her. If you want to know what clinical depression is like, imagine putting your head into a tourniquet, a turning it until it gives just enough pressure to make your brain numb. This numbness causing silent, heavy tears. Not the dramatic cry like earlier in the night. This cry starts with a knot the size of a golf ball in your throat, but this knot doesn't go away. It's a constant pressure, like a hand with skinny, long fingers gripping your neck just loosely enough so that you can breath, but uncomfortably so.I stare at the snow flake patterns in the white ceiling above me, listening to my mom breath heavily. "Lord help me", is the only thought that passes through my battlefield of a mind. That, and what will end this pain. "The mind is a terrible thing to waste". The founder of this famous quote is unknown and unimportant to me at this time. At this time, my own revised version of the quote is all that matters. "The mind is a terrible thing, especially when it wants to waste you".


As I lay there, numb, staring at that white ceiling, I start to experience what seems like the closest thing to schizophrenia without actually having it. My mind and I become two separate people, and it starts to talk to me, telling me the best way to deal with these circumstances is to end my life. "Is there really a heaven or hell, Georden?", and "What if we do all go to the same place when we die? And it doesn't matter how we get there? Don't you want to end this madness and see Garrett again?" I'm overcome with what feels like paralysis and feel like I can't move. I can only lay there and take what my brain is doing to me, because any positive thoughts I had to prevent this have burnt up in oblivion.I would give anything just to fall asleep and not wake up again. I'm actually praying to Jesus himself through my heavy tears that this is what happens. If my mind doesn't want me to see the light of day again, then so be it, I give up. I turn to my mom on the left of me. She looks so peaceful there sleeping, even though I know this not to be true due to the spontaneous jumps she has here and there from the anxiety she's having herself. Her long brown hair is like that of an angels. Here I am, wanting to end it all, lying next to the very person that brought me in and raised me in this world. How ironic, and that's it. This epiphany is the thing that saves my life on this round, though there will be more to come. My mother needs me. I'm all she has, and she's all I got. Making a decision like this without consulting her about it first would be violating our partnership of the uttermost importance. As I look past her, through my vision blurred pupils, I see the rays of the sun start to crack through the blinds. "The sun will come out, tomorrow," I think. It is followed by another night though, sadly. For now I decide I'm going to see another day, as I drift back into the abyss of my mind, unconscious to everything.


"But that the dread of something after death, the undiscovered country from whose bourn  no traveler returns, puzzles the will 

and makes us rather bear those ills we have than fly to those we know not of? Thus conscience does make us 

cowards"-Shakespeare


"Reflection"
I lay in my not so comfortable dorm room bed, I ponder what somebody would say about me if asked to describe me. Would they be accurate? Is it even possible to be accurate? Maybe before I lost my brother. Now though, I don't even know myself. Reflecting on all the events of the past, and the current moods that overwhelm me, some staying briefly like a drizzle of rain, and some staying to torment like a rainstorm. I question how much have a permanent effect on me, and which are just there for the moment. In a way I'm like two different people now. If you we're to meet me at a social event, you may assume this is a very extroverted, outgoing, fun to be around person. If you made a video tape of one of my nights alone though, you would think I was crazy. So I question myself. Which one of these extremes dictates who the real Georden Burton is? Can I be an even mix of the two? Am I that outgoing guy that gets taken over sometimes by the madness. Or am I the madness, and the fun times I do have are when I try to run away from it, and the longer it doesn't catch up to me, the longer I can resemble my past self, before all this started. The possibility of me never knowing isn't impossible. The only thing that is certain to me is life isn't fair, and you have no choice but to play the cards given to you. I imagine the dealer of these cards being a beautiful woman I once knew, that took her mask off and showed me the hideous thing I was unknowingly dealing with. Time stops for no man though. This is my circumstance. Next time you meet somebody, before you judge them, be sure to question what cards their life has dealt them.

Monday, February 23, 2009

1200 words

"Good Night"

As I travel the hilly path of this stable sidewalk below me, my metal shield keeping the cold from gripping my bones, I think to myself this party better be worth it. I branch off from the guys for a bathroom break in the back alley of a building. Out of all the illegal things students do at OU, public urination will be the act to land you in the back of a cop car. As I release my bodily fluids I look around me. My mind takes a pause and stops to think that kind of thought that only comes when your mind is free as a result of the massage Captain Morgan is giving your brain. This would be a horrible place to be in the midst of one of your enemys. I zip up, meet back up with the guys and continue my travel to our destination. What a great valentines day this will be.

As I see more and more traveler's on the same drunken journey I am taking, thee excitement starts to set in on my already impressive feeling body. We arrive at the party, and it's full to the point that even the yard was even being invaded by random people the owners of the house have never seen, and probably will never see again. The first thing I see when I get into the party is a friend of mine in my math class, name oblivous to me at the time. I bob and weave through the what seemed like a million people to the kitchen. 7 cases of beer lay on the ground, all empty. How depressing I think to myself. I know this night will end one of two ways, from past experience. I will converse with a beautiful girl, get her number, and be satisfied I became more than just some guy at a party. Or I will not, and drink even more as to not think about how option one hasn't occured. At this moment it dawns on me that a very pretty brunnette with blonde highlights is being harassed by two guys standing not more than 24 inches away from me. She has an illumanting glow that lights up that filthy kitchen, like a light bulb in a damp creepy basement. Her smile is amazing, her personality complimenting it even more, because she had an amazing sense of humor. She looks like the type of girl you can watch sportscenter with on a sunday, and she's the one I say to myself. Now when I say harassed, I don't mean verbally or physically. Harassed as in they we're hitting on her, and I could tell she wasn't having it. Then the magic eye contact happens. I look at her and squinch my face up into that look you get in akward situations. This shows her that I feel her pain, and I'm two seconds away from taking it as a damsel in distress call. Two seconds away from pulling her up on my white horse and riding away.

No more than two seconds later, I give her the come here finger, and she steps in between the two guys with happiness, leaving upset, hateful looks on there faces. I don't quite remember exactly how the conversation went. It was a good one though. Her name was Eaven, the name of a goddess, and I was feeling like Hercules. I got her number, left the party, and went to Goodfellas to top off my night. The thick juicy pizza always making the long walk home a bit easier. I get home, throw my good clothes in the dirty laundry, and commence into chill mode and reflecting on the night with my roommates who have their own set of triumphs and tribulations. When this ritual is over, it is reflect on my life time, to the beautiful sound of hip hop in the background of my thoughts. It's about 4 o clock a.m now. This night was different however. I played a song I'd never heard before, which is rare, called "Letter to B.I.G". Hearing the melody of the beat was like love at first site. It automatically made me think of my brother, and how I hadn't gotten around to writting a song for him yet. I would write it to this beat. This would be my masterpiece I think, as a fade away into darkness. Fade away before all the pain and madness I had thought I washed away before brutally lets its presence be known again.

"Bad Night"

It all starts with the curling of my toes and the rubbing of my feet against each other like reticulated pythons, the anxiety in my body having no other way of expressing itself. This action never stops at night, but what will determine if I have a bad night is if that's where the anxiety stays. It doesn't though. The green lights on the cable box read 2 30 in the morning. As I lay on the cool leather of the couch, I look around my brightly lit living room to the other couch, and its emptyness. Visions from the past play in my mind of all the fun nights me and my brother had in this very room, staying up all night watching t.v. Now it is just me, in this empty, quiet room. It's starting to happen. The anxiety creeps up my legs and I have to sit up. It goes from the wiggle of my toes to a full blown leg jitter. Tears start to stream down my face and cries of sorrow escape my mouth as a rock back and forth. All the memories of a past life ripping through my brain and wrecking my present state like a tsunami. My mom is upstairs sleeping. I don't explain to her this nightly routine that I know all to well. She has enough on her plate, and to add to the constant worry about me would be selfish on my part. So each night this fear induced insomnia takes its heavy toll on me uninterrupted. Fear induced because the hour of chaos is coming up. 3 o clock is when I lost my other half. 3 o clock is the anti-hour if your religious, which is when the demons like to play. 3 o clock exactly is when I woke up screaming from the all too real nightmare three weeks before this night. I haven't slept right since. 3 o clock is when my panic attack hits its climax. When I feel tingles in my face from crying so much and the anxiety and stress is to the point that I dig my fingers into my head, wishing it would stop. I'd give anything to calm down right now, but i know this is a wish that only a genie could grant me, and there is no magic lamp in sight. Thirty minutes later this madness hits a calm. However, sadly, this is the calm before the storm.

Post traumatic stress disorder and insomnia is not the bulk of my problems. I go upstairs and lay in my moms bed, quietly so I don't wake her. If you want to know what clinical depression is like, imagine putting your head into a tourniquet, a turning it until it gives just enough pressure to make your brain numb. This numbness causing silent, heavy tears. Not the dramatic cry like earlier in the night. This cry starts with a knot the size of a golf ball in your throat, but this knot doesn't go away. It's a constant pressure, like a hand with skinny, long fingers gripping your neck just loosely enough so that you can breath, but uncomfortably so. I stare at the snow flake patterns in the white ceiling above me, listening to my mom breath heavily. "Lord help me", is the only thought that passes through my battlefield of a mind. That, and what will end this pain. "The mind is a terrible thing to waste". The founder of this famous quote is unknown and unimportant to me at this time. At this time, my own revised version of the quote is all that matters. "The mind is a terrible thing, especially when it wants to waste you".

**there may be more added on to this in my actual memoir. I haven't decided whether I want to dive any deeper yet.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Running in the Family 60-100

After reading pages 60 through 100, and discussing the first part of the book in class, my outlook on it isn't as bad as before. I realized there was some really good context that I hadn't picked up on because of the difficult reading in general. Now that I know to look harder though, this time around, reading was more enjoyable. I felt like I got to know the author more and how he chooses to teach us about himself through his stories. Especially through the series of poems he chose to put in the book. One that really captivated me was the poem  "Woman like you". This shows us a side of him he hadn't portrayed yet and how he  could view a woman. "Women like you make men pour their hearts out"(pg. 92). This line interested me the most because I know exactly what kind of woman he's talking about

We also learn more about his native island in this passage. The animal life, the different island kept traditions like all the poisons, the vicious heat and the roll it plays, and overall belief's the island native's have. "that was my father who had come to protect his family" (pg. 99). This statement shows that the natives believe that people come back as animals, which is interesting. Family history comes up in the passage of Ondaatje going to a church over 300 years old and discovering all the different Ondaatjes that had been married there or preached there. The author took a lot of pride in this fact. One of the last things we learn about the author is some of his childhood and past experiences on the island. He used to throw the eggs of the kabaragoya at the "Royal" students at cricket matches. And that his first memory is that of a National Museums publication. 

Overall Ondaatje went from talking about the older men in his family first, and is now coming closer to him. The structure of the book seems to be as if he's starting the readers off by telling us about people and stories that aren't as directly close to him, and as time goes on we get closer and closer to him. It was a decent 40 pages of reading and has restored my faith in hopefully finding enjoyment in reading the book.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Recent Story and Descriptions

Descriptions
Zach Collins- is a great, 20 year old outgoing guy. Baby blue eyes and big muscles, yes ladies he's a stud muffin. Has had so many blackouts he doesn't drink without a flashlight. A big great bundle of testosterone, drunkenness, and good times.

Patti Burton-the most caring, strongest person I will ever know. 52 years of age, but looks 30. You can see the daily struggle she goes through in her baby brown eyes and long, dramatic hair, but would never be able to tell through her hyper, almost in need of Riddlin personality.

Torrence Hatch-the weight of his world has mad his legs strong. Keyword being his world, because he does not know much outside of the hot ghetto of south side Baton Rouge, Louisiana. A 23 year old diabetic with a lot to say about what he has learned in life.

Recent Story

As I travel the hilly path of this stable sidewalk below me, my metal shield keeping the cold from gripping my bones, I think to myself this party better be worth it. I branch off from the guys for a bathroom break in the back alley of a building. Out of all the illegal things students do at OU, public urination will be the act to land you in the back of a cop car. As I release my bodily fluids I look around me. My mind takes a pause and stops to think that kind of thought that only comes when your mind is free as a result of the massage Captain Morgan is giving your brain. This would be a horrible place to be in the midst of one of your enemys. I zip up, meet back up with the guys and continue my travel to our destination. What a great valentines day this will be.

As I see more and more traveler's on the same drunken journey I am taking, thee excitement starts to set in on my already impressive feeling body. We arrive at the party, and it's full to the point that even the yard was even being invaded by random people the owners of the house have never seen, and probably will never see again. The first thing I see when I get into the party is a friend of mine in my math class, name oblivous to me at the time. I bob and weave through the what seemed like a million people to the kitchen. 7 cases of beer lay on the ground, all empty. How depressing I think to myself. I know this night will end one of two ways, from past experience. I will converse with a beautiful girl, get her number, and be satisfied I became more than just some guy at a party. Or I will not, and drink even more as to not think about how option one hasn't occured. At this moment it dawns on me that a very pretty brunnette with blonde highlights is being harassed by two guys standing not more than 24 inches away from me. She has an illumanting glow that lights up that filthy kitchen, like a light bulb in a damp creepy basement. Her smile is amazing, her personality complimenting it even more, because she had an amazing sense of humor. She looks like the type of girl you can watch sportscenter with on a sunday, and she's the one I say to myself. Now when I say harassed, I don't mean verbally or physically. Harassed as in they we're hitting on her, and I could tell she wasn't having it. Then the magic eye contact happens. I look at her and squinch my face up into that look you get in akward situations. This shows her that I feel her pain, and I'm two seconds away from taking it as a damsel in distress call. Two seconds away from pulling her up on my white horse and riding away.

No more than two seconds later, I give her the come here finger, and she steps in between the two guys with happiness, leaving upset, hateful looks on there faces. I don't quite remember exactly how the conversation went. It was a good one though. Her name was Eaven, the name of a goddess, and I was feeling like Hercules. I got her number, left the party, and went to Goodfellas to top off my night. The thick juicy pizza always making the long walk home a bit easier. I get home, throw my good clothes in the dirty laundry, and commence into chill mode and reflecting on the night with my roommates who have their own set of triumphs and tribulations. When this ritual is over, it is reflect on my life time, to the beautiful sound of hip hop in the background of my thoughts. It's about 4 o clock a.m now. This night was different however. I played a song I'd never heard before, which is rare, called "Letter to B.I.G". Hearing the melody of the beat was like love at first site. It automatically made me think of my brother, and how I hadn't gotten around to writting a song for him yet. I would write it to this beat. This would be my masterpiece I think, as a fade away into darkness. Fade away before all the pain and madness I had thought I washed away before brutally lets its presence be known again.

Running in the Family

After reading the first 69 pages of this book, I can already tell I'm not going to like it very much. Maybe I'm not giving it much of a chance already, and hopefully that changes. So far this book is really hard to keep up with because it's all over the place. It's hard to even quote a passage because it seems like there's only a couple passages that actually stay on the same subject for a page or two. It's also really hard to understand because it takes place in another country. All the references to things and places are over my head as a result of this, so its really hard to relate or have interest in what the author is talking about. The Liars' Club and Fathers, Sons, and Brothers, the setting was in America so the places and events were relatable because I actually new what they were. On the bright side, the actual text itself is well written. So well written that it makes it harder to keep up with. When you read an author's writing you can some what get a sense of their personalities, or can imagine them as people sitting right next to you telling you the story. I can imagine the author of this book as a well educated, sophisticated individual. Overall, I'm not finding too much interest in it so far, but hopefully it will get better as a move along and it's just a case of getting used to it. We'll see.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Footsteps of a Generation

Life can be pictured as a field of snow. No matter the path we choose to walk to get to our destination, we will always leave footprints. The people that walk behind us can choose to follow our footsteps, or branch off and make an entirely new path. In Fathers, Sons, and Brothers, Bret Lott analyses the similar paths taken throughout his life by each generation of men in his family. These paths being taken unconsciously by those walking them.

When a father looks down on his offspring, how often does he find himself reminiscing on his childhood, because he sees himself in his son? Bret Lott does it often. "That pinch was entry into our childhood: my arm around him, our smiling, is the proof of us two surfacing, alive but not unscathed . And here are my own two boys, already embarked" (pg. 32). This is the first, of many situations in the book when Bret portrays the footsteps of him and his brother being walked by his own sons, Zeb and Jacob. Jacob had just accidently slammed Zeb's fingers in the car door. This sent Lott's mind racing to the past to a time when his brother Brad had first pinched him by a pool one day. It is interesting because Jacob and Zeb are unaware of the similar situation they had just partaken in. They are already walking in the footsteps of their father without knowing it.  One of the biggest examples of this phenomenon is when Lott overhears Zeb whispering to Jacob. ""Jake, don't tell Dad," Zeb whispered, and it seemed Swear to God you won't tell ought to be the next words I would hear" (pg. 163). He associates these words directly with the memory of his older brother Brad always telling him not to tell his parents something he did. A direct example of Lott watching his sons follow in the footsteps of him and his brother. Even the role of youngest and oldest correspond to each other."Jacob is me, just trying to make my way in the wake, for better or worse, of big brother Brad." (pg. 160)

Lott's sons aren't the only ones following in the footsteps of their father. In the chapter "Uncle", Bret describes the relationship of his Uncle Lynn to his father. "His tongue naturally stuck, and it had been my Uncle who had discovered him in the freezer crying, Lynn laughing a good five minutes or so before he went to get warm water" (pg. 57). Obviously his Uncle wasn't very concerned over the issue of his Dad's well being. The same lack of concern is displayed by Lott's older brother Brad. "But Brad only stood there, the basketball by his hip, while the kid sat on my arms and punched me in the chest" (pg. 155). Once again, the oldest in the two sets of brothers are following in each others footsteps. The youngest, falling victim to the carelessness of their older brother. Is this trait reoccurring only in the Lott family, or families all over the world? Whatever the answer may be, it's obvious that Lott's family has a habit being more similar than they would like, or care to acknowledge. 

Lott's life probably has the most in common with his dads, especially when revolved around the company of RC cola. ""Bill used to by my salesman," he said, and looked down, hands still on the glass, head still shaking." (pg. 181) This to me is the most powerful evidence in the book of following in the footsteps of the men before you. Out of all the different paths Lott tried to take in his life, he ended up for a brief time period doing the same exact thing as his father, even selling products to the same exact person his father used to. Lott followed in his fathers footsteps even to the point of something as little as what to keep in his garage. "Thats it for my tools. Like father, like son." (pg. 10) The real question is how things work out to be so similar between generations. How much of it is consciously done by the father? How much of it is pure chance? Lott does describe instances where he, and his father, tried to distill some quality's they had into their sons. Lott recognized this as his fathers intention."And I have no doubt he imagined for us, later in our lives, careers with the company." (pg. 183) Fathers definitely have a huge impact on how their sons turn out. If a son is following in his fathers footsteps, and is old enough to see how, I think it's a result of taking in the habits his father has. This transformation happens unconsciously at a younger age though. Until it reaches a peak and we can sit back and realize how much the apple doesn't fall far from the tree. 

Those are my thoughts on the subject. However, this isn't about me. Lott doesn't really give a direct opinion on the cause of this trend between fathers, sons, and brothers. What he does do, it take it all in, and enjoy it to the fullest. Something we should all stop to do once and awhile. If Lott didn't take these moments in and analyze how they intertwine with each other, I believe this book wouldn't have been the great book it's considered today. As a younger generation with many negative stereotypes, maybe we should stop to see who's footsteps we are following in, and who's footsteps we should be.

300 (soon to be 900) Words

After reading Fathers, Sons, and Brothers, I see the bigger picture of the text and what I believe Bret Lott wanted us to get out of this memoir. One of these ideas is that if we stop to take in the simple moments of life for what they really are, we'd find a better overall satisfaction in these moments. "Though she does not know it yet, the view from here is the most beautiful gift I can remember Melanie giving me..."(pg 149). Lott's simple trip to the island would be one of the most fulfilling  simple things in his life, considering the fact he chose to put it in the book. It also interested me how he chose to write about it. It seemed as though Lott was in a dreamlike state throughout the trip. The images he saw, and the thoughts that went through his head at the time. All of it seemed as though it was a surreal feeling. "Still as though in a dream, the old man raises his hand to me, and I feel my hand rising of its own..." (pg 146). Did Bret Lott want to imply to us that this experience seemed to good to be true?

Another thing that sticks out to me about the text is the once again unique parallelism Lott displays by going back and forth between generations in the instant of a new paragraph. One of the central ideas that I believe is being portrayed is that one way or another, the boys in a family follow in each others footsteps. The way he transitions back and forth from the generations makes this easier to see. ""Jake, don't tell dad," Zeb whispered, and it seemed Swear to God you won't tell ought to be the next words I would hear." (pg. 163). Lott's older brother Brad put him in this situation numerous times as a child, and here Lott's oldest son Zeb is putting his younger brother in the situation. Another example of this is how Brad didn't help Bret when his friend was beating him up on the basketball court. He's not very protective of him. This reminds me of Uncle Lynn, being older than Lott's dad, and how he laughed at him for 5 minutes when his tongue was stuck to the walls of the freezer.  He wasn't very protective either. Overall, I believe these common attributes in generations are shared by all family's in one way or another. I never really thought about it until reading this book, though. 

One more thing that sticks out to me about this book is the simplicity of the writing. This simplicity isn't bad however. Not only does it make the book an easy read, but in a weird way, it speaks more volumes of how great the book is because of the aspects of family the author presents in such a simple text. No hard metaphors and imagery to understand like in the The Liar's Club. Just simple, good writing, and I love it.

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Thesis Statement

In Fathers, Sons, and Brothers, Bret Lott intertwines stories of his family to convey the bigger picture that sons eventually walk in the same footsteps of their fathers, and brothers, one way or another, at a certain point in time.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

The Role I Play

"When you find yourself at the end of the rope, tie a knot and hold on"-unknown. I guess you could say the role I have in my family now would to be that knot. To understand why, you must know some background information. My family consisted of me, my younger brother Garrett, my mom Patti, and my 93 year old grandma Almeta. We all lived in the same house together. I have a Dad also, but don't get to see him as much. My grandma just had a surgery to get a huge tumor removed from her stomach on May 13th, 2008. May 13th is also my brothers birthday. The doctors didn't expect full recovery. They said "this surgery will only extend her life about 6 months". She's in a nursing home as you read this, still immobile, but alive. The surgery is when I started to take on my role as the knot of my family. I remember the exact night the pain started to transform me into it. About 3 days after the surgery, I had just gotten off work around 11. It was a school night, and I went to see my grandma in the hostipital. Walking in her room and seeing her laying in that bed turned my stomach upside down. The first thing I noticed was the gigantic blue and black bruise on the inside of her wrist. I remember the anger building up in me at the thought of it, because I didn't know how it arose at the time. Later I would find out it was  from the needle the nurses tried to stick in her arm numerous times because they couldn't find the vain for the IV. I went to sit next to her. She's sleeping, "thank god" I think to myself. You don't feel pain when you sleep. I find out I was wrong about that later, because I found out some nightmares are too real. That's another story however. Five minutes later the nurse comes in to check on her and wakes her up. She's surprised to see me sitting up next to her, but was suffering from extreme dementia at the time, so our conversation didn't go so smoothly. Then, out of nowhere, she lets out a moan of pain. I knew the effects of the surgery were kicking in now that she was awake. Moan, after moan, after terrible moan. I go to the hallway hoping to see somebody that could help. It was empty. So I go back and hold her hand. Tears start to stream down my face as I sit there listening to her  cries of pain. At that moment I prayed to God for him to stop this pain, and give her the strength to get through it. Told him at that moment that I'd give anything if he just gave her enough time to see Garrett graduate high school. That's when the role of a helping hand and a backbone landed on me. The good thing about this time was that I wasn't the only one. Me, my mom, and my brother helped each other. Soon I wouldn't have that privilege.

Fast forward to the end of the summer. I'm not going to go into details about my brother's murder, or the effects it has on me, only the role it made me play. He was 16 and had been a junior for only 3 days of high school, in case you were wondering. My mom has one sister that lives in another state, our grandma, and me. Now that's the only family she has. Me being her only son, and the only person living with her. I became her backbone, and she became mine. Me and my mother went three months without telling my grandma, for fear of what it would do to her mentally. She was immobile in a nursing home, and Garrett was like her best friend, me being the some what rebel of the family before. She was already on her possible death bed, and we were worried that if she found out this would be motivation to give up. Countless times, I had to be there when she asked where Garrett was, and hold my moms hand when she lied and looked away. "He's at school mom", or, "He's working". The day we finally told her, I had to be there again to support my mom. I couldn't take it and left the room. We got through it though.

The point I'm trying to make by now is the role I play with all the importance in the world is support for my mom. Not to get too personal, especially on a blog site, but she probably wouldn't even be here today if it wasn't for me. Just like a week ago I remember our conversation."Mom, I got an A on my exam". "That's so great Georden". I hear the tears coming in her eyes through the phone. "I think that the only reason I even wake up day to day is the hope of you going to college and succeeding". What she doesn't know is the only reason I'm probably succeeding in college is for her. Well, my grandma, and the rest of my distant family I don't have much of a relationship with too. My brother would be the biggest influence. I have to make him proud. My mom however, is the most important, because my brothers at peace. My mom still needs me everyday. 

The role I play in my family is the backbone my mother needs. The knot at the end of the rope to hold on to. The hope that there's something left to look forward to, in this cruel, terrible world.

Sunday, February 1, 2009

600 Word Revised

It's apparent to me by now that in Mary Karr's The Liars Club, she uses imagery in her writing that have more to them than the actual image itself. There are many examples of this, and because of that fact, I wanted to pick two examples that I believed would be less obvious than others, and hope that I stumbled onto something big. "We all see the same shit, just through different eyes", to quote one of my famous musicians. I would also apply this quote to Mary Karr. What stuck out to me was the theme of white hands in times of tragedy. The owners of these limbs having the life some what metaphorically sucked out of them, for one reason or another. With the life, went the color.

In a memoir, what an author recollects of an experience is key. At a young age, something must really stick out to be remembered in such detail that Karr does. "Then out of all the darkness I see Mother's white hands rising from her lap like they were powered and lit from inside. Like all the light in the world has been poured out to shape those hands. She's reaching for the steering wheel, locking onto it with her knuckles tight. The car jumps to the side and skips up onto the sidewalk. She's trying to take us over the edge" (138). Mary's mom is nothing short of an emotional train wreck. Throughout the book being represented in many occasions with the "Nervousness". How she got to that point is an argument in itself. The fact remains though that she is. With that being said, being mentally unstable doesn't just happen on its own. It's a result of the things we go through in life, and the things that have happened to us. Whatever the case may be in Mary's Mother's life, I believe that each trial and tribulation sucked a little piece out of her at a time. All of these things building up, and hitting a climax(even though worse things happen later) at the point where Mother reaches for the wheel. She wanted to kill herself and her family. In my opinion you must be lifeless on the inside, or void of any good emotion's a normal human being should experience. So Mary describes her hands as being "powered and lit from inside". That's a very white glow. White being colorless. Colorless being lifeless, in a book that uses a vast majority of colors to describe many situations and emotions.

I don't know how much experience the average person has with death. Once you meet get introduced to it however, especially if it's on a blind date, it's capable of taking complete control of your life and ripping out every piece of normal you thought you once knew. "But there was another hand from that time that also got seared into what I can remember. It was the hand of Bugsy Juarez's wife. It was covered in flour one morning she came to our backdoor. She pressed that white hand onto our damp breakfast table while she said to Daddy, please come quick, Bugs shot hisself"(174). I don't know much about Mrs. Juarez's state before this incident. I do know, that if your husband kills himself, and you loved him, you would lose a part of yourself forever. You would also lose your color, in Mary's child mind frame at the time. Let's think of the importance of hands to this particular child. Numerous times throughout the book Mary looks to hands for comfort. A steady hand to hold onto and to guide her through the tremendous struggle she sees as life. However, sadly, hands have also violated her more than once, and have been the reason for some of her psychological disfunction. For a child that finds comfort in 5 fingers and a palm, pale white hands would have lost their warmth and power, and would stick out to her. This would certainly be the case for Mrs. Juarez. It wouldn't be far stretched to assume that the suicide of her husband left her morbid, and to a child that looks to hands for comfort, morbid and emotionless is no better represented than by the extremely white hands that now occupy the place where instruments of warmth and comfort once were.

Mary Karr has seen an abundance of tragedy in her life. In her childhood, she painted pictures with her mind, as a child often does. When using color to describe the things and experiences she encountered, the same color that is used to describe ghost in society can't be good. Coincidentally this color usually being emphasized in terrible situations in Karr's mind. This is why I have chosen to believe that the color white represents tragedy and lifelessness in Mary Karr's mind. Hopefully I have convinced you to believe the same.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

FSB intro on steroids

After reading the first 32 pages of Fathers, Sons, and Brothers, I have an overall pretty good vibe. When it comes to the insane ups and downs of The Liars' Club, I have a feeling this book isn't going to match up with it. That's fine, however, because not everybody's family is as dysfunctional as Karr's was so it's nice to see a good memoir from a some what normal point of view. I absolutely love how Lott transitions back and forth from present and past. Especially when he recognizes resemblances between his kids and his childhood with his brothers. His writing makes me believe that he sees his own childhood living on in his kids at the very moment he observes them. Like his kids are a living home video of the past. This makes for good transitions between past and present."And here are my own two boys, already embarked" (32). Others may find it quite confusing, but I enjoy it. In my opinion it adds to telling a better story. Karr would stay in the past for numerous amounts of time to the point where I pondered how she remembered all of it day by day. Lott uses little stories in the past and then relates them to the present right then and there. This to me makes it easier to see him reminiscing and telling his story. The way Lott intertwines the stories of his sons, to the stories of his brothers, helps me see the bigger picture of how the different stories of the memoir are connected to each other. Like one big spiderweb that you can follow each strand to the other side. Karr's writing was more like a maze that had a destination eventually, but you have to go through a lot to get there. Also, the fact that I'm a guy makes it so that I'm able to relate to the book more. Overall great first 32 pages and I'm excited to read more.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Memory List

I know the assignment was about a memory list, but coming up with memories is very painful for me to do. There's like a block the size of the Berlin wall that enables me to do so, because metaphorically I died inside, and was born again. All a result of this particular memory.

It was a friday night, August 30th, 2008, and of coarse I was planning on going to a party, or chilling with a couple of people. DIdn't end up finding anything to do, so I stayed at my friend's house. It's about 1:30 am, and I call my younger brother Garrett, who's 16. to see what he was doing. Me and him weren't doing very good lately, so I thought maybe I could go to wherever he was to chill, or at least make sure he was home. Considering the fact it was 1:30, he should have been home, because my mom makes him come home at 12. Dial tone, but no answer. That was strange to me, because he always answers, or at least calls back. So about an hour or two goes by, and I decide to go on home. I live in a small suburban town of Columbus, and that night it seemed more quiet than usual, the ill type of quiet that gives you the impression your not the only one around. I get home, go upstairs. and open his door. He's not there. It's 3:30 am. "He must be spending the night with wayne", I thought. My mothers already sleep. So I get all comfy in my bed, turn the lights off and start to dose off. Nobody ever knows the exact time they fell asleep. So I drift off for who knows how long, and I hear this voice in the distance. Sounded blurry, so I thought it was apart of my dream, even though I wasn't having one. I hear it again. Its saying my name. I wake up and realize it's a distressed call from my mom downstairs. She said the cops are here and to come down, you might want to hear this. So I grab my pillow for reasons I still don't know, but I think it was my unconscience mind telling me to get something you'll be able to embrace. I walk downstairs, and there's two policeman standing at the door, and one in a suit, kind of heavy set, with glasses. "Is Garrett in some type of trouble, did he get caught for curfew, you'd have to call his dad about all this because he's a police officer and I don't know how to deal with any of this", my mom says. "Describe your son Ma'am" She describes him, and they look ath the ground. "Ma'am, do you have any pictures of Garrett" he then replies. "Well sure, right here, but what does that have to do with anything, tell me what the hells going on with my son". Those words lit a short fuse to an atom bomb ready to explode and destroy any normalness we once knew. What came next was like the secret password to open a door in hell full of demons whose purpose was to come make my mind the terrible place it is today. "Ma'am, Garrett's dead".

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

600 Words

Its apparent by now that Mary Karr uses imagery in her writing that have more to them than the actual image itself.
They're many examples of this, and because of that fact, I wanted to pick two examples that I believed would be less obvious than others, and hope that I stumbled onto something big. What stuck out to me was the theme of white hands in times of crisis. The owners of these limbs having the life some what metaphorically sucked out of them, for one reason or another. With the life, went the color.

"Then out of all the darkness I see Mother's white hands rising from her lap like they were powered and lit from inside. Like all the light in the world has been poured out to shape those hands. She's reaching for the steering wheel, locking onto it with her knuckles tight. The car jumps to the side and skips up onto the sidewalk. She's trying to take us over the edge" (138). Mary's mom is nothing short of an emotional train wreck. Throughout the book being represented in many occasions with the "Nervousness". How she got to that point is an argument in itself. The fact remains though that she is mentally unstable. With that being said, being mentally unstable doesn't just happen on its own. It's a result of the things we go through in life, and the things that have happened to us. Whatever the case may be in Mary's Mother's life, I believe that each trial and tribulation sucked a little piece out of her at a time. All of these things building up, and hitting a climax(even though worse things happen later) at the point where Mother reaches for the wheel. She wanted to kill herself and her family. In my opinion you must be lifeless on the inside, or void of any good emotion's a normal human being should experience. So Mary describes her hands as being "powered and lit from inside". That's a very white glow. White being colorless. Colorless being lifeless, in a book that uses a vast majority of colors to describe many situations and emotions.

"But there was another hand from that time that also got seared into what I can remember. It was the hand of Bugsy Juarez's wife. It was covered in flour one morning she came to our backdoor. She pressed that white hand onto our damp breakfast table while she said to Daddy, please come quick, Bugs shot hisself"(174). I don't know much about Mrs. Juarez state before this incident. I do know, that if your husband kills himself, and you loved him, it would suck every good emotion out of you until you recover. Her white hand, being metaphorical to having no color, which means being void of any good emotions in my opinion, represents another example that makes me believe Karr uses colors to describe emotion. No color means no emotion, or at least no good emotions you might feel, like what other colors might represent. She just lost her husband, which means she probably felt as though she just had a big piece of her life sucked out of her. What is left when you suck the color, or emotion out of something? Plain, blank, white, emptiness

These two examples are proof in my opinion to my claims. If these aren't enough, then I ask why Mary chooses to emphasize the colors in these two situations? She's caucasion, so we obviously know what her family's natural skin color is white. Why then did she choose to point out the white in these two situations? This is why it stuck out to me as something deeper than what was being read. Hopefully it does to you too. If not, I could be wrong. "We all see the same shit, just through different eyes", to quote one of my favorite musicians.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

8 Images

1. " What was running through my head though, was the song the Munchkins sing when Dorothy's house lands on the witch with the stripy socks" (pg 99)

The fact that Mary chose to say with the stripy socks is evidence of how she uses extreme detail in her writing. We all know what scene she's talking about in the movie (if you've seen it). The stripy socks was an unecassary detail, but that's what Karr has done throughout the whole book. Give unecassary details that ultimately help us picture the scene.

2. "In the next slide, dark finally comes in" ( pg 116)

In the next slide is one of the many things Karr will say to transfer from memory to memory, or parts of the same memory. She does it throughout the book

3. "I wrapped my arms around my knees, bowed my head, and prayed to a god I didn't trust a prayer that probably went like this....." (115)

This shows how much Karr really cared about her sister, because she actually got down to pray to god after all the cynical things she'd said when it comes to religion. This also interested me because I believe this is symbolism for how the world is. We could care less about a God, question wether one exist, if there is we dont live like he wants us to, but when shit hits the fan its all praying and "please do this and that" for us.
4. "I stopped trusting the world partly from seeing how those meaty-faced men bellowed under the shadowy bills of their tractor or cowboy hats" (104)

This was the moment Mary's cynical attitude towards the world really started to take control of her I think. I personally don't blame her either.

5. "But I knew with cold certainty while I stood there in that lukewarm water that she was going up there to get drunk" (109)

I can't say because I'm not Mary Karr. Just doing some foreshadowing. I ultimately am convinced the passing of the grandmother is what started the mother on her psychotic trip. But I believe that with Mary's realization of this moment, this represented the spiral downward her family was going to take, or at least their mother. They took a family trip to have fun together, and instead of having fun with her children, she goes to get drunk. Would she have done that had grandma still been alive?

6. "My feet sank and couldn't get traction, like the run in a bad dream" (114)

This is an example of Karr's amazing writing style, where she uses something most of us have been through at a certain point in time or can imagine, and relates it to what was happening to her at that moment. It helps us put ourselves in her mind and feel her emotions at the time.

7."mother is shouting, shouting she'd wished herself dead before she'd ever married daddy" (138)

In writing about this, mary uses the word shouting twice, back to back. Putting it this way builds up the dramatic intensity to the climax of the memory I believe. It also helped me visualize it more because it made it easier to imagine Mary's voice in my head instead of knowing I'm just reading ink on paper.

8."and that's it, that's what I remember about my birthday" (139)

To have her birthday go the way it did must of had some later psychological effects unseen right now. To have your mother try to drive the car off the road, possibly killing you and the rest of your family, on your birthday? As we all read this book and are amazed at how this woman's life went. Do we question how it could have been this way? Or why? I didn't really have an answer up until now. Now I believe it's a result of the parents she had.

Monday, January 12, 2009

Quiz

A. Please write specifically about Mary's feelings about her grandmother. What are some of her grandmother's habits? What does she suffer from? What does she think about Mary and Lecia? What does she reveal to Mary about Mary's mother?

If you cannot remember the answers to these questions, don't despair. Write as much as you can about the relationship.

B. Briefly, What causes Mary and her family to run from Leechfield? What happens on the bridge?

A
-Mary's feelings about her grandma are not very good. Her grandma is more of a figure of torment, amusement, and fear in her eyes than that of a loved one. Torment, because her grandma hates the way she's being raised and how she acts. Amusement, sometimes anyway, when it comes to her grandma having no leg. Like her pretending she was captain hook, or laughing when the national guardsmen tried to pick her up and her stub kept slipping out. Last but definitely not least, fear. The fear of seeing grandma laying in the bed after surgery. The fear of the wooden legs shadow in the hallway. The fear of the smell of death in grandma's room and it bubbling from within her stomach, rising through her throat and out of her mouth.

-Some of grandmas habits would be always trying to tell Mary's mother how to raise and discipline her kids, and always eating baby aspirin, just to name a few.

- Grandma suffers from cancer, to answer the question generally. A specific thing she suffered from was having mustard gas pumped in her leg. The doctors thought it would stop the spread, but they were wrong. Her leg was pitch black and had to be amputed. The book says that she screamed for a week or more straight.

-Grandma thinks Mary could probably be the Anti Christ(not literally) when it comes to the way she behaves and how a child should behave. Her opinion of Lecia however, is much better. Not because Lecia acts any better than Mary behind closed doors, but because Lecia knows how to suck up and do things that please grandma, like go to church.

-Grandma reveals to Mary that her mother has two older childer, named Tex and Belinda. She says to Mary that her mother had them "sent away" because of their behavior.

B
-Mary and her family had to run from Leechfield due to a Hurricane. They weren't going to leave, hadn't it been for the National Guard busting in their door and making them. They make it all the way to the bridge which is very steep. On the bridge Mary throws up in her shirt. I believe the cars spins out of control? Or they almost crash? Or something of that matter. My imagery of the scene at the time was not as sharp as its been throughout other parts of the book, and I'm not going to pick the book up and look because I spent most this week actually reading and keeping up specifically so I wouldnt have to today. Pride issue, I'm sorry

Saturday, January 10, 2009

BoldIf I recall correctly, the assignment was to write in detail about some family imagery, and a passage in the liars club. If I'm wrong and my passages are off topic, please forgive me.

They're numerous things that I could speak on about the liars club right now. The first one that really stuck out to me is when mary karr was telling the story about her mother almost dying. "Mother said that she saw the whole sky through gray curtains"(pg. 25) This interested me because it says she was two years old. How many of us distinctly remember anything from when we we're two? For the ones that do, do you distinctly remember it, or do you have bits and pieces in your brain, like pieces of a movie with clips missing. Thats how my brain is. Well, before the age of four anyway. Another passage that really stuck out to me was the whole going to visit grandma in the ER. This was chilling to my spine. Only because my grandma just had surgery at the age of 93 to get a tumor removed in may. She still hasn't really recovered. Remembering her not knowing who we were as a result of dementia was painful. It's still like that sometimes. A big one was the whole her losing her virginity at 7 thing. I can't believe a 14 year old boy (I think that's how old he was) would even think about messing with a 7 year old. There's some sick people in this world. Anyways, as I stated earlier, there's numerous things that I can speak on, but I've never been the type to do more work than I have to. Especially on a saturday night=)

For the family imagery, one I distinctly remember was when I first went to kings island. It was me, my brother, my mom, and her boyfriend. I remember first walking in, and smelling the water from that gigantic fountain they have in the middle. It looked like a pool for a giant. It had 3 or 4 more towering fountains in the middle of it spraying water and creating this lovely mist. At night it has lights that turn the water every color you can think of. Its surrounded by a strip of shops and food places. Smelling all the food, being surrounded by all the scurrying people, and seeing all the rides in the distance. I was overwhelmed with excitement, and didn't quite know what to do or where to go first. It was my first time even being in an amusement park. I probably road every ride in the park that day. I don't really know what else to say because I'm not much of a writer like I said. More of a you ask a question and I'll answer type of guy. That'll improve as time goes on though, I'm sure.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Liars Club and MM

My first thoughts on the liars club are that its boring. I do know that its way too earlier to judge the book by the first 22 pages however. I'm wondering if what happened the first night with the doctors being there well be revealed later or if it will be left a mystery. Same with the Dad leaving a bullet in the chamber part. I don't really know what else to say about my thoughts about it. It is very well written and the writer uses a lot of details that help me picture what he's talking about and the scene the story's taking place in. I'm really curious to find out more information about the other members of the liars club themselves and they're different relationships with each other.

As far as mm. It pulled me in quickly and I have no reason why because it actually had less of a story going than the liars club. I just believed it was really interesting the type of book it was though. I was reading a book , which is written about a writer himself preparing to help writers? Amazing. The lessons learned in it could be used in a text book. Well I'm only assuming anyway because I haven't gotten that far. I guess we'll see.

Monday, January 5, 2009

Hello anyone that cares.

My name is Georden Burton. I'm as experienced in English as a caveman would be with computers. I think some things about it are interesting, but mostly I find a lot of it to be boring. That lead to me sleeping in most of my English classes throughout high school. However, I still acquired good grades. My main problem with it would probably be that they're a lot of intelligent things that could be said on a subject, but if somebody doesn't say them with proper grammar most people will not respect it, and my grammar isn't the greatest. I am in this class though so hopefully that changes. My background information will probably be brief because I was never good at the whole introducing myself thing. I was born and raised, and currently live in Columbus. That's the capital of Ohio for you out of staters. This is my first quarter at OU due to some unfortunate circumstances. I'm sure you'll learn why later. Now that I'm here I plan on making the best of it though. I don't really know what I'm supposed to be writing about though so lets get back to English. What I expect out of this class is to broaden my horizons and overall intelligence through reading and writing about the material we're assigned. Especially the writing part because I used to bring my essays up to my teacher to proof read after every paragraph in high school to make sure they were okay. I'm a very opinionated person and would love writing if I didn't have to worry about all the technical aspects of it. So I'm looking forward to being able to sharpen my writing skills. I enjoy reading a good book also, but probably won't enjoy it that much at this school, being surrounded with all the tempting "distractions". Overall I'm hoping this class will be interesting and that I'll soak up as much knowledge as possible that will be useful outside of it. That seems to be the case so far.