Saturday, August 6, 2011

Thoughts from Places: Every Green is Gold

A new segment [oh, segments, oh-so-common on this blog xD] inspired by the Thoughts from Places videos on YouTube. Instead of vlogging these thoughts, I thought, why not write them here? I mean, it is like a story, which is primarily what this blog is for. So voila, this segment was born. And unlike all the other segments, hopefully this one will be spasmotically placed, whenever I have visited a place of thought-provoking-ness-ity [pssh, yeah, I make up words like that].
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I woke up today around 12:30 in the afternoon, having went to bed at a late hour the night before - YouTube at two in the morning has always been my weakness. After making waffles for lunch and taking a long drawn out shower, I was left to my own devises when my family left for the county fair. Having been to the fair thirteen times in the past seventeen years of my life, I chose the option of staying home. Fairs may have novelty, but something deep inside of me told me today was a good day to stay home.

I was beginning to think my instincts weren't that credable, when a familiar feeling of boredom settled over me. Somehow, even reading and writing could not devoid myself of this kind of boredom. So instead I slid on my shoes, grabbed a small bag with a notebook, pen, the seventh Harry Potter book, and my camera, and headed outside.

I am not a naturally outdoorsy person. I find the buzzing of horseflies and bites of mosquitoes to be the greatest annoyance. But for some reason, today nothing bothered me. The sun was hot, but I did not feel warmth. The horseflies buzzed, but I was not thoroughly annoyed by it. Mosquitoes chewed at my exposed skin, but I could not feel it. For the first time, I realized how much of my home front I did not know about. And I was taking in the acres of our property with a newfound sense of wonder and an itching to see what was out there.

I explored the vastness of the small woods beyond our home, pausing here and there to snap pictures, finding an exposed clearing to sit down and write, trying to figure out how I had never known such beauty existed right in my own backyard. I traveled like a wilderness explorer searching for a rare species, with the sounds of the outdoor world and twigs snapping beneath my feet. And at last, when I felt as though I could go no farther without getting too far, I stopped to rest under a magnificent tree, a simple tree that, until today, I had not known existed. I sat under the tree for a while, absorbed in nothing but my own thoughts and the beauty of simplicity.

That's one of the problems with our lives today. We get so wound up in what is extraordinary, and outstanding, that we forget some of the most outstanding and extraordinary things are the simplest of ideas, the simplest of sights. As I sat under that tree, listening to the birds as they called to one another, hearing the gentle wind rock the branches of the trees, I realized that. I realized the extraordinary beauty of something so simple. I became aware of what was always there, as though waiting for someone to take it in.

That's novelty.

I reluctantly left the shady tree and made my way back to the house, and was suddenly reminded of a poem I had read once in English, that seemed to summarize every feeling I had while exploring my own property: "Nature's first green is gold/her hardest hue to hold," which reminded me of the simplicity of nature, and how it really was magnificent, a simple green being pure gold, "So dawn goes down to day/nothing gold can stay," as a telltale sign that, however much I had wanted to stay out in the wilderness, just as gold cannot stay, neither could I. But I experienced Nature's gold, before I was forced to go. Because Robert Frost was telling great truths when he said "Nothing gold can stay."

So the moral of the story? Experience what you thought was ordinary, the things you see everyday. Because it cannot stay for long, just as you cannot either. "Nothing gold can stay."



~the writer on the wall~

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

~My Harry Potter Story~



I was inspired by many people all over the internet sharing their beloved Harry Potter stories with the world, how the series changed them, and how it's helping them grow as people.

And since I am still suffering from PPD [Post-Potter Depression] following the eighth movie, most of my posts on this blog are going to be related to the series for awhile.

My Harry Potter story actually begins on year before I actually started to read the series. In fifth grade, when I became to have a strong love of books. My teacher at the time was a strong English lover, and I had a special bond with her because of what she made me realize in myself. She made me a reader. She made me a writer.

That's relevant because I hear many stories of how some people were never really into reading until they read the Harry Potter series. That wasn't the case for me, really. I loved reading from fifth grade. Still, I was raised in a family who considered reading to be beneath them. I was the first avid reader in my family in a generation, and I don't say that dramatically.

As I reached my first year of middle school and my sadness at the fact I was leaving what I presumed to be the best year of my life, I slowly drifted away from reading. I still had that love for it, but it seemed that I did much, much less of it. When sixth grade started I slowly eased back into my reading habit, always on the look out for new literary pieces to sink my teeth into.

I started reacquainting myself with a girl who I had known in my previous years of school. We drifted away in fourth grade and fifth, and reconnected upon learning we had similar classes in sixth grade. The more we got to talking the more we realized we shared a lot in common, including our love of reading.

One day -a day I would later come to call "the day that changed my life," all dramatics aside- near the end of sixth grade year, I found that that friend was reading one of the Harry Potter books -the third one, if I'm remembering correctly. I got to talking with her about how she liked the series, and she assured me it was the greatest series known to the world, and that I should consider reading it. Taking her advice, I went to the library that day in study hall and checked out the first book.

I owe so much to her, if I'm being honest. Because me checking out "Sorcerer's Stone" was the beginning of the thing in my life I owe so much to.

I remember starting to read the first book, and in all honesty, I really didn't like it! I actually stopped reading it for long periods of time, and then retrying. It was a cycle that continued until I got passed the first two chapters of the book. And once I got passed those first two chapters, I devoured the book, and was anxious for the second. I read every page with the air of a dog devouring its first meal in a month. And when my school's library didn't have the third book available, I practically begged my friend to borrow her copy.

The third book took me the least amount of time to finish -I just remember staying up late at night so I could keep reading and reading. From the start of the book I drew a very fond bond to Remus Lupin, who I would come to call my favorite character in later time. And I started to have an inkling of liking for Severus Snape, who was downright maniacal in the third book, such a deep hatred buried beneath his already dark, hateful exterior that I immediately gravitated towards. That third book became an instant favorite for me, having finished it in a day's time.

I read Goblet of Fire with equal haste as Prisoner of Azkaban, and Order of the Phoenix put a stopper on me, one of the hardest books for me to push through because of Harry's constant angst and shouting and overall, I just couldn't seem to connect with it. My dear, dear friend spoiled Sirius' death for me, a fact I quickly overlooked as I knew there would always be spoilers when so many people had already read the books and I was five-plus years behind schedule.

Half-Blood Prince I absolutely tore through, even though I knew I should savor the moment, what with having to wait for the seventh booka year from then. But I couldn't help it - before I knew it I had finished all six books, and a parasite known as Harry was now taking over my mind. I would reread the series many, many times before the release of Deathly Hallows in July 2007. And I remember my severe disappointment at not being allowed to attend its midnight release, nor was I allowed to preorder it [my parents were nucking futs, okay?]. I remember ignoring all references to the seventh book, anywhere I went, and waiting for my friend to finish her preordered copy so I could read it. Only to have -can you believe my luck!- her unable to lend out the book due to the fact other members of her family were anxious to read it as well....and lending a seven hundred paged, hard covered, finale-to-the-best-series-ever wasn't exactly a great idea. I don't think I would've even done it.

So I put my name on hold for it at the library, for the large print edition, which had fewer requests than the normal printed book. And when the library finally called us and said it was on hold for me, I couldn't wait to get to the library and read it. I read the first chapter in the car ride home, and spent the rest of the night so engrossed in it.

Honestly, reading the last book was such a blur to me, I was reading it so fast. And I relapsed into PPD when I read the last three words of the book. I remember rereading so many parts of it before I had to return it to the library, and even then I was sincerely saddened to see the book slide down the book drop off chute.

Eighth grade year, I spent the majority of my days completely obsessing over the series with my fellow HP loving friend. I reread the series multiple times in that year. It actually quite frightened my current language teacher when I walked into her classroom holding the fifth book, which we all know is a monster. She looked at me with this crazy look in her eyes as I sat down at my desk and cracked open the book to read it. And she eventually came up to me and asked seriously, "You're reading that monster of a book? For...enjoyment?"

I thought English teachers were to encourage reading, but obviously words of advice never get through. When I look back on that day, I'm absolutely positive she thought I was crazy for being the only thirteen year old to willingly read a book.

But I replied, without looking up, "Yep."

She wasn't the only teacher I would encounter Harry Potter with. My math teacher -of all the teachers!- noticed me reading the fifth book in her class, too. Unlike my English teacher, she was not appalled. In fact, we got into a huge discussion about the series! She was currently reading it for the first time, and was reading the fifth book. At the end of my eighth grade year, I actually became her kind of "pen pal," and we would write back and forth over the summer about the series, and I would console her when she admitted to her PPD after reading Deathly Hallows.

Yeah, I am a geek, for keeping correspondence with teachers. And my math teacher, of all people. But to this day she remains one of the adults in my life I have complete and total trust in. A trust I never would have had it not been for -what else?- Harry Potter.

What may be quite shocking is the fact that through all of this, I never gave a thought to the movies. I didn't watch Sorcerer's Stone until ninth grade, three years after I had started loving the series. And even then, I only watched the first four, and did not watch the fifth until after watching the sixth, which was released in 2009, if my knowledge is credable. My first experience at a movie theater alone with only one friend -can you guess which friend? ;)- was with the Half Blood Prince movie. I remember my friend had gone to the midnight premiere with one of her other friends, and we were talking about it on Yahoo messenger, and I brought up how I really wanted to go see it, and that she did too, again.

Seeing a Harry Potter film for the first time in a theater is a different experience from just watching the films in general. It's somehow more meaningful, to know you're such a fan that you'll even pay ten dollars to see the HP film. And that sixth movie remains to this day one of my favorite Harry Potter films in the franchise.

Throughout my first two years of high school, Harry Potter became a defining trait of who I was. Before I worried about being "that one nerd who loves reading." I thought of "nerds" as what they're painted in every media outlet in the world. But something changed when I grew older and realized....this was who I was. Harry Potter defined my life. Harry Potter made me who I am today. It still remains one of the first things I tell new people I meet, because I do believe that strongly that if you want to know me, you have to know my Harry Potter love.

The end of this amazing franchise means so much to me. It means unbearable sadness, because I don't think there will be anything in the world that has literally shaped me following this. Yes, I have parents, family, friends, etc etc. But Harry Potter has taught me so much over the years, and now that the last film is blowing down blockbuster walls all over the world....it's something I can't describe.

I've always said that the Harry Potter books have taught me more than the adults in my life. Which in a sense, isn't an overexaggeration. My parents have taught me how to care for myself, how to deal with things, and given me valuable lessons to carry me through my life. But there's things they didn't teach me, things they didn't tell me. My parents taught me how to live, but Harry Potter -and many books I've read- taught me why.

It's easiest to explain it in this way. Harry Potter taught me why I live. Why I should cherish everything I have. Why I should make the most of everything. Because, and this may be dark, it all can go away so fast. It taught me not to take things for granted. It taught me that a life without love is no life at all. It taught me that judgement is the worst form of belittlement, that trust is earned, not given...I have so many life lessons to thank J.K. Rowling for. Her writing added to the lessons my parents had taught me, but unlike them, she didn't just drill them into me, she gave me a reason why. And I'll never, ever be able to express my gratitude for that.

I frequently refer to my Harry Potter adorance as one of the most memorable lines in the Harry Potter series:
"After all this time?"
"Always."
I really, honestly, truly do not see my Harry Potter love dying. I see myself one day, as old as time itself, reading the third book, remembering...Some people in my life say I'll grow out of it. That one day, I'll stop reading them and move on. That that Harry Potter bug inside of me will eventually find its way out.

And to them I say one thing, the one thing I want to end this extremely long post with:

If there's anything Harry Potter taught me, it's the power of love.
And that sort of power cannot be washed out.

~Chelsea~

Friday, May 13, 2011

The Things That Inspire Me: The British Edition

[first, before staring the post off today, I'd like to give a shoutout to Kendall who correctly guessed the main character of the poem "Bravery" in my last post. Ah, the joys of being a Harry Potter geek and understanding Snape references ;)]


I'm inspired by a lot of things in my life. Lots of things. People...places...things...ideas... Most nouns xD

So today I'm going to take a moment to just list a few things that inspire me...and I'll make a habit of doing this every once in awhile ;)

Today's inspiration theme is...


1. England

Yes, England does inspire me. I've never been there, but it's a place I frequently search on Google, look at the beautiful pictures of it...I could pretty much go there tomorrow and know ten places I would go and see and what I could see there.
But why exactly does this place inspire me? Well, I very frequently write stories with my settings being loosely based on English settings. One of my characters always has a British accent, it's pretty much essential or it's not one of my stories. Basically it's a huge influence on my writing. And what's not to be inspiring about that beautiful picture up there?

2. J.K. Rowling

One of my favorite authors at a dead standstill tie with Suzanne Collins. She's one of the authors who inspires me everyday to write. I can only dream of being as successful as she is...You have no idea how much of a dream come true it would be for me to meet her.

3. English Royalty

Yes, everything about England's royal court fascinates me. A lot of my storylines have something to do with royalty or aristocracy [Emma's blog is one of them] England's royal history has always been a fascinating history topic for me that I actually am very interested in researching for fun.

4. This Dress That Is Vintage English Fashion That I Would Totally Wear And I Don't Even Like, Love Dresses, At All But I Love This thing

'Nuff said.

Four things. Not many as I'm starving and kind of want to go and eat xD

Thanks for reading my fellow bloggers, and stay tuned for the next post that is sure to come ;)

~[the writer on the wall]~

.The images above do not belong to me.

Friday, April 29, 2011

Written on the Wall: Poems About Harry Potter

Bonjour, readers :D

Today, as a part of The Writing on the Wall's new purpose, I, Chelsea, the author of this blog, am introducing a new segment, called Written on the Wall, in which I post some of the writings I have done.

This edition of Written on the Wall is...

POEMS ABOUT HARRY POTTER.

Yes. I am so obsessed I've written poems about the Harry Potter series. Two of which I'm posting today that I happen to be distinctly proud of.

One of them is a parody (The Writing on the Wall Definition--parody: a spin off of a popular song, book, show, et cetera, usually comical and the other is a narrative poem (The Writing on the Wall Definition--narrative poem: a poem that tells a story with a distinct beginning, middle, and end.) So without further ado, presenting...

HARRY POTTER
(a parody to the song "Alejandro" by Lady Gaga)

ORIGINAL LYRICS:
You know that I love you boy.
Hot like Mexico, rejoice.
At this point I gotta choose,
nothing to loose.

Don't call my name.
Don't call my name, Alejandro.
I'm not your babe.
I'm not your babe, Fernando.

Don't wanna kiss, don't wanna touch.
Just smoke my cigarrette and hush.
Don't call my name.
Don't call my name, Roberto.

Alejandro.
Alejandro.
Ale-ale-jandro.
Ale-ale-jandro.

PARODY:
I know that you play Quidditch,
With extreme talent, the Snitch!
At this point, we’re far ahead,
Not gonna lose..

Just catch that Snitch, just catch that Snitch,
Harry Potter!
Guard your goals, guard your goals,
Ronald Weasley!

Don’t hesitate, don’t fool around,
You just nearly hit a Bludger!
Stay on your broom, stay on your broom,
Harry Potter!

Harry Potter,
Harry Potter.
Harry-Harry Potter
Harry-Harry Potter…

(NOTE: Song rights of "Alejandro" do not belong to me. However, the parody lyrics of "Harry Potter" does. Please don't copyright, it's illegal)

And now for the narrative. I'll give a shoutout to the commenter who guesses the character it is about ;)

BRAVERY
There was a man who lived,
A short time anew.
I knew him and swore he was,
The cruelest man I knew.
His disposition proved to be,
As cold as the North Pole.
There seemed to be no heart in him,
Just a an empty hole.
But I had never known,
The reason for this hate,
Until the very last moment,
When his thoughts opened gate.
His troubles had been provoked,
From a very early age,
When the one he had always loved,
Faded from his brain.
That awful man did die,
Trying to do the best.
His death was simply ludicrous,
But he went with peaceful rest.
When the truth had finally came,
I realized he was true.
That awful man had just became,
The bravest I ever knew.

(Again, all rights to the poem "Bravery" belong to me. Don't steal the poem, please, I will find you. And I will throw tomatoes at you until you delete the poem from wherever you're posting it to)

Ahaha, more evidence of my Harry Potter obsession xD
I hope you enjoyed these two poems. Stay tuned for the next edition of Written on the Wall, and for more posts on other stuff to come :D

[the writer on the wall]

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

**renovations**

Hello, readers!

Just a heads up that this blog has underwent some pretty obvious changes.

That's because I've realized I don't really care to speak about my life on this blog. Rather, I'm transforming this blog into a book review haven, and a place where I can share some of my writing. Reading and writing, the two things I love to do the most ^_^

I hope you like the changes, and continue reading for the full extent of them. Yes, all previous posts will be deleted prior to this one. Yes, I will continue to post here, but with a new ideal ;)

Thank you for your patience. Please enjoy this fine picture of Harry Potter as you wait for the renovations to be completed.




~Chelly~