Some proof of this fact? Not too long ago, my parents, who recently moved, sent me some files that they'd extracted from an ancient computer. Their most amusing discovery was a dreadfully earnest, terribly overwritten original story by yours truly. And if you must know: it was about a Christmas Elf figurine named Jingle who desperately wanted to become a Christmas gift. You'll be happy to hear that he indeed found a home, with exactly the sort of Angelic Crippled Girl that you'd expect to find in a knock-off Victorian-esque Christmas tale. (The Bird's Christmas Carol, anyone?) The clincher of it all? Though I have no memory of actually writing it, my story was oh-so-craftily saved to the shared family computer under the file name "AlgebraProject" (Because, really, who would ever think THAT file would be interesting enough to bother opening it?)
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Nearly two decades later, I'm still fascinated by stories and their telling. And I'd still MUCH rather be thinking about stories than doing Algebra homework. Wouldn't everyone?
4 comments:
It does amaze me about how little people change. I don't even see it in myself a lot of the times. For example, I always thought that I was a rather shy, unwilling to take chances kind of person when I was younger, but since I was a teenager, I broke out and have done some amazing things--travel, writing, new adventures that I never would have believed I would grow up and have the courage for in, say, elementary school. When I comment on this, though, my friends and family who knew me then say they always knew I'd do those things. I guess you are who you are, even if you can't see it within yourself.
Indeed. It's been twenty years or so since I first tried writing a story. And I'm still terrible at it!
Oh ma heck. Now I am reminded of a truly cringeworthy WESTING GAME ripoff I tried to write at age eight or nine . . .
I'm sure I have a few "AlgebraProject" files lurking on my own computer.
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