Kickwrite#1

Sometimes people say things without even thinking about it. I’ve come to pinpoint some things people told me, and I was stupid enough to accept these things as true and to let their ideas affect my own ideas. Sometimes the way the ideas were presented to you makes it seem like the idea is true. So we should not just accept right away what people say.

Boy: You like that guy? But he’s gay!
You: Really?! *scared*

Make way, people. I’m not pro-gay.

I get these comments a lot. So what if I crush on gayguys? That would not make me a bisexual. It would actually make even more sense if I like a gay guy. Why? Because he’s still a guy, and there’s nothing we can do about it. Why would a girl worry about that stupid thing? It’s the same thing as girls liking guys.

But comments like these will hurt those boys more:

“You like that girl? But she’s gay!”

Plurker: Sorry, I can’t add you as a friend, only as a fan! Because I don’t know you personally.
You: Oh, okay.

Now, that’s not very smart to agree. Lol. This is for all Plurkers out there.

If someone is a fan of yours, he would see your plurks. You won’t see his if he’s on private mode. The thing is, I set my profile on private, and I followed some dude. He told me that thingy and I agreed.

But it wouldn’t make any sense! If privacy were a big deal to a plurker, then he shouldn’t have added me as a fan. Because that would be the same thing! I’d see his plurks, he won’t see mine. Turns out I get to know what he’s doing, and he wouldn’t know what I am saying. That was just lame.

So now you see my point?

Nobody’s Darling


More here

Three cups of coffee in the morning feels good, but all I really want right now is my camera.

I’ve been wanting to read some books these days. I have tons of unread lovelies piled up on my desk, but I really have no more time to read right now. I may sacrifice my time for microblogging for the sake of finishing some books. But then I have my Theatre Arts class. So I might just leave everything for now until second semester comes. Bummer.

I’ve been lonely these past few days, so I have decided to list the things that made me happy (and survive the week).

  1. Reading The Lives of Others by David Bartholomae and Anthony Petrosky.
  2. G-Dragon’s Me2day updates.
  3. Cold coffee.
  4. Teaching.
  5. Being able to go back home this weekend.

When you stop to talk or write about what you’ve read, the author is silent; you take over- it’s your turn to write, to begin to respond to what the author said. At that point this author and his or her text become something you construct out of what you remember or what you notice as you go back through the text the second time, working from passages or examples but filtering them through your own predisposition to see or read in different ways.

Reading The Lives Of Others by David Bartholomae and Anthony Petrosky, 1995

I loved that one. So right now, it’s your turn to write.


Plugging my Visitors page.

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