Thursday, March 8, 2012

Story in the Making -- PART 1


My mom and my brother hurled words that would make the heavens collapse at each other with such force that the house quaked with bitterness and anger.  I couldn't help the anger welling up inside of me myself- for days they hadn't talked to each other, leaving me alone to care for small, helpless Lucy- it wasn't our fault that Father had never returned.  So, with adrenaline surging through my nerves, I grabbed Lucy's hand and ran out the door.  I ran like I had never run before.
I ran and ran and ran, through the Forbidden Woods, their dark, ghostly arms whipping at my face and the thick, merciless thorns tripping me and ripping my thin khaki pants.  I ran until the adrenaline drained out of my blood stream and my weak, screaming thighs no longer supported my weight. I collapsed on the ground, my head spinning, the events of the day choking me with guilt, anger, and confusion.  At that moment, I did something that I will never forgive myself for- I cried.  In all my seventeen years, through good and bad, pain and joy, crying is the one thing I never allowed myself.  But now that the tears started, they didn’t stop. I cried out of pain, exhaustion, and anger.  I wouldn’t have ever stopped if Lucy hadn’t put her hand on my shoulder.  I looked into her calm, chocolate-brown eyes. Eyes just like dad’s.  I knew she was frightened, was wondering why I dragged her out of the house, why I had brought her to the Forbidden Woods at dusk.  But she masked her fear and held out a hand to help me up.  I pulled myself together.  I had to. For Lucy. 
I had never been like other girls, prissy and perfect.  I had always been different- my dad called me a mischief- loving monkey, my mom a ratty scoundrel.  So it wasn’t my first time hiding out in the woods.  The night before, it had felt like I had run far enough to be in the heart of the woods- but now I realized I was merely in the border.  As I picked up my dirk from its hiding place in the trunk of a willow, I knew that this wasn’t like the other times.  I could sense the change in the air, by the way the trees seemed to stay still in anticipation, waiting for my next move.  Yes, this time was different.  Because this time, I wasn’t going to go back.  I walked soundlessly across the woods, my sharp eyes searching for the slightest rustle or movement.  I had been too exhausted and dizzy to hunt last night, and both Lucy and I were starving.  Snap.  I turned and my dirk soundlessly flew out of my hand, ending the life of whatever creature and been careless enough to venture across my path.  I know I should be worried, but as I skinned the fat rabbit that I had killed I couldn’t help the new enthusiasm running through my veins.  I wasn’t going to take this rabbit home only to have Mother yell at me for not bringing home more- this rabbit was mine- and I was doing this for my survival.
I ran back the moment I felt something was wrong.  I knew it was a mistake leaving Lucy behind, but she didn’t have what I called “hunter feet.”  So I had armed her with a small knife and told her to scream the moment she smelled danger.  The scream didn’t come.  But I could sense the change in the air, and I instinctively ran back to our clearing.   I was prepared for many things, but what I saw managed to catch me by surprise.  Rather who I saw.  Years of training kicked in.   With the stealth of predator stalking prey, my wrist flexed, releasing the dirk still in my hand.  It was too late by the time my mind registered that the person was actually handing a freshly killed deer to my sister.  I was famous for my reputation with a blade, and I was aiming for the stranger’s major arteries in the back of his neck.  Instant death.  “Look ou-!”  The words had barely exited my mouth when the stranger instantly turned and gracefully caught the deadly blade slicing through the air.  It was balanced perfectly between his experienced fingers.
“Are you alright?” I gasped, relief flooding my face as the young man gazed at me, unharmed.
 “Couldn’t be better,” he muttered, “considering I’m not dead.”
 I gave a weak smile.  Then glared.  “What are you doing here anyway?” I demanded.  “These are my woods, and you’re on my property!”
Your woods?” he asked indignantly.  “My family’s tribe’s been living here for centuries, and you say this is your property?!”
Suddenly, I felt nervous.  “What do you mean, centuries?  I’ve never seen you or anyone else, for that matter, around.”
He rolled his eyes exasperatedly, as if explaining an extremely easy math problem to a mentally challenged two-year old.  “That’s because you Americans don’t see things that you don’t want to see.  Obviously, you don’t want to see that there are people a lot smarter than you are roaming your land without permission.  So you don’t see them.  Period.  And we’re a lot better than you are hiding, too,” he added.
I sighed, surveying the exposed clearing around me.  “You’re right,” I admitted reluctantly.  
A thought struck me that maybe it was also his striking looks that helped with camouflage.  He looked to be about eighteen.  His skin was a brownish tan- the color of the underside of fallen leaves, his eyes were a muddy green with streaks of brown- the color of the forest floor, and his hair was a dark brown- like bark.  Even his clothes matched- a dirty green t-shirt that looked to be woven out leaves and khaki pants just like mine.  Overall, he was the opposite of me.  I was visible from a mile away with my silky copper hair that fell in curls to my waist; worn free.  Even my eyes were against me with their ocean blue bordered with startling green.  I may be the envy of other girls at church, but at the forest my beauty only worked against me.
“So what’s your name?” the boy asked.
“Sirena,” I replied.  “And yours?”
“Khyeol.”
“This is my sister, Lucy-”   I froze.  “Lucy? Where’s Lucy?”  My heart was racing.  I looked to Khyeol, my eyes questioning.  He shook his head, looking just as worried as I was.  “Lucy!” I shouted, the fear in my voice obvious.  That’s when I heard the scream.  The world seemed to cease in its never ending cycle as the unearthly sound pierced the calm of the woods.  And it unmistakably belonged to Lucy.  
KABOOM!  The earth shook, and I dropped to the ground with a shriek.  I saw Khyeol do the same beside me, though silently.  A bigger quake churned the ground, this time throwing both of us off balance.  I lay there, trembling, for a long while, too shocked to think.  Khyeol shook my shoulder, and said with incredible calm, “Sirena, you better look, it’s really bad.”  I stood up, my eyes squeezed shut.  Nothing could possibly get worse, I thought.  But it did.  As I watched, horror-struck and helpless, I saw the smoke billowing from my house as it was engulfed in flames.
My knees melted like butter.  My skull felt like it was splitting open, and my heart raced.  I lost Lucy.  My home was a pile of smoldering ashes.  My mother and brother were gone forever, and my last memory of them was gruesome.  My father was who-knows-where, maybe even dead. 
It was in that moment that I changed.  I took all my memories of my family that were worth having and buried them deep inside of me, where they couldn’t reach me and haunt my dreams.  I made a decision.  From now on I wouldn’t feel emotions, wouldn’t live in the flow of life.  Just on it.  Even now, I was only alive because I had to save Lucy.  She still had a chance of life, happy, bright, joyful memories that gave her a purpose to live.  But I had no motive, was fueled by naught but the ruthless, poisonous, most recent moments of my life.  In this manner, I changed.  And I ceased to feel.  Anger, revenge, joy, pain, grief, excitement, appreciation- all of these no longer had a hold on me.  But is that something to value, despise, enjoy or fear?  And just like that, all signs of humanity disappeared from my eyes.  They were unreadable and empty. I was there, not alive, not dead.  Just there.
I turned my back to the scene of destruction.  “I’m going to save Lucy,” I said flatly.  I walked away, not looking back once at the place I had called home until a few hours ago.
I maybe heartless, but that hadn’t lessened my sense of security.  I therefore froze mid-step when I felt something.  It was a few minutes after what I had decided to call the “Bombing,” and I was standing at the scene where Lucy had apparently disappeared.  I had followed the footsteps from the clearing- she had supposedly wandered away.  But then they had simply stopped- there was no sign of a struggle, nothing to hint what had become of Lucy.  So here I was, searching the clearing for anything that might hint that something was amiss. And then I felt it.  It was a peculiar feeling, as if someone was stroking you with a silken cloak.  Except for the fact that there was no person, and no cloak.  The answer revealed itself before my very eyes.  It was unbelievable; yet I couldn’t deny it.  It was a chunk of air, no, space that appeared to shimmer, that almost whispered to you to come to it.  But you also got this gut feeling that yelled at you,” run, you brainless idiot.”   It sent shivers down my spine.  It was out of place, wrong- it wasn’t supposed to be there, yet it was- almost like magic.  Dark magic.  My mother would say I had an overactive imagination.  But why not? 
Dark magic was an insufficient word for what happened next.  The shimmery chunk of space moved toward me with lighting speed, engulfing me.  A skull-splitting pain shot through my body, and the world spun in front of my eyes.  The last thing I could remember was Khyeol’s hand being thrown back as he reached out to me before I let out a scream that gave the word scream a second meaning.  I blacked out, falling into a churning void of nothingness, hoping more than anything that Lucy was alive and well.

IF -- 1/17/12


If you lurk ‘neath others’ shadows,
And follow their worn out path,
If you tread upon their footsteps,
Until you breathe your last,
If you float along the current,
Let it guide you through,
And make its wish your only destiny,
Then what about your wish? Your destiny?
What about you?

If you’re in the iron clutches,
Of pain and joy and fear,
If you’re controlled by your enemies,
‘cause they threaten you and sneer,
Then what are you but an empty carcass,
Thrown about as others please,
A reflection of your true self,
A reflection that can at any second,
Be blown away by the breeze

But if you are the one to cast the shadows
And weave a path anew,
Sink your feel into a soil,
That’s soft and fresh and new,
If you fight against a current,
that’s fighting just as hard as you,
to make you end up downstream,
Then only are you worthy of calling yourself you.

If the skies collapsed, and the seas dried up,
And yet you’d stay at ease
If you grieve for neither the living nor the dead,
And realize that everything is but a puzzle piece,
Then you are the master of the Earth,
‘cause you are truly free,
For there’s nothing that is more bound in chains,
Than the minds of you and me!

The World is Falling Apart - 2/7/12

Thy world is falling apart
Due to the unearthly creatures we call men
Those despicable beings which forever shame heaven
That are, vein by vein, dissecting thy heart

The soles of thy cracked and bloody feet
Tremble upon the parched, miserable earth
As thy wade through the fragile carcasses
Of vermin fortunate enough to be forever buried in dirt

Thy is tortured with cruelty unheard of
 Forced to watch helpless as loves ones are devoured by starvation, disease and pain,
Gape with disbelief as thy home is engulfed in flames
Awarded not with the paradise of death nor with the release from this brutal horror


Why does thy world speak naught but agony
All beautiful now ashes and black dust
It is by the greed in thou own precious black heart
Selfish and brimming with hatred till the center of its black core


Thou war and slaughter innocent
Oblivious to their pleas
Smoke billowing from thou factories
Sparing not man, animal or tree
Is this the reason for our creation
What we are truly destined to be
Stop! Think the terror of the crimes thou committed
The nonredeemable horror unleashed on thou family and thee


What is done cannot be changed
The past is safe from the evil of thou hands
But thou can rescue the future still in thou possession
And save thy world from forever falling apart




 

Second Sonnet -- COLOR -- 2/2/12

Colors bloom from every patch of sunlight
Reds, browns, yellows, greens, purples, and blues
Weaving through life, bursting with love and fright
The feelings of Earth hidden in hues
Each stroke of white a lone stain in the sky
Each smudge of brown camouflaging the leaves
Taste rasberry red in a cherry pie
Hear unforgiving black as a man grieves
Feel bright, clear blue as you bathe in a stream
Smell pure, dark green in a forest of pine
Colors state the truth, wherever they are seen
And now they're stating: fading is their shine
If our colors die, gone will be our mirth
But to save color, first we must save Earth

I watched the Telly -- Sonnet -- 1/26/12

My First SONNET
(http://shakespeare.about.com/od/thesonnets/a/what_is_a_sonnet.htm)


I watched the telly as the rain poured down
I watched the telly as the  sun shone on
I watched the telly as I donned on my gown
Telly I watched as grass bloomed on the lawn
I watched the telly twenty-four seven
And I did play video games galore
For what's there that's more worthy in heaven
Other than watching television more
The TV in the hall is roof to floor
And that's twenty-five feet, just so you know!
Telly I watched till I got locked out the door
And then I saw the flowers and though "Whoah!"
Me and nature became very fast friends
And never I touched poor telly again 

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Who Cares About Volcanoes?


Who Cares About Volcanoes?
By Dylan Sawyer
Jan. 3, 2013
Hey. I’m Dylan, but you probably already realized that.  If you’re an ordinary kid like me, you probably hate essays.  I totally get it.  The teacher gives you a topic you don’t even care about, and then you’re forced to do a whole lot of research on it.  I’m not gonna grow up to be some psycho Einstein, anyways.  All I wanna do is get a trusty job at McDonalds and have a burger for lunch for free every day.  And be happy and enjoy life.   Is that too much to ask?  Anyways, this is not about my future career- it’s a dreaded essay on volcanoes.  If the word “essay” just made you fall asleep, I’m with you.  I have a focus span of about 2-3 seconds.  I’ll do my best to wake you up again. (P.S. Don’t snore, it’s impolite.) 
The story begins with Mrs. Pamlock giving us about a week to write an essay on volcanoes.  (The guys call her Mrs. Hemlock because she is the most successful person in the galaxy when it comes to strangling helpless kids like us with vocabulary words and “scientific theories” that don’t make sense.  For example: you get “1 hour” of homework a day that takes 2 hours to look up on the internet. I do 5 hours of television/video games while eating popcorn, and am expected to go outside and play in fresh air and get some exercise too.  I come home at three. I sleep at ten. Where’s the time? I could go on and on…) I have short term memory.  The essay troubled me for about three minutes, and then I forgot.  I’m pretty sure I would have continued to conveniently “forget” until Mrs. Hemlock stepped in and made life a whole lot more complicated.  So on Friday, I walked into the classroom and promptly went to sleep at my desk when the word of the century startled me awake.  (Starting now, I will underline all words that I used the dictionary for.  My vocab was fine by itself, but this is another unnecessary requirement.)  Obviously, chocolate’s the word of the century.  (For you aliens who are watching from outer space that don’t know.)  So anyway, Mrs. Hemlock strode into the room looking all haughty, gave us the usual glare that signified that we were nothing more than wriggling maggots.  And then she said the word. And automatically had the attention of every kid in the class. It was a first-timer.  “Class, the best volcano essay in the class will win a chocolate volcano with marshmallow lava 4 feet tall.  You filthy little maggots don’t deserve it, but the principal will kick me out if I don’t bump up my attitude,” were her exact words. (I wrote it down to make sure I wasn’t dreaming.  Though the second sentence is probably my imagination.) 
Great. Now I was in the biggest dilemma mankind had probably faced since the beginning of time.  Me missing the chocolate volcano? Not an option. Me actually writing the essay?  You’ve got to be kidding.  Under normal circumstances, I would probably cut and paste something from the internet.  But, some geek invented this nifty little device that reads your essay and cuts out the copied stuff.  There would be nothing left in mine.  Plus, I only had the weekend to do it.  I wake up at 2:30 p.m., and then it’s video games from 3 p.m. - 2 a.m.  I’m a busy man.
My computer is on fire.  It’s the first thought I get when my screen blares out at me with a blinding flash.  It’s raining rocks and fire.  The second thought I get when a flaming rock the size of my fist shatters my window and sets the bedcovers on fire.  Seeing my fire-proof Nintendo on fire is what kicks some common sense into my head.  I scream.  I assure you, it’s not a sound you’d like to hear.  And as dark, poisonous smoke fills my lungs and my shoe blazes afire while still on my foot, I black out.  (I would like to note that blacking out is an unpleasant experience.  When I did, I landed on my iPhone 7 advanced, creating a thin crack in the border.)
I was in my least favorite place in the world- a hospital.  There had been a code red evacuation, and the seismic waves that had followed the eruption had reduced my house to a rubble.  I was shivering.  The volcano had been completely unpredicted, and the deadly procrastic flow had traveled for miles.  My entire family was under emergency care, as we were direct victims of the eruption.  I had broken my arm in the fall, so I was condemned to hospital life for two weeks.  I had some nasty burns snaking their way down my ankle, sending spasms of pain through my leg. It stunk.
I will make a confession: maybe volcanoes are worth learning about.  I mean, if some guy had predicted the eruption, the city could have been evacuated beforehand, saving the city a lot of money and damage.  So my life’s ambition has changed- I will now be a volcanic geologist.  Well, guess what?  Having your room catch fire with you still in it really does make you reconsider what you’re going to do with life now that you’re lucky enough to still have it.  So I had borrowed one of the hospital’s junky laptops, and was looking up the volcano that had changed my life- I would never be the same again.  I mean, maybe Mrs. Pamlock had a point all along.  And this is the mind-boggling info that I found:
Kilauea has returned to life, bringing with it, yet another miracle of Mother Nature.  On January 3, this volcano roared to life, replaying history.  Exactly thirty years ago, a similar eruption lit up the sky, ripping the world apart with its fiery mirth.  The citizens living on the southeastern flank of Mauna Loa continue to dance to the rhythm of this historic volcanic eruption to date, the land churning with the volcanic goddess Pele’s wrath.  And now, the totally unpredicted twin eruption! It seems truly impossible and miraculous too, for the two eruptions are identical not only in appearance, but also in manner.  The curtain of fire created by Kilauea consolidated to a central dominating vent thirty years ago, and scientists predict that exactly the same has occurred again.  Halema’uma’u, one of the major vents when Kilauea first came to life, is the most active in the recent eruption too.  It’s been five days since the eruption, and Kilauea is continuing to ooze lava even now and the same 5 mile long discontinuous fissures that came to life in 1983 repeat as the eruption continues to crackle with fire. This episodic activity, large flows and high fountaining,         re-characterize Kilauea as the most active surface volcano in the world.  Kilauea is 3,646 ft. deep with a circumference of 8 mi., and the Goddess Pele’s dance seems to have shifted to an invigorated beat.  This shield volcano is located on a hot spot in the middle of the Pacific Plate, and is part of the Ring of Fire.  This volcano is unique- it is only a satellite to its much larger twin neighbor, but it was discovered to have its own plumbing system over 60km deep! As the magma from the past eruption did not solidify in the conduit of the volcano, which would have cut off the supply of magma that comes from the magma plume and made it dormant, this volcano is still active but non-explosive. This is because the great shield was formed by lava with low silica levels and a low amount of gas which made the runny lava run down its sides, but the lava that drenched the flanks of Kilauea today was charged with gas making it explode in high fountains!  Thus,  for all the facts and numbers of a historic volcanic eruption to repeat them selves with such exact accuracy is an exception! It came as a surprise to everyone.  Young Hawaiian Dylan Sawyer can definitely justify that, when balls of fire came raining through his room…
 I stopped reading right then.  I was on the Internet.  My life’s dream.
I was officially famous.  But you guys know the rest of the story- it’s all over the place.  There’s just one more thing to say, and I’m talking to you now, Mrs. Hemlock- I didn’t set my shoes on fire for nothing.  I’d better get that chocolate volcano.