Monday, February 20, 2012

Using a Warrant (Not the Band



I'm sitting here thinking of 1984.  I can smell it: hairspray (Gen X was solely responsible for the hole in the ozone layer, I contend), Marlboro cigarettes and other things that have a grassy, smoky aroma, Jordache perfume, diesel fuel.  It is my own warrant to speak of this time, and let me tell you, I do and often.  After reading "Tesla Matters (Dude)" all I can think of is this: what are our warrants?  How do we utilize them in our writing?  Do they put folks off? Draw them in?  When, and in what kind of writing, do we use them?

I would contend nonfiction deems them critical to the power of our message.  Let me prove this: how often have you been reading along, innocently accepting the message (or maybe trepidatiously) when BAM.  There it is.  A cultural misstep.  That is NOT what Reagan said, or Clinton, or Bush--the timeline is totally off--no one would have worn those shoes then . . .

(Yep, I totally just used all of the devices we talked about today.)

A professor I had once upon a time (her name was mentioned in class this afternoon) taught me something like this once.  It went something like: never break the suspension of disbelief with your audience.  You lose them.  Badly.

You know the moment.  You read the book.  And then?  There it is, the popcorn halfway up to your mouth, your feet jauntily hooked onto the chair in front of you, and there it is.  Bastards. Sophie (The Da Vinci Code) has a brother?  What the?  That was not in the book.  You look around, expecting riotous indignation from your fellow moviegoers.  Nothing.  Yet you have psychically left the building.  Over and out.  Suspension?  Nope.  Disbelief?  Yep.  The rest is just, well, garbage. I am personally still bitter about every single Stephen-King-book-turned-movie I have ever seen.  (One of the only screenplays he has written is Maximum Overdrive.  The others were Shawshank Redemption and The Green Mile. Stellar.)

No warrant.  You can't  come in.  That is our right as readers, though, I believe.  To refuse entry when we call qualitative bullshit.

And yes.  I have cursed more than once in this blog.  Why?  Because I am about to use a warrant, and there is no way you would buy me if I came off as a pretentious, ivy-league prof.

It was 1984 and the Cradle Will Rock tour hit hard, right on the heels of the Back in Black tour (AC/DC, folks).  I had no intention of ever working for "the man" and had even less intention of staying chemically lucid for more than, well, five or ten minutes.  The t-shirt was black and had SEX DRUGS AND ROCK AND ROLL emblazoned across the front, and it was about two years before most of us had even heard the word "aids."  And I was ruuunnning.  (Little Forest Gump for you there.) Smart kid, lost, angry, scared, with a serious Peter Pan complex and no vision of my thirties.  Kids like yourselves made no sense to me.  How did they study and mind and cut their hair and eat their Wheaties? No way, man.  Sunlight hurt my eyes and Walt Disney was blasphemy to my soul.  Purposefully, vehemently, I threw away my childhood when I threw up my lighter to David Lee Rothe in crimson spandex.  Part of me is still back there, waiting for the lights to come up and force me out into the street.  Strangely, all the songs and all the bands and all the beer-soaked nights add up to this one moment in my teenage wasteland:

And when some local kid gets down
They try an' drum him outta town
They say, "Ya coulda least faked it, boy"
Fake it, boy (Ooh, stranger, boy)
At an early age he hits the street
Winds up tied with who he meets
An' he's unemployed--his folks are overjoyed.

But here I am, Dr. PD, thirty years later, talking about warrants.  I suppose I could have just "faked it," but I think I learned the regret of that decades ago.

And so.  I begin sentences with and.  And do a lot of ---- stuff like that.  Proper English?  Um, no.  But it's in line with the signature on my warrant.  I wonder, do we ever know the voice in our heads without examining the paperwork . . .

55 comments:

  1. So as of right now I feel like I have no warrant to write a comment on this blog. No one else has. I've never blogged for real before. What gives me a warrant to? Dr. P does. And I suppose some of my 12 years of education does at this point.

    So I have a warrant to blog. Well what else do I have a warrant on? I have a lot of experience in the art of watching television. And reading. I could talk about books all day long! Harry Potter anyone? Or maybe The Last of the Really Great Whangdoodles (that's a favorite)??

    Okay, so maybe fiction. Yeah, I have a warrant in fiction.

    And the ocean. I know lots and lots about the ocean. Maybe I don't live anywhere near one, but most of those who have met me can attest to my warrant of the ocean and the cuddly otters that live in it.

    So I guess where I'm going with this rambling is in this direction: warrants define you. They explain to others who you are and where you came from. What you enjoy. What you care enough about to pursue and to gain knowledge about. Enough knowledge that you radiate the fact that you have a warrant on that subject.

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    1. Honestly, I think we won't have a warrant in anything until we are married with kids. That is when most of us will gain some sense of maturity and until we gain maturity I don't think we will have be able to put together verified evidence to make a case for a specific warrant. Does that make sense? Well maybe to some of you it does, but others it doesn't. So what I'm saying is that this is just my opinion. Well of course it is. We all have a right to our opinion so I guess even though I may agree or disagree we all have a right to whatever warrant we may choose.

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    2. Abby! I love this post. I think that the idea of radiating what we warrant is a neat idea. I'm all about being myself and letting everyone know it, but just the word radiate...it works so well. Radiating your warrants to me says that you don't have to be wearing a shirt that says " I love ___" or "I have a warrant for ____". Radiating your warrant means something more subtle... like your warrants are an aura about you that people pick up on when they get to know you.

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  2. What are my warrants? This question poses a much deeper meaning than its rather simple appearance. Our lives are composed of moments and events, good things and bad things. These experiences, tribulations, and jubilations collect in the basin of our souls and define our character. These are our warrants.

    So what are my warrants? What do I have understanding of? What knowledge has my experience provided me? Clearly basic understandings of the academic realms, the three “R”s we learned from preschool forward. Yet those are boring and easily available in civilized society. That does not distinguish me. It is not the familiar things that define us, certainly it is not! If it were then nobody could tell anyone from another. It is the unfamiliar that defines us, what makes us different that we are appreciated for. So how am I different? What was different in my upbringing? Why am I who I am? And most importantly, what warrants has my formation provided?

    With all these questions running through my mind I realize a very subtle truth. I have warrant over me. I am the keeper of my soul. And in a striking revelation, I understand how it all ties in. How Dr. P asking us to define ourselves what not a random question. The question of “who am I” was not some busy work intended to ruin our social lives, rather it was a means of understanding our warrants.

    Who am I. I write that as a statement rather than a question, because it is indeed not a question. A question can have an answer, but a statement needs no response. The question of who am I cannot be answered, because humans are, by nature, paradoxical. We are a positive and a negative. We are opposing poles of the same force. We cannot understand our own complexities. So who am I.

    The only way to go about finding yourself is to ask “if I died tonight, what would the world think of me?” For you see, in time, all things decay. Every story has an ending, every book a final page. We do not decide the future, we define the past. We are the writers of our own history, the authors of time. But who reads it? What imprint of ourselves do we leave our descendants? The truth is, I am afraid of being forgotten. I want to make a difference, I want to matter. You see, all humans are different. Some are tall, short, friendly, mean, mysterious, open, but if there is one quality that all humans have in common, it is that no human being that will ever live, no human that will ever see the light of day or love or laugh or cry is simple. We, as individuals, are absurd. I am no exception. People live their lives surrounded by people, people they think they know, but that is all a lie. Nobody is who you think they are, everyone is more than you could ever hope to imagine, its just they hide it. They bury their warrants. They are afraid. Fear is so complex an emotion. It eats away at courage like a disease, and can turn the strongest of men into a child. Yet the absurdity is in our fear. We need to be remembered, but not afraid!

    We want to break free from the routine of every day spent meandering through the crowds of melancholy disregard and make a difference. All I see when I look around is people who all share the fundamental belief that there is something more important for them than this life they are watching pass by, there is more out there, so much more than any one man can imagine. And no matter what you have or what you do, you always feel that need for more, that there is a greater purpose for you. And I rejoice in it! I celebrate my life and cherish it because I know I have something to look forward to. I will wither away one day because I must, because that is the way of the world. But people do not change and wither away to be forgotten. We wither away to be remembered, and I will be remembered with all my complexities and humanity. So who am I? I am fire and ice. I am hate and love. I am pain and bliss. I am alive. But most importantly, I am human. That is who I am. That is my warrant.

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    1. My humanities professor from high school told me that "if you never examine the ideas that I give, it will never be yours, itll be my ideas copied in your head" He told me that I had to experience it myself. Reading Nietzsche or machiavelli is just soaking their ideas in, if i take that and examine it and make it mine, that becomes my ideas.

      While I wrote that I could write whatever I want, if I wasnt such a rebel... sike, I agree with you that what you experience and imagine is your warrant

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  3. So warrants...

    I feel like I have several of these...So here goes nothing.

    Who am I and what are my warrants? I am Catie Murphy, a blonde girl from the Gulf Coast with a warrant for dreaming. I am truly a dreamer. I have so many ambitions and goals for myself, and I dream about them all day everyday. One of those dreams is to open a bridal boutique of my own one day, and for that reason I am an Apparel Merchandising major and I've worked in retail for the past 3 years, which is something I am so passionate about.

    Why a bridal boutique? Well...everyone has a story, right? Well I dream of being a part of someone's story. What girl doesn't remember what they wore on their first date, right? or maybe I'm a weirdo and remember stuff like that because I like clothes. But the way I see it, I will forever remember that little black sun dress with the ruffles, and it's now a part of my story. I want to be a part of someone's story--what better way to do that then design the dress someone will wear on the most important day of their lives?! CRAZY EXCITING!!!

    Another warrant of mine is for self esteem and confidence. Having a positive self image is something that is essential in today's culture. It may not seem like I have a warrant for this, seeing as how I haven't ever struggled with self-image myself. However, too many people I love with my whole heart have struggled with eating disorders and other self image problems. And for that reason, I will fight that in girls until I can't anymore. This is easier said than done, but I have given many talks to younger teenage girls about this on retreats and I've seen so much brokenness. It takes realizing that today there is an unrealistic standard that women hold themselves to, and there's no way you can be happy trying to compare yourself to a photo-shopped supermodel in a magazine while you're standing in the grocery store line with no make up on and wearing your favorite sweats. It's time for women to own who they are, and be healthy.

    Warrant number 3 is for being real. I am about as genuine as they come. I am honest, and will go out of my way to help people I love. I'm a people person, and want to know people's stories. I am motivated by people around me. I will better myself if I know that it will in turn help someone I love.

    Miscellaneous warrants for being: curious, a hard worker, responsible, someone who wishes she was more outdoorsy, a cookie-cutter-oldest-child, goofy, a bad joke teller, cheesy, and a girly girl.

    Most important warrant is for being myself and owning who I am all day everyday.

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    1. With our teenage years drawing to an end, it's hard to say if we have discovered who we really are yet. But it is obvious that you are confident in your own person. These are such beautiful warrants to have. You want to make a difference in girl's lives and make them truly happy, and I believe that spreading our happiness is one of the only ways to be happy ourselves. I believe that it should be everyone's warrant to help people and try to become better people in their love for fellow men.

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    2. I totally agree with Abby in really admiring your obvious confidence. I love how you ended this with how your most important warrant is just for being yourself and owning who you are. Because that's the best warrant all of us really have. We've all been through experiences and had certain things effect us, and all of these things are things we want-- and deserve-- to talk about. Our warrants. But I never would've thought of being myself and owning who I am as being a warrant. So thanks for letting me see that in a whole new light. And for inspiriting me with your confidence in the person you are, something that so many at this place in time struggle to do.

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  4. If I were to claim that I had a warrant over something I would have to say it would be the outdoors. For most of my childhood up through high school I spent many of my weekends sleeping in tents outside under the stars(and in the less appealing case rain.)

    That is just where I feel the most at home. From scorching hot summer days to freezing cold winter nights there is no place I'd rather be than out in nature soaking it all in. Being involved with Scouts since I was young only helped to strengthen this warrant as well as give me a good reason to be outside.

    Another warrant I could lay claim over is being able to not think about things too much (I know that doesn't sound like a very good warrant.) But it helps me to look on the positive side of things and to just take life as it comes at me. I'd rather be happy in life than get upset and hold grudges.

    Warrants tell everyone who you are and even give you some insight on yourself. Everyone has warrants. Even if two people have the same warrant they can mean two completely different things depending on the person.

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    1. Ben that last statement is a pretty good one. "Even if two people have the same warrant they can mean two completely different things depending on the person."
      So, if two people claimed the same warrant over something, who would be "right"? I honestly believe that there has to be a winner because one person is bound to be more experienced than the other, no matter how different their actual experiences are. One person will have more knowledge, more hands-on experience, and more passion than the other, which i believe is the point of this whole warrant exercise.
      You can claim a warrant, but someone can definitely claim the same warrant over you if they truly have more experience.
      This pretty much means that ANYONE can claim a warrant over ANYTHING...until someone with a greater or "actual" warrant contests yours

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    2. I strongly do not believe anyone can claim a warrant over anything. That would be like me claiming a warrant over something like skydiving. I could make up a warrant about skydiving. But I think that is called something else... a lie. Like when Dr. P gave the example of a sixteen year old, middle-class white girl having a warrant over growing up in the projects. No one would believe her because she didn't actually live through it. And having a warrant and expressing that warrant is all about the truth-- allowing your readers to see that you genuinely know what you are talking about. Right? How could you get your readers or audience to believe you if you are telling a lie... or think you have warrant over everything?

      Life gets a lot easier when you realize you are not always right... and you don't know everything. But we all learn from other people's warrants and learn from other people's experiences. It's also why I don't believe one person can win out in a game of warrants. It's about learning, not winning.

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  5. Warrants.... There are so many ways a warrant can be described, or how people claim them.

    As for me, I am just another backwoods Alabamian that hasn't been raised on anything but cornbread and Auburn football. I love to play in the mud and do anything that involves the possibility of getting dirty. That's just who I am.

    I'd say that my warrant would be for taking risks.I haven't gotten anything that I've wanted in life without being all in ( yes I made that my slogan before Auburn) and if I hadn't taken a risk I would have never made the golf team in seventh grade, or won the Kelsey Goodwin Memorial Scholarship. Without risking anything I wouldn't have gotten my black belt at the age of 11, or gained respect and the best friend any person has ever known. Taking risks have been very rewarding to me, but be cautious of when to take them.

    I don't know too much about it professionally, but I guess I can be warranted in robotics seeing that I've built and competed robots several times. I've built them from scratch and even programmed the controls allowing me to manipulate them to function in anyway I needed them to. Competition also makes you respect what goes into the ideas of science and technology.

    I am not like anyone famous or some redneck, but I am my own individual person and I have my own warrants that show what I am good at and what kind of person I am as well. Everyone has their weaknesses and strengths, but how would we know who was being true without our warrants? Where is honesty without them? Where is our humanity without them?

    Warrants are of our own interpretation and as humans we see things through our own eyes, not each others. That means we are people made by what we can be warranted to. People will gain warrants all the way until the end of their days. I will be warranted more and more and change before the end of my days.

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    1. Every individual has warrants over various things. Whether a warrant on a time period, activity, object, skill... anything! We simply have to recognize that we have these warrants and unique thoughts or ideas. Do not be afraid to say your opinion if you have a warrant over the topic. Your insight is legitimate because you know about the topic and can offer good advice regarding the topic.

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  6. Warrants of individual people are gained through the life in their years: Warrants are achieved through one’s experiences. In my nineteen years of experiences I have learned a ton of life lessons and I have earned at least few warrants, specifically regarding water.

    Although this warrant may initially sound bizarre, I absolutely LOVE being around, in, or near water. The beach, lake, pool, rain… I love it all! There is a sense of peace and tranquility when submerging myself completely underwater, listening to the soft bubbles slowly floating around my head or feeling waves in the ocean sway my body back and forth—secretly wishing I was a mermaid. Then I come back to the surface—back to reality—where that same peaceful water can bring me to my most competitive edge in a race. It makes me want to train harder, push myself farther…in hopes of becoming stronger, better, faster.

    However, I know that this exact same water, for some people, is their biggest fear. As a lifeguard and swim instructor, I protect people from and teach children about something that gives me the greatest pleasure in the world. It honestly breaks my heart to see a child crying because they are afraid of the water, or an older person who says they cannot swim.

    I have also lived on the Tennessee River for almost my whole life. Kayaking on the river brings out the adventure in me. I want to explore different places, discover new things, and take time to listen to nature (cheesy I know… but true). On the exact same river, I ride the jet ski, boat, and inner-tube—things that can put me in the BEST mood possible no matter what. My favorite memories come from being with my family and friends on the river in my backyard.

    So I say, I definitely have warrant over things like swimming, kayaking, boating, and lifeguarding. Being around water constantly has taught me much about life. Both life and the water are blessings that should be enjoyed to their fullest extents. At the same time, they both can be harsh, making me battle and fight in ways I never knew I was capable of. But ultimately, I fight through the harsh and crashing waves to reach the good ones (yes, I like to surf too). So even if this whole blog sounds completely corny—but I have warrant over that too—I absolutely LOVE the water and would not be who I am today without it in my life.

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  7. When I listened to Dr.PD talk about this in class, something actually did instantaneously pop into my head. It’s something that I actually know better than most, something that is real and beautiful. I have a “warrant” for this place, and lots of people really do try to tell me otherwise, even though they have never been to this place and have not even the slightest clue as to what it’s like.

    Israel is a place that I’ll always hold close to my heart. It’s a beautiful country with the most outstanding history. It’s also a really friken safe place to live. I lived there for seven years and moved back to the U.S. when I was 12. When I tell people I’ve lived there, I get hit with an array of positive as well as interested responses. But, many responces have also been the classic “Damn…weren’t you scared?”, “Why? That sucks, you must have been terrified?”, “Wow, was it like a total warzone or what?”, and my oh so favorite, but a little more
    understandable “so ummmm.. what’s it like living in the desert?”

    This is where I like to exercise my “warrant” over people…for pretty much being too assumptious and asking stupid questions that have been put in their heads by short news headlines and current-events jibber jabber on late night talk shows.

    Aside from Auburn and the lovely housing community of South Run that I now refer to as “back home”, there is not a single place that I have felt safer in, than in Israel. As a child, I would bike and walk around the entire country by myself, literally. On the Jewish holiday known as Yom Kippur, all the streets in Israel would close down and we would all bike to Jerusalem on the highways. Heck my parents and I would go to Jerusalem every other weekend. I know the Old City like the back of my hand and can tell you that it’s a pretty damn safe place. I never felt endangered at any time. We had numerous friends throughout the city, and my parents would trust me to navigate the city by myself at times.

    Look, it’s a semi-tropical country with tons of flowers and cool wildlife, not a desert where everybody rides camels. And no it’s not a “war zone”. Its actually safer than most American cities. No people walking around with AK-47s or suicide bombs left and right. NO. It’s an advanced nation, kinda like the United States, but maybe just a little bit hotter with 3000 plus years more history. Just don’t be airheaded, bird-brained, dense, dumb, or witless and say “Hey guys lets go to the Gaza Strip!!! It’ll be a blast!”. That’s the equivalent of saying “Hey friends! Wanna head to downtown Detroit for the day? Something bad could happen n_n !”

    That’s the warrant that I hold over some people. Anyone got a warrant for Taiwan, Australia, Japan, Brazil, or most other countries? Cuz I don’t know jack sh*t about them, just like most people…but, you won’t get to exercise that warrant on me, you’ll just get to use it to speak, while I listen with open ears.

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  8. As far as my writing goes, I'm starting to discover that high school took away my warrant, my personal style, if i had any at all. If not, it completely halted its development.. I have always been encouraged to conform and to go by the rules. The goal was to be perfect, not to be unique. But now I realize that is a perfectly good way to bore readers to tears. Even I would hate revising my papers because they put me to sleep. Were they scholarly? Yes. Were they exactly what was expected of me? Definitely. Were they me? Absolutely not.

    As I'm thinking more and more about this topic, I begin to recall my past experiences and my upbringing and I realize that, while I may not be the most interesting person in the room, I can hold my own. I have a warrant and I can put that out in my paper.

    I went to an all-girl private school. Some may say i'm sheltered-- I say its given me an outlook on life that not many people have. Going to a single sex school has given me a warrant, whether it's appreciated or not, on feminism. It's shown me both the highlights and drawbacks and given me reasons to argue about it. I have had feminism in culture and literature drilled into my brain for four years and, as a result, can take a stand.

    If I have a warrant for anything, it's society's view on feminism. Unfortunately, I'm not sure how far that will get me in college much less in life. It especially won't help that I have been exposed to the idea so often that it has begun to shed a negative light on me. Nevertheless, I know it, I can spot it, and I can argue it. And I have experience to back it up.

    As for other warrants, they're still being discovered. Hopefully one day I'll be able to explain exactly why you should listen to me in this blog and not just scroll down and read the next comment. I guess this is a start..

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    1. This is really interesting. The high school you attend before college really does shape who you will become in college, or at the vary least has some pull. For you, for example, going to an all girls school gave you a complete set list of different experiences that the majority of this school doesn't have an idea of. I went to a small liberal private school on the ocean. This gave me a completely different outlook on tons of issues, especially here at Auburn which is very conservative for a college. My girlfriend went to a catholic school that taught her to feel guilty for pretty much anything and everything other than going to church. Like I said earlier where you went to school helps shape who you are. But I think in the end only you can figure out who you really are.

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  9. I've gone through some dark days in my life. They say only women have shoe fetishes, however you must never have met a serious male runner. I had more shoes then all my friends combined. I had shoes all over my room, shelves, closet, kitchen, garage, gym bags, hell even the bathroom. I eat, sleep, and dream about running.

    When it comes to running, I know the inside and outside of all the newest shoes, trails to run around campus, local runners to nationally ranked runners. You want to talk about your most recent 12 mile run? Or your last track workout you did? I can give advance ranging from what shoes you should buy based on your budget, running form, and style to how to train to run your best race.

    I am a runner. And what comes with running is the need for sleep. Which I need badly right now. SO PEACH OUT PLAYERS. STAY UP.

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    1. Hahaha, like Dory in the Finding Nemo, Just keep running just keep running just keep running running running.

      Running is like golf for me. I had golf balls and tees scattered everywhere in my house, in my dorm, and in my truck. I chewed on a golf tee during class and I can't help but practice my swing whenever I have room. I know what golfer is the leading money earner and internationally leading the PGA. Budge, HA, budget is nothing in golf. It has been called the "Gentleman's" game.

      Both running and golf are under appreciated sports- though running is an olympic sport. Knowing the ins and outs, being able to name the leaders in the sport and the record for the best score/time recorded. That's what warrants us.

      Not only is there a natural warrant from self experience but from sheer passion of the sport.

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    2. I could relate to the shoes part. haha
      Before I came to college I gave away most of my shoes to charity and while i was cleaning out my wardrobe, I realized that I owned 46 pairs of shoes... yea. I like shoes.

      Also of that 46, 9 of them was soccer related shoes. Ive been playing soccer for my whole life. I could relate to loving a sport so much that you just live the sport.

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    3. This comment is cool for me because I too love running. I ran cross country and track in high school for a while, but then I got injured. I tore a bunch of ligaments in my ankle and still manage to re injure it from time to time...yeah, you guys remember that boot first semester, I know. I love running but I miss it a lot. I used to be a great runner, and I was in great shape in high school. But now I want to be just as good as I was, but my injuries keep me from running during long periods of time and I get more and more out of shape while healing. I never knew this about you Robert, but I may get you to share your warrant with me! Maybe you can help me with finding shoes that won't make me roll my bad ankle every few weeks! Or maybe you can help me come up with a running work out schedule that will help me get back in shape with some short term goals to reach! Thanks for sharing your warrant, Robert.

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    4. This is awesome. I think its totally cool that you are into running like that. I can't say that I know to many people who like to talk about running or better yet know everything there is to know. Having the ability to talk about something because you know it is a great feeling. All I have to say really is just "own it". Own your interest and love for the sport of running. Its not everyday you meet someone who has that type of interest in running.

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  10. A warrant. Something I have a right to talk about. That would be a few things in my life. The things that I have been a part of and seen for myself. Something like international adoption.

    I have a warrant to talk about adoption because it has affected every part of who I am. Four times, I have been to China to adopt my siblings from the beautiful country where half of my heart will always stay. Five of my seven siblings have the word "China" listed for their "country of birth" in their passports. Yes, I have a warrant to talk about adoption. To talk about the screams that come about as a child leaves everything they've ever known to enter into a completely new life... to go from orphaned to adopted, unwanted to adored, cast aside to cherished. I know what it's like to love despite being rejected. To hold despite being kicked and hit. To promise a life of hope when all they see is their world crashing down. I know the pain that they will endure as a result of being rejected in the earliest days of their lives. I also know the joy and hope of adoption... the redemptive process that it is. I know these things because I have seen them, I have witnessed them. Because my life has been changed by this very process.

    Adoption is a miracle. It is what has shaped me into the very person I am today. It is what has uniquely and beautifully created my family into the ten that we are today. So yes, I have a warrant to talk about it.

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    1. wow that really cool and extremely special. To think that you've changed all their lives and now they are your family is something to talk about. I'd defiantly call that a warrant. I know my best friend was adopted from Romania and he wouldn't be alive today if it wasn't for his adoption.

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    2. Thats amazing!
      One of my good friends was adopted also from south korea and i see the man he is today and i believe that adoption is truly a great process,

      He tells me about how much he loves being here and i enjoy listening to his stories.

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    3. I love this warrant! I think it's so special that your family has adopted and it's something you should be able to share with many people. I also feel like it lets you appreciate things so much more than others may and you can spread that in your writing. You obviously have such a different perspective on family and for all your blessings. This can make your writing different and stronger by providing a different style than most.

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    4. It is touching to about a story of someone who is so passionate about people and their well being. It is a characteristic our generation is losing and needs to come back to before it is too late. Think of how mad we get when a text message won't send because we have bad service or when our internet is being slow. But guess what WE STILL HAVE THOSE THINGS. We tend to forget how blessed we are compared to every other country in the world and I can only pray that we would have a passion for those that are less fortunate than we are here in the United States.

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  12. What gives someone a warrant, a right to write?

    Everything does. So what do i have a "warrant" on? Whatever the heck I want to write about.
    It could be poorly written, misinformed, and overall terrible. But there are processes where errors can be fixed and misinformed facts can be updated. And whether it is good or not, the readers definitely have the right to not read it.

    When i do decide to write about something, its because the subject I write on INTERESTS me and since it interests me, it gives me the warrant to write on that subject on whatever it is.

    I never lived through the Enlightenment and as Dr. PD said, ill never know what the air smelled like. But by reading Descartes, Kant, Rousseau, and Paine, I can get a sense of what the thoughts in the Enlightenment era smelled like. And at the end, isnt it the thought that lasts longer than just a experience?

    While its true that "having a warrant" can make writing more personal and relatable, its not always the case that warrants make better writing. While I'm still not convinced that "warrants" are necessary, if i had to give an answer to what my warrant is, it would be my thoughts.
    Whether I ever experienced it or not, my imagination, passion, and desire are always there in my head giving me "warrants" to write.

    So I still am not convinced that you really need a warrant to write. And as always, I can be wrong, but until someone convinces me and gives me a solid argument, I'm going say ---- screw warrants.

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    1. I definitely agree with your point of view here. Warrants are not always necessary to be able to write about a subject. It would make it easier to write about something you think you have a warrant over, but anyone can write about anything they feel like.

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    2. You bring up a very interesting point here. I think you are right in many ways. You don't really need a warrant to write. We have the freedom and power to write whatever the heck we want. However, to earn respect in writing, I think having a warrant to talk about something is vital. No one is going to take us seriously if we write crap about a subject we have to right to talk about. Sure, you can do it anyway. I just think it takes a warrant in something for people to actually listen to you.

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    3. I like this a lot. All to often I feel like we get caught agreeing with whatever the teacher/adult says. Damn, by this time we are considered adults. It's time we all step up to the plate and express ourselves, even if it goes against what the teacher may of said. I agree with this a lot to. There is no reason you have to have a warrent to write and this is more than evident here. If nothing else how about this statement, "at the end, isnt it the thought that lasts longer than just a experience?" now that gets you thinking doesnt it.

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  13. Warrants.... Sorry I just felt like I need to start my response like that because half of the class did. Anyways knowing something and experiencing something are two COMPLETELY different things. I know about the 80s. I can tell you some major events that happened in that glorious decade, but does that mean I lived through it? Heck no. I wasn't born until '93. Ya see, actually experiencing a certain time period or particular situation gives you more of a "warrant" to talk about that matter.

    Honestly, one subject I feel like I have had many experiences with in the far past and recent past is getting hurt. Yeah, go on and laugh at me. I'M CLUMSY. There I got it out. For some reason all of my life I have had the tendency to get hurt, which I absolutely hate in case you were wondering. Breaking bones and spraining isn't fun, but this is life and sometimes you have to through poop to come out on top. You smell what I'm stepping in? Even though I have gone through these various mishaps in my life I have not let it hinder my personality. I am still a fun-loving, out-going guy to be around even if I have a cast on.

    As odd as this warrant of mine may have sounded it is true. You go through ups and downs that shape who you become, but don't let those experiences turn you into a bitter person. Stay happy, stay optimistic, but most importantly stay safe.

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  14. Warrants.... to be honest I didnt know what that meant till i looked it up on google. thank God for google right??? anyways i guess ill start rambling about warrants now!

    family. family is what sticks by your side no matter what. just when you think nobody in the world cares there is always someone that does! i was sooo blessed with an amazing family. i thank God every single day for letting me be apart of such a strong bond. i can not imagine a day without them. they have always been my number 1 supporter at anything i did. i wanted to be on the swim team one year, why? i do not know. but they were always at my competetions cheering me on. i wanted to play soccer, why again? i do not know. but they were always there in the freezing cold. i never scored a goal... but that didnt matter to them (it mattered to me so that one year was enough for me). but what i am trying to say is that with family you can do anything.

    i hope that sounded good :)

    ps... i had something typed then hit the back space button a couple of times by accident and it exited the page... PLUS i only have 15% battery left with no charger so you know what that means... GOODNIGHT :)

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    1. I didn't know was "warrants" meant either until I looked it up. Family is one of the most important things in my life. They support me in everything I do and are definitely one of the reason's I am who I am today. They work very hard to give me the things I have, and (to be honest) I take them for granted sometimes. But you're right, with family you CAN do anything.

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    2. I have this warrant too. I absolutely love my family and would not be where I am today without each of them in my life. It's the warrant of love. Loving someone else more than you love yourself.

      I believe many people would have a warrant over family. But it is interesting to think about the differences in each of those warrants. What comprises each family and how they live from day to day. Although it would be the same warrant... each warrant is so different! It's incredible to think of what we can learn from other people's warrants... even if we have our own warrant over the subject as well.

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  15. So it's 2 am, and like the typical college student, im drowning in a sea of books being attacked by homework and test sharks left and right. And as bad as I want to insert the phrase (when your stuck, write shit), I guess I'll go ahead and discuss what I'm warranted to talk about. Now when I think about what someone is warranted to do, my mind directly jumps to the idea of a degree. Ya know, someone has a degree in something, and therefore they're qualified to discuss that topic. But then my mind begins to branch out and think, "what if there are other ways that people are granted these qualifications?" What about experience. skills. talents. passions? Don't they too warrant people to discuss and do certain things?

    Dance. Cheerleading. Public Speaking. Pageants. You name it, I'm warranted to do it. But when I think of one thing that I'm warranted to do the most, is the warrant to make change. And probably the most beautiful thing of all, is that this warrant lies within each and every one of us.

    Helping our friends. Positively impacting an organization. Changing our University.

    There are so many ways in which we can become involved, impact others lives, and truly make a difference. The warrant to live. The warrant to breath. And the warrant to make change are 3 of the most powerful things in the world.

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    1. As I go back through and read these posts, deciding which to comment on, I find myself shocked to find that Leah may in fact be clairvoyant! Somehow, she knew to use "when your stuck, write shit". Fascinating! She could in fact be psychic. How did she know that would be our final blog topic???? Simply incredible.

      Now apart from Leah's apparent mystical powers, I found her comment strikingly appropriate. It really connects with the reader ya know? After all, we are all typical college students (unless of course you are not a college student, which would then lead me to ask what the hell you are doing reading our blogs), and it is easy to relate to this kind, young girl (even if she consults with spirits from different planes of existence who may or may not tell her of events that are yet to come). She uses her warrant well.

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    2. I really love these warrants and I also believe in them whole-heartedly. "The warrant to live. The warrant to breath. and the warrant to make a change..." That is what life is all about right? And the funny thing is... EVERYONE has the warrant to live. But each individuals warrant of life is so different. And then... the ways each of those warrants of life impacts others and their warrants of life. It is a never-ending cycle... The Circle of Life!

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  16. I actually stared at my paper for a solid 10, long minutes, debating on whether to discuss this issue or not. Rather to change topics or what. Talking about this always makes me seem like a sketch ass individual. But, here goes nothing.


    Coping.

    Is that possible? Chelsea Phillips has a warrant....for coping. Coping with mostly with hardships. I will never say someone doesn’t understand because despite the fact that we all come from different backgrounds, people may have equally dealt with the same issues as the next person.

    Or maybe not?

    I’ve learned to deal with a lot of painful issues. Tell me this; have you ever been around someone, consistently, for 2 1/2 years, being there for him/her, supporting him/her in everything from finding his/her faith to attending EVERY last sporting event, just to find you heart broken. Some people say teenage love is nonexistent, but the feeling you experience when your significant other cheats on you with your teammate/his cousin is like 1,000 knives being stabbed in your heart at once.
    Didn’t see that coming, huh?
    Yea. I’m a professional at dealing with a broken heart. My warrant.
    But, just as you fall down 7 times, you get back up an 8th time to keep on keeping on. You live to see another day, to tell another person your personal testimony, to smile, knowing that things only fall apart so that better things may fall together.

    At this point, I’m sure my fellow classmates and even Dr. P are reading this like, “what in THE hell is wrong with this emotional ass girl?” In a way, I feel like warrants allow us to better the next individual. Yes, it did hurt. Hell, the thought of it is still painful at times and I would never wish that pain on anyone, but despite how cliche’ it sounds, I feel like it made me a better, stronger person. It taught me not to let my guard down, and to be cognizant of the people I trust.



    After all, If there were no pain, there would be no progress.

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    1. This comment reminded me of one of my favorite quotes: "without suffering, there can be no compassion."
      It's from "A Walk to Remember," and I love it because it proves that there is truly a reason for everything. All the pain felt, all the sacrifices made, they all come back in the end to make you a better person and to better your impact on the world around you. Your suffering has made you stronger, and it has made your relationships since then so much better. you now know what heartbreak feels like, and you'll be a better comforter and a better heart-breaker because of it.

      Own that warrant, girl!

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    2. Abby, I love that quote and have to say that reading Chelsea's comment immediately made me think of it, too. I have noticed this thing about suffering, being let down, being left with a broken heart, etc. It absolutely sucks. It hurts. It's hard. But you know what? It also has a way of molding and shaping us into the people we are. It makes you more relatable, it makes you more understandable, it makes you more loving. Because you know how much it sucks to be let down. And of course, it makes you stronger. Stronger in the sense of you were knocked down, but you made it. You got back up-- something to be incredibly proud of.

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    3. This was a great blog. I know how you feel... all through high school being with the same person just to get screwed over in the end. It sucks. Theres that initial feeling of loss that you cant describe. Its literally like having a hole in you. Luckily, it does eventually go away in the end. Oh and bad ass quote to end it on. Im gonna have to write that down.
      your the bomb Chelsea

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  17. After hearing Dr.P talk on warrants, I immediately began questioning, What's my warrant? What make me who I am today? What's something that I could seriously go on for hours discussing? While several things raced into my head, the one that seems to "raise its hand the highest" would be missions.

    While missions can mean a wide variety of things, I talk specifically of missions in Rio Bravo, Mexico. I have always had a servant's heart and continue to reach out to those in our area that need help, but Mexico is that EXTRA SPECIAL SOMEONE..who am I kidding, it sounds like I'm dating Mexico....I am in love with it though! Is it that they are SO poor and live in cardboard boxes that makes me want to go there? Absolutely not. It's their constant love and gratitude while I am there that I simply can't get enough of. It's knowing that at the end of the day, they have a big grin on their face because you shared your heart with them. It's things like that that CHANGE YOU. I've been changed-for the better. I'll never be the same.

    So while a warrant can be something of your past that you try with all your might to get rid of, it also includes those attachments and memories that you hope you never forget.

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    1. This post shows the difference between people who throw money at a problem and people who actually roll up their sleeves and try to fix it. The problem being Mexican poverty of course. People who simply write a check to their church's missionaries never really understand how grateful the people are, who they are helping. When I went to Mexico for a similar mission trip, I was astounded at how kind and friendly the people were. Everyone seemed to have a since of pride.

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  18. So originally I was going to think about what I just read and then look at the page a little while and make sure I wasted a good bit of time until I finally decided what I wanted to write about. Then I remembered what Dr. P said about writing…. Just write bullshit and then look through all of it, and somewhere it the midst of all that shit there will be the shiny nugget of great writing that can be expanded on. So here we go, where’s the golden nugget going pop out at?

    Warrants. Warrants.. Warrants…. So what is a warrant? I’m not entirely sure if I grasp the concept, but as of right now I see a warrant as the experiences in your life that shape you and make you who you are. In other words, the things that you feel comfortable with, understand, and can completely explain to others without having to rely on any additional sources. Everyone has many different warrants and no person should have the exact same set of warrants. It kind of reminds me of personality, but then again I may be way off here…

    What exactly are my warrants? Well of that I’m not entirely sure. I’ve had a great deal of experiences but I’m not sure if I’m warranted to speak on them. At the same time if I was forced to speak about all my warrants I’m pretty sure I could make up enough bullshit to fill any time slot on almost any topic. I’ve always been very good and speaking on something I know little about and still pulling it off. Three things that I feel truly warranted to speak on though: Haiti, being a camp counselor, and theater. Throughout my life so far I have probably spent the most free time (not forced by school or the man) studying, working, acting, playing, teaching, and just having an all around good time doing those things. They are probably up there on the things that I feel most passionate about.

    Trying to wrap this up, I’m having some real doubts. While I feel like, sure I’m warranted to speak on these things, at the same time I realize that woa there are people ten times more qualified, more “Warranted”, to speak on those subjects that I feel Oh So Passionate about. So why should I be warranted to speak on them? Maybe I’m over thinking this and overstaying my welcome on this blog site. What really is a warrant? I think I just realized I have no damn idea…

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  19. I think this could be one of the best assignments I've had since I've started college. Actually having to dig for something personal and real that requires more than remembering which hominid came before which or learning how to conjugate French verbs in the passe compose is refreshing and enjoyable. Of course I would love to share my warrant(s) because although they are few and far between, I feel as if I have had to work for them in a way. Maybe not. We'll see.

    Now before you roll your eyes and just glaze over this next paragraph, hear me out. I know this horse has been beat dead over and over and over again, but I feel like one of my true warrants is everything Auburn. No, I'm not claiming I know every last game changing play that has happened on the football field or every last drop of Auburn history, but I feel that I have my fair share of knowledge about what it's like to truly have Auburn spirit and be in the Auburn family. I am a 5th generation Auburn student and I put that claim to fame on a pedestal and have it framed and protected with 3 inch thick bullet proof glass. I absolutely adore this place and I wish I could soak up every last inch of it until there was no possible way I could contain anymore. I went to my first football game when I was 6 months old and had family, up until a few years ago, who lived in Opelika. With visits to them came visits to the place I can now not get enough of, and books worth of my great grandparent's, grandparent's, and parent's stories that I can practically tell myself now. Hearing their tales of places long gone (like the Nehi Cola bottle and Sani-Freeze) and some still here are like a drug to me. They start off with some crazy anecdote and I feel a rush of excitement and try to put myself into the Auburn they speak of and love as much as I do. I can never get enough of them and cannot wait until my next dose. If I could dye my blood orange and blue and tattoo the creed on my back, I would. I could feed the world with my love for Auburn and still have plenty to spare. It's actually kind of ridiculous. Ok, I got a little excited. I'm done. War Damn Eagle.

    I don't really know how to describe my next warrant exactly, but I guess it's basically dealing with how my life has been affected by my dad being in the military. It's not something that can be ignored what with my dad's dress blues and ACUs and all his random manuals and handbooks laying around the house and him being gone for one weekend a month and 2 weeks during the summer. Oh, and the fact that he was overseas for a year when I was in the 6th grade and that he'll be returning to Afghanistan again in a few months. All of the trips I've taken to random military bases, all of the talks about how my dad views different world events from a soldier's perspective, and getting lessons on which patch stands for a certain unit or which plane was used in which war has taken a large toll on how I personally view the world. I don't really know how to make this make any sense besides giving examples. For instance, all of the rules and courtesies that are common on military bases have definitely made me appreciate the good that order can do. Yeah, sometimes rules really suck, but without them there would be total chaos. I don't really sympathize with people who say they deal with too many rules and being "put down by the man". That's total BS to me. You clearly haven't spent any time with a solider. Those long trips to bases have also made me appreciate a well groomed man. They are beyond attractive to me. Anyways...
    So maybe this is or maybe it isn't a warrant, but either way it has affected the person I am and I feel that I can definitely have a say in matters that involve being in a military family.

    Sooo there they are, my warrants. Both of these things are constantly surrounding me and whether a like it or not, they are going to be a part of me forever.

    I also realize this is extremely late, my bad. :)

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  20. I like the idea behind having a warrant. It took my quite a bit of time to figure out what a warrant is or what i have a right to call my warrant. Now that I fully I understand the idea behind having a warrant I can define mine.

    Living in the moment is what I consider my warrant. I've grown up surrounded by people who have everything planned out for them. Where their going. What their going to do in life. Even as severe as whats in line for dinner every night of next week. Quite sad and ridiculous. I told myself growing up that i was going to live for me and let everything just fall into place. I am a firm believer in my warrant. My favorite saying is "you do you and I'll do me." These seven words sum up my opinion on life.

    This type of lifestyle is very hair pulling and teeth clinching on my parents. But they're my parents and they have to deal with my choices. Not saying I didn't spend many of weekends on (double secret probation) aka grounded.

    My parents and their friends have always compared me to Huckleberry Finn. Saying that I'm adventurous but I don't see the danger in things or the consequences that can follow. One time that stands out was when i was a 9 year old with an orange canoe that was named "b1badinfluence." This canoe and I, alone, traveled 5 miles down the St. Johns river in Jacksonville, Florida at night. This is the fastest flowing river in Florida. When my mom received the phone call from the police saying " Mrs. Edwards, we have found your son in downtown Jacksonville by himself," she freaked and asked me what was I thinking....What was I thinking? Good question. Was I a Rebel? Was I a Hard ass? Neither actually. I was just a stupid little kid with a hatred towards the idea of being confined and controlled.

    In the words of Dierks Bentley, Im "free and easy down the road I go."

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    1. Hahaha Davis I love this post. Everyone who has ever been in class with you can clearly see that going with the flow of things is your strong point. It's actually really entertaining and as long as it works for you and you realize you do it instead of denying it, keep it up. I kind of admire people who can do that kind of thing because most of my life, I've been terrified by rules and breaking them. I liked keeping my parents happy and never wanted to try anything too stupid for fear of my parents finding out. As I've gotten older though, I've gone out on a limb and my new favorite saying is "what they don't know won't hurt them". Thank you, college.

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  21. When I first read this the more popular definition of warrant sprang to mind. That is something law enforcement officers use justify being able to search one's personal belongings. After reading this post twice and contemplating my own life experiences I figured out my own personal warrant.

    Finding alternate uses with things would have to be warrant. Ever since I can remember I have always be obsessed with altering toys, electronics, and any other junk I managed to score at yard sales. My definition of a fun Sunday afternoon would be filling a supersoaker with stove alcohol and turning it into a flamethrower. Or modifying a hand held pocket fan to a couple of nine volt batteries to make it spin ridiculously fast until it launches ten feet into the air. Or adding part of a broom to a remote controlled car so sweeping the kitchen floor is a breeze.

    This curiosity and creativity has helped me to really figure out how things work that most people just use and pay no attention to. Eventually I hope to find an alternate use for something that I can slap a patient on and sell; however I mostly do it to entertain myself.

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    1. A regular MacGyver. Nice.
      Once you slap that patent on whatever crazy awesome thing it is you invent, i bet you'll be the only one for a long, long time, who holds the only true warrant over it. No one will be able to tell you anything about it that you wont know better!.......except the customer..he's always right

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  22. As Dr.PD was talking in class about her warrant, the 80s, I started wondering what I could possibly have a warrant to talk about. Well I know two things really well... Soccer and movies.
    Soccer has been a passion of mine since I was four. My parents, who insisted that I wait to play till I was older, refused to sign me up. They kept saying that I have to wait because they wanted to make sure I that I really really wanted to play. A year of waiting and begging… and some more begging, I finally was signed up. I lived and breathed soccer for 28 club seasons, 6 school seasons which is about 14 years of my life. People ask what my interests are and I tell them soccer and they nod as if every other kid tells them that. But if it was not for soccer, I would be a completely different person. Soccer to me is more than a sport, more than a silly game where people chase each other up and down a field for over an hour to put a ball in a net. Soccer to me is a way of life and a stress reliever. When I am on a soccer field, I feel the rush of immediate relief. Soccer helped me get through some of the darkest times of my life. It also helped me celebrate the best times. I know and understand soccer as if it were a relative. If I have a warrant to speak about anything, Soccer is definitely it.
    But my passions extend farther than just sports… I love movies. Now, many people love movies. As a matter of fact I have never come across someone who didn’t but… my passion goes farther than just going to the movie theater now and again. When my mother was growing, she spent a lot of time with her grandmother, my great grandmother. She loved watching movies. I mean, movie marathons all day, every day. But it wasn’t just watching it; it was knowing everything about it. She knew dates, actors/actresses, directors and fun facts. All of this movie loving knowledge was passed to my mother and then down to me. Once I see a movie, I have to know more about it. I want to know directors, who came up with the idea, how long did it take to make, how much did it take to make and so on… My brain is filled with useless information about movies and I love them. I certainly have a warrant to talk about them…
    Soccer and movies are my warrants and they are a part of me.

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    1. Being an athlete in high school, I know completely what you mean about soccer. I played volleyball for 7 years and it was who I was. It defined me, and when I got to college, and couldn't play anymore, I felt like I no longer knew who I was. One of my best friends is a year younger than me, and she still played at the high school in the fall (and she will be playing in college), and I lived vicariously through her. I would call her once a week and the first thing I wanted to know was all about how the team was doing. When she would tell me, all I could think about was how much better they would be if I were still there. Volleyball was my warrant, but going to college made me realize that warrants can change throughout our lives. If they didn't, then we would all still be claiming a warrant on Disney Channel or on Happy Meals. But I do love that some warrants define us our whole lives, like your great-grandmother and her movies. We continue to grow in our expertise, giving us something to love.

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  23. So its the end of the semester and I'm just now replying to this blog post. Yeah, I know i'm a little late, but i think its perfectly fine. But, the topic isn't my procrastination habits. No. The topic is whether or not I know what my warrants are. I'd like to think that I do.

    I'd say that two things that come to mind are music and creativity. I've been singing in choirs since I was in pre-school. Church choirs, school choirs, they both consumed much of my time. I was almost always found sitting front row center- the teachers pet. But I didn't care, I enjoyed it. Then there is guitar. Having music course through your body and out your finger tips to produce something wonderful is one of the most amazing things ever.

    Then there's creativity. Not just in music, either. I love to draw pictures and be "crafty." When I was a kid I was almost always found building something out of legos or ken-x. Later I would show my creativity in video games I played (I'm a guy, give me a break). I would play roller coaster tycoon and sims for hours regurgitating my ideas onto my computer screen. It was great.

    These two things are my warrants; they are a part of me.
    My warrants ARE me.

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    1. I like that you took longer to figure out what your warrants were. Although it's the end of the semester, I feel like it is something that you thought hard about. So we have similar warrants. You know that! Choir? Heck, I've been singing all my life. Continue doing it in college. So although I never thought about it, I guess show choir is another one of my warrants. It's something I could talk for days about and probably lose a lot of people's interest, but I would love every second of it! And the teacher's pet part.....I really can't help it! I'm working on not making it so obvious!

      So yes, my warrants need work, the teacher's pet one especially. But although not always the best to admit, they make me who I am! I like to be someone that is likable.

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