Saturday, March 3, 2012

Blog Two

Potrait of My Body



I'm sitting here actually trying to link "Portrait of My Body" and "Why We Crave Horror Movies."  Sober.  I think I've got it, but it all seems a bit too strange for a blog, or for sharing, or for thinking even.    I wonder if several of us were pulled in easily to "Portrait" simply because we wanted to connect to it somehow, have the scars made beautiful or the imperfections justifiable.  What a jolt those of us must have had when it all went wrong halfway in and our tender author betrayed us, made it a bit uncomfortable, and stank up the room.  I wondered the same thing halfway through King's piece.  It was all fine and good until he started saying things like "we" and "madman," and sheesh, so close together like that?

Which brings me to another bit of a loser supposition: what if certain folks are right?  What if there is no "true" us, only the performer on paper?  What if we cannot escape him/her simply because we (the reader) are the intended audience for us (the writer) and, here's the kicker, we know what we cannot bear to hear?  Then, riddle me this Batman, is there any point at all to this academic, masturbatory, narcissistic exercise called writing?

Come on.  You didn't think I was that innocent, did you?

Let's try something here.  Portrait # One:

Long fingers.  Granma loved them, called them piano chasers.  (And they were, years ago, chasers along porcelain sound). Here, a sliver of a scar in the shape of the glass that sliced it, either side of my middle right knuckle.  Hands just beginning to crepe up a bit after years of washing dishes, cleaning houses, working dirt.  They held babies and stroked hair and clasped others and enunciated sentences.  Married by joints that ache when it's going to rain and sometimes just because.  They were the prettiest thing I had and are now the most belligerent sign of my wisdom.  The left one bears a wedding ring so heavy that it has left a permanent, soft dent.  I find comfort in them, the bones and the thinning skin that are the closet thing to my writing, my history, my life.  My hands.

Sookay.  Now.  Portrait # Two:

Cuticles long scarred by permanent teeth, ripped and bit and torn until they bled.  I curl the tips under to hide the flesh when I pay in cash, cut the nails to cripple their chances of self-mutilation.  Veiny and branded by a drop of velvety hot grease -- a moment of self-defense against someone I loved.  Fingers so long that they will have no choice but to become claws in the next two decades, bony things that held cigarettes and formed obscene gestures and slapped a friend once in a drunken rage.  I am terrified of these appendages for they just might one day turn on the rest of me in jointy glee.  Premeditated.  Justifiable handocide.  My hands.

Saalright.  Pick one.  Which portrait is true?  Why, both, of course.  And neither.  Somewhere in the middle.  Whatever I choose to remember or believe or tell.  I think that may be the point, after all: to tell the truth, but to tell it slant (English majors, unite).  Tell it ugly, sometimes, otherwise the writer in you will call bullshit on the whole sweet thing.

And for reasons beyond my own understanding this morning, the following verse just came into my head:

Would you believe in a love at first sight?  Yes, I'm certain that it happens all the time.  What do you see when you turn out the light?  I can't tell you, but I know it's mine.

KPD

52 comments:

  1. When I started reading the Stephen King article, I honestly immediately agreed with him. We are insane. In philosophy, the human creature is described as a “rational animal”. And that’s where I call shenanigans. Humans aren’t rational at all. We are brilliant and innovative and completely insane. But what defines insanity? Surely everyone who has ever been “insane” hasn’t known they were, in fact they deny their insanity. But then what does that make us, those who are confident in their sanity? Surely by denying insanity we too can be called insane. And then there was the other article, the one about the body. What was with that? He was describing himself? What was his opinion? Then I read Mrs. P’s two portraits, and it all makes sense. The beauty is in our insanity. We are yin and yang. Humans have two sides, dementia and mania. The two portraits are two sides of the same coin. One is through the eyes of the manic, the one that is blissful and ecstatic, while the other is from the eyes of the demented, tormented in their misery and wallowing in fear and self-hate. And all of this makes me think of my favorite painter, Vincent Van Gogh. Van Gogh was insane; he was tormented, but even more so than those, Van Gogh was an artist. He used the pain of his tormented life to show the beauty and ecstasy of life in his paintings. He used his dementia to portray bliss. He invented worlds and people in darkness and saw them in light. We watch horror movies not because we want to be scared; we watch them because we want to see fear. We desire that primevality of being the predator, to stalk our prey. And that is where our insanity comes into play. We deny our desires because they are dark, because they are socially unacceptable, because we would be labeled insane. That doesn’t mean we don’t have them though.

    What do you see when you turn out the light? You see darkness, and even though you can tell me, you won’t.

    And that darkness is yours.

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    1. I like to think that i am sane in an insane world. All of us are crazy and insane, but some people try and hide/ deny it while putting others down. We all are crazy, insane, innovative. Creativity comes from insanity.

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    2. We are rational animals, I would have to agree with Aristotle on that one.

      People are rational, in a way where we do things in order to suffice our needs.
      Rationality is simply the use of reason, and if you dont exercise that, youre closer to a beast than to a man.

      You dont have to be insane to be creative.
      You dont have to be insane to be innovative.

      Its about passion. Whatever you are passionate about, youll go beyond other people's understanding. When we dont understand someone's action, we call it insane.
      Its just priorities at the end.

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    3. That was some good stuff. I defiantly got a little tripped out there at the end. I completely have to agree with her on this one though. Everyone has weird dark desires, it's just all a matter of who can hide them the best. I just read a study on yahoo that showed a direct correlation between the kids that were most popular in high school and the kids that were the best liars. 9 out of 10 of the best liars are also the most well liked people. SO, based off of that i'd say we really like the illusion of sanity.

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  2. So this is all about honest opinions, right? I hope so... because here goes nothing...

    Although I do think that it very interesting to think that there is an insane person inside all of us, I just can't see it..especially in myself. I liked the article about horror movies and I thought that the portrait article was a very interesting companion and they both provoked thoughts on my end. But if I'm going to really be myself here, then the ever-present dreamer is going to come out to chat now...

    I have never been an aggressive person, and I am typically very laid back. When I really care about people or something, then I could be considered aggressive, but even then it's more like I'm just motivated...so active, not aggressive? Anyways, the dreamer in me can some how always manage to believe that there's good in even the most evil people. Sure some people seem to be hopeless, but I hate that word. There's always hope! I am that person that will search, search, and keep searching for the good in someone.

    So because of this, I have a hard time believing that there's an insanely evil, horror movie loving side to everyone. I run at the first sight of a horror movie, but that's just me. I can't handle the nightmares that would ensue. Maybe I'm weird, and I can see how people would have this side, and maybe if I explored this part of me a bit more, I could meet this crazy lady lurking inside...but she's really good at hiding, and maybe there's a reason why I don't know her. Maybe it's for the best. I like to think that I'm a pretty upbeat person..granted, I have my good days and my days where I'm dragging. However, I don't need horror movies or an inner crazy person to make me depressed or unlike my usual self for any span of time...not having time for my morning coffee is reason enough for me.

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    1. I agree with the whole running at the first sight of a horror movie thing. I slept in my parents bed for weeks after seeing E.T., because I was afraid I would be abducted. However, I sometimes wonder if it's because I am even more sensitive to the crazy than everyone else. Maybe the crazy lady in me is too easily stirred, and that's why I didn't watch T.V. for a month when "The Exorcism of Emily Rose" commercial was circulating. Instead of being buried inside of me, she was waiting at the edge of the hole, ready to jump out at the slightest notion of terror. And, yes, maybe it's best for me to keep her at bay, continuing to hide from the pop-culture phenomenon that is scary movies. But I sometimes wonder what would happen if I let her out, if I let her run wild for a night and have her fun? Would it destroy me? Would one fitful night of sleeping with my scissors within reach be worth her fun?

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  3. Where to begin... Where to begin...

    I guess I believe there is an alter ego to everyone. Bruce Banner had the Hulk, Dr. Jekyll had Mr. Hyde, and Dr. Conners had Lizard. Everyone has a part of them that is what they truly are, and a part that is what they wish they could be, or in some cases things they wish they weren't.

    I don't know exactly who I am yet, so I can't say what my alter ego would be. I'm an Auburn fanatic and a true Southerner so I can't help but try and see the best in everything -except University of Alabama- and be genuine to who I was raised to be. My confusion comes from why are we supposed to be an upper class rich snob? Didn't the truly brilliant people of the world come from rebels and people who decided if they couldn't be born into wealth and fame then they should make their own? I'm fortunate to have a good family, but my namesake was a bootlegger in the backwoods of northeast Alabama, my grandfather was an Army soldier in Vietnam, and my dad was an Opelika and Anniston police officer. Then men in my family didn't have pretty office jobs, they had jobs no one wanted at the time and that were often took the brunt of reticule (and some laws), but they worked them to provide for their family.

    All this makes me say if there is a side of us that crave horror movies, then there is a side that makes all of us crave to go beyond the desk jobs and the neatness of the world, but instead get into the dirty jobs and do what is necessary to succeed in life and make a living and not a name. This is just my take on what Dr. PD has said and what I've always thought made a person truly great. I don't claim success when someone else took my advice, but when I take my own advice.

    I believe everyone has a side that everyone can relate to, it is the side that each individual embraces that we see and know. We are not born any certain way, but we are made into the person that we are today and we build on ourselves. In the words of Forrest Gump: "That's all I have to say about that".

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    1. "we are not born into any certain way, but are made into the person that we are today and we build on ourselves" I like that. I like that a lot. And of course the classic Forrest gump. Love the Alabaman background. Right there with ya.

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    2. "Everyone has a part of them that is what they truly are, and a part that is what they wish they could be, or in some cases things they wish they weren't. "

      This line is perfect. Reading through this passage I just saw this and had to stop and reflect a little bit. I think we can all relate to this. We see some people and think, damn, i wish I could be more like that. Then, sadly, for a few of us we look at ourselves and think, I wish I wasn't the person I am. Luckily, college is the perfect time to decide who you are really gonna be. So envision what you wish you were, and then make it happen.

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  4. Every single person in this world has their own unique quirks, secrets, fears, pet-peaves, passions, and obsessions. It is these aspects of our character that make us "insane" or "crazy." This insanity comes in all sorts of different flavors! But everyone seems to adapt and become a person who, to some degree, hides their passions and obsessions so they may function in everyday life (to maintain the status quo). Like King says, we must develop muscles to control our inner passions and fears so they do not consume our life. Often times, secretly we wish our passions consumed our life, while we try to forget or discredit our extreme fears. It is these extremities of personality that causes our inner insanity. And to make matters worse (actually better in my mind), these extremities of personality and passions differ from person to person-- forever broadening the infinite spectrum of insanity. But this is what makes life and meeting new people... fun. Learning the things that make them who they are, what causes their unique insanity. This bonds us to our closest friends and family-- having a commonality or appreciation of a peculiar insanity.

    So when it comes down to it, Stephen King is absolutely right about all individuals being insane-- but it's not a bad thing. Life is enjoyed to its fullest extents when one realizes their own idiosyncrasies and can appreciate those of others.

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    1. Alex this was extremely insightful! i mean seriously, awesome response! I agree completely that people tone down and hide their passions in order fit in or "maintain the status quo", and yes, i do have several passions that i wish consumed my life but that i cant let get in the way.
      It is this that makes us unique, glues us to our friends, repels us from others, and keeps this awful wonderful world unbearably fun!

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  5. Lopate's and King's articles both focus on seeing the true man underneath the cover that humans so often put on. By digging deeper inti the meanings and hidden antics of ourselves we can learn more about what makes us tick and what we like.

    Loparte's article makes me want to do a self portrait of myself. Often, we overlook the small details of our being and don't take them into thought. If we focus more on the little things we can find quirks about ourselves that we may have no known existed. While I was reading this article, each body part he mention I took a step back and thought of my own bodily stature. Looking at my body I think it represents me well and I had never realized it.
    King made me think more about who I am based on society. My surroundings affect me in ways that sometimes I'm not aware of and realizing that is kind of scary. It makes me understand that I may not be as strong as I like to think I am.

    Thinking of my underlying personality makes me relate back to my warrant. My hidden traits that others don't know about and I'm still discovering are part of who I am and what gives me a background and a style. Whether it's those traits or the society around me, I'm still discovering who I am and the combination of the two cause me to be more complex and even two-sided.

    So what does this have to do with anything? Probably nothing. Probably just a rant. The more I write about these articles, the more I begin to understand them and that understanding unfolds gradually just as the understanding of my own self-portrait. I'm unique, right?

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  6. Alright, its late and I'm tired so ill make this sweet and short

    Insanity is a spectrum of behaviors characterized by certain abnormal mental or behavioral patterns. Insanity may manifest as violations of societal norms, including a person becoming a danger to themselves or others, though not all such acts are considered insanity - Wikipedia

    That does not describe me or anyone that I know. Yes we all have an "alter-ego" that pops up once in a while, but everyone makes mistakes and if we say that we are insane because our alter ego pops up once in a while that seems quite extreme.

    In viewing humanity, you have to look at the overall pattern, not the occasional "insanity"

    I dont think King understands the severity of the word insanity.
    Ive seen people that are insane, and its scary. And for him to say insane because an occasional sick joke and enjoying a horror movie just shows that he doesnt understand what insanity means.

    I do agree that humanity has more than one side to it and that is normal for everyone. Humans are complex beings that we will never come to a full understanding of how we operate and function.

    Well, theres that.I do believe that we are unique and special but insane?
    I dont think so.

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    1. You have an interesting perspective on these articles. I like how you investigated more into the use of the words other than the point of the article itself. I think sometimes people get so caught up in arguing a certain words that they lose track of what they're arguing for in the first place. They get tripped up on the bells and whistles when they should be focusing on the heart of the piece. Had King used a different word, the article would have been much more effective, especially for readers like you. That's something that writers have to look out for- to make sure they are staying true to their topic and that they will get the proper response.

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    2. I agree with this! The word insane itself is kind of a turn off for me. It has such a negative connotation! Even if all of us have a mean side, or enjoys the occasional scary movie, that doesn't mean that we are lunatics! I am a strong believe that there's good in everyone even in the most crazy, insane, and bad people on this planet. And this article was all about the opposite...it's like they're looking for the bad in people. But why not look for the good? Instead of looking for the insanity in everyone, can we look at the qualities that make people the individuals that they are? Can we look at the great things that they could contribute to the lives of others instead of how they could potentially be insane or dream of being a serial killer? Maybe I'm a dreamer...but, just some questions.

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  7. I think the thing that both of these articles have in common in the fact that they both point out how weird we really are as members of the human race. There is no denying it. No hiding it.

    Normal isn't normal. Normal is just a word that people use to feel less alone. We think that if we can create a status quo and get others to go along with it, then we can convince ourselves that we are not alone in our thinking. It makes us feel better to know that there is a majority opinion, and it makes us feel better to be able to put people down for not living up to it. We feed off of the negative energy that people give off when they are rejected. It makes us feel powerful and alive. Telling someone that they are not normal makes us feel as if we are more powerful than them, and if we are more powerful than one person, then we are more powerful than many.

    Or maybe it's more significant that we are not powfilms and go to haunted houses, isn't part of the reason to test ourselves? To see if we are brave enough to make it though without crying to our mommies or tweeting about it. Of course,tweeting about it is what we all seem to do best. To prove to the rest of the world that we did it. Aren't we all taking a little time to look at the person next to us when that ghost come out of the closet? Aren't we all looking behind us as we get out of the haunted house to see if we were the last people to make it out...maybe even hoping we were the last? We made it out alive and you didn't, which makes us that more powerful...

    We made it out alive that much stronger, with that much more knowledge about what we can handle and eager to test ourselves again. We crave to know ourselves, the good and the bad. We want to know how poised we are or how gross we are, that way, we can set a standard for everyone else. Because if I can make it through 4 horror films, then that's normal, and anyone who can see more than that is numb to emotions, but anyone who can't handle that many is a sissy.

    Don't be a sissy.

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    1. Truth is- everyone is weird. Everyone is unique, but it's who we were created to be! I think far too often, we look for the imperfections in others to make us feel more confident...at least I do. It's so hard to accept that someone is better than you. Better at speaking, at writing, at doing whatever. It is engrained in us from the beginning to strive for perfection, but the truth is that none of us are perfect. So why are we looking at other people's flaws? More importantly, why do we have to broadcast to the rest of the world how great we are? We are just fishing for a compliment so we can say "Nanananabooboo I'm better than you at something." I still question why? I'm so guilty of it and I can't stop. Always trying to outdo others. And it's getting old and I'm getting tired.

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    1. I know I have pretended like I was something I wasn't at one time or another. Mostly its to impress someone or a group of people. Regretfully, in pretending to be something i'm not, I often forget about what i'm passionate about- or as some would say "what I'm crazy about". And I guess it all goes back to the idea that we are all crazy in some way or another- whether is it through pretended we are something we are not in order to impress someone, or if its in just being passionate about something.

      Anyways, im not sure where im going with this...

      Also, i enjoy your writing style with the lack of capitalization- it reminds me of e e cummings' style (which is awesome)

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    2. Pretending to be someone your not really helps us keep our sanity in modern times. Video games are the perfect example. Does your life suck? Well if it does you can always turn on your game console and become a pro football player, mass murderer, or valiant infantry man real quick.

      But be carefull.... Things get really fucked up when the line blurs between who your pretending to be, and who you really are.

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    3. If insanity includes pretending to be someone you aren't, then I am probably the most insane person on this planet. At times, I pretend to have everything all together when shit is just going absolutely HORRIBLE. Other times, I pretend to be happy when I know I am dying inside because of a certain situation I am dealing with. I feel like every once in a while, it's needed to just step outside of who you are in order to see who you truly are.

      Is that confusing?

      Stepping out to pretend I'm "perfect" (for the lack of a better word) helps me to understand I am truly not perfect at all. Far from it.

      But, that is just me. =)

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  9. So I'm guessing that I'm somehow supposed to pull together some type of "academic" frame of mind and write in the most professional way possible?

    Well thats going to be extremely hard. Probably because pulling it together and being professional isn't always the easiest thing. But then again, some people do it better than others.

    After reading these two articles that I seemed to not even slightly agree with, I decided to read the prompt one last time before giving it a go.(No, I don't believe that all people are insane. There are just those few whose elevators don't go to the top floor who'd like to make themselves feel better and put us all into the same category.) And despite trying to overlook large chunks at a time because I'm clearly not in the mood to read about bloody hands while eating my breakfast cereal, one sentence in particular stood out to me. "What if there is no "true" us, only the performer on paper?"

    Now I'm sure your wondering how in the world I was given two prompts in which everyone seems to agree with, yet I can only skim up 1 sentence that even remotely makes sense. Well that's just how my brain works. Get over it.

    But this sentence just makes so much sense!!! I mean, if you actually think about it, its screaming so loud to my brain that I can barely type as fast as my mind is going. We all do perform when we write! And it's awful! And ya know why we perform? Because for the most part we're all in one of these two categories: 1) We're either trying to write so hard to please our audience or 2) We're trying to ass kiss to get a good grade.
    In college, can you imagine how different and unique everyone's papers and writing assignments would be if they didn't have to stuff themselves into a box and write exactly what each professor wanted them to? If we could all write as "bloggish" OR conservative as we wanted to, because maybe that's just our style?

    Unfortunately that day may never come. We will forever be on the stage writing under scrutiny and perfection knowing that each song sang and line read will be put under the spotlight. So my brethren, let us all write to perfection, or let the ass kissing begin.

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    1. Your writing should please yourself. Ass kissing is nice, and probably smart, but what if you wrote in such away that you still found joy in it AND got the acceptance from your audience? That is the trickery of writing a good essay; you have to pick a topic that you will enjoy writing on about but at the same time know your audience will like. You have to show your audience you are passionate about this topic, and they will like it.

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    2. I agree with you and there is a certain amount of enjoyment or confidence your writing should bring with yourself. Kissing up and writing to please your audience but you can't neglect the most important part... yourself. No matter what if you don't love what your doing you'll fail. If the reader can tell you have bad feelings on a paper it won't be a good read. You must be passionate to be successful, not a suck up or a people pleaser, just passionate.

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    3. That's the beauty in the real world though, isn't it? College can be suffocating in that it forces us to confine to whatever our teacher wants us to confine to, but once we are out in the real world, there are no rules. I love E.E. Cummings because he does a great job of ignoring the rules of grammar and just doing whatever he wants. Here's one of his poems called "Tumbling-hair":

      Tumbling-hair
      picker of buttercups
      violets
      dandelions
      And the big bullying daisies
      through the field wonderful
      with eyes a little sorry
      Another comes
      also picking flowers

      That poem doesn't make any sense grammatically, but it is so beautiful! Some teachers probably would have loved it, and some would have probably hated it, but it doesn't matter now. Now, it's published, and whether or not it got an A doesn't make a difference!

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  10. First off I want to start by talking about the subject that everyone tried to avoid. In “Portrait of my Body” that dude starts off great, well kinda. I still felt like his essay was long drawn out boring. Good for the author that he is tall and has bushy eyebrows, honestly I don’t really give a fuck. Now even though I say that. It doesn’t mean that I don’t do that exact same thing. I feel like its human nature for people to care about how they look at least a little bit. Why are almost all celebrities attractive – because we as humans, or at least as a culture like attractive people. That’s also why all this bullshit shows like the Biggest Looser and Celebrity Fit Club tend to do so well. Everyone loves seeing fat unattractive people lose weight and become what society tells them is attractive.

    Now I don’t think this necessarily bad, even though its not really good either. I am kind of indifferent about it. In other words I don’t give a shit. Sure I may care what I look like but honestly I could care less about some stranger and there quest to become attractive. You might say, “oh it is so touching though, these TV shows have people changing there lives for the better.” Ya, well that’s true good for them, but maybe if they had any sense of drive they could have attempted to loose a few pounds before they ballooned into a 500 pound man/woman.

    Any way I digress, I got off topic a bit. What I really wanted to mention about “A Portrait of My Body” was how that dude throws a curveball and suddenly starts talking about his dick. Woa man, I mean that’s fine if you like backs and socially acceptable parts of your body, that’s cool if your tall and that makes you happy, but honestly I don’t wanna hear about your dick, (I mean maybe I would have if it was like weird in someway, like you had two, or it was 20 ft long I mean then curiosity might have gotten the better of me and I’d be like, damn have you heard bout this guy with the double 20 ft long dick? That’s some crazy shit.) but no it was just a regular dick and that makes me uncomfortable. I don’t wanna hear about some regular average Joe guys dick because that tends to make people uncomfortable. And if that’s what he was going for it worked. Even though my girlfriend made fun of me when I told her about it saying, “Thomas why does that make you uncomfortable it’s just a penis, you have one to.” - (That Awkward moment cause I just talked about dicks.) - Maybe girls are more comfortable with themselves, who knows.

    On to the next one, “Why We Crave Horror Movies”. So this one was pretty straight forward and for the most part I agree with it. Every one is nuts, that’s true for sure. Society seems to be just how well you can cover up how nuts you really are. Obviously some are much better than others. Think of the most popular kids at your high school. I read an article the other day that talked about how the popular kids are also the kids that are the best liars and tend to show emotion the least. That’s because we don’t like real emotion, and to be friends with everyone you have to be a good liar so you can talk shit about the right people at the right time, and then transition to being the best friend of the person you were just talking shit about 30 minutes ago. Oh and if your attractive that helps to. If your that strange kid that sits in the back, and tells people how you really feel, THAT SHIT CRAY. People don’t wanna know that your upset cause that may make them upset. Be happy all of the time or at least most of the time and you’ll probably have a lot more friends. Any way I gotta head on my way into class. Dueces Thomas

    Probably the most straightforward honest writing I’ve ever done.

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  11. Alright so Stephen King thinks we are all insane in the membrane. That is just an everyday occurrence for human beings However, I think he is the insane person and we are just trapped in his screwed up reality.

    I consider myself a unique individual different from everyone else in this world. I talk differently, think differently, have different habits, and have my own problems. This is what makes us as humans the most complex beings on Earth. We are capable of doing just about anything if we really put our mind to it.

    So I have come to this... We are not insane but unique even though THE Stephen King thinks differently. Gander at this thought though, because I don't want to just disagree with Mr. King since he is a very very intelligent scholar... What if our uniqueness makes us insane. It is a scary thought, but sometimes the truth is scary.

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    1. This is interesting, however I'm not sure how uniqueness would make us insane... But maybe it does? Maybe we are so wrapped up in ourselves and how we think that we literally cannot fathom other ways of thought and other people's "sanity"...Maybe sanity is relative.

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    2. I agree that we are unique, not insane.
      Insanity is defined as not sane; not of sound mind; mentally deranged.

      THrough out history there have been many scholars and thinkers who were
      brilliant, yet wrong. I believe King had the right concept of us being unique,
      but wrong in the way where he credits our uniqueness to insanity

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  12. Humans on the outside, in society, seem to be rational creatures. Of course everybody is rational in public, where they are seen by others for fear of being labeled or called a name. This rational escapes the human as they head to the confines of their own space. A place where no judgement is passed. A good example:

    My roommate, an 18 year old college student, loves Pokemon Cards. Everybody like them too, ten years ago. He has recently spent outrageous amounts of money to complete his collection of cards, I for one think this i crazy, and so would the outside world and society. But, this collection of insignificant paper objects brings him joy, and to him that's what maters. As I asked him over and over again about his financial plan and how he planned to earn back the money he kept telling me that he didn't care to make a profit by selling them on Ebay, the process simply brought him joy.

    Not something I completely but when I compare it to my life, I guess I do.

    I race cars. It's a terrible and dangerous addiction, but there's nothing else in existence comparable to pushing a machine and yourself in harmony to their absolute limit and then holding it there. It's almost divine, and its the only way I can relax, it's like a church service for my adrenaline. I'm not very athletic, never was, but I understand the capabilities of my car and myself.

    I have one piece of advice, don't get in to car racing, its a life long, never ending addiction, but I love it.

    Therefore, car racing is not rational. It's dangerous beyond belief and is more expensive than you can imagine, which is where my business prowess comes in. I know how to get people to like me, which is important for getting sponsorships. My specialty. I ask people for money to help me go faster and get closer to death. IRRATIONAL, but awesome.

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  13. I like to think of everyone having two sides to their coin. Not in the two-faced way, but in the way that everyone has something that people love and a side to them that they want no one to know about. What is such a difficult concept for me to grasp is that I can't always be a people pleaser. I can't be the "teacher's pet." Especially around Dr. P because she can see right through me. She sees that I'm not perfect. I can't be myself if I'm constantly trying to please everyone else. Why can't I just accept me for me? I have these scars for a reason. I have my own style. I have my own ideas and my own life. I need to accept that it's okay to not agree with everything that everyone else says.

    So what is it deep down that causes people to be something they aren’t? Why is it that people decide they need to cover up the “not so perfect” things. It makes them who they are today. Yes, we have blood on our hands. Blood that we can’t wash off because we aren’t pure and cleansed. We have bad things that happen, things that we can’t forget about, but it makes us us. Everyone knows that you aren’t perfect. Everyone. So why do we need to be fake with ourselves and try to hide in the bushes of our own imperfections trying to make sure it’s not seen by the rest of the world? When we finally accept who we are we can begin to open up and people will accept who we are. We aren’t perfect. God created us how He wanted us. Why would we change it?

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    1. I've struggled a lot with the fact that everyone here seems to think that they have to live in this perfect little world where nothing ever goes wrong. But the thing is, that is completely false. Your comment hit dead on with my recent thoughts. WHY do we try so hard to make people think that we have it all together? We don't! And everyone knows it! So why cover the scars-- the very things that have made us uniquely beautiful? "I can't be myself if I'm constantly trying to please everyone else." It's true. We're going to be climbing up a ladder for the rest of our lives trying to reach something that is impossible to reach-- the complete approval of others. So instead of failing time and time again to be what someone else wants, why not embrace the unique and beautiful people that we are?

      Wear your pearls with pride, girl, because they are a small part of who you are!

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  14. I have never been one to like feet. I actually kind of hate them. They disgust me when I think of everywhere the have been. The amount of germs that they pick up as I run down the tiles of Leischuck Hall. The sweaty socks they rest in as I run throughout campus. The fact that they aren't washed like hands are washed. The awkward pale way they appear to me, toes not perfectly aligned, and nail polish constantly chipping off. Feet. They are ugly. They are awkward. They are smelly. You put one in my face and I can assure that I will squeal in disgust at the very sight.

    On the other hand, they are beautiful. I think of the places my own feet have walked, and it would be impossible not to say that they are beautiful. They have walked down the steps of the Great Wall of China. They have crossed over the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco. They have climbed down orphanage stairs in a small town in Romania. They have walked the hallways of Covenant Day School, bringing memories that will stay with me for a lifetime. They have brought me pain, they have brought me joy, they have brought me compassion. Their very existence has, in some way or another, molded me.

    Without them, I would be lost. With them, I am repulsed. What is it that makes feet so beautiful, yet so ugly?

    It is the sight that makes them unappealing. It is the experiences that make them a wonderful part of who I am.

    They are raw with experience, and I imagine life without feet, and the very thought makes me afraid. How much I would've missed without this very aspect of my body that has me so torn between beauty or repulse. So today, I am thankful for feet. I am thankful for the awkwardly, smelly, often sweaty extensions to my legs. Because they have brought me to where I am in life, and without my very feet, I wouldn't be the person that I am today.

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    1. Wow... Feet? Really? Because I think that's brilliant! You just wrote poetic justice. Not even being sarcastic. This is by far my favorite comment, due to the superficial characteristics of its deceptively simple plot. You see, this isn't about feet, its about HER!!! "It is not the appearance, it is the experience they provide". Pure literary genius! What a profound statement regarding human nature. We humans run about our day taking things for granted, viewing simple things as ugly and stupid, yet this girl has just shown us that even something as simple and absurd as feet has deeper implications. Feet are a gift, but it isn't about the feet, its about the gift. She appreciates the gifts she has, it shows her optimistic nature, and reveals to us a part of herself.

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    2. It funny that you mention feet because that is the one part of my body I'm most self conscious about. They are big, grotesque, and smelly. Yet for some reason I don't try to cover them up. For some reason I don't try to hide them even though they are the most ugly part of my body. Why is that? Well quite frankly, I've come to accept the fact I have horrible feet and covering them up isn't going to help my feet. It isn't going to magically make them disappear so I might as well show them off, right? I mean they aren't going away anytime soon so there should be no reason I should be ashamed of them. God made my feet in His perfect image and I am so thankful for them even though I see them as a flaw rather than perfection.

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  15. Both of the articles really show the opinion of the authors themselves and the subjects they are about everyone should have their own opinion about. Stephen King thinks we are all insane, which may be true. But Websters defines normal as conforming to a type, standard, or regular pattern. So if we are all really insane then doesn’t that make insane the new normal? I believe that everyone can be insane at some point in their lives, and sometimes you can’t really help but feel like you are about to go insane. I know at many points this semester I thought I was going to freak out whether being loaded with so much work that it feels like I’ll never finish or just little things that can make a day go from good to bad. Now I don’t think I would’ve felt like murdering someone or something that extreme but I definitely was not in a normal state of thinking.
    Lopate tells us all about his quirks and probably more information than I needed to know about his body. Now while I don’t deny that I don’t do any of those things, actually in high school a friend pointed out to me how I tilted my head to the right a lot much like Lopate, but I feel that people should feel comfortable with their own bodies and not really have to care what others think. I know this is easier said than done because as many movies and tv shows have pointed out life just seems easier if you are attractive. If we can’t accept ourselves for who we are how can we possibly expect other to?

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    1. It is an interesting point-- if everyone is insane... then insane must be the new normal. Overall, I enjoy how both of these authors state their opinions in interesting styles. They are not afraid of what their readers will think. Rather, they simply make their readers think. I also agree with both writers. Every human being is a tad bit crazy or weird in some way. And every human being has different looks and bodies. But as humans, we must accept these unique qualities about ourselves, so that we don't drive ourselves even more insane. Accept what God has given you, both on the inside and outside. Realize that you have quirks and look a certain way for a reason.

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  16. Insanity may be looked at from two different points of view:

    Doing the same thing over and over expecting a different result each time
    OR
    Maddness or briefing from a mental disorder or illness.

    Which one do you agree with? I could very much say a majority of the people in the world would like to agree with the first statement if they believed Stephen King's article, arguing that we are all, indeed, insane. I would also like to agree. However, I believe there may be different levels of such. An insane person who is locked in a mental asylum is not on the same Richter scale as an "insane" man who finds simple humor in running over a squirrel that dashed into the middle of the road on his journey home after a long day of work.

    Now I, on the other hand, do not find joy in simple minded jokes like the one mentioned in King's article. But, does that make me completely sane?



    I seriously doubt it. I wouldn't go to those extremities that he mentions, but I wouldn't say I have it all together.

    I wouldn't say you have it all together either.




    Hell, no one has it all together. We are all some type of insane.

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    1. I agree with the idea that all people are some type of insane. Everyone is insane by someone's standards. It all depends on the person's perception of insanity. Assuming there are no physical deformities in a person, how exactly can you tell if there are indeed insane. There are no advanced medical machines currently available that diagnose mental conditions. This leaves a gray area in this particular field of study. The doctor diagnosing insanity only knows what the patient has told him/her based on the doctors perception.

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    2. All people may be insane as you bring up a good point. We go into our lives everyday and perform the same tasks, yet complain when the outcome is no different. It baffles us humans that doing the same things again and again doesn't yield something wonderful and magical. The key to overcoming this is to expect what is expectable. Expect what may come from your actions. Key to moving forward is setting short-term and long-term goals. Ask yourself where you want to be in a month, a year, ten years. Then write out what it will take to accomplish your goals. Find motivation and go for.

      Even if we do this we're probably still insane.

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  17. We have in a mind a certain perspective of our own self. Everyday we look at ourself in the mirror and our brain controls what our eye's see. Standing there you wondering, "why am I fat? why is my nose so big? why do I have acne? why do I not have perfect hair? why, why why..." Throughout the day our mind over thinks about who we are and can even trying and either change or conform to a personality, belief, or a way of life.

    Each and everyone of us is unique, but we spend so much time looking at the negatives about ourself or trying to change who we are. You may see yourself as fat, but to someone else you are normal. You may trying to come off sweet and nice, but your friends no better. We cannot change who we are, how we look, and how we act. Those were given and set in the very beginning. So instead of worrying or trying to change, embrace what you have. Love your hands, love your feet, love your gender parts. They are all perfect to someone else, so they should be perfect for you.

    I know I am crazy, and I sure do love scary movies. I know I am lanky, but thats my body time. It annoys me when people try to force change on themselves. Like girls trying to starve themselves for a week before spring break to "look" skinner in their bikini. Your mind is going to maybe look at yourself and say, "damn I look good" but really you just hurt yourself and probably made things worse by starving yourself.... there was a great basketball player called Michael Jordan, the Air Man, and everyone wanted to be like him. Every kid playing street ball looked up to MJ and tried to mimic him in every way. There was even one great player now, Kobe Bryant, who in his early career even talked like MJ in post-game interviews.

    Instead of players being their own, they strived to be someone else. In life, we always want be something else. Maybe it's society or the Media, but it just ins't right. Be happy and thankful for who you are, never listen to anyone other than your heart, and never ever try to change yourself

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    1. This is a great response. I completely agree people should like themselves and not try to change just because they don't fit a certain look. But there will always be something that everyone wants to change with themselves and that is just human nature.

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    2. Optimism will always trump pessimism. One thing I have learned in life is to never discourage others because you don't know what the problems they may be struggling with. Plus, being mean and hurtful is just no fun to be around. I know I sound like your First Grade teacher but it's the truth. Just imagine this world filled with a bunch of optimistic people rather than a bunch of pessimistic people. It would just be a little different, wouldn't it?

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  18. These portraits are just two (or more) ways that you see yourself, and they are most likely at different stages in your life. One when you're in a confident, up-beat mood, probably when things are up, and the other when you are a little down in the ruts, maybe after something not so great has happened. Either way, this it totally based on the mind and how you perceive yourself through it. You may do terribly on a test or athletic event and start to paint yourself in a negative light, but as soon as you score with that hot chic/guy or ace that next test, you revert back to that positive portrait.

    I for one like to see myself as a whole. I take the bad with the good, simply because I believe that the good far outweighs the bad. I do not have more than one portrait of myself....lately. But I know that at times I have. Do I not paint this other not-so-nice picture of myself now because I’m just doing so great? Probably. My life is fantastic right about now. I’m in college! It’s not too hard, I’m getting awesome grades, doing more than outstanding in ROTC, and I've pretty much got the girl of my dreams. So why would I paint this other portrait of myself when the one I’m looking at right now is just so beautiful and awesome?

    That's just it though...I don’t want to paint another portrait, my mind won’t let me. I like this me too much to take this portrait down...I’m sure that when things get out of my control and start going downhill, I'll put another one up...but only for a time. Just enough time for me to dust my favorite portrait off and put it back up when the time is right.

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    1. Haha dude this is a very well written response to this idea of two portraits. I think its awesome what you got going for you and i think your idea behind, "Why would I paint this other picture" when everything is going alright thing, is really awesome. When something is going well for you, there is no need to change it. Its great that everything is going good for you, and you keep painting that portrait that suites you.

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  19. Steven King has a very good point; stating his opinion into why people enjoy his horror books/movies. Also King suggests why he enjoys writing scary movies, because he is so good at it.

    Horror movies are different from any other type of movie. If you walked into a random movie theater during a movie some people would classify the movie as comedy-romance or an action-adventure; however no sane person would say comedic-horror. Although action movies can have you on the edge of your seat one can guess the hero will fight on or die heroically. A good horror movie can you on the edge of your seat and not have a clue what happens next.

    Also scary movies do a job of putting you in the protagonist's shoes. Most movies relate the normal life of most members of the audience, unlike action movies which typical relate to badass secret government agents or what not.

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    1. Scary movies relating to our normal lives is what makes them so scary! It is so easy to convince ourselves that CIA operatives aren't after us, because we know we haven't done anything wrong, and we won't ever be those operatives, because we aren't geniuses or ti-Kwan-do experts. However, who's to say that there isn't a monster in our attic? In the scary movies, the killer always goes for the innocent bystander, maybe the one with a little curiosity. And we all have curiosity, don't we? Who's to say that we won't be next? The paranoia sets in, and there is no going back.

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  20. Sober...? Hmm.. Sure Dr. P. Anyways,

    I agree completely we''re all mad. At least just a little bit. And the thing that makes us mad is simply being: human. We as humans, thrive on thrill, seek perfection, have a desire to be loved, and will do anything for survival. Writing is our complex of putting all of the madness and trying to make sense of it all. Doable? Maybe. As for the portrait... Well I haven't quite painted mine yet. I'll get back to you all on that a little later in life.

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  21. Where to begin (2 months late, and i'm still struggling)...?

    Well instead of reflecting on the two essays I think ill reflect on a different subject- the subject of insanity. I think we are all a little bit insane. Some more than others. We all have things we are passionate about. We've all pretended to be something we're not to impress someone. We've all over reacted to an issue once. All of these things- these thing that are considered "crazy"- are actually NORMAL. These things are consistent in all of us.

    On a separate topic- I think it IS better to write the "not-so-sweet story." You are just hiding who you really are if you make it sweet. Plus, it shows how talented you are as a writer- its hard to write a completely truthful story. We always want to fluff it up and make it FAR from truthful. And that is bad.

    Just be yourself, be truthful, and remember its okay to be a little bit insane!

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  22. I believe that there is an insane person inside of everybody. If not inside than an alter ego. I know that personally for me that this is very true. I am very shy and quiet around people I don’t know. I hate confrontations and will do everything in my power to avoid them. I say things that people want to hear and hope that they will be happy with what I say and drop their conflict. But inside my head I play a whole different situation. The internal situation is me saying how I feel and confronting people and saying everything that I feel. After the conflict has been dropped, my mind races with everything that could have happened differently. My mind screams at me to say something and do something. An like Bruce Banner trying to keep the Hulk inside, I keep my emotions in check and count to ten and try not to scream what I want to say. I totally believe that there is an “insane” person in all of us. For some of us, it is hard to see that person inside of us. For others, it is very easy to see.

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  23. I loved these articles for 2 reasons, 1. It made me really aware of how I view my own body, all my sun spots, the scars, how odd my toes look, etc. and 2. How Stephen King's writing does point out the obvious fact that we're all off the rocker about something. We've all known that we have our quirks and others may have it worse, but they're still there and they affect our daily lives in some way. It made me aware of myself-both mind and body.

    King's version of insanity and what he feeds off of to fuel his amazing and mind blowing stories is definitely an unknown area than what most of us are used to, and that could be what we love so much about it. It's along the same basis of why people like reality TV shows. I know I like them because I find it so fascinating to watch someone else's life. It's not llke I'm unsatisfied with my life, but it gets boring. I feed my curiosity and watch the shows (particularly the Real Housewives series. Don't judge me) just for kicks and giggles. People just have a tendency to be nosy, and this is a way for them to satisfy their needs, I suppose. It's not necessarily a bad thing, you just have to make sure you don't take any of it too seriously because let's be honest, those shows and weird movies aren't actually fit reality.

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  24. Stephen King, what a champ! One of the best authors/writers that has ever walked this earth. What makes him unique and special is his ability to grab a reader and sit you in a chair for hours. Without physically touching you! Keeping you at the edge of your seat, and having you hold on for the big BANG...to sum it all up, what I'm trying to say, is that Stephen King is a great author to listen to.
    In his article about everyone having an insane side is pretty interesting, to say the least. But I would have to agree. Truly agree. I believe that everyone has their demons that they keep disguised. Hell, some don't even disguise it! Sorry Sis. Joking...but really. I think we all have a bit of insanity ready to release. Fortunately for most of us we can keep the demons dormant. We do this (staying dormant) by knowing our boundaries in society. You know, the "rules". The one thing that keeps us from breaking our shells... our demons! There are too many deterrents set in place to keep us from over stepping our boundaries.

    Maybe we need to release our insane sides...when I say insane, I mean the side of us thats loosey goosey. Bet you haven't heard that saying in a good minute. Have you? Our inner insanity needs to be released, because without insanity the world would be boring and explained...and whats a world thats explained?

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