I am not very disciplined. I do better with assignments.
If anyone has anything they need written, a brochure for a business, a quick bio for a website, a love poem for a gift...let me know. No papers for school though. I do not believe in cheating or plagiarism. I may not have been uber-successful in school, but I have done it on my own merit and I don't blame anyone but myself for my failures. Except the one teacher who lost my paper (which I put in his mailbox) and then told me to write another one. He was an idiot.
I really am serious though. I am not charging anything, but I do reserve the right to put the material in a portfolio.
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Monday, March 7, 2011
Thank you, Louisa May Alcott!
Today is the anniversary of Louisa May Alcott’s death. I thought that I would finally begin this blog by talking about how much her work has meant to me. In these changing times we forget about home, hearth, and simple comforts.
I first read “Little Women” in Fourth grade and my teacher let me keep the book because I enjoyed it so much. It was my escape from a troubled home and a great pathway of learning. For one thing, I don’t think I would be as kind or as loving without having read it.
A reader can see parts of themselves in all of Miss Alcott’s characters. I was at once deviant like Jo, prim like Amy, shy like Beth, and careful like Meg. I think the same could be said for any adolescent girl. Furthermore, I wish I could be more like Hannah, a warm supporting presence for my family.
So without more time to write, I would like to thank her posthumously 143 years later for writing “Little Women” which still fulfills an important need today.
I would like to thank the facebook presence of “The Secret Life of Emily Dickinson” for linking to Miss Alcott’s obituary and inspiring me to begin to write again today.
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