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.
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 . . .
Warrants do everything. They make people mad, give you authority, put questions in other peoples' minds, and create arguments. And this is exactly what I want! It is what I desire. The reason...it makes people listen. No matter how mad you get over what I say it means you are reading what I am saying...did you catch that? Right now I am drawing you in and you did not even know it (and I did not even use a warrant! Ha!)
ReplyDeleteThat is what a warrant does for your writing. It allures people into your thoughts and mind like a Venus flytrap allures her flies. The flies see a plant that looks delicious but before they know it they are being destroyed. Warrants look good, and once you are in, there is no escaping. You are drawn in no matter if they wish for it to happen or not. How do you ignore someone's warrant? You almost cannot...
Everyone has some kind of warrant. Education is a large warrant for all of us. If we have been accepted into a high standing institution like Auburn University, all of us can approach anything from a decent educated view. Now some of us in this class are extreme NERDS and know a little more in certain areas than others. Take politics. Some of us are extreme nerds while others could care less (LIKE ME.) So the few of you can talk about politics all you want and have a decent warrant for that. Now that warrant would annoy the rest of us in the class...however, it still gets us thinking about it no matter how we feel about it. You got me to write it down...
(It is inescapable!)
The most frustrating and annoying warrant that a lot of people THINK they have is on religion. Especially Christians. Being a Christian myself, I cannot stand how a lot of people pull stuff out of the Bible to back up whatever they want to do. Other times, they just use whatever in the Bible fits with their life and ignores the other parts that also matter. I am sorry but the truth is...you may want to check if you really are a Christian. The reason so many people are atheist are because of people like YOU! And for you people that are not Christian out there, I honestly know how you feel. Christians lives are no different than yals, so why change? Why be a fake person? At least atheist live towards what they claim to believe. (Even though I know yal need Jesus. Badly.)
That is what a warrant is...I just got yal to read that and you probably were not expecting it...and some of yal did not want to hear it.
Warrants command attention. Respect them or not, do not deny their power. When was the last time you read something that pissed you off? Was it recently? If so, you know what I am talking about. When you read something it usually means others are too. Chances are these warrants are impacting everyone. However, what makes one person upset, could make another hopeful. When writing touches so many people, it is bound to have different effects.
ReplyDeleteThe effect writing has on people is so powerful that it parallels the feelings we have for it. I dare you to try to go one hour – no just a few minutes – without having an opinion about something you read or talk about. I feel comfortable speaking for all of you when I say that is, quite frankly, impossible. We are all human. We are hard-wired to have feelings and attitudes. With these characteristics, it makes warrants even more effective to use against us.
Warrants provide people with motivation to write or talk about something. They give people a sense of confidence, justified or not, to speak about something and provide it with voice and attention. When someone talks about something they think they have a warrant for, but really don’t, it pisses people off. No one likes someone who makes things us as they go along, a pathological liar. We all know someone who does this. You get into a quarrel with him, and he just starts making things up that you know are incorrect. Eventually it just ends ugly.
Guys seem to never want to admit they’re wrong. They also feel empowered to alter things any time they see fit. This is where people become upset when movie directors alter their favorite books.
Warrants are everywhere, just like dog21 said. He/she is accurate to say that people do think they have warrants, when at times they do not. However, I don’t think a warrant is necessary in all writing…it is just necessary in good writing.
I always take my warrants way to seriously. I don’t know why but I’ve always had this mindset where my writing HAS to be profound and deep and open up a person’s third eye to be worth it. If I don’t have a deep thought, I don’t write, it I do have one, then I write. And who am I kidding? I really am not that serious of a person. No one is ever going to really get to know me through my writing if I keep pretending that I am this really intense bookworm who wears glasses on the tip of my nose and stares off into the dust that has been rustled up in the library isles. Not me. Not even by a long shot. I am sunshine, trees, loud music, laughter, and constant smiles. Yes, I can be deep and meaningful, but that is not the person I let people see on a regular basis.
ReplyDeleteI have not been giving my warrants justice. Yes, I can use my warrants to bring people into the reality of Christianity (Thank you Dog21 by the way! That was pretty amazing and something I wish I could have gotten into words as well as you did.) or I could use them to make people realize the wrongs of our society. But my goal on a daily basis, to everyone I meet, is to spread a little bit of happiness and leave a smile after I leave.
So instead of preaching about the sadness materialism has brought our country and the greed it has bred and making people regret the Starbucks they had this morning (mmm… Peppermint Mocha) I would rather make people feel lucky for what they have. I get really mad at my mom sometimes because she complains about stupid things like how we don’t have a nice enough lake house and stuff like that. But I just respond, at least we have one! I would rather be thankful for the little things I have and enjoy them to the best of my abilities than to waste my life away wishing I had more.
And in light of the current holiday season, we should really examine how blessed we are to live in a beautiful state and country and have the opportunities we do. Also, in light of this stupid Victoria’s Secret fashion show that had 85% of my facebook friends who are girls say they’re not eating for the next month, I would like to thank the world for butter. I like butter (its quite obvious by my hips). But in a world where children are starving to death every day, women in a high income country should not feel the need to starve themselves to look like unrealistic and emaciated Barbie dolls. So, be thankful that we have food on our tables every night instead of sad that you can’t have fake boobs and fit in 00 jeans. Be healthy of course, but embrace the bacon y’all.
And be thankful you have ears, listen to a good song that makes you smile and spread that to everyone you meet! We have a sad enough world, everyone could use more smiles in a day.
http://youtu.be/HK7DLN90tuE
Skittles: I like your comment on guys seem to never want to admit they are wrong. It is true. Everyone has a little pride. Expecially guys. A way to make anyone see they are wrong in a certain area would be warrants. (If the guy is a MAJOR ego, he will not listen to anything regardless). However, you can make your case by using warrants. I couldn't argue with a female solider serving our country because I have never been in a situation of war. In the same way, we can use our warrants to blast any egotistical person in the face with truth and experience. We are our warrants. Guys, use them daily! Not just in writing!
ReplyDeleteI was sitting in my friends' dorm room. By friends, I mean girls that I had met upon coming to college a month before. These two girls, a couple of guys in our dorm, and myself had developed in to a little clique over the past month, and I liked them; they were friendly and supportive (we had developed a little routine of sending 'good luck!' texts on test days, etc.), but we'd really only been friends for a month and were still far from deeply emotional relationships…so naturally, my peers had no idea how to handle my behavior, my sudden loss of control, my accidental vulnerability.
ReplyDelete"Uh…hey….?" (knock knock knock.) "Come out of the bathroom…please?"
...Earlier, they had asked me, "what do you mean you've never seen A Walk To Remember? Do you love America? Are you sure you're a real girl?" Well then. Feature presentation decided.
But an hour and a half through the beautiful life-changing relationship mush that is '90's America's hookup movie, the climax came…and I begon to lose control of my well-contained, sealed-off emotions. The shock. The slow goodbye. The deterioration. The desperation. The dread of the looming inevitable. Everything my mother felt. Everything I was too young to understand to feel. As the close came with the widowed young man now in medical school narrating the conclusion, I was way over the movie. I was far too deep in my own thoughts… in what my mom must have felt. In how strong, and wonderful, and faithful they both were… and how I had suppressed the thought for so long. Cue the image fading, the credits, and turning the lights on. Everyone sat up from the beds and stretched, with the "awww, good movie"s streaming conversation back into existence. I immediately dreaded them all becoming aware of me, sitting on the rug, tears uncontrollably streaming down my face with no stop in sight. I instantly went into suppression mode. 'Shove it to the back of your mind, please,' I begged of myself, 'you can do this later. Please don't go into this now—' —too late. They had noticed. They were all looking at me with bewildered faces, faces with 'it wasn't that sad…' running through the minds behind them, faces that I was not ready to explain myself to.
I immediately put on my smile. "Heh, yeah, I'm a big baby. Y'all sure learned that quickly," I tried, but I couldn't do it. I welled up again and muttered, "that was just really sad." I saw them all look at each other with slightly frightened faces as I found myself covering my face with my hands and making my way to the bathroom. I just couldn't do it this time.
I tried to regain my composure as I heard them asking each other in hushed voices what just happened. I was mortified. I had let my guard down in front of people I barely knew. I hate drama. Now I was THAT guy.
The problem with this generation, or maybe just being a teenager, is that we are so afraid of emotion, of being uncomfortable, that we just laugh off anything that might arouse 'something too deep.' Oh sure, we have plenty of 'deep convos' about our dating lives and who-likes-who 'drama,' about petty, foolish, insignificant far-from-really-deep sputter that delivers a sort of fix that convinces us we have a life that is hard to deal with. I had fully conformed to it. But true, more-than-petty, meaningful emotion is so 'awkward' to us that we close it all in a buried jar with no intention of showing it unless we are in the privacy of our own rooms...sometimes not even then.
Enough.
I had a warrant to cry. I had pushed it back, forgotten it to avoid anything awkward for so long that a simple movie had caused my sealed jar to shatter and release the emotions that had been buried too long. Would these people outside the bathroom understand? I still found myself planning to play my meltdown off when (if) I would reemerge into the dorm room, but I knew I couldn't. I'd have to come out of the bathroom and face their bewildered expressions, and I had to not mind.
ReplyDeleteThat's the beauty of a warrant, I realized. It's okay. Like dog21 and Skittles said, everyone has a warrant, and they are powerful. We all have reasons to cry, and should do so without being uncomfortable. We deserve it. We have the warrant to. Life is too short to bury it all in that jar. It is okay to open up to vulnerability. How can we truly be ourselves if we never make ourselves vulnerable to the world? Put pride away and open up on occasion. This is what I had to do.
So, I decided yes, I had the warrant to cry, and it was okay. The people outside the door can react to it however they wish. So, as the guys knocked on the bathroom door asking me to come out, I took a deep breath, put all my vanity aside, and turned the door handle, pride gone and vulnerable to the judgement of these new people in my life. They all looked at me with bated breath, and each stepped up to hug me. I sighed and said, "I just don't deal with cancer well." They nodded and made comments of "yeah, it's sad," and so forth. They were uncomfortable, but I knew that they understood that I had some good reason to cry. They respected me. I decided not to explain myself to them, and they didn't need me to. They had already swung back into let's-brighten-the-mood mode. They still don't quite know why that movie got to me so badly.
I lost my daddy to cancer when I was three years old. I don't remember any of the struggle, the dread, the loss. Looking at pictures years later though, I can see everything. I didn't understand any of it; I just wanted Daddy to get better so we could go to Disneyland. All that my mother must have felt with her toddlers looking up at her while her husband was on her mind…she has the biggest warrant—she and my daddy…one of strength, one of faith. I cannot imagine what either of them felt. It would be disrespectful to my parents and their unimaginable strength for me to simply not acknowledge their struggle. I thank God for blessing me with this warrant, for it it such a large part of who I am, and I love who God has blessed me to be. This is my warrant. I was allowed to cry, in fact, it was the least I can do. And, for the first time in too long, that is just what I did.
"For as we share abundantly in Christ's sufferings, so through Christ we share abundantly in comfort too." - 2 Corinthians 1:5
What are my warrants? What am I qualified to talk about? What makes me unique and different from all the other special snowflakes with a pen or a keyboard? My experiences shape my writing, and those experiences are far more diverse than the assumptions I know you have all made about me.
ReplyDeleteSo who am I? What is my essence? I am an Army brat. I know what it is like to move every year or three. I know what it feels like to be the new kid, the one with no friends, the one starting over with a whole new life. I know what it is like to have your dad be deployed for a good quarter of your life, and how it feels when he finally comes home again.
I am a woman. I’m allowed to tell you that I want to rip out my uterus once a month and I am allowed to be a bitch at times. I can cry when the dog dies in a movie and I can take offense when you insinuate I only good for a career in the kitchen, taking care of my man and children. Who are you to decide that’s all I’m good for? What makes you assume I even want children? (I don’t, by the way)
I am fiercely independent. I don’t put up with bullshit and I don’t take direction from anyone (though I always call my mom for her advice). I know what it is like to pay my own bills and decide between going out with my friends and being able to afford lunch for the next week.
I am opinionated. Annoyingly opinionated. I’m open to hearing your opinion too, but god help you if you can’t back that opinion up with a valid argument. I like to debate, but I stand my ground and don’t compromise my beliefs for anyone.
I can write about disaster. I know what it is like to cower in a closet while a tornado rips the walls and roof of my high school off the foundation. I know what it’s like to feel loss, to attend four funerals in three days, to cry uncontrollably for a week straight before feeling dead inside.
I can also write about happiness. I can tell you what it is like to work six days a week for a shitty paycheck and be the most fulfilled you’ve ever felt in your entire life. I can tell you what it is like to work for a community with its own language, with fireworks every night, and where dreams actually come true, even if they aren’t the dreams you thought you had.
I am all these things. I am also things I haven’t mentioned. The point is, my warrants give me the strength to tell the stories I want to share, to come up with new stories, and to relate to the stories you tell me. Our warrants shape who we are, but they don’t define us. They encompass us, but don’t limit us. They simply allow us to relate to others and ourselves.
The effects of warrants are powerful and they are everywhere. Just like dog21 said, warrants do everything. They are all over the place and there is not much you can do to avoid them. Warrants can bring a negative or positive affect and that all depends on the person. There are all throughout readings and you will realize it once you have already read it. The opinions and thoughts of these writers easily get inside the readers head and that is where it being negative or positive is questionable. It also leads to people forming their own thoughts and opinions in return. I agree with Skittles that warrants definitely run parallel with people’s feelings. The person can either be offended by it or take it to heart.
ReplyDeleteThere is not a day where you will not have personal thoughts or feelings of what is going on around you and that is the reasoning of why it is hard to avoid these warrants. What would writing be, though, without these warrants? Writing is something that can be seen in different aspects. One person may like certain writing, while another may despise it. Writing causes different effects on everyone, which makes it seem to be able to make or a break a person. They will either pick up the writing and engage immediately or they will read through it and shut themselves off from it. This can lead to the understanding of why there are so many diverse authors and stories throughout society. In all, Warrants are unavoidable and they will continue to be included in writings.
Caring, lazy, southern, adventurous, bubbly, friendly, and sensitive… when asked to write words describing me these are some I used. It is easy to say words that describe myself, but what is hard is to make it show in my writing. I still have trouble bringing out my bubbly personality in my writing. I am sure my laziness shows with the way I write, but how do I show that I have a sense of adventure or my southern background? I don’t think it is grammatically correct to start off a paper with.. “Hey Yall.”
ReplyDeleteThat’s why I really find these blogs beneficial. It is helping everyone not only be able to write freely but also it gives us a greater opportunity to put our warrants in our writing. Warrants are very important in writing. I have always thought that the best writing is work that has personality in it, and that shows what type a person is writing it. I say this and yet I have the hardest time making it happen. That’s why using warrants and very important. They bring out personality in papers and they make the papers stand out. From now on I am going to try to put my warrants into my writing. Having doing this blog I feel has helped because we can just write and write with no limits and use all our warrants in our writing.
First i'd like to say KatHug...your writing is so beautifully descriptive.
ReplyDelete"Well it kind of hurts when the kind of words you say, kind of turn themselves into knives. And don't mind my nerve, you can call it fiction 'cause I like being submerged in your contradtiction, dear. 'Cause here we are, here we are."
Warrants.
A list of things come through my mind that I could credibly write about. The southern small town girl, sorority girl, college girl, working girl, out of state student, animal lover, short, blunt, the list goes on. My problem when it comes to writing with warrants is I feel that there is always someone who is more credible than me, more southern, ect. I think everyone's writing could be deemed a "cultural misstep" by a reader. There is always that one person that thinks they relate to something better than you...I call them the "one-uppers" because that's what they do--you tell a story and they always have a better one.
How annoying.
Anyways, I am damn proud to be the person I am today. Plain and simple. If someone has a problem with that then "frankly my dear I don't give a damn", why yes I did just quote Gone In The Wind. BAM.
Well that's all for now folks.
I often feel as if society has placed an overshadowed sense of restriction on being an intellectual. For real, how often can people (specifically college students) begin to delve into .. say, a deep, philosophical topic with their peers as a part of an everyday conversation? It's certainly not because the students aren't capable of doing so; rather, the constraints on being "politically correct" are felt.
ReplyDeleteSometimes, we are our worst enemy. We limit ourselves because we're too afraid to reach across the horizon. Indeed, traversing the unknown can be scary. But we owe it to ourselves to take the risk and see what's beyond. Perhaps you'll come across a dead end, and perhaps a threshold in which you would've never imagined. Perhaps. You can be sure that you won't see the end of the tunnel unless you traverse it.
“Write what you know,” the message that all English teachers and authors have told us. It’s not just what you learn in school it’s your experience, your characteristics, what defines you. So what’s my warrant? What can I honestly write about without others calling bs?
ReplyDeleteI am insecure, thriving on people telling me how good I am. I search for people’s approval and friendship without being confident in myself. I get nervous talking in front of people I don’t know because I don’t know what they are thinking. And this is how I write. I don’t take risks and go into great detail unless I feel comfortable on the topic, worried that I will make a mistake.
My Occupy Wall Street essay was a great example of this. I had no warrant to go into an in depth discussion about politics, because I don’t care or know a lot about the topic. So instead, I connected the movement to music. I wrote about associations between the musical performances at Woodstock and Zuccoti Park, the importance of lyrics and how it made a difference in history. And look, I almost made an A (which is the highest grade I have gotten this semester, yay for being a science major!). Dr. P didn’t call bs because I didn’t try to be something I wasn’t. I wrote about something I enjoyed, and hey, it was a heck of a lot easier than trying to make it look like I understood everything that goes on in the government.
Who are you? How do we identify ourselves? These clichéd questions are the reasons people join the Peace Corps or decide to become a gypsy. What I think we fail to realize is that we already know who we are.
ReplyDeleteI’ve been thinking a lot about warrants. What they are and what they mean and such. I think I’ve come up with a simple definition. Maybe. Think of us like a Lego sculpture. Each block a different memory, experience, our actions and words. We are made of these smaller moments and descriptions. Those blocks are our warrants.
We use them without even realizing it. But not in our writing. We are expected to write a certain way because of our teachers, but we shouldn’t feel like that now—not after this semester.
Well damn.
I wrote that a few days ago, but now I’m not sure that’s the direction I want to go anymore (though, I’m leaving it ‘cause I thought it still stands). I want to thank Dr. P for this assignment, giving it to us, helping us with it, molding us into writers we never thought we could be. We’ve talked and thought and delved so far into the world of warrants, we are discovering more of who we are. Which is more than I ever expected in an English class. I read all of the posts. Yes….all of them (I have such an exciting social life I know (but in my defense you guys are great)). Was that even correct punctuation?
Let’s just end this with this thought, what we have learned this semester –about ourselves and writing—we can’t ignore it. Not like everything else we learn in our studious lives. Let’s keep this with us. What do you say to that?
Lehhhgo- Thank you! I have been struggling with what to write on this blog and you just nailed it. Literally, it’s like you took the scrambled thoughts in my head and voiced them perfectly. I made a list of what describes me and makes me unique. But I still felt uncomfortable claiming those warrants because quite frankly, “I feel that there is always someone who is more credible than me."
ReplyDeleteThat’s what kind of held me back from writing this blog is because I don’t really feel as if I have anything to claim. I am a girlfriend, a daughter (only child to be exact), and a Christian. I am hard working, responsible, and organized. And all of these things tend to make me overly worrisome and consistently stressed. I am also caring, thoughtful, and dearly loved. Yet, I am wary of taking recognition for any of these titles. Why? Because I know there is someone out there who could say it better than I ever could; someone who has more wisdom and more experience.
However, our true voice comes from our warrants. Who we are and what we claim gives us our character. We show our personality in our writing through what we are passionate about. These are our warrants. I never realized how important our warrants are; they are everything in writing. Warrants give you authority and respect- they grasp an audience’s attention and force them to listen. They give us the power to write.
“Be yourself. Above all, let who you are, what you are, what you believe, shine through every sentence you write, every piece you finish.”
-John Jakes
Using warrants is everywhere around you. Southern, sassy, short-tempered, hopeless romantic, Catholic.. those are a few of my warrants. Things that make me who I am. It is easy for me to describe myself or show people who I am, but how do I show this throughout my writing. How can I show all the great things about me through my writing when I’m not even writing about me?
ReplyDeleteThrough these blogs I’ve gotten to show my personality through my writing. To let loose of all rules and write exactly what I think. To show everyone who I am. My warrants come out in these blogs. I hope people can see that.
I think most English teachers have ruined people’s warrants and letting students freely express them. Express who they are and what they feel. I know most of y’all hate the normal structured papers and perfect citations, but that is all we know. I know that’s all I know. My teachers have taught me perfect grammatical correct sentence structures and structured paragraphs, but where does my voice come in? When do I get to tell my opinion on something that I think is completely absurd? English teachers have also made writing lose its warrant also. It’s warrant to be a form of art work, a way to escape. Teachers have brain washed students. I know I have been until Dr. P showed me my warrants were important too. My voice was important too. I could finally be myself.
Hmmm...Warrants
ReplyDeleteGrowing up, my father tried to implement his ideals upon me. Not like some beat the religion into me kind of thing(he's atheist!..bad joke) , but he made it aware to me what he would massively prefer out of me. The great thing is that I was able to be who I wanted to be, but that was not acheived without my father's consistency of teasing and what not.
When I told him I was not interested in playing sports in high school( not that I was that great, but I was OK) I could see the dismay in his eyes, but he was outwardly accepting.
He wanted me to be my own man.
My father is a fucking asshole, nonetheless, but he strongly helped influence an accepting warrant in me. He is the typical FOX News idolist. On top of that, my hometown is as redneck and incest as they come.
(I seriously am not kidding. There are "clans" were I come from that just interbreed with one another and their poor children do not even go to the public school. It is quite sad)
He claims to have a reason to be "partial" racist, (21 years of police service on the streets of Tampa). I do not test him. He gets upset when he hears profane racial slurs from the locals. I ask him why, and he says that he guarantees that most of these irrational mountain folk have never even met an African American.(Literally, my hometown is 100 percent white).
I see my father's passion and also his reasoning. My father is by no means a smart man, but he understands morals, and his implications have helped me accept who I am. I am definitely not a chip off the old block, but maybe more like a grain off of it.
Animal Collective- "My Girls"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zol2MJf6XNE
This song helps define me in a different way than represented in my post. Great Song. Pretty much this song says that (the singer) doesn't need much to make him happy. I can relate to his minimalism. As stated after the intro verse:
"I don't care for fancy things/
Or to take part in the freshest ways."
Daughter, sister, Christian, southern belle, shy, stressed and worried, are just a few words to describe the many warrants that I actually have. This blog was also one that I had trouble thinking of what to write. Reading everyone elses amazing blogs have made me think about what I need to write for my blog.
ReplyDeleteI have always held back from expressing my feelings. I don’t wanna say that I let people walk over me, but sometimes it happens. I am afraid to tell people what I really want them to hear in order to avoid a fight of some sort. I am more of a solver than an arguer. I won’t express my feelings out loud and I think very carefully before saying something. Lehhhgo and McGee said just what I wanted to say. I am also afraid to speak my mind because I know that there is always someone better to voice their opinion. I never speak up in class knowing that my idea or thought is way worse than another classmate’s opinion.
Blogging has helped me express the warrants that I am too scared to express out loud. It has helped me to enjoy expressing my opinions so others can see what I have to say but have no idea who I am. I have this hidden identity that will never be revealed. Blogging is my secret warrant.
Warrant. All I can think about is "She's my Cherry Pie." It just gets stuck in your head. Damn oh well.
ReplyDeleteWarrants. I'm a son, a step-son, a half brother, a shoe freak, a jazz listener, a liberal. All of those things make me, me. While many seem to try and keep their warrants toned down, I strive for the opposite. I'm not obnoxious by any means, but I am proud of my warrants and I don't keep them a secret.
Writing without my warrants seems like an impossible task. I'm sure I could, but what kind of writing would that be? It'd be so dull! That's the beauty of warrants. They give us a unique color to pain our writing, and if used correctly, separate our writing for everyone else.
I also agree with livelaughlove. Blogging has brought out warrants for me to use. Writing in this format has made it far more easy to write. It's truly coming from me and not bogged down by any overbearing writing jargon. When it comes from me, that's when the warrants are at there fullest. That's when I'm just being me.
KatHug- Wow. Your response is so touching, raw, and truthful. That really hit me hard… Beautiful example of a warrant.
ReplyDeleteMy story is not extraordinary, but I love the person it has shaped me into. I grew up in a family of six. I have two older sisters, a younger brother, and the best parents I could possibly ask for. Growing up, family dinners became a daily routine in my household. Almost immediately after I would get home from school every day I would ask the infamous question, “What’s for dinner Mom?”. These dinners became a rock for me- stability. My Dad would rant about government problems, my Mom would roll her eyes, my brother would do whatever it takes to get attention on him (being the youngest and only boy besides my Dad must be tough for him…), my sisters and I would look at each other with that “lets hurry this up so we can go do whatever we want” stare. Looking back I value these family dinners more than anything else. Elementary school was a blur of rainbow parachute gym games, and polly pocket play dates, but as life progressed into high school a lot changed. Girls got bitchy and competitive, boys seemed to never be on the same page as me, teachers were always a toss up, and life was just one bottle of familiar completely shaken up. What got me through these years were times like family dinners. This is my strongest and most valued warrant.
Growing up, little did I know how much I would one day treasure these special dinners.
Warrants.
Family is the best warrant I could’ve stumbled into.
KatHug- you are beautiful. What strength and courage you have! The Lord will continue to bless you as you rely on Him for strength, what a beautiful heart you have.
ReplyDeletePutty-I am right there with you, i dont want you to think i am copying you, but my warrant is indeed too my family.
I am a daddy's girl, but i would never tell my mom that to her face- even though she knows it anyways. My dad is my role model in everything I do. He is the most Godly, humble man i have ever known to walk this earth. He treats my mom like a princess and always knows how to put a smile on my face. I love to shop and be girly sometimes, but honestly there is nothing better than sitting in my dad's lap and watching saturday college football all day long (i miss that). I still hold my dad's hand in public and im almost nineteen years old. My dad works so hard to make sure that we are all provided for. I know that so many girls don't have the opportunity to have a strong male role model in their lives and i have just come to realize that I am so blessed by this. My daddy has given me so many tools to be successful in the real world, he has taught me how to love, care, work hard and be humble but most importantly, how to serve the Lord in everything you do.
My mom is the same way. Her heart is constantly full of love, joy, care, and patience, qualities that only a true woman of God possesses. She never stops loving me, despite my many shortcomings, and I know there are many. I know I test her patience beyond all measures, but her love for me still overflows daily. I have come to realize that not many daughters get to experience the kind of love she continually shows me. She cares so much about me and would truly give anything to make sure I am happy, but more importantly to make sure that I too am living a life for God. She constantly encourages me and demonstrates to me that she is proud of me, something I take for granted. When I rejoice, she rejoices, when my heart breaks, so does hers. That is the kind of love that is so rare, even among the Christian community. I honestly cannot express how grateful I am to have a mom who cares more about my well-being than she cares about herself. She put others first in everything she does and is rooted and established in love.
When i left for college, it was one of the hardest things i have ever done and looking back on it i now realize why. It is because of the strong relationships I had built with my family. I am one of few teenagers who can honestly say that a night with my family can be just as enjoyable as a night with my best friends. My parents molded our family into what it is. Everyone sees the true love and care my family of five has for one another and that started with my parents.
My parents shaped my family into a beautiful picture of the love of Christ. I strongly believe that because they demonstrated to me the true meaning of Christ's love, my family is also rooted and established in love. My family is my most precious gift that I have been blessed with on earth. They are what has shaped me into who i am today. I am a daddy's girl, a moms daughter, a big and a little sister. I wouldn't trade this warrant for anything else in the world.
December 20th, 2011 we will all be back together when my sister gets home from London. It's been over four months and it simply brings tears to my eyes to think that we will all soon be together again. I am blessed.
Well, I can relate exactly to goose12. Looking back on my writing, I can see my insecurities flooding the page. I have always felt insecure when talking to strangers. Was I being annoying? Was I pushing my opinions too hard on them? All I cared about was impressing. And this showed up time and time again in my writing. No risks whatsoever. And I’m not really sure why I never tried anything new because I never got great grades on my papers. Mostly B’s and a few A-‘s sprinkled in here and there. I always got in my own way. Never confident enough in myself to lay it all on the line, take a few risks. This class has pretty much thrown me out of my comfort zone. I was forced to share my opinions and put myself into papers, something I had NEVER done before in my life. I am so thankful for this class. It has truly changed my writing style and has brought me back to a place where I actually look forward to writing because I know that I am about to let the reader in on a little piece of me.
ReplyDeleteSo what are my warrants? Daughter, big sister, Christian, outgoing, conservative. These are all words that mean something to me. They all make up me. I never would have dreamed that someone would be able to tell these things about me through my writing. I mean, for goodness sake, my high school teachers would have murdered me and my grade if I made my opinions on a topic too clear in my papers. We wouldn’t want to offend anyone, now would we? But these are the things I identify with. These are the things that mean the most to me in life. This is what I know the most. Teachers have always told me to write about a topic I know the most. Well… this is about as good as it gets. I am so thankful to have had the opportunity to show myself in this class. I am able to unashamedly and fearlessly write. Write about what I know. Write about ME. I have always been afraid to completely own these titles. That is, until I came into this class. Including little bits of myself in my writing has made me more aware than ever about how proud I should be to call myself all of these things. So, this is me. And I am stinkin’ proud of it.
Well I'm not gonna try to make y'all (yes I spell y'all with an apostrophe) drown out your sorrows with whiskey like I did with my other posts. Life's just too damn short.
ReplyDeleteI definitely feel what Dr. P's talking about. During the Thanksgiving break, I had the pleasure of watching the GOP debate. Subsequently, I had the pleasure of wanting to rupture my own eardrums in an effort to silence the stupidity. Honestly, I was positively elated about exercising my hard-earned freedom to vote. Now I'm considering abstaining.
No Michele Bachmann, Obama is NOT outsourcing our interrogation to the ACLU (American Civil Liberties Union). Sorry Santorum, I don't know how y'all roll in Minnesota, but profiling Arabians isn't going to be any more effective at stopping terrorist attacks (remember the bombing of the Oklahoma Federal Building? yeah, that was a White guy). And Herman Cain: Who are these "experts" that will guide your hand on foreign aid policy? I'm pretty sure we're electing a leader, not a placeholder that can take advice. And the rest are just as disappointing.
I mean I dislike Obama as much as the next guy, if for no other reason than he hasn't done half of what he promised, but c'mon guys. This country has survived nearly 250 years, I'm pretty sure Obama's not bad enough to end that record.
I don't think of politics as a warrant of mine; I just am able to see through all the avoided questions and vague answers that politicians use to prey on the ignorant. Ah well. That's politics.