Friday, January 16, 2009
Hmm.
Today I was just sitting here thinking about how people become all upset and unhappy and reminisce how much they miss something after it's gone. When they still have it, they generally just add it to a part of their daily lives. They don't cherish it or think about how amazing it is... Or even appreciate it at all. But when it's gone they remember how happy they were? This is mostly applicable to relationships and losing your "boo", and it is most common among high school relationships. Teenagers aren't mature enough to differentiate between what's real and what's simply infatuation. Some think it's real when it's not... and some think it's just infatuation when it's honestly real. I think everyone needs to look at the relationship they are in, appreciate it for what it is, and realize that they will be terribly upset without it. If they don't, it could be the very reason that it ends.
Yesterday In English Class...
I'm in accelerated english. It's more just a title than an actually hard class; no one in it has any difficulties with it whatsoever, so it can't be that hard. Anywho, we were learning about whether or not it is she or her, he or him, who or whom, me or I (that one is easy), they or them, and whether or not it is possessive, objective, nominative. My teacher started to give us a speech (oh yeah, I forgot that we or us was one too) about how if we didn't learn to speak correctly and differentiate naturally, then we students wouldn't succeed in the real world. I just looked at her and thought honestly, how often does she mess up her grammar? Oh, wonderful English teacher who speaks "Picksburgese." Ha. Hypocrites often bother me, especially because I'm generally set on the whole pronoun thing without needing to determine whether it is an indirect object or a direct object or object of a preposition and such.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
