A Day In The Eyes of a Teenager



Saturday, October 29, 2011

How To Survive a Snake Bite

* Recently, I was given the challenge of a fiction writing assignment in English class and this is what I came up with. My teacher loved it so much that it motivated me to start writing again. So hopefully, I'll be posting more stories on this blog. Hope you enjoy this story just as much! *

From the outside, Sherman Winchester’s one story white house looked bare and vacant.  However, there was much life within the walls of the Virginia house.  Sherman, a short, obese, thirty-some year old man with barely enough greasy hair to pull off a comb over, lived almost alone. He didn’t have any family or friends to talk to besides his mother. The only exception was his twenty pet snakes.
            All the snakes were poisonous and varied in length from the size of a worm to up to 6 feet.  Sherman kept these snakes in a room that served as a giant habitat. The walls of the room were painted a dark green to match the dirt floor and grassy logs propped up against the walls.  Heated lamps hung down from the ceiling creating a humid temperature and a moldy smell.    The snakes occupied every inch of the room.  Some snakes were barely visible, blending in with the manmade habitat.
            Sherman spent most of his time in the snake room listening to the musical hissing sounds of the creatures.  He sat for hours with a book or notepad reading about and drawing serpents. These slithering lizards were the only thing Sherman had, even as a young boy. Sherman often sat alone at lunch, his head buried in a snake book because no one ever wanted to talk to him. His home life wasn’t too great either. As a young boy, his father walked out and left his mother a single parent. Living a short walk from the zoo, Sherman spent most of his time observing the beautiful patterns of snake scales.
            Now, sitting in the dirt on the floor, Sherman did the same thing. He came to this room to find peace in solitude. However, his stay was cut short when the phone rang. Sherman raced out of the room forgetting to shut the door. He already knew who was calling. “Hello, mother!” He said into the phone. “How are you?”
“Sherman! I’m just calling to tell you I’ll be over soon so keep those ugly snakes away!” The voice on the other end was nasally and high like a piccolo.
“Yes mother, will do!” Sherman hung up the phone and returned to the snake room, realizing his mistake. However, he didn’t think much of it, assuming the snakes wouldn’t want to be out in the open away from the comfort of the heat lamps. “Okay little snakes,” He spoke to them. “Mother’s coming over and you know she’s a little frightened of you. So, I need you to be on your best behavior.” Turning to go make tea for him and his mother, he almost didn’t see the snake coiled around the doorknob. “Woah!” He said. “That was a close one.”
It was almost noon when the doorbell rang. Sherman knew it was either his mother or the mailman with the new snake book he had ordered from the zoo catalog. Although he loved his mother, he was really hoping it was the mailman. His hopes were let down when he peeked through the door hole and spotted a short, little red haired lady with big round glasses. “Mother!” Sherman opened the door and invited her in. “How are you?”
“You put those evil things away, right?” Mrs. Winchester looked cautiously around the living room. She never approved of her son’s hobby. “Yes mother.” He told her. “They’re all locked away. Can we go to the kitchen? I made us some tea.” Sherman followed his mother into the kitchen. She barely sat down before she tasted the tea. “Ugh! So bitter!” Mrs. Winchester took the sugar dish off the counter and opened the utensil drawer for a spoon. Looking down, two little beady eyes looked back up at her.
Mrs. Winchester’s eyes became huge. Her whole body tensed up and she fell over dead.
“Mother!”  Sherman ran to her side and watched the perpetrator slither out of the drawer. All his life, everything he had was his mother and his snakes. Bringing the two together, he realized, was a fatal mistake. It was his entire fault, he decided. He promised his mother that she was protected from the snakes and he had failed her. There was only one thing left to do now.
Seeing the little black snake that killed his mother on the kitchen counter, he reached for it. In just a second, the snake’s fangs shot out and stabbed the blue veins in his left hand. The venom immediately took effect, burning as it traveled up his arm to his heart. Staggering to the door, Sherman desperately tried to go get help. His legs became weak beneath him and his eyes were blurry with pain. Dropping to the floor, Sherman reached out making a final attempt to grab the doorknob.
He’d never make it, he decided. His life was over. The pain was too much to handle. He was going to die here with his mother in the kitchen and the snakes in the house. Finally coming to accept death, the door bell rang. Unable to call out or reach for the door, it was as if God himself was mocking him.
On the other side of the door, the mailman was dropping off a package. Before the mailman left the front porch, Sherman was already dead. Days later, a neighbor noticed mail piling up and called the police. On the scene, police discovered the brown package still sitting on the porch. Upon opening the package, the police discovered a book titled, ‘How to Survive a Snake Bite’.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Here comes the sun...do do do do ♫

Last night was the first night since I was a little girl that I stayed up all night and was awake to see the sunrise. Right before the crack of dawn, life began again. The gas station across the street was already open and full of the daily early birds. It is so different looking at the world with the same eyes as yesterday.
I realized it's not the day you should live by but the moments in the day. You can go through life with one day at a time but before you know it, the days have gone by and life has passed you out. When I wake up in the morning (Or in some cases, the afternoon), my first thought is not what I'm going to do with the day but what I'm going to do right now. There's so much you can learn about life when you keep your eyes open.
Peeking through the blinds this morning and watching the sun rise into the sky, it reminded me of one of my favorite memories with my father. When I was little, I would go with him on the weekends and on an early Saturday morning, we'd wake up, drive to Frackville and sit in the mall parking lot eating McDonald's hotcakes and watching the sun come up over the mountain. Everytime I see a sunrise, I think of that Saturday morning. Good moments that I remember with my father are rare but this is one that I'll never forget. I hope one day you'll see the sun rise and experience it like I did.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Rise Against - Swing Life Away - Story of My Life

Am I loud and clear, or am I breaking up?
Am I still your charm, or am I just bad luck?
Are we getting closer, or are we just getting more lost?

I'll show you mine if you show me yours first
Let's compare scars, I'll tell you whose is worse
Let's unwrite these pages and replace them with our own words

We live on front porches and swing life away,
We get by just fine here on minimum wage
If love is a labor I'll slave till the end,
I won't cross these streets until you hold my hand

I've been here so long, I think that it's time to move
The winter's so cold, summer's over too soon
Let's pack our bags and settle down where palm trees grow

I've got some friends, some that I hardly know
But we've had some times, I wouldn't trade for the world
We chase these days down with talks of the places that we will go

We live on front porches and swing life away,
We get by just fine here on minimum wage
If love is a labor I'll slave till the end,
I won't cross these streets until you hold my hand....until you hold my hand

I'll show you mine if you show me yours first
Let's compare scars, I'll tell you whose is worse
Let's unwrite these pages and replace them with our own words

We live on front porches and swing life away,
We get by just fine here on minimum wage
If love is a labor I'll slave till the end,
I won't cross these streets until you hold my hand

I've only heard this song today and it suddenly discribed the details of my soul and now I'm going to go through all the lyrics and tell you what they mean to me. ( I recommend listening to this song as you read on ) Click Here for the Youtube Video of it.


Am I loud and clear, or am I breaking up?
Am I still your charm, or am I just bad luck?
Are we getting closer, or are we just getting more lost?

This describes how confused and lost I am in the world sometimes and how I don't understand my place in life. It also explains how quick people can change. How you may think you're on track but in reality way off.


I'll show you mine if you show me yours first
Let's compare scars, I'll tell you whose is worse
Let's unwrite these pages and replace them with our own words

The first line explains how I'll only open up to you if you have something to relate to me. The second line explains how I secretly compare my experiences with people I know to see if they really know the hurt that I know. The 3rd is really my favorite line. It tells me that it's okay to not want to give my life story to some people and I can edit how people see my past.


We live on front porches and swing life away,
We get by just fine here on minimum wage
If love is a labor I'll slave till the end,
I won't cross these streets until you hold my hand

The first two lines tell me that life is still beautiful no matter how you live it. The next couple lines tell that no matter what you decide to do in life, you need love and someone to be there for you when you go out in the world because in the end, we can't do it all on our own.


I've been here so long, I think that it's time to move
The winter's so cold, summer's over too soon
Let's pack our bags and settle down where palm trees grow

These lines say that there's hurt in my life right now but I need to pack my bags and leave it all behind me.


I've got some friends, some that I hardly know
But we've had some times, I wouldn't trade for the world
We chase these days down with talks of the places that we will go

These lines are awesome. I don't feel so bad about the fact that my friends barely know me but yet from our experiences together, we've become so close. It reminds me that I'm alone but at the same time, not so alone.


This song truly seems to describe me and how I feel about life and it reminds me that life doesn't turn out the way you plan it to be but you need to just keep swinging (:

Friday, July 1, 2011

Children of the Corn, I mean, House.





Dear children of the house,
No, cleaning up does not mean make a bigger mess.
No, you don't have to show me what you got out of the fridge today. Really, it's okay to not leave stuff out on the table.
Guess what?! Paper towels are for more than just wiping your face! They clean stuff up too!!
If you're eating something and an adult takes it away, sitting there and crying is not going to make it any better.
It's really okay to sleep that extra hour. You really don't have to wake up from your nap just yet.
Sometimes I really do want to take a walk by myself. Feel free to stay home.
Same goes for the Wii.
If you could read this, that'd be awesome.
                                                          Thank-You!

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Mayo doesn't go well with hair. Trust me.

Ok. You seriously need to listen to me. If you ever, EVER, see a recipe for a deep conditioner that calls for mayo, eggs, and olive oil, DON'T EVER PUT IT IN YOUR HAIR!! Because you know what? It makes your hair smell like potato salad and feel really greasy. It does not make shine. It makes grease. And the mayo? Oh, don't expect that to come out after only one wash!! Oh no it won't my dear:) But on the bright side, it's actually really good for your face:) At least mine. Don't use on sensitive skin. Ok?

Sunday, February 20, 2011

A Letter I Wrote A Few Days Ago. .

This hurts. This really hurts. It hurts to even write this but I have to let it out. I'm just so sick of crying. I miss you. You only left 4 hours ago and I miss you. I cried at practice after school and even Stoner tried to cheer me up.
Everything is ok until I think about tomorrow. When I wake up tomorrow, will I be able to get out of bed? You were the only reason to wake up that early and now that reason is gone. What about when I DO go to school? What'll I see? I'll see a vacant seat where you used to sit. I'll see a ghost of you in the hallway only to take a second glimpse and realize you're not there. I'll see a tear in your sister's eye that only I'll understand. I'll see an empty seat at lunch, the same spot I'll probably continue to stare at. And next to it? A best friend being his usual self but every so often I'll see a glimpse of the hurt in his eyes. But only for a second. I'll see an untouched trumpet sitting alone on a shelf. I'll see noone in the morning sitting in the same chair that alwasy made my day.
I see nothing in that school and it's going to hurt to walk the halls and know you're not there to care. I'll continue to look for you at lunch, at your locker, in the band room, in the morning. And everytime I don't see you, I'll realize you're gone and just might get the urge to cry.
I've been trying so hard not to let you see how much I really am hurting but now that you're not there to see it, I'm just going to let it out. Coming back every other weekend isn't enough. You don't call me or hang out with me now so why should I believe you'll start to like you promised?
You probably have no idea but it broke my heart when you left for what seemed like forever over the summer. I cried then too. And when I saw you again, I just wanted to hug you and never let you go. But instead I let out a mere, "hey, how are you? I missed you"
And now, you're still not completely gone and I feel like there's a big empty hole in my life. You need to come back. I don't care if you move closer with your father or if you move back with your mother but you HAVE to come back. I feel like dying with you gone. What's there to look forward to?
I passed up the chance to go to a nicer school because I wanted to be in the same school as you and see you and I truly believed you would do the same.
I understand it's your life but you're ripping apart the lives of others by doing this. Nothing that we did together will EVER be as much fun. Nothing will ever be the same.