Out of Place

by Joe Bunting | 432 comments

I don't know if it was the black eyes of the people watching me or the way everything looked dark and overused in that city, but I was ill at ease, as if restlessness could be defined by a leg that wouldn't stop bouncing under the table and an imagination that predicted I would be mugged.

Film Noir by Harry Pehkonen

I sat in a fifties-style diner and waited. I waited for half an hour, forty-five minutes, an hour. I felt like I had been waiting for people all day.

But then he showed up, his dark hair in small dreads, loose-bound behind his head. He was a black man but had sounded Hispanic over the phone. He sat down in front of me.

“Sorry for being late,” he said, “Your wife told me about what happened. You want to see it?”

He showed me the merchandise, that nefarious thing I'd driven to the city for, the thing I couldn't live without.

“It looks good. I'll take it.” I pulled out my checkbook.

“Woah…no no no, we only do cash here. I thought I was very clear about that on the site.”

“I didn't see the site.”

“Right, yeah, I'm sorry about that, but we only do cash.”

“I don't have cash,” I said, my stomach sinking, as it had been all day.

“I don't know then. You could come back tomorrow, or…”

“I'm not coming back tomorrow. I can get cash. Can you meet again in 45 minutes?”

“The banks are closed, man.”

“It's fine.”

I hit up the grocery store first, dropping a half-dozen bagels on the dirty conveyor belt in that dimlit place. “What's your cash back limit,” I asked.

“One hundred dollars,” said the uninterested checker.

“Great,” I said.

The bank was next. I pulled my daily limit. With that, and with what I already I had, I think I would have enough. And then it would be home and out of this dark city where no one knew  my name. I called him.

“You got it all? Wow, I'm surprised. Alright, meet you at the Starbucks at 7th.”

When I pulled in, he was already there, his tall figure in my headlights cutting a column of light against the black. I parked illegally and he sauntered over, pulling what I wanted out of the bag and handing it to me. I put it in the front seat and handed him the dirty cash. He counted it in the parking lot, then shook my hand and left.

Driving home, I put my hand on it, feeling its soft metal purr, that touch that you only get when you've longed for something too many hours in darkness.

When You Feel Out of Place—Write

Thanks for bearing with me. The story above is about my trek to Atlanta to buy a used computer I found on Craigslist. The whole time, I felt like I was in The French Connection doing a drug deal. Thus, the film noir feel of the passage and the ambiguous “merchandise.”

Yesterday, I felt out of place. I spent eight hours in a city I don't know very well, waiting for people I didn't know at all.

I read somewhere that the best time to write is when you first arrive at a new place whether that's a new country, city, or even restaurant. Everything is fresh and new and strange. You don't have those lenses over your eyes that tell you what to ignore and what to notice.

We writers can be social misfits. While sometimes that's uncomfortable, it gives us a creative edge. When you're an outsider, you see things others don't.

When have you felt out of place? How can you capture that experience in words?

PRACTICE

Write about a time you felt out of place, awkward, and uncomfortable.

Try not to focus on your feelings, but project your feelings onto the things around you (for example, in the story above, I talked about darkness again and again because I felt confused and uncomfortable most of the day).

Write for fifteen minutes. When you're finished, post your practice in the comments.

Joe Bunting is an author and the leader of The Write Practice community. He is also the author of the new book Crowdsourcing Paris, a real life adventure story set in France. It was a #1 New Release on Amazon. Follow him on Instagram (@jhbunting).

Want best-seller coaching? Book Joe here.

432 Comments

  1. Patricia W Hunter

    That was awesome…I hung on every word. This was a fun challenge. Here’s what I came up with:

    We waited all day for her to call, checking and rechecking our recording devices, and rushing to check the caller ID every time the phone rang. Wanting to keep the phone line open, we ignored calls from those we knew could not be hers, but answering those in question.

    Anyway, what would the caller ID indicate? Her publicist hadn’t told me. Would she be the one to place the call herself or would a personal assistant traveling with her make the call?

    I‘d definitely stepped out of my area of expertise. Had it not been for the opportunity this provided my daughter, I probably wouldn’t have pursued the assignment.

    We’d done our research and prepared thoughtful questions, but we’d only conducted one other celebrity interview and it was face-to-face with girls we knew well. This was a challenge I suddenly regretted. Would we ask stupid questions? Would she be able to tell we were novices?

    With each passing hour and ring from the phone, my heart pounded and my palms began to sweat, but I tried to appear calm and confident. I didn’t want to make my daughter more nervous than she already was.

    When the phone rang and the name “Smallbone” appeared in the caller ID, we knew instantly it was the call we’d been waiting for.

    Reply
    • Joe Bunting

      Thank you so much for reading and commenting Patricia. While I have no idea who Smallbone is, it must have been such a thrill interviewing a celebrity.

      I would have liked to see more. You set the scene up by summarizing what is happening, but I think you tell more interesting, suspenseful stories when you drop the backstory and just talk about what’s going on in the scene. With that in mind, I think your first, second, and last paragraphs are great, but your middle paragraphs aren’t as interesting.

      I do like how you don’t start off by telling us exactly what is going on. You let us figure it out slowly. It’s great.

    • Patricia W Hunter

      Thanks, Joe. I appreciate you taking the time to critique my efforts. Rebecca St. James’ real name before marriage was Rebecca Smallbone. If I’d had more than 15 minutes I would have revealed that info, but I wanted to be honest and I was inspired by the mystery of your piece. That was fun.

    • Joe Bunting

      Of course Patricia. That must have been a fun interview. Do you have the link to it?

    • Joe Bunting

      Read them both. Very nice Patricia (in all seriousness).

  2. Patricia W Hunter

    That was awesome…I hung on every word. This was a fun challenge. Here’s what I came up with:

    We waited all day for her to call, checking and rechecking our recording devices, and rushing to check the caller ID every time the phone rang. Wanting to keep the phone line open, we ignored calls from those we knew could not be hers, but answering those in question.

    Anyway, what would the caller ID indicate? Her publicist hadn’t told me. Would she be the one to place the call herself or would a personal assistant traveling with her make the call?

    I‘d definitely stepped out of my area of expertise. Had it not been for the opportunity this provided my daughter, I probably wouldn’t have pursued the assignment.

    We’d done our research and prepared thoughtful questions, but we’d only conducted one other celebrity interview and it was face-to-face with girls we knew well. This was a challenge I suddenly regretted. Would we ask stupid questions? Would she be able to tell we were novices?

    With each passing hour and ring from the phone, my heart pounded and my palms began to sweat, but I tried to appear calm and confident. I didn’t want to make my daughter more nervous than she already was.

    When the phone rang and the name “Smallbone” appeared in the caller ID, we knew instantly it was the call we’d been waiting for.

    Reply
    • Joe Bunting

      Thank you so much for reading and commenting Patricia. While I have no idea who Smallbone is, it must have been such a thrill interviewing a celebrity.

      I would have liked to see more. You set the scene up by summarizing what is happening, but I think you tell more interesting, suspenseful stories when you drop the backstory and just talk about what’s going on in the scene. With that in mind, I think your first, second, and last paragraphs are great, but your middle paragraphs aren’t as interesting.

      I do like how you don’t start off by telling us exactly what is going on. You let us figure it out slowly. It’s great.

    • Patricia W Hunter

      Thanks, Joe. I appreciate you taking the time to critique my efforts. Rebecca St. James’ real name before marriage was Rebecca Smallbone. If I’d had more than 15 minutes I would have revealed that info, but I wanted to be honest and I was inspired by the mystery of your piece. That was fun.

    • Joe Bunting

      Of course Patricia. That must have been a fun interview. Do you have the link to it?

    • Joe Bunting

      Read them both. Very nice Patricia (in all seriousness).

  3. Mbetters

    I don’t have the time to practice, but hey- great reminder.

    I’m also a writer, and also find that writing when alone and befuddled is the one of the best ways of all. They say I live on Mars.

    Reply
    • Joe Bunting

      What kind of writing do you do?

  4. Mbetters

    I don’t have the time to practice, but hey- great reminder.

    I’m also a writer, and also find that writing when alone and befuddled is the one of the best ways of all. They say I live on Mars.

    Reply
    • Joe Bunting

      What kind of writing do you do?

  5. Gord Mayer

    Ooooo – reminded me of something I wanted to mull over for a blog post. Thanks!

    Reply
    • Joe Bunting

      Do it! If you let me know I’ll link to it in the post 🙂

  6. Gord Mayer

    Ooooo – reminded me of something I wanted to mull over for a blog post. Thanks!

    Reply
    • Joe Bunting

      Do it! If you let me know I’ll link to it in the post 🙂

  7. Jeff Goins

    Joe, your writing just keeps getting better and better. More fun, too. I liked this one.

    Reply
    • Joe Bunting

      Thanks Jeff!

  8. Jeff Goins

    Joe, your writing just keeps getting better and better. More fun, too. I liked this one.

    Reply
    • Joe Bunting

      Thanks Jeff!

  9. Hope Clark

    This lesson so sucked me in, and I’m a hard sell on most blogs. Thanks for this. It gave me pause and made me realize the importance of writing from a new place.

    Hope Clark
    FundsforWriters.com

    Reply
    • Joe Bunting

      Thank you so much Hope. I’ve admired your website for a long time. Thank you for what you do.

  10. Hope Clark

    This lesson so sucked me in, and I’m a hard sell on most blogs. Thanks for this. It gave me pause and made me realize the importance of writing from a new place.

    Hope Clark
    FundsforWriters.com

    Reply
    • Joe Bunting

      Thank you so much Hope. I’ve admired your website for a long time. Thank you for what you do.

  11. Guest

    I looked at my ringing cell phone. Steve was calling me, again.

    “Hello, Tom, this is Steve.”

    “Yeah Steve, what’s up?” I tried to act unperturbed.

    “Man, I can’t catch a break! You know Pam’s kicked me out and I’m staying over at my cousin, Sally’s apartment, but the reason I’m calling is to tell you I’m gonna go over to Pam’s and I’m gonna do something bad but I don’t care!” Steve rambled on and on for another couple of minutes about messing things up, but that it had to be done.

    It was obvious to me at this point that there was no way for me to not be perturbed and inconvenienced so I sighed and said a little prayer before responding.

    “Steve, have you been drinking?” I asked.

    “No, what makes you ask me that?” he slurred.

    “Because you sound drunk. You’re speech is slurred.”

    “Really?” was his only reply.

    I did my best to try and talk him out of going over to his ex’s house. I knew it wouldn’t turn out pretty. Pam had kicked him out after he got drunk and took his disability check and gambled it all away on the “boats.” But there was no reasoning with Steve. He was obviously drunk and set on revenge.

    I turned the car around and headed to Pam’s house to warn her. But when I pulled up to the house, I realized it was already too late. Steve was there in the front yard arguing with Pam’s ex-husband and their teenage son. As I pulled my car to the curb I witnessed Steve take the first swing. I reached for my cell and called 911.

    While silently praying for the cops to arrive asap, I got out of the car and did my best to referee my first domestic disturbance. It had all the elements I had always assumed would be involved; beer, lawn chairs, and drunk ex’s in wife-beaters. The only element I hoped would never be involved was me. But there I was in the middle of my first fists-punching, head-locking, blood-dripping and spit-flinging front yard brawl.

    As the fists and f-bombs flew, two questions crossed my mind, “Does Steve have a weapon?” and “Am I gonna be on ‘Cops’?”

    Reply
    • Joe Bunting

      Ha! Wow, you were out place. Great practice tdub. I know it’s not possible for this space, but I think if you were to expand this story, I would love to hear more detail about the fight on the lawn. Still, I normally don’t like summary (your second to last paragraph), you did a beautiful job. It’s funny, descriptive, and action packed. In fact, that’s some of the best summary I’ve ever seen. Good job!

  12. tdub

    I looked at my ringing cell phone. Steve was calling me, again.

    “Hello, Tom, this is Steve.”

    “Yeah Steve, what’s up?” I tried to act unperturbed.

    “Man, I can’t catch a break! You know Pam’s kicked me out and I’m staying over at my cousin, Sally’s apartment, but the reason I’m calling is to tell you I’m gonna go over to Pam’s and I’m gonna do something bad but I don’t care!” Steve rambled on and on for another couple of minutes about messing things up, but that it had to be done.

    It was obvious to me at this point that there was no way for me to not be perturbed and inconvenienced so I sighed and said a little prayer before responding.

    “Steve, have you been drinking?” I asked.

    “No, what makes you ask me that?” he slurred.

    “Because you sound drunk. You’re speech is slurred.”

    “Really?” was his only reply.

    I did my best to try and talk him out of going over to his ex’s house. I knew it wouldn’t turn out pretty. Pam had kicked him out after he got drunk and took his disability check and gambled it all away on the “boats.” But there was no reasoning with Steve. He was obviously drunk and set on revenge.

    I turned the car around and headed to Pam’s house to warn her. But when I pulled up to the house, I realized it was already too late. Steve was there in the front yard arguing with Pam’s ex-husband and their teenage son. As I pulled my car to the curb I witnessed Steve take the first swing. I reached for my cell and called 911.

    While silently praying for the cops to arrive asap, I got out of the car and did my best to referee my first domestic disturbance. It had all the elements I had always assumed would be involved; beer, lawn chairs, and drunk ex’s in wife-beaters. The only element I hoped would never be involved was me. But there I was in the middle of my first fists-punching, head-locking, blood-dripping and spit-flinging front yard brawl.

    As the fists and f-bombs flew, two questions crossed my mind, “Does Steve have a weapon?” and “Am I gonna be on ‘Cops’?”

    Reply
  13. tdub

    I looked at my ringing cell phone. Steve was calling me, again.

    “Hello, Tom, this is Steve.”

    “Yeah Steve, what’s up?” I tried to act unperturbed.

    “Man, I can’t catch a break! You know Pam’s kicked me out and I’m staying over at my cousin, Sally’s apartment, but the reason I’m calling is to tell you I’m gonna go over to Pam’s and I’m gonna do something bad but I don’t care!” Steve rambled on and on for another couple of minutes about messing things up, but that it had to be done.

    It was obvious to me at this point that there was no way for me to not be perturbed and inconvenienced so I sighed and said a little prayer before responding.

    “Steve, have you been drinking?” I asked.

    “No, what makes you ask me that?” he slurred.

    “Because you sound drunk. You’re speech is slurred.”

    “Really?” was his only reply.

    I did my best to try and talk him out of going over to his ex’s house. I knew it wouldn’t turn out pretty. Pam had kicked him out after he got drunk and took his disability check and gambled it all away on the “boats.” But there was no reasoning with Steve. He was obviously drunk and set on revenge.

    I turned the car around and headed to Pam’s house to warn her. But when I pulled up to the house, I realized it was already too late. Steve was there in the front yard arguing with Pam’s ex-husband and their teenage son. As I pulled my car to the curb I witnessed Steve take the first swing. I reached for my cell and called 911.

    While silently praying for the cops to arrive asap, I got out of the car and did my best to referee my first domestic disturbance. It had all the elements I had always assumed would be involved; beer, lawn chairs, and drunk ex’s in wife-beaters. The only element I hoped would never be involved was me. But there I was in the middle of my first fists-punching, head-locking, blood-dripping and spit-flinging front yard brawl.

    As the fists and f-bombs flew, two questions crossed my mind, “Does Steve have a weapon?” and “Am I gonna be on ‘Cops’?”

    Reply
  14. tdub

    I looked at my ringing cell phone. Steve was calling me, again.

    “Hello, Tom, this is Steve.”

    “Yeah Steve, what’s up?” I tried to act unperturbed.

    “Man, I can’t catch a break! You know Pam’s kicked me out and I’m staying over at my cousin, Sally’s apartment, but the reason I’m calling is to tell you I’m gonna go over to Pam’s and I’m gonna do something bad but I don’t care!” Steve rambled on and on for another couple of minutes about messing things up, but that it had to be done.

    It was obvious to me at this point that there was no way for me to not be perturbed and inconvenienced so I sighed and said a little prayer before responding.

    “Steve, have you been drinking?” I asked.

    “No, what makes you ask me that?” he slurred.

    “Because you sound drunk. You’re speech is slurred.”

    “Really?” was his only reply.

    I did my best to try and talk him out of going over to his ex’s house. I knew it wouldn’t turn out pretty. Pam had kicked him out after he got drunk and took his disability check and gambled it all away on the “boats.” But there was no reasoning with Steve. He was obviously drunk and set on revenge.

    I turned the car around and headed to Pam’s house to warn her. But when I pulled up to the house, I realized it was already too late. Steve was there in the front yard arguing with Pam’s ex-husband and their teenage son. As I pulled my car to the curb I witnessed Steve take the first swing. I reached for my cell and called 911.

    While silently praying for the cops to arrive asap, I got out of the car and did my best to referee my first domestic disturbance. It had all the elements I had always assumed would be involved; beer, lawn chairs, and drunk ex’s in wife-beaters. The only element I hoped would never be involved was me. But there I was in the middle of my first fists-punching, head-locking, blood-dripping and spit-flinging front yard brawl.

    As the fists and f-bombs flew, two questions crossed my mind, “Does Steve have a weapon?” and “Am I gonna be on ‘Cops’?”

    Reply
    • Joe Bunting

      Ha! Wow, you were out place. Great practice tdub. I know it’s not possible for this space, but I think if you were to expand this story, I would love to hear more detail about the fight on the lawn. Still, I normally don’t like summary (your second to last paragraph), you did a beautiful job. It’s funny, descriptive, and action packed. In fact, that’s some of the best summary I’ve ever seen. Good job!

  15. Brynna Lynea

    All right, I’ll bite. Don’t judge, this is practice. 😉

    My first day of high school took place in a downtown office building. Teachers and classrooms stacked on top of one another rose five stories from a stark cement lobby with two elevators and an attached café. The sixth floor rested on top of us still full of offices, drawing primly dressed business people into an awkward mingle with teenagers in the common areas. My historic high school building was undergoing a two-year, forty-one million dollar renovation, and the Holley Mason building, with its echoing enclosed stairwells, would be the setting for my ninth and tenth grade years.

    I was a too-skinny, stringy haired, big eyed girl with a forty-pound back pack and zero sense of public school etiquette. My junior high was a K-8 Lutheran school with two grade levels per classroom and a total of 120 students. I had served as both student council president and valedictorian in my class of eleven; the same year, there were three seventh graders.

    Mrs. Mayer taught my first period Honors Global Issues class on the fifth floor, where our metal-legged chairs and desks scratched hideously on the cement floor. Entering, I scanned the room and recognized a girl named Claire from my church’s junior high lock-in. The boy I was three years in love with had invited her to come and spend the whole night with him and his friends. She had beautiful long brown hair pulled back with a preppy pink ribbon. I sat close enough to her that I could hear her talking with a few other girls toward the end of class about a party they were throwing. Suddenly one of them walked over to my desk.

    “Do you drink?” were the first words Felicia Allerman spoke to me.

    She was tall and athletic, with dark brown skin, spiral hair, and wide dark eyes. By way of a get-to-know-you poster project, I knew that her favorite song was Nelly’s “Country Grammar.”

    “No, I’m sober.” I tossed the question aside coolly.

    She looked at me as though she hadn’t heard correctly.

    “What?”

    “I mean, I don’t drink.”

    “Oh. That’s cool.”

    She walked away, and I was not invited to another drinking party for a very long time.

    Reply
    • Joe Bunting

      Thanks for practicing, Brynna! And don’t worry, judgment is only allowed on Saturdays here.

      But I think this is great. You’ve got a good realistic style and pacing. I thought the way you set up your school was full of wonderful awkwardness, just like the scene. I liked your line, “The boy I was three years in love…” Oh high school. What a great representation of the trials and tribulations of that period of life.

      This was great, ““Do you drink?” were the first words Felicia Allerman spoke to me.” You just drop it on us, like she dropped it on you. It feels real to me.

      And you end it beautifully, “and I was not invited to another drinking party for a very long time.” It’s funny and sad and awkward all at the same time. Well done 🙂

    • Brynna Lynea

      Thanks for your feedback and encouragement, Joe! It was a fun scene to remember.

  16. Brynna Lynea King

    All right, I’ll bite. Don’t judge, this is practice. 😉

    My first day of high school took place in a downtown office building. Teachers and classrooms stacked on top of one another rose five stories from a stark cement lobby with two elevators and an attached café. The sixth floor rested on top of us still full of offices, drawing primly dressed business people into an awkward mingle with teenagers in the common areas. My historic high school building was undergoing a two-year, forty-one million dollar renovation, and the Holley Mason building, with its echoing enclosed stairwells, would be the setting for my ninth and tenth grade years.

    I was a too-skinny, stringy haired, big eyed girl with a forty-pound back pack and zero sense of public school etiquette. My junior high was a K-8 Lutheran school with two grade levels per classroom and a total of 120 students. I had served as both student council president and valedictorian in my class of eleven; the same year, there were three seventh graders.

    Mrs. Mayer taught my first period Honors Global Issues class on the fifth floor, where our metal-legged chairs and desks scratched hideously on the cement floor. Entering, I scanned the room and recognized a girl named Claire from my church’s junior high lock-in. The boy I was three years in love with had invited her to come and spend the whole night with him and his friends. She had beautiful long brown hair pulled back with a preppy pink ribbon. I sat close enough to her that I could hear her talking with a few other girls toward the end of class about a party they were throwing. Suddenly one of them walked over to my desk.

    “Do you drink?” were the first words Felicia Allerman spoke to me.

    She was tall and athletic, with dark brown skin, spiral hair, and wide dark eyes. By way of a get-to-know-you poster project, I knew that her favorite song was Nelly’s “Country Grammar.”

    “No, I’m sober.” I tossed the question aside coolly.

    She looked at me as though she hadn’t heard correctly.

    “What?”

    “I mean, I don’t drink.”

    “Oh. That’s cool.”

    She walked away, and I was not invited to another drinking party for a very long time.

    Reply
    • Joe Bunting

      Thanks for practicing, Brynna! And don’t worry, judgment is only allowed on Saturdays here.

      But I think this is great. You’ve got a good realistic style and pacing. I thought the way you set up your school was full of wonderful awkwardness, just like the scene. I liked your line, “The boy I was three years in love…” Oh high school. What a great representation of the trials and tribulations of that period of life.

      This was great, ““Do you drink?” were the first words Felicia Allerman spoke to me.” You just drop it on us, like she dropped it on you. It feels real to me.

      And you end it beautifully, “and I was not invited to another drinking party for a very long time.” It’s funny and sad and awkward all at the same time. Well done 🙂

    • Brynna Lynea King

      Thanks for your feedback and encouragement, Joe! It was a fun scene to remember.

  17. Heathmacnelson

    Twilight….Zone….
    She is so sweet, 11 yrs old now, running around blowing people’s heads off. Little girl in a war scene.   Blood gushes. No one bats an eyelash. 
    Something is off… wrong….does no one see?  Awkward….. just WRONG!!
     I remember Tori, so much has changed.  Momma never would allow her to even hear a bad word .  Now….   I am in Twilight.   That game her brother bought, he himself a real-life soldier, back from Afghanistan, a boy no more.   This is no game to him anymore.  They are not bad people.  The conflict makes me long to  sign off into my own twilight.  My obvious disapproval, my self conscience condemnation and disdain.  sigh.  Called to love, called to forgive, called to be holy.  The war is waging in me, like on the screen.  Split, confused, Blood gushes from my head/heart wound.  The condemnation rests on me.  Sigh again.  My weapon?  honestly would prefer some stronger ammo.  PRAYER  when I think of it, I am locked and loaded in bullets of prayer to my Almighty, infinite father.  War, yup I’m in it.  We all are.  Wanting the same things.  Love, Peace children safe and sound.  Not inflicting mortal wounds on pretend soldiers . (good night, she is good at that game!!)  Guess what? My war is not with these people, it is NOT with flesh and blood, but with nasty flesh-eating zombie spirits.  YESSSSSS!  Don’t want to just WRESTLE them,  Want to blow their heads off.  Take THAT!! you flesh eating zombie evil spirit!! Leave my TORI alone!! In Jesus name!!!

    Reply
    • Joe Bunting

      Interesting piece, Heath. Lots going on hear. You’ve got the soldier, back from Iraq. The little girl killing things in a video game. And some spiritual killing as well. I think your set pieces are interesting. There’s a tinge of preachy pep rally to it, too, specifically in the “we all are,” and the, “In Jesus name.” It really is difficult to write about spiritual things well, though. I think Annie Dillard and CS Lewis do it well in the nonfiction category, though. Frank Perretti is pretty good too. You might check them out. I would like to see more description in this and a peak into what is motivating the characters. Why does she want to play this game? Why does the narrator dislike it? Why did the soldier give it to her?

      Thanks so much for practicing Heath. I hope I don’t scare you off with this. I actually really like the disjointed, shots of information. Your narrative style is interesting.

  18. Heathmacnelson

    Twilight….Zone….
    She is so sweet, 11 yrs old now, running around blowing people’s heads off. Little girl in a war scene.   Blood gushes. No one bats an eyelash. 
    Something is off… wrong….does no one see?  Awkward….. just WRONG!!
     I remember Tori, so much has changed.  Momma never would allow her to even hear a bad word .  Now….   I am in Twilight.   That game her brother bought, he himself a real-life soldier, back from Afghanistan, a boy no more.   This is no game to him anymore.  They are not bad people.  The conflict makes me long to  sign off into my own twilight.  My obvious disapproval, my self conscience condemnation and disdain.  sigh.  Called to love, called to forgive, called to be holy.  The war is waging in me, like on the screen.  Split, confused, Blood gushes from my head/heart wound.  The condemnation rests on me.  Sigh again.  My weapon?  honestly would prefer some stronger ammo.  PRAYER  when I think of it, I am locked and loaded in bullets of prayer to my Almighty, infinite father.  War, yup I’m in it.  We all are.  Wanting the same things.  Love, Peace children safe and sound.  Not inflicting mortal wounds on pretend soldiers . (good night, she is good at that game!!)  Guess what? My war is not with these people, it is NOT with flesh and blood, but with nasty flesh-eating zombie spirits.  YESSSSSS!  Don’t want to just WRESTLE them,  Want to blow their heads off.  Take THAT!! you flesh eating zombie evil spirit!! Leave my TORI alone!! In Jesus name!!!

    Reply
    • Joe Bunting

      Interesting piece, Heath. Lots going on hear. You’ve got the soldier, back from Iraq. The little girl killing things in a video game. And some spiritual killing as well. I think your set pieces are interesting. There’s a tinge of preachy pep rally to it, too, specifically in the “we all are,” and the, “In Jesus name.” It really is difficult to write about spiritual things well, though. I think Annie Dillard and CS Lewis do it well in the nonfiction category, though. Frank Perretti is pretty good too. You might check them out. I would like to see more description in this and a peak into what is motivating the characters. Why does she want to play this game? Why does the narrator dislike it? Why did the soldier give it to her?

      Thanks so much for practicing Heath. I hope I don’t scare you off with this. I actually really like the disjointed, shots of information. Your narrative style is interesting.

  19. Pilar Arsenec

    I totally love this post!! You write so yummy. Yeah, I can totally relate to being an outsider observing and looking in.

    Reply
  20. Pilar Arsenec

    I totally love this post!! You write so yummy. Yeah, I can totally relate to being an outsider observing and looking in.

    Reply
  21. Jenny Dykstra

    This is my 30-minute version – just wrote it, no editing. Thanks for the prompt!

    I pulled into the parking lot after first missing my turn and having to go down the road a ways and come back. It was a place I had been to before, but not for a couple of years, and not a part of town I frequented. I was early. Very early. My appointment was for noon and it was only 11:23am. Wow, Jenny. Over-anxious much? I sat and tried not to think about the impending hour of time I would spend in the office. These offices were all the same, even though they looked different upon entering. The words exchanged between two people had such a familiar ring to them. A talker, a listener, a response, a question. Rinse and repeat. Time’s up.

    This was my third visit to such an office. Let me clarify. This was the third in my series of visits. Twice before I had subjected myself to the agony of therapy, counseling, whatever you want to call it. It all felt the same to me. It all left me feeling as though I was never going to be enough and the tools I needed to cope weren’t even in my reach. Third time’s a charm? I could only hope. This time, you see, was indeed different. Not just because it was my third time, but because he had answers. He had already given me hope in our hour-and-a-half-long conversation two weeks prior. Yes, he seemed surprised about my diagnoses from the year before, but not at all as though this was a problem bigger than something he had seen before. Yes, this did seem different.

    At ten minutes til noon I walked quickly into the building. I checked for his name on the wall in the foyer just to be sure I remembered where to go. I had met with a psychology student for counseling in this office before, but I wanted to be sure. Same office. I walked down the long hall to my right and sat in one of the three chairs in the small waiting room. The white walls were well lit and there was a sound machine somewhere playing bird songs. I figured this was supposed to calm me down. I tried to be calm, really I did. I picked up a magazine from the table next to me. I didn’t read anything but just flipped from front to back several times. Somebody came out of the inner office – another patient. Then my heart really started pounding. The type of pound that feels like everybody else can see and hear as clearly as I could feel it. I noticed a painting on the wall of a lake with bushes on the other bank. It looked like the bushes were on fire. That seemed a bit crazy for a shrink’s office.

    I waited almost ten more minutes until Brian came out. Thankfully I knew him well enough that his presence was more peace-giving than anxiety-causing. He has that effect on most people, I would imagine. But I was still nervous so I told him about his painting. He had never noticed the bushes before.

    I walked into his office and took the black leather chair on the left side of the room. I kicked off my shoes and put my feet underneath my body – my common comfortable yet guarded posture. We exchanged a few pleasantries, but it’s awkward to conjure up conversation with somebody you sort of know, but in reality know nothing about. He guided the conversation to the topic at hand, sort of. We were here to start a new path for my life, or so it seemed. He had, in our phone conversation two weeks before, taken away my diagnoses of Dissociative Identity Disorder. I had been misdiagnosed by a very sweet, well-meaning counselor. It was a relief and a terror all at once, because I had shaped my life around this new reality for the past year. Now it was gone. Here we sat.

    The conversation covered many things, but really not much about the past year, which shocked me. The two therapists I had worked with before wanted to know all about my past. Brian seemed mostly interested in the things I wanted to change in my life, not the things which knocked me off my feet to begin with. As I sat there I knew this was going to be different. I told him I didn’t see a way out of the pit I was in, but at the same time I was willing to forge ahead with his help. My heart didn’t entirely calm down until I arrived home. I didn’t feel empowered, but I did feel ready now. Ready to do something new. And that is exactly what I got. My heart still pounds thinking about it.

    Reply
  22. Jenny Dykstra

    This is my 30-minute version – just wrote it, no editing. Thanks for the prompt!

    I pulled into the parking lot after first missing my turn and having to go down the road a ways and come back. It was a place I had been to before, but not for a couple of years, and not a part of town I frequented. I was early. Very early. My appointment was for noon and it was only 11:23am. Wow, Jenny. Over-anxious much? I sat and tried not to think about the impending hour of time I would spend in the office. These offices were all the same, even though they looked different upon entering. The words exchanged between two people had such a familiar ring to them. A talker, a listener, a response, a question. Rinse and repeat. Time’s up.

    This was my third visit to such an office. Let me clarify. This was the third in my series of visits. Twice before I had subjected myself to the agony of therapy, counseling, whatever you want to call it. It all felt the same to me. It all left me feeling as though I was never going to be enough and the tools I needed to cope weren’t even in my reach. Third time’s a charm? I could only hope. This time, you see, was indeed different. Not just because it was my third time, but because he had answers. He had already given me hope in our hour-and-a-half-long conversation two weeks prior. Yes, he seemed surprised about my diagnoses from the year before, but not at all as though this was a problem bigger than something he had seen before. Yes, this did seem different.

    At ten minutes til noon I walked quickly into the building. I checked for his name on the wall in the foyer just to be sure I remembered where to go. I had met with a psychology student for counseling in this office before, but I wanted to be sure. Same office. I walked down the long hall to my right and sat in one of the three chairs in the small waiting room. The white walls were well lit and there was a sound machine somewhere playing bird songs. I figured this was supposed to calm me down. I tried to be calm, really I did. I picked up a magazine from the table next to me. I didn’t read anything but just flipped from front to back several times. Somebody came out of the inner office – another patient. Then my heart really started pounding. The type of pound that feels like everybody else can see and hear as clearly as I could feel it. I noticed a painting on the wall of a lake with bushes on the other bank. It looked like the bushes were on fire. That seemed a bit crazy for a shrink’s office.

    I waited almost ten more minutes until Brian came out. Thankfully I knew him well enough that his presence was more peace-giving than anxiety-causing. He has that effect on most people, I would imagine. But I was still nervous so I told him about his painting. He had never noticed the bushes before.

    I walked into his office and took the black leather chair on the left side of the room. I kicked off my shoes and put my feet underneath my body – my common comfortable yet guarded posture. We exchanged a few pleasantries, but it’s awkward to conjure up conversation with somebody you sort of know, but in reality know nothing about. He guided the conversation to the topic at hand, sort of. We were here to start a new path for my life, or so it seemed. He had, in our phone conversation two weeks before, taken away my diagnoses of Dissociative Identity Disorder. I had been misdiagnosed by a very sweet, well-meaning counselor. It was a relief and a terror all at once, because I had shaped my life around this new reality for the past year. Now it was gone. Here we sat.

    The conversation covered many things, but really not much about the past year, which shocked me. The two therapists I had worked with before wanted to know all about my past. Brian seemed mostly interested in the things I wanted to change in my life, not the things which knocked me off my feet to begin with. As I sat there I knew this was going to be different. I told him I didn’t see a way out of the pit I was in, but at the same time I was willing to forge ahead with his help. My heart didn’t entirely calm down until I arrived home. I didn’t feel empowered, but I did feel ready now. Ready to do something new. And that is exactly what I got. My heart still pounds thinking about it.

    Reply
  23. Maddy

    This is my first time – I went with the 30 minute limit and here’s what I came up with.

    I’m at my first real boyfriend’s house for my first real
    Christmas party. I’m wearing a pretty but subtle dress that took more than a
    few minutes to choose though I usually opt for an outfit that’s newly back from
    the wash and in a pile on my supposed writing table. I’m wearing this dress and
    I’m standing in the doorway and everyone else is wearing pajamas.

    I don’t know what I had expected, it had been spelled out
    right out in green and red type on the invitation I’d received weeks before,
    but already my hand was hovering by my mouth as it does when I don’t know how
    to behave. I felt myself sinking back into some Scroogily shadowed place even
    as I walked forward the few steps into the main room.

    I hear my name called out long and bright, hear its sound
    being introduced to ears around the room it hasn’t yet met, the sound waving
    and laughing assuredly while I, its owner, move my hand from my lips to my
    opposite arm, preparing to greet my greeter.

    “Maddyyyyyyyy!” It’s my boyfriend’s mom, approaching with
    arms wide open. “Now, where are your pj’s?” The words are light, playfully
    scolding, yet as I scrounge for a cute retort I come up empty-handed, my mind
    as empty as my pajama drawer. I’m stuck standing there, smiling up at her in a
    way I hope appears good-naturedly bashful but probably looks like I’m squinting
    away reflected light from the tinsel-laden tree. After a moment’s pause my
    distressed look seems to pass as some kind of reply and I’m sent with my
    boyfriend to find something from his middle school days that might fit my small
    frame.

    Five minutes later I enter the room a changed woman. Or if
    not, certainly a woman who has changed into a pair of slightly shabby reindeer
    pajama pants with a white tee tucked in at the front. I have been at the party
    less than ten minutes. I catch a few eyes, strangers smiling hello as if I’ve
    just entered for the first time. I breathe in and out, remind myself not to
    knock over the Christmas tree or a festive holiday candle, and blend into the
    comfort of Jingle Bells chatter and a room full of flannel. 

    Reply
    • Joe Bunting

      This was beautiful, Maddy. I’m very impressed. Thanks so much for practicing!

  24. Maddy

    This is my first time – I went with the 30 minute limit and here’s what I came up with.

    I’m at my first real boyfriend’s house for my first real
    Christmas party. I’m wearing a pretty but subtle dress that took more than a
    few minutes to choose though I usually opt for an outfit that’s newly back from
    the wash and in a pile on my supposed writing table. I’m wearing this dress and
    I’m standing in the doorway and everyone else is wearing pajamas.

    I don’t know what I had expected, it had been spelled out
    right out in green and red type on the invitation I’d received weeks before,
    but already my hand was hovering by my mouth as it does when I don’t know how
    to behave. I felt myself sinking back into some Scroogily shadowed place even
    as I walked forward the few steps into the main room.

    I hear my name called out long and bright, hear its sound
    being introduced to ears around the room it hasn’t yet met, the sound waving
    and laughing assuredly while I, its owner, move my hand from my lips to my
    opposite arm, preparing to greet my greeter.

    “Maddyyyyyyyy!” It’s my boyfriend’s mom, approaching with
    arms wide open. “Now, where are your pj’s?” The words are light, playfully
    scolding, yet as I scrounge for a cute retort I come up empty-handed, my mind
    as empty as my pajama drawer. I’m stuck standing there, smiling up at her in a
    way I hope appears good-naturedly bashful but probably looks like I’m squinting
    away reflected light from the tinsel-laden tree. After a moment’s pause my
    distressed look seems to pass as some kind of reply and I’m sent with my
    boyfriend to find something from his middle school days that might fit my small
    frame.

    Five minutes later I enter the room a changed woman. Or if
    not, certainly a woman who has changed into a pair of slightly shabby reindeer
    pajama pants with a white tee tucked in at the front. I have been at the party
    less than ten minutes. I catch a few eyes, strangers smiling hello as if I’ve
    just entered for the first time. I breathe in and out, remind myself not to
    knock over the Christmas tree or a festive holiday candle, and blend into the
    comfort of Jingle Bells chatter and a room full of flannel. 

    Reply
    • Joe Bunting

      This was beautiful, Maddy. I’m very impressed. Thanks so much for practicing!

  25. Paul J Natsch

    This is my first time doing something like this. I basically stuck with a 30 minute time limit. Here’s what came out of my brain. 

    I drove through the tall, metal gate, the wheels of my wheelchair squeaking as I passed over the uneven threshold. The sun was beaming down on me like an automobile headlight shining on a unsuspecting deer crossing the street at night. Then the heads turned toward me as if all on queue. I looked straight ahead focusing on a small tree that lay just beyond the far end of the fenced-in pool area. The area immediately adjacent to the tree was free of onlookers. It was my oasis. My safe haven. Unoccupied pool furniture was haphazardly scattered about seemingly dumped where it’s previous occupants were using it. But where others most likely would see nothing more than a scattered group of pool furniture I saw an obstacle course that I needed to figure out how best to navigate through. Slowing down I went left, right, and then left again before clipping the from corner of one of the cheap aluminum loungers. At that instant the few faces that had already drifted back to their mundane activities once again focused their attention on the peculiar sight. Despite the setback I forged on towards that  spacious area in the far corner that was so beautifully devoid of obstacles and prying eyes. Upon my arrival I turned around to face the glistening water and curious stares from across the pool. There I was on stage, a literal fish out of water, in broad daylight, for all to see. But I achieved my goal. I made it. Now all I had to do was wait. Wait for the one who sees me as the person I am, as a human being and man. It was worth going through all of this just to see her and talk to her. It should only be a few minutes now.

    Reply
  26. Paul J Natsch

    This is my first time doing something like this. I basically stuck with a 30 minute time limit. Here’s what came out of my brain. 

    I drove through the tall, metal gate, the wheels of my wheelchair squeaking as I passed over the uneven threshold. The sun was beaming down on me like an automobile headlight shining on a unsuspecting deer crossing the street at night. Then the heads turned toward me as if all on queue. I looked straight ahead focusing on a small tree that lay just beyond the far end of the fenced-in pool area. The area immediately adjacent to the tree was free of onlookers. It was my oasis. My safe haven. Unoccupied pool furniture was haphazardly scattered about seemingly dumped where it’s previous occupants were using it. But where others most likely would see nothing more than a scattered group of pool furniture I saw an obstacle course that I needed to figure out how best to navigate through. Slowing down I went left, right, and then left again before clipping the from corner of one of the cheap aluminum loungers. At that instant the few faces that had already drifted back to their mundane activities once again focused their attention on the peculiar sight. Despite the setback I forged on towards that  spacious area in the far corner that was so beautifully devoid of obstacles and prying eyes. Upon my arrival I turned around to face the glistening water and curious stares from across the pool. There I was on stage, a literal fish out of water, in broad daylight, for all to see. But I achieved my goal. I made it. Now all I had to do was wait. Wait for the one who sees me as the person I am, as a human being and man. It was worth going through all of this just to see her and talk to her. It should only be a few minutes now.

    Reply
  27. Anna Narr

    I used the 30 minute time limit. I may have went a bit over. The funny thing was when I started writing this piece it wasn’t going to be about what it ended up being about at all. It just kind of happened. I probably should have used more imagery, but since it is my first post I decided to leave it as it is.

    Down town is always so confusing. One ways here, no left turns there, it is really quit ridiculous. I found a parking spot that seemed at least a block away from the building I was suppose to be at. That’s another problem with down town, no parking.

    I grabbed the large envelope from beside me in the passenger’s seat. My stomach clenched. All I wanted to do was go home. Maybe if I went home and went to sleep I would wake up and it would all have been a nightmare. Taking a deep breath, I got out of the car, fed the parking meter and started walking toward the office building.

    The damp musty smell of old building greeted me as I opened the door. Most of the buildings in the area were old. The city was trying to revive it, by renovating the old buildings and houses and calling it the Historic District. Hippsters everywhere were rushing to rent flats in the newly renovated buildings that had been turned into loft apartments. This building had yet to be renovated. It was just old.

    Steep steps wound up to the top floor. I wasn’t about to take the elevator. It sounded like it would die any moment, grinding as it came down to the ground level, and besides, I didn’t want to have to be in an enclosed space with anyone. What if they asked me how I was doing? Or tried to make other small talk? I just couldn’t do it. I only ran into one person coming down the stairs as I was going up. He nodded at me and gave me a pitying look or at least it seemed that way to me. Of course now a days it seemed like everyone was giving me those looks. As if they somehow know what is going on, even if I haven’t ever seen or spoken to them in my life.

    Office 304 was at the top of the stairs and to the left. It wasn’t nearly as nice as I had thought it would be. As much as this lady charged it should be nicer.

    “May I help you?” asked the receptionist at the tiny desk.

    I wanted to say no and walk out but I couldn’t do that, not now. “Yes, I have one o’clock appointment.”

    She found my name on her computer “Yes, here you are. Right this way please. Would you like something to drink?”

    “No thank you.” If I drank anything I was sure I would have to puke.

    “Ok, she is on the phone right now, she will be with you in just a few minutes.”

    “Thank you.”

    The conference table I was seated at filled the whole room, it seemed like the brightly painted yellow walls were closing in on me. Making it hard to breath. A feeling I felt all too often now. It was all I could do to keep from crying. This wasn’t suppose to be happening to me. I shouldn’t have had to be here at all. The envelope lay on the table in front of me. How could I share what was in it with this stranger. I had never been so humiliated in all my life.

    I could hear her on the phone in the room beside me. Either the walls were very thin or she spoke very loud. Maybe both. It sounded like she couldn’t get the person on the phone to understand how things were. Then she called someone else and related the story to them. It seemed unprofessional to allow conversations to be over heard by other clients.

    It was over thirty minutes before she came into the room and introduced herself. Thirty minutes of dread, thirty minutes of wishing it would all just go away.

    She asked me a few questions and I told her my story. No, I didn’t want this, but it was not up to me. She told me my options. I didn’t want to do any of them. All I wanted to do is crawl in a hole and die.

    Reply
    • Shane Johnson

      Anna,
      Your written internal dialogue was honest, straight-forward and was easy to follow through the entire story.
      Shane

  28. Anna Narr

    I used the 30 minute time limit. I may have went a bit over. The funny thing was when I started writing this piece it wasn’t going to be about what it ended up being about at all. It just kind of happened. I probably should have used more imagery, but since it is my first post I decided to leave it as it is.

    Down town is always so confusing. One ways here, no left turns there, it is really quit ridiculous. I found a parking spot that seemed at least a block away from the building I was suppose to be at. That’s another problem with down town, no parking.

    I grabbed the large envelope from beside me in the passenger’s seat. My stomach clenched. All I wanted to do was go home. Maybe if I went home and went to sleep I would wake up and it would all have been a nightmare. Taking a deep breath, I got out of the car, fed the parking meter and started walking toward the office building.

    The damp musty smell of old building greeted me as I opened the door. Most of the buildings in the area were old. The city was trying to revive it, by renovating the old buildings and houses and calling it the Historic District. Hippsters everywhere were rushing to rent flats in the newly renovated buildings that had been turned into loft apartments. This building had yet to be renovated. It was just old.

    Steep steps wound up to the top floor. I wasn’t about to take the elevator. It sounded like it would die any moment, grinding as it came down to the ground level, and besides, I didn’t want to have to be in an enclosed space with anyone. What if they asked me how I was doing? Or tried to make other small talk? I just couldn’t do it. I only ran into one person coming down the stairs as I was going up. He nodded at me and gave me a pitying look or at least it seemed that way to me. Of course now a days it seemed like everyone was giving me those looks. As if they somehow know what is going on, even if I haven’t ever seen or spoken to them in my life.

    Office 304 was at the top of the stairs and to the left. It wasn’t nearly as nice as I had thought it would be. As much as this lady charged it should be nicer.

    “May I help you?” asked the receptionist at the tiny desk.

    I wanted to say no and walk out but I couldn’t do that, not now. “Yes, I have one o’clock appointment.”

    She found my name on her computer “Yes, here you are. Right this way please. Would you like something to drink?”

    “No thank you.” If I drank anything I was sure I would have to puke.

    “Ok, she is on the phone right now, she will be with you in just a few minutes.”

    “Thank you.”

    The conference table I was seated at filled the whole room, it seemed like the brightly painted yellow walls were closing in on me. Making it hard to breath. A feeling I felt all too often now. It was all I could do to keep from crying. This wasn’t suppose to be happening to me. I shouldn’t have had to be here at all. The envelope lay on the table in front of me. How could I share what was in it with this stranger. I had never been so humiliated in all my life.

    I could hear her on the phone in the room beside me. Either the walls were very thin or she spoke very loud. Maybe both. It sounded like she couldn’t get the person on the phone to understand how things were. Then she called someone else and related the story to them. It seemed unprofessional to allow conversations to be over heard by other clients.

    It was over thirty minutes before she came into the room and introduced herself. Thirty minutes of dread, thirty minutes of wishing it would all just go away.

    She asked me a few questions and I told her my story. No, I didn’t want this, but it was not up to me. She told me my options. I didn’t want to do any of them. All I wanted to do is crawl in a hole and die.

    Reply
    • Shane Johnson

      Anna,
      Your written internal dialogue was honest, straight-forward and was easy to follow through the entire story.
      Shane

  29. Jessica Eve

    Took a little less than 30 minutes and did this writing prompt (I am very out of practice!) and haven’t really edited it. I already know it’s a little boring, I am still mastering show-instead-of-tell. I love the idea of sharing my work, so here goes:
    ————————————————————————–

    I came through the door looking, I’m sure, like any schoolchild who is late for class. I glanced wide-eyed at the instructor, who gave me an ominous look and asked where I was coming from.

    “Lewisburg,” I breathed, a town which was a good 45-minute drive away.

    “Oh, okay, just wondering,” he said with closure as if there was no problem. I scurried to a table in the back corner of the classroom where a girl with black curly hair and glasses was already sitting, beside an empty chair.

    “Can I sit here?” I asked with a smile, hoping she was nice. I think she said sure, I can’t remember, I just sat down, with my heart pounding. My first class of my first day of college had begun.

    However, this wasn’t a normal first day of college. Like the rest of my life, my college experience was destined to be unconventional from the start. I was 23, and this was only my second time in a classroom. The first time had been a few weeks earlier when I took my placement test. I had been homeschooled, and the extent of the formality of my school environment from K-12 had been sitting at my family’s dining room table. Now here I was, in a real classroom, with a real teacher, surrounded by people who had been in classrooms all their life.

    When the instructor told us what supplies we would need (a pen and a notebook) I held up the 3 x 5 notebook I had grabbed, having no idea what college supplies should be. “Is this okay?”

    Again the look. “You’ll need to have a regular-sized notebook, college-ruled,” he informed the class. I concentrated on my pen.

    After class, I had to wait before the next one started. I walked through the hall, my painful feelings of self-consciousness and uprooted transplanting more keen than any of my surroundings. I did not want to see anyone, but most importantly I did not want to be seen. Never having been one to obey my weaker impulses, however (such as hiding in a utility closet, had there been one,) I took a seat at a table in the hall and sought refuge in a book of poetry I had, at least, had the foresight to bring with me in anticipation of the wait.

    The table was round, the kind with the pressboard top and a layer of fake wood veneered over it, the kind I ate dinner off of during my childhood at home and at my cousins’ house. The chair was a metal folding chair. I put my backpack on the floor and opened the book.

    It was a book of spiritual poems and songs from many different countries, cultures and religions. I can’t recall which ones I read but I do recall that something true snapped at me and I realized in an instant why I was miserable.

    I didn’t want anyone to know that I had no idea what I was doing. I didn’t want anyone to know that this was my first time going to school. I didn’t want anyone to think I was backward or awkward or strange. In short… I could not be ME, so I didn’t know who to be.

    With this realization, I also had the joy of the solution: Stop pretending. Don’t be ashamed of and certainly don’t hide your past or the truth. Bring your real self, your whole self, to this experience. It’s okay if you don’t know what you’re doing. Just be honest about it.

    With that determination, my heart completely turned in my chest and I could breathe again. In fact, I smiled. I packed up my things and stood up and walked through the hall and noticed the paintings on the walls, the upholstered benches. I noticed the muffled sounds coming from the classrooms, the signs and bulletin boards, the display case with school memorabilia. “I’m in college,” I thought. “This is college.”

    I walked into my next class early and found a seat in the front row.

    Reply
    • Shane Johnson

      I enjoyed reading this piece. Some wonderful sentences, like the one describing the table. It brought to mind great images. Good work!

  30. Jessica Eve

    Took a little less than 30 minutes and did this writing prompt (I am very out of practice!) and haven’t really edited it. I already know it’s a little boring, I am still mastering show-instead-of-tell. I love the idea of sharing my work, so here goes:
    ————————————————————————–

    I came through the door looking, I’m sure, like any schoolchild who is late for class. I glanced wide-eyed at the instructor, who gave me an ominous look and asked where I was coming from.

    “Lewisburg,” I breathed, a town which was a good 45-minute drive away.

    “Oh, okay, just wondering,” he said with closure as if there was no problem. I scurried to a table in the back corner of the classroom where a girl with black curly hair and glasses was already sitting, beside an empty chair.

    “Can I sit here?” I asked with a smile, hoping she was nice. I think she said sure, I can’t remember, I just sat down, with my heart pounding. My first class of my first day of college had begun.

    However, this wasn’t a normal first day of college. Like the rest of my life, my college experience was destined to be unconventional from the start. I was 23, and this was only my second time in a classroom. The first time had been a few weeks earlier when I took my placement test. I had been homeschooled, and the extent of the formality of my school environment from K-12 had been sitting at my family’s dining room table. Now here I was, in a real classroom, with a real teacher, surrounded by people who had been in classrooms all their life.

    When the instructor told us what supplies we would need (a pen and a notebook) I held up the 3 x 5 notebook I had grabbed, having no idea what college supplies should be. “Is this okay?”

    Again the look. “You’ll need to have a regular-sized notebook, college-ruled,” he informed the class. I concentrated on my pen.

    After class, I had to wait before the next one started. I walked through the hall, my painful feelings of self-consciousness and uprooted transplanting more keen than any of my surroundings. I did not want to see anyone, but most importantly I did not want to be seen. Never having been one to obey my weaker impulses, however (such as hiding in a utility closet, had there been one,) I took a seat at a table in the hall and sought refuge in a book of poetry I had, at least, had the foresight to bring with me in anticipation of the wait.

    The table was round, the kind with the pressboard top and a layer of fake wood veneered over it, the kind I ate dinner off of during my childhood at home and at my cousins’ house. The chair was a metal folding chair. I put my backpack on the floor and opened the book.

    It was a book of spiritual poems and songs from many different countries, cultures and religions. I can’t recall which ones I read but I do recall that something true snapped at me and I realized in an instant why I was miserable.

    I didn’t want anyone to know that I had no idea what I was doing. I didn’t want anyone to know that this was my first time going to school. I didn’t want anyone to think I was backward or awkward or strange. In short… I could not be ME, so I didn’t know who to be.

    With this realization, I also had the joy of the solution: Stop pretending. Don’t be ashamed of and certainly don’t hide your past or the truth. Bring your real self, your whole self, to this experience. It’s okay if you don’t know what you’re doing. Just be honest about it.

    With that determination, my heart completely turned in my chest and I could breathe again. In fact, I smiled. I packed up my things and stood up and walked through the hall and noticed the paintings on the walls, the upholstered benches. I noticed the muffled sounds coming from the classrooms, the signs and bulletin boards, the display case with school memorabilia. “I’m in college,” I thought. “This is college.”

    I walked into my next class early and found a seat in the front row.

    Reply
    • Shane Johnson

      I enjoyed reading this piece. Some wonderful sentences, like the one describing the table. It brought to mind great images. Good work!

  31. Shane Johnson

    The chair was positioned so I was seated a bit lower than the man with whom I had an appointment. I hadn’t met him yet and as he’d not been in his office, he must be busy. The books on the shelf behind his desk bent in the middle from gravity, or perhaps the weight of knowledge contained therein.
    Someone approached so I straightened my back and hand-pressed the front of my shirt, looking to see that I looked presentable. Mom would be proud with the pressed seams, not to mention the clean underwear and matching socks hidden beneath. I wiped the line of sweat off my lip and chin, praying they would not return when he arrived.
    The sunny day cast squares on the floor that would work well for a quick hop-scotch game which might calm me a bit. My luck, he’d walk in and catch me in the act.
    The worn letter-opener, dog eared dictionary, and yellow notepad pulled back with used pages folded beneath, all spoke to a man who had practiced a craft for quite some time. That was good to know.
    “Hello,” He said, striding in and dropping his coat on the leather couch.
    “Hello,” I said, standing and reaching out to shake hands.
    “So you must be Thatch,” gripping my hand with firmness that I returned in equal force.
    “Yes, thank you for taking time to see me,” I said, as he moved to his desk chair and I sat down.
    “Tell me about your situation,” He said. Wow. He was jumping right in. I’d hoped for some small talk, but I guess not.
    “I was fired for misconduct,” I said, looking at my shoes.
    “I understand that, Thatch, and I want you to know that these things happen,” He said. “Five years ago I worked for an outfit that pulled the same sort of trickery on me, and, looking back, it was the best thing that’s ever happened to me.”
    “Really?” I said, squaring my shoulders and looking him in the eyes.”
    “Yes. There’s nothing to be ashamed of, and here’s the good part, I’ve reviewed your employment agreement with these scoundrels and I think we’re in strong position to secure full payment for the full term of the agreement.”
    “No kidding?” He had opened a file on his desk and pulled out the document I’d sent to him earlier in the week for review.
    “Not at all, they drafted the agreement, right?”
    “Yes.”
    “Unfortunately for them, they’d written it with the hope of being able to discharge you without cause, but the termination paragraph is poorly written.” He removed his glasses and set them on the desktop, pointed to the document. “In fact, it’s ambiguous, and you know what that means, as an attorney?”
    “Well, a recovering attorney.”
    “Yes, good one, well, yes, it means that because they drafted the document any ambiguity is construed against them and thus works in our favor. That gives us the legal high ground.” He paused, looking at me waiting for a response.
    “Really?”
    “Yes, my boy,” He laughed, “We’re going to win this thing, so let’s get to it!”

    Reply
  32. Shane Johnson

    The chair was positioned so I was seated a bit lower than the man with whom I had an appointment. I hadn’t met him yet and as he’d not been in his office, he must be busy. The books on the shelf behind his desk bent in the middle from gravity, or perhaps the weight of knowledge contained therein.
    Someone approached so I straightened my back and hand-pressed the front of my shirt, looking to see that I looked presentable. Mom would be proud with the pressed seams, not to mention the clean underwear and matching socks hidden beneath. I wiped the line of sweat off my lip and chin, praying they would not return when he arrived.
    The sunny day cast squares on the floor that would work well for a quick hop-scotch game which might calm me a bit. My luck, he’d walk in and catch me in the act.
    The worn letter-opener, dog eared dictionary, and yellow notepad pulled back with used pages folded beneath, all spoke to a man who had practiced a craft for quite some time. That was good to know.
    “Hello,” He said, striding in and dropping his coat on the leather couch.
    “Hello,” I said, standing and reaching out to shake hands.
    “So you must be Thatch,” gripping my hand with firmness that I returned in equal force.
    “Yes, thank you for taking time to see me,” I said, as he moved to his desk chair and I sat down.
    “Tell me about your situation,” He said. Wow. He was jumping right in. I’d hoped for some small talk, but I guess not.
    “I was fired for misconduct,” I said, looking at my shoes.
    “I understand that, Thatch, and I want you to know that these things happen,” He said. “Five years ago I worked for an outfit that pulled the same sort of trickery on me, and, looking back, it was the best thing that’s ever happened to me.”
    “Really?” I said, squaring my shoulders and looking him in the eyes.”
    “Yes. There’s nothing to be ashamed of, and here’s the good part, I’ve reviewed your employment agreement with these scoundrels and I think we’re in strong position to secure full payment for the full term of the agreement.”
    “No kidding?” He had opened a file on his desk and pulled out the document I’d sent to him earlier in the week for review.
    “Not at all, they drafted the agreement, right?”
    “Yes.”
    “Unfortunately for them, they’d written it with the hope of being able to discharge you without cause, but the termination paragraph is poorly written.” He removed his glasses and set them on the desktop, pointed to the document. “In fact, it’s ambiguous, and you know what that means, as an attorney?”
    “Well, a recovering attorney.”
    “Yes, good one, well, yes, it means that because they drafted the document any ambiguity is construed against them and thus works in our favor. That gives us the legal high ground.” He paused, looking at me waiting for a response.
    “Really?”
    “Yes, my boy,” He laughed, “We’re going to win this thing, so let’s get to it!”

    Reply
  33. Debby

    Just this past week or so got 14 Prompts through Story Cartel and am able to now post my first 30-minute prompt “Out of Place” … would love some feedback:

    I stepped back into history. I never dreamed I would visit such a place. A place I had heard of all my life. History, ancient civilization, a place which existed in my history books and is real, here, today.

    It was hot. I was thirsty. I had traveled hours to get here. The people around me spoke a language that sounded like they were angry and yelling. Arms waved. Voices raised. People in each other’s faces. It was wild. It was crazy. And I felt this was a place like no other on earth. And all I wanted was a cold drink. I didn’t know a drink meant room temperature and not icy like I was used to. Finding the right words to order my thirst quencher was a challenge. Again, little did I know the drink that satisfied thirst in the afternoon in this ancient and exciting place would be hot and make the sweat ooze from your pores, which is the way you cooled down.

    I had come here to live. Finding an apartment was an adventure. Using my limited vocabulary and waving my arms, smiling and hoping they didn’t think I was a crazy American. I was just what they thought. After pronouncing the words all the wrong way, I managed to find a place to live. I made a life-long friend in the process. A friend who showed me the ropes. He gave me the tools needed to live in this piece of history. He told me about life and love here in this land, which abounds like no other place on earth. Except maybe Paris I am told. I like Paris, but no place in my heart could compare to where I stood.

    In the afternoon, all shops close for a few hours People relax over a huge meal and then lazily enjoy a few hours of respite. Dozing, drawing the energy they need to replenish themselves for the latter hours of the day and into the night. It took no effort for me to have that afternoon nap. Especially in the heat of the summer. I didn’t realize at the time, I would be building into my life a habit that later would be hard to break.

    Life revolves around food and family. Around laughter and noise. Meals are enjoyed as a reunion of sorts. Everyone talking at once and yet all making sense. Contrary to where I grew up, just as we would be settling in for the night, the city here comes alive. The streets are filled with shoppers, lovers strolling hand in hand. Cafes and restaurants become the center of existence. As the heat wanes and the night cools, the party begins. The city squares surrounded by cafes and restaurants with tables pouring out onto sidewalks. You take on the feeling of people loving and enjoying the moment. Not thinking of tomorrow or worrying about the next day’s schedule. Living and loving the people right there. I learned to relax and love life in this place.

    I have visited every square inch of history here. Drank in the presence of those who lived, loved and ruled thousands of years before. Breathed the same air of those who met their death in this place. Walked the paths and roads of legends. Those who painted and wrote sat on the same benches I now sit. Gazing up into the same stars once looked upon by kings and rulers. I am mesmerized by the realization of where I am. I actually live here.

    As out of place as I felt when I first set foot in this land, I have succumbed to its charm. As frustrated as I once was not being able to communicate or understand all that was happening around me, I have found rest. I was a stranger and alone, but I have fallen in love with a people. The food and culture. The history. The hills and seaside. The fashion and the coffee. Pasta and gelato. I have found my home. And I love it like no other. And yes, all my roads lead to Rome.

    Reply
  34. Debby

    Just this past week or so got 14 Prompts through Story Cartel and am able to now post my first 30-minute prompt “Out of Place” … would love some feedback:

    I stepped back into history. I never dreamed I would visit such a place. A place I had heard of all my life. History, ancient civilization, a place which existed in my history books and is real, here, today.

    It was hot. I was thirsty. I had traveled hours to get here. The people around me spoke a language that sounded like they were angry and yelling. Arms waved. Voices raised. People in each other’s faces. It was wild. It was crazy. And I felt this was a place like no other on earth. And all I wanted was a cold drink. I didn’t know a drink meant room temperature and not icy like I was used to. Finding the right words to order my thirst quencher was a challenge. Again, little did I know the drink that satisfied thirst in the afternoon in this ancient and exciting place would be hot and make the sweat ooze from your pores, which is the way you cooled down.

    I had come here to live. Finding an apartment was an adventure. Using my limited vocabulary and waving my arms, smiling and hoping they didn’t think I was a crazy American. I was just what they thought. After pronouncing the words all the wrong way, I managed to find a place to live. I made a life-long friend in the process. A friend who showed me the ropes. He gave me the tools needed to live in this piece of history. He told me about life and love here in this land, which abounds like no other place on earth. Except maybe Paris I am told. I like Paris, but no place in my heart could compare to where I stood.

    In the afternoon, all shops close for a few hours People relax over a huge meal and then lazily enjoy a few hours of respite. Dozing, drawing the energy they need to replenish themselves for the latter hours of the day and into the night. It took no effort for me to have that afternoon nap. Especially in the heat of the summer. I didn’t realize at the time, I would be building into my life a habit that later would be hard to break.

    Life revolves around food and family. Around laughter and noise. Meals are enjoyed as a reunion of sorts. Everyone talking at once and yet all making sense. Contrary to where I grew up, just as we would be settling in for the night, the city here comes alive. The streets are filled with shoppers, lovers strolling hand in hand. Cafes and restaurants become the center of existence. As the heat wanes and the night cools, the party begins. The city squares surrounded by cafes and restaurants with tables pouring out onto sidewalks. You take on the feeling of people loving and enjoying the moment. Not thinking of tomorrow or worrying about the next day’s schedule. Living and loving the people right there. I learned to relax and love life in this place.

    I have visited every square inch of history here. Drank in the presence of those who lived, loved and ruled thousands of years before. Breathed the same air of those who met their death in this place. Walked the paths and roads of legends. Those who painted and wrote sat on the same benches I now sit. Gazing up into the same stars once looked upon by kings and rulers. I am mesmerized by the realization of where I am. I actually live here.

    As out of place as I felt when I first set foot in this land, I have succumbed to its charm. As frustrated as I once was not being able to communicate or understand all that was happening around me, I have found rest. I was a stranger and alone, but I have fallen in love with a people. The food and culture. The history. The hills and seaside. The fashion and the coffee. Pasta and gelato. I have found my home. And I love it like no other. And yes, all my roads lead to Rome.

    Reply
  35. Therese

    This is my first post – I can’t wait to hear any/all feedback you may have – thank you!

    ———————————————————————————————

    It was supposed to be just me and you. Let’s get drinks you
    said, I’ll be right there I said. But right there wasn’t what I had meant. I
    meant 20 minutes in my closet, trying on all of my limited wardrobe, 20 minutes fussing over each stray curl of hair as it escaped my control, and 20 more minutes trying not to smudge my devastatingly difficult liquid eyeliner. I was the essence of casual, after hours of preparation, but I didn’t want you to
    know that.

    I made the 20-minute trek to your place, in my usual fast
    pace. Why was I rushing so much? I needed to slow down or I would start
    sweating through my meticulously chosen dress. As I rushed through the streets, the graveyard, and down the big hill that divides the city between me and you, I thought of topics of conversation. This wasn’t even our first date, and I was nervous.

    Okay, run through your day, what can you tell him? What did
    you do that was interesting? What did he say he was working on today? What
    questions should I ask? What’s my back up plan for a lull in the conversation?
    Why do I instantly forget how to talk to other humans the moment there is a
    touch of a romantic inclination?

    As I rushed to your room, you let me in, and swept me into a
    hug that was forced, awkward, and unsure in its delivery. Now I was sure to
    sweat through this dress. We headed outside to the bar across from your
    apartment, we grabbed two beers, and just happened to run into your group of
    friends. “Do you want to sit with them?” you asked. How could I say no?

    Inside I was shouting just as loud as I could, no no no!
    What will I talk about now that I have to engage a whole troupe of people I
    have never met, and not in my native language. I sat at a wooden picnic table,
    in a foreign country, with a group of people who were in varying degrees
    friendly to me, and sympathetic to the fact that I don’t speak their language
    very well.

    The conversation bobbed in and out of Swedish and English, I
    panicked every moment the conversation seemed to slow, feeling their eyes
    boring into me. My first beer disappeared in record time, as I used sips to buy
    myself precious moments to let my mind think up something clever, or translate a Swedish phrase, or an English one into Swedish. I ripped frantically at the label, making a pile of debris next to my empty ale bottle, trying to keep me cool and not seem to eager to go rushing for another beer, for both the
    courage, and the activity it provided.

    I almost forgot you were sitting next to me as my anxiety
    continued to heighten. And I would have forgotten completely if it hadn’t been
    for that unsure hand placed on my knee left kneecap. It was a firm grasp, not
    casual, and placed in a nonchalantly way, but one that was decisive, and full
    of meaning and gesture. This is a date, I will put my hand on your knee no
    matter how awkward it feels because this is what I am supposed to do, his five
    fingers seemed to say with her passing second. I felt like I couldn’t move my
    leg at all, even as my legs stuck to the swollen wood of the bench, and people
    joined and left our clan and we needed to shift around. I felt stuck, holding
    up the weight of your hand, and holding up my giant, American, English end of
    the conversation. It was time for another beer.

    More people joined, and I tried to talk to you, and only
    you, slipping quietly out of the spotlight you thrust me into, on our second
    date. As the Swedish sun began to set, you suggested that we head back to your place, in a subtle, non-direct way of course. But I was more than happy to follow your awkward lead, make our hasty goodbyes, and hope that we would never see these people again. You didn’t grab my hand, and I followed behind you like a lost duckling of sorts, praying you’d keep me safe from their stares, and their thoughts and insinuations as I followed you back to your apartment.

    I wanted to crawl into your bed and die. Wrap myself in your
    arms, let me makeup run, and my perfectly placed curls fall to ruin. I wanted
    to slip into your warn Metallica t-shirt you had lent me before, and forget
    about the world. But you wanted to talk about your friends, and insisted we
    speak some Swedish (to help me practice you said). And I felt all hollow,
    unable to think or communicate easily, or freely. My sentences escaped, short,
    methodical, based on the small bank of vocab stored in my brain. “De var
    trevliga. Det var kul.” You were patient, and eventually slipped into English
    with me, as I pushed you out of your own comfort zone.

    My words sped up, and my sentiments kicked in, and I laughed
    at my own jokes, though it took you a few minutes to catch up. That always
    happened with us, there was always a lag, a delay time between us. A space that was sometimes small, easy to ignore, that us feel so close and connected, and at other times gaped like the Grand Canyon between us. Nothing shared it
    seemed.

    From the chill of sitting outside, I asked to borrow some
    sweatpants to slip on. You cocked your head to the side, confused. You looked away, rummaging for something, and didn’t answer me. But we were chatting away and I didn’t seem to care or notice that you hadn’t answered me. A good few minutes later your eyes lit up. I asked you what was up and you questioned, “mjukbyxor?” I smiled and shrugged my shoulders, admitting my own ignorance to what the hell you were talking about. You pulled out a pair of sweatpants, and alas, we were on the same page for maybe the first time all night.

    You told me that the Swedish word translates to mean
    something like “softy pants,” or “cuddle pants,” and as I laughed at your
    translation, deciding that they were much better words than sweatpants, I couldn’t help but feel the space. I didn’t know if we could ever overcome its nagging presence. And it was important, and big that I could not even communicate a desire for a simple piece of clothing to you, without our wires getting crossed.

    Forget slang, and speed, and colloquialisms, we couldn’t
    have an easy conversation. As the days stretched on, and the days turned into
    weeks and months, I never stopped feeling it. We had this problem of
    communicating, and that was big. Could we ever really have a meaningful
    relationship when we didn’t quite perfectly understand each other? There was no time to think this way. Instead, we practiced and fumbled and struggled. And got frustrated and sometimes just kissed instead of talking because that was common, and universal, and required no translation or force. Your touches became less involuntary, our hugs, and your hand on me knee felt less foreign, less Swedish, and more like home to me.

    Reply
    • Craig Woodall

      I really enjoyed your piece. I found myself feeling the multitude of emotions you were feeling…Very clearly…I’d say you did great.

    • Adelaide Shaw

      Having lived in a foreign country for a few years I know the feeling of being unable to communicate. I had only to communicate with strangers, not someone I loved. You conveyed your emotions well.
      Adelaide

    • Scarlet Ferya Ma

      I really liked the part that was about sitting in the new, big group of friends, that’s such a tangible feeling for everyone, foreigner or not! I thought you could have focussed more on that part of it instead of adding the part where you left them. I really like this line: ‘I followed behind you like a lost duckling’. I thought you really did well in portraying that lost feeling.

    • Annie

      So many great things in your post but at times the the tone and mood felt jarringly inconsistent to me ….. as one reader.

    • Kirsis Concepcion

      Definitely hooked my attention and kept it. I thought that you communicated well the feeling of being out of place. I enjoyed the part about the sweatpants and how the narrator and the Swedish guy were able to communicate and although a foreigner and out of place one individual can make you feel at home even when you can’t communicate thoroughly. Connecting is more than just what we say its how we make each other feel. I enjoyed reading it!

      🙂

    • Valeria Primost

      im really new at this practice, and I´m not a native english speaker, I liked the image of the city divided between you and him, as if nothing else existed in that city or was as important. the phrase : that wasn´t even our first date and I was nervous… confused me: because being nervous for a date doesn´t require it to be the first (for me) so I started imagining you were going to meet someone you liked at a non-date situation… but then you were already running to his bedrroom… – just a note. lovely the issue of language and feeling home anyways, I was also a foreigner in europe and now i am in usa, so i understand that well. And that smile at his translation is a very daily thing at a couple speaking different languages. thank you Therese!

    • Robbie Ann

      You appear to be the only person who has posted someting here in the last 3 months. I just posted a prompted piece, but it disappeared after I picked a screen name and password. I guess I’ll try posting it again, hoping you or someone will toss me some feedback. Got to run an errand. Hope someone logs on later today, though!

    • marimed

      Really great job. I liked it so much and can’t wait to see more of your stories 🙂

  36. Therese

    This is my first post – I can’t wait to hear any/all feedback you may have – thank you!

    ———————————————————————————————

    It was supposed to be just me and you. Let’s get drinks you
    said, I’ll be right there I said. But right there wasn’t what I had meant. I
    meant 20 minutes in my closet, trying on all of my limited wardrobe, 20 minutes fussing over each stray curl of hair as it escaped my control, and 20 more minutes trying not to smudge my devastatingly difficult liquid eyeliner. I was the essence of casual, after hours of preparation, but I didn’t want you to
    know that.

    I made the 20-minute trek to your place, in my usual fast
    pace. Why was I rushing so much? I needed to slow down or I would start
    sweating through my meticulously chosen dress. As I rushed through the streets, the graveyard, and down the big hill that divides the city between me and you, I thought of topics of conversation. This wasn’t even our first date, and I was nervous.

    Okay, run through your day, what can you tell him? What did
    you do that was interesting? What did he say he was working on today? What
    questions should I ask? What’s my back up plan for a lull in the conversation?
    Why do I instantly forget how to talk to other humans the moment there is a
    touch of a romantic inclination?

    As I rushed to your room, you let me in, and swept me into a
    hug that was forced, awkward, and unsure in its delivery. Now I was sure to
    sweat through this dress. We headed outside to the bar across from your
    apartment, we grabbed two beers, and just happened to run into your group of
    friends. “Do you want to sit with them?” you asked. How could I say no?

    Inside I was shouting just as loud as I could, no no no!
    What will I talk about now that I have to engage a whole troupe of people I
    have never met, and not in my native language. I sat at a wooden picnic table,
    in a foreign country, with a group of people who were in varying degrees
    friendly to me, and sympathetic to the fact that I don’t speak their language
    very well.

    The conversation bobbed in and out of Swedish and English, I
    panicked every moment the conversation seemed to slow, feeling their eyes
    boring into me. My first beer disappeared in record time, as I used sips to buy
    myself precious moments to let my mind think up something clever, or translate a Swedish phrase, or an English one into Swedish. I ripped frantically at the label, making a pile of debris next to my empty ale bottle, trying to keep me cool and not seem to eager to go rushing for another beer, for both the
    courage, and the activity it provided.

    I almost forgot you were sitting next to me as my anxiety
    continued to heighten. And I would have forgotten completely if it hadn’t been
    for that unsure hand placed on my knee left kneecap. It was a firm grasp, not
    casual, and placed in a nonchalantly way, but one that was decisive, and full
    of meaning and gesture. This is a date, I will put my hand on your knee no
    matter how awkward it feels because this is what I am supposed to do, his five
    fingers seemed to say with her passing second. I felt like I couldn’t move my
    leg at all, even as my legs stuck to the swollen wood of the bench, and people
    joined and left our clan and we needed to shift around. I felt stuck, holding
    up the weight of your hand, and holding up my giant, American, English end of
    the conversation. It was time for another beer.

    More people joined, and I tried to talk to you, and only
    you, slipping quietly out of the spotlight you thrust me into, on our second
    date. As the Swedish sun began to set, you suggested that we head back to your place, in a subtle, non-direct way of course. But I was more than happy to follow your awkward lead, make our hasty goodbyes, and hope that we would never see these people again. You didn’t grab my hand, and I followed behind you like a lost duckling of sorts, praying you’d keep me safe from their stares, and their thoughts and insinuations as I followed you back to your apartment.

    I wanted to crawl into your bed and die. Wrap myself in your
    arms, let me makeup run, and my perfectly placed curls fall to ruin. I wanted
    to slip into your warn Metallica t-shirt you had lent me before, and forget
    about the world. But you wanted to talk about your friends, and insisted we
    speak some Swedish (to help me practice you said). And I felt all hollow,
    unable to think or communicate easily, or freely. My sentences escaped, short,
    methodical, based on the small bank of vocab stored in my brain. “De var
    trevliga. Det var kul.” You were patient, and eventually slipped into English
    with me, as I pushed you out of your own comfort zone.

    My words sped up, and my sentiments kicked in, and I laughed
    at my own jokes, though it took you a few minutes to catch up. That always
    happened with us, there was always a lag, a delay time between us. A space that was sometimes small, easy to ignore, that us feel so close and connected, and at other times gaped like the Grand Canyon between us. Nothing shared it
    seemed.

    From the chill of sitting outside, I asked to borrow some
    sweatpants to slip on. You cocked your head to the side, confused. You looked away, rummaging for something, and didn’t answer me. But we were chatting away and I didn’t seem to care or notice that you hadn’t answered me. A good few minutes later your eyes lit up. I asked you what was up and you questioned, “mjukbyxor?” I smiled and shrugged my shoulders, admitting my own ignorance to what the hell you were talking about. You pulled out a pair of sweatpants, and alas, we were on the same page for maybe the first time all night.

    You told me that the Swedish word translates to mean
    something like “softy pants,” or “cuddle pants,” and as I laughed at your
    translation, deciding that they were much better words than sweatpants, I couldn’t help but feel the space. I didn’t know if we could ever overcome its nagging presence. And it was important, and big that I could not even communicate a desire for a simple piece of clothing to you, without our wires getting crossed.

    Forget slang, and speed, and colloquialisms, we couldn’t
    have an easy conversation. As the days stretched on, and the days turned into
    weeks and months, I never stopped feeling it. We had this problem of
    communicating, and that was big. Could we ever really have a meaningful
    relationship when we didn’t quite perfectly understand each other? There was no time to think this way. Instead, we practiced and fumbled and struggled. And got frustrated and sometimes just kissed instead of talking because that was common, and universal, and required no translation or force. Your touches became less involuntary, our hugs, and your hand on me knee felt less foreign, less Swedish, and more like home to me.

    Reply
  37. datom

    Ah, what the heck. Let’s give it a shot. 20 mins

    “I’m afraid we’re going to continue the meeting over lunch. You’re welcome to have a sandwich and meet them when we’re finished”.

    I looked at the woman who had opened the door only so far as
    necessary to get her head through. I knew her from a drinks event somewhere or a conference somewhere else, and realized in her smile that she knew I was out of place. A small fish in a sea of whales.

    The door remained slightly a-jar and I squeezed through, as the woman returned to the table where the Captains of Industry sat. They continued gesturing expansively at assorted documents on the table. I made
    sure to not catch their eye as I strode with purpose towards the buffet at the back of the room. I focussed only on my destination; it was not yet My Time.

    I examined the chicken (goujons, stiff like a carrot, battered evenly in something artificial, unearthly). I examined the sauce (peanut, burnt crimson, in a small glass bowl). I considered the two elements and how they might interact. I dipped the chicken in the sauce. I took a bite. Neither item had any discernible taste, but both required chewing. I moved further down the buffet table, and examined the sandwiches.

    The sandwiches clung to the same principles of rigid design as the items on the chicken platter. Regimented clearly into equilateral triangles, each consisted of a paste – all broadly similar in terms of texture but differing in colour and presumably origin. I opted for silver-grey, which was perheps to be tuna, but was also reminiscent of the chicken.

    The analysis and consumption of buffet items continued. I was confronted by cheese/grape cocktail sticks, laid out like so many soldiers standing to attention, near-cubes of chocolate cake (3cm x 2cm x 2cm), and finally a perfectly segmented orange,splayed into a circle. Following the orange, I had arrived at the end of the table; I restarted my voyage, this time heading in the opposite direction, against the passage of dinner time, if one will.

    On returning to the chicken sticks, the figures rose from the table, and strode towards me (I was pleased that their gait was so reminiscent of my original stride toward the back of the room). I had the presence of mind to return all
    chicken to its plate in time to grab the flotilla of outstretched hands that
    approached. I shook quickly, with what I considered the firmness required of a Business Leader of Tomorrow. We swapped names, but not cards; quick remark on weather/golf; and suddenly I was out, hustled through the door in a manner much like I came in by the same woman. “Thanks for that”, she said, patting me sympathetically on the back. Through the corner of the eye I took a last glimpse at the world of Power, Influence and Respect behind me, before the door clapped shut.

    Reply
  38. datom

    Ah, what the heck. Let’s give it a shot. 20 mins

    “I’m afraid we’re going to continue the meeting over lunch. You’re welcome to have a sandwich and meet them when we’re finished”.

    I looked at the woman who had opened the door only so far as
    necessary to get her head through. I knew her from a drinks event somewhere or a conference somewhere else, and realized in her smile that she knew I was out of place. A small fish in a sea of whales.

    The door remained slightly a-jar and I squeezed through, asthe woman returned to the table where the Captains of Industry sat. They continued gesturing expansively at assorted documents on the table. I made
    sure to not catch their eye as I strode with purpose towards the buffet at the back of the room. I focussed only on my destination; it was not yet My Time.

    I examined the chicken (goujons, stiff like a carrot, battered evenly in something artificial, unearthly). I examined the sauce (peanut, burnt crimson, in a small glass bowl). I considered the two elements and how they might interact. I dipped the chicken in the sauce. I took a bite. Neither item had any discernible taste, but both required chewing. I moved further down the buffet table, and examined the sandwiches.

    The sandwiches clung to the same principles of rigid design
    as the items on the chicken platter. Regimented clearly into equilateral triangles, each consisted of a paste – all broadly similar in terms of texture but differing in colour and presumably origin. I opted forsilver-grey, which was perheps to be tuna, but was also reminiscent of the chicken.

    The analysis and consumption of buffet items continued. I was confronted by cheese/grape cocktail sticks, laid out like so many soldiers standing to attention, near-cubes of chocolate cake (3cm x 2cm x 2cm), and finally a perfectly segmented orange,splayed into a circle. Following the orange, I had arrived at the end of the table; I restarted my voyage, this time heading in the opposite direction, against the passage of dinner time, if one will.

    On returning to the chicken sticks, the figures rose from the table, and strode towards me (I was pleased that their gait was so reminiscent of my original stride toward the back of the room). I had the presence of mind to return all
    chicken to its plate in time to grab the flotilla of outstretched hands that
    approached. I shook quickly, with what I considered the firmness required of a Business Leader of Tomorrow. We swapped names, but not cards; quick remark on weather/golf; and suddenly I was out, hustled through the door in a manner much like I came in by the same woman. “Thanks for that”, she said, patting me sympathetically on the back. Through the corner of the eye I took a last glimpse at the world of Power, Influence and Respect behind me, before the door clapped shut.

    Reply
  39. Chetana

    Took 20 mins on this – I am not really confident in my writing – i have lot to work on – it takes quite a bit just to put my thoughts together – its my first effort -so please any feedback will be helpful because i really want to improve!!

    That summer went by too fast for me to realize I was in another country altogether. Everything seemed different, everything seemed blurry, everything seemed unknown and new. I didn’t want to be here. I wanted to curl up and be submerged into a vortex that transported me home. I wanted familiarity, my mom and my friends. Now here I was in LA, not by choice. My parents divorce gave me no choice. Mom had moved in her life, she didn’t need me anymore.Dad moved to LA to start over and therefore after finishing my tenth I was transported here.
    You should know that I was never big on change. We used to live in rural India. I went to boarding school which was set in the hills. We rarely traveled to any city in India so to be arriving in Los Angeles was frightening to me. Arrived here, everyone knew what was best for me, still I had no choice. People were different, they talked different, they looked at me different and they had different expectations. I knew I didn’t belong.

    Reply
  40. Chetana

    Took 20 mins on this – I am not really confident in my writing – i have lot to work on – it takes quite a bit just to put my thoughts together – its my first effort -so please any feedback will be helpful because i really want to improve!!

    That summer went by too fast for me to realize I was in another country altogether. Everything seemed different, everything seemed blurry, everything seemed unknown and new. I didn’t want to be here. I wanted to curl up and be submerged into a vortex that transported me home. I wanted familiarity, my mom and my friends. Now here I was in LA, not by choice. My parents divorce gave me no choice. Mom had moved in her life, she didn’t need me anymore.Dad moved to LA to start over and therefore after finishing my tenth I was transported here.
    You should know that I was never big on change. We used to live in rural India. I went to boarding school which was set in the hills. We rarely traveled to any city in India so to be arriving in Los Angeles was frightening to me. Arrived here, everyone knew what was best for me, still I had no choice. People were different, they talked different, they looked at me different and they had different expectations. I knew I didn’t belong.

    Reply
  41. Matt Jacobs

    I don’t really know when it was. Third grade…maybe. I remember my teacher at the time had a video camera and for some reason she was filming the class room. Once again, I have no idea why she was doing this. It was forever ago but this thing still comes up in my thoughts all of the time. At this time, I was a huge fan of the show “The Simpsons” and in the cartoon world when somebody was pulled or yanked, someone like Bart Simpson, it would portray him as being lifted straight up off the ground and then completely horizontal leaving only a little poof cloud behind him.

    Anyways back to the classroom, I don’t know why I did it…so awkward…but I remember the camera being pointed in my direction and at that split second, I pull a Bart Simpson (pun intended). No one was pulling me. I just randomly jump into the air and to the left. So strange.

    I think about this incident to this day. Of everything I could have possibly done as a child this particular event traumatized me to this day in my 20 somethings. I can see myself and the other students in my class clear as day. The other students probably looked at me like what in the would?! My teacher probably watching the tape later on saying things like “There’s Matt…what a complete weirdo…what is he even doing?!?!”

    This haunts me day in and day out. I don’t understand why it is that this thought bugs me. It eats away at me. I would rather deal with an eternal bug bite on my leg then to be remembered of this incident. The sheer awkwardness of it is enough to drive me absolutely crazy. But those were simpler times. Maybe I need to realize that children do dumb, awkward, stuff that puts themselves out there. Spontaneous. Awkward. Weird. Whatever you want to call it, but I lost it as I grew up. Now, everything is meticulously thought out and planned.

    The courage is gone. Wait, hold up! I called it courage?…COURAGE?!?!

    Yep. A positive way to look at it. To be care free again. To be awkward and weird would be wonderful.

    Reply
  42. Matt Jacobs

    I don’t really know when it was. Third grade…maybe. I remember my teacher at the time had a video camera and for some reason she was filming the class room. Once again, I have no idea why she was doing this. It was forever ago but this thing still comes up in my thoughts all of the time. At this time, I was a huge fan of the show “The Simpsons” and in the cartoon world when somebody was pulled or yanked, someone like Bart Simpson, it would portray him as being lifted straight up off the ground and then completely horizontal leaving only a little poof cloud behind him.

    Anyways back to the classroom, I don’t know why I did it…so awkward…but I remember the camera being pointed in my direction and at that split second, I pull a Bart Simpson (pun intended). No one was pulling me. I just randomly jump into the air and to the left. So strange.

    I think about this incident to this day. Of everything I could have possibly done as a child this particular event traumatized me to this day in my 20 somethings. I can see myself and the other students in my class clear as day. The other students probably looked at me like what in the would?! My teacher probably watching the tape later on saying things like “There’s Matt…what a complete weirdo…what is he even doing?!?!”

    This haunts me day in and day out. I don’t understand why it is that this thought bugs me. It eats away at me. I would rather deal with an eternal bug bite on my leg then to be remembered of this incident. The sheer awkwardness of it is enough to drive me absolutely crazy. But those were simpler times. Maybe I need to realize that children do dumb, awkward, stuff that puts themselves out there. Spontaneous. Awkward. Weird. Whatever you want to call it, but I lost it as I grew up. Now, everything is meticulously thought out and planned.

    The courage is gone. Wait, hold up! I called it courage?…COURAGE?!?!

    Yep. A positive way to look at it. To be care free again. To be awkward and weird would be wonderful.

    Reply
  43. Fran Thring

    It was late. Way later than planned. I don’t know if it was
    the hair or the glasses of wine but everyone was going to be waiting for us. Oh
    well, they know us well enough by now, probably aren’t surprised. Lock the car,
    check for ID, grab a jacket from the back seat and pop my phone in my pocket.
    Standing on the corner, a toothy half grin, a man waved at us indicating that
    he would watch the car.

    There were a few struggling streetlights along the road and we
    rounded the corner. The sense of anticipation before a night out was evident
    like a strong perfume in our steps and laughing conversation.

    I grabbed Katie’s arm. “Do you even know where it is?”

    “No,” she squealed and hit me. “You’re in charge of
    directions.”

    “I drove. I thought you had them. Fine, just look it up on
    your I phone. We’re about a 5 minute walk away.”

    Walking fast in high heels we turned up the street. This
    way? No wait, that way. The roads- difficult to recognize at night. Checking
    directions we crossed the highway and run up a nearby alleyway. It must be up
    here. I feel as if it’s this way. Just walk fast, ok. Don’t say anything to
    anyone. It can’t be that far.

    The road headed upwards and the lights of the city a moment
    ago exciting and full of promise became a little more menacing with each quick
    step. This didn’t look familiar, was it just because it was night? It must be
    close. It said 5 minutes. But that was at least 20 minutes ago and we’re going
    in the right direction.

    My feet were beginning to hurt from the pace. I could sense
    Katie getting worried. She was snapping at me. It wasn’t my fault. She always
    did this when she was stressed and it didn’t make anything better. She is the
    one with the phone. Can’t she follow a simple set of directions?

    We past a small store dingily lit by a half lit lamp. A few
    men were sitting outside it; bottles in their hands and you could smell the
    weed clinging to the night air. A sense of unease grew between us. It couldn’t
    be far.

    Swaying slightly and swinging a half empty bottle one of the
    men started following us. “Hey ladies, hey ladies, don’t be scared now. I am
    not going to hurt you. Come here, ay”. Picking up the pace we moved further
    down the road. I could hear Katie under her breath, “shhhh, just walk. Shhhh”.

    Encouraged by our blonde hair and the alcohol he followed,
    crossing the road and calling to his friends. “Ay ladies, what you want
    tonight? Why you here? You want me, I’ll tell you what I want”. He made a rude
    sign and something inside me said start running…

    Reply
    • Adelaide Shaw

      What happens next? You’ve caught my interest.
      Adelaide

  44. Chris

    This is my first attempt at writing and it was all I could do in 15 minutes.
    I am looking forward to getting some feedback and criticism.

    It was 7:45 in the morning, right before sun rise. The sky began glow, that pale blue glow that seemed to be the embodiment of a new day. A new day full of new challenges, Chris thought to himself. He stepped through the sliding doors into jarring humidity. The weather seemed to be mirroring his anxiety. The windows of the hotel as well as every car in the parking lot glistened with the thick moisture in the air. He approached his car and grabbed the slippery door handle. As he climbed in he absently wiped his now damp hand on his pants. Sighing, he started his car headed toward his destination. “This is going to be a long day” he muttered to himself.
        A short and dreary drive later, he arrived at the Sealy branch. Wondering what to expect, tentatively walked toward the building. Just like the hotel, the windows of this structure were sweating profusely. He entered the building and looked around. There was not a soul in sight. That fact seemed to intensify his apprehension. 
    “Why am I so nervous?” He thought to himself. “I’m sure these people will be friendly.” As he looked around he noticed how immaculate the display area was. He turned left down a hallway and continued walking. Still, no one was around to greet him. No one around to calm his fears, and tell him that everything going to be alright.  

    Reply
    • Elissaveta

      Really got sucked in by your story and in all honesty, I wish you’d kept on writing beyond the 15 minutes… Gripping, nicely described and also liked the transfer of anxiety and sweat to the character’s surroundings. A real mirror, like you said.

    • Scarlet Ferya Ma

      Really like the bit about ‘the windows were sweating’ and ‘thick moisture in the air’ – both really conjure up great imagery. Agree with Elissaveta, would love to know where this is going!

    • Anna

      Agreed!

    • Kirsis Concepcion

      I thought for 15minutes you were able to deliver. I wish I could have found out what happened next. What caused Chris’ fears and why the building was empty? You were able to catch my attention as a reader and keep hold of it and thats usually the hardest part so I commend you for that. I feel that if you played a bit with the syntax and/or grammar you could really make the reader feel the challenges of Chris’ day. For example, you have ten sentences in the first paragraph, you can shorten this by merging some sentences and making them longer so the language flows. The first and second sentence can me merged into one making the break of day real and not one thing that happened before the next thing and then followed the next thing, catch my drift? You want the reader to live what your writing, so something maybe like this:

      “It was 7:45 in the morning right before the sun rise the sky began glowing that pale blue glow that seems the embodiment of a new day. Chris stepped through the sliding doors into jarring humidity thinking to himself, “a new day full of new challenges.”

      I didn’t change much just blended a few things but it makes a huge difference and its still your words. When I was reading I felt that the short sentences took away from the natural flow of the narration, now if that is the effect that as a writer you wanted to create then maybe I missed the point but it does read in staccato manner and that can get you into the telling more than showing category and as a writer you want to show more than tell. Short sentences are good for creating impact and perhaps that is what you wanted to do but for the content I felt it didn’t fit.

      Don’t be afraid to run on a bit with your sentences. Life is in fact always in constant motion. Look into reading authors like Virginia Wolf, Marcel Proust, or James Joyce and then read Hemingway and compare and contrast. Totally different styles and both are really gripping.

      I enjoyed reading your story Chris 🙂

  45. Megan DaGata

    My very rough response to the first prompt from “14 Prompts”…
    Every day Meg rises at 7 am without fail. She makes a pot of coffee and washes a few dishes, then heads back to her room to get ready. She dresses simply is slacks and a shirt, pulling a brush through her hair and leaving it to dry in the wind. There is no fussing with makeup, not even a smear of moisturizer or lip gloss. Each morning she is out the door by 8 am to drive the 40 miles to her office. Praying each mile that there are no accidents and no cops. The best mornings she is actually to work on time.
    This is where the comfort ends.
    As each mile passes the anxiety builds Meg’s heart rate increases and a cold sweat forms on her brow. As she enters the parking garage a tightness forms around her throat and as she walks from the garage to the building her breath becomes labored. For one brief moment each morning Meg would like to turn around and go back to the comfort of her home, but she persists. There is too much dependent on her doing her job, and she stays.
    The moment passes leaving Meg in the lobby with a bank of elevators. She closes her eyes and presses the button.
    -DING-
    Twenty one floors to breath in and out, catching up to herself and slowing her heart. Breath in – relax – breath out – relax.
    -DING- 19th floor
    -DING- 20th floor
    “Deep breath,” Meg mumbles. “Smile,” she reminds herself, subconsciously hoping that no one is watching her and that the camera in the corner is just in case of incident and that no one is watching her right then.
    The doors part and the office lobby is empty.
    Thank God for small blessings, Meg thinks as she slides her card past the lock to open the door. Turning right, then left, then right again Meg follows the vacant corridor.
    “Good Morning!”
    Meg turns to see Destiny perched at her desk. Ahhhhh! I had almost made it!
    “Hi there! How are you?”
    “Great! You?”
    It is here where the fear and terror grip Meg and she has had to learn to cope. It is such a simple question, but incredibly complicated at the same time. Meg has learned to answer swiftly in hopes that the person questioning will go away, but on the inside she hears a monologue that would put the best psychologists to work for decades.
    “I’m good,” Meg says with a smile, but on the inside she hears.
    “How am I doing? Really? I am here at this momet trying to perceive what you really want to hear. Do you really care how I feel or are you just trying to fill a societal norm? A moment ago I was thinking about how and when I would get my first cup of coffee. The moment before that I was thinking about the many societal problems in the world. How can I be effective in leading any change that could be possible if I am constantly taking breaks to answer a question as mundane as ‘How are you?’ when the person asking so rarely even cares.”
    Meg smiles again and walks away, keeping her thoughts to herself. Finally escaping into the sactity of her windowless cave to create and perceive through the darkness. All the while hoping that the small talk will be kept to a minimum and that anyone who walks through her door will understand when she just smiles and keeps working.

    Reply
    • gina

      …on the inside she hears a monologue that would put the best psychologists to work for decades. wow! I like it.

  46. Eloise Lau

    Unedited, first response to this first prompt, written in fifteen minutes. Hope to get some good critique. 🙂

    I tried to make my way down the busy boulevard that would eventually bring me to my apartment. I heard the wheels of my luggage bag click against the pavement, and I could feel its weight threatening my hand to let go, else I should topple over. The cars passing by were unsympathetic, the people, even more so. After being splashed on by a puddle the third time I gave up hoping that a kind Samaritan would let me a hand.

    Under normal circumstances, when the rain ends, a lull falls across the land- an eerie, yet soothing silence that reaches deep into your soul. In a bustling metropolitan city like Kuala Lumpur, this was not so. Business went on as usual. The faces of the passersby reflected this. The rain had ended, there was a rainbow in the sky, there was beauty in their midst – but they could not care less. They focused solely on the destination they were headed to, never giving a thought to the beauty of their surroundings.

    At this point, I had given up walking amongst the throng of people and decided to sit at the bus stop. I observed them- these soulless human beings-hardened by the lives they led. I wasn’t one of them.

    I thought of home, miles away from here.

    Reply
    • Mirel

      I found the first paragraph a bit awkward, but once you hit the second paragraph it was really lovely. (especially loved first and last sentence of paragraph 2, last 2 of paragraph 3 and the end) well done!

    • Adelaide Shaw

      The feeling of being a stranger really comes through.
      Adelaide

    • Grits

      My opinion on the first paragraph (for what it’s worth): I felt uncomfortable and restless right along with our protagonist from the first sentence.

    • Jay

      “The rain had ended, there was a rainbow in the sky, there was beauty in their midst – but they could not care less” Love this line… Overall the piece reads well and is definitely a situation many people relate to.

    • Kiki Stamatiou

      Outstanding piece of prose. As I was reading this piece, I felt like a was a participant in the narrator’s journey. The voice in the piece is established well, and there is great use of language. As a writer, you’ve done a great job of capturing the city life and the people. I could get a strong sense of the atmosphere, and the sense of fear and discomfort of the narrator.

    • Karlie

      I feel as if this describes New York City. lol And I believe you did a very well job of describing how much the character hates it. Magnificent!!! Keep up the good work!

    • DRB2930

      I love the details …the wheels of my luggage click, being splashed, the rain had ended. It gives me a true sense of the place and your experience. I also like the stark contrast and brevity of your sentence “I wasn’t one of them.” Excellent. The irony of traveling so far in a desire to appreciate the beauty only to have a moment in which you think of home.

      The only critique I can add is that your voice changes from “I” to “your” in the first sentence of the second paragraph. It takes us outside of your experience for a moment. I wonder if rewriting it from your POV would make it that much more cohesive. Just a thought. Great overall.

    • Mary Wang

      I think this is an interesting set up where you were setting up a somber and lost tone of the story. I sense that it can be darker, and you should permit yourself to go a bit crazy and then tighten. Right now it’s a bit simplistic, with some unnecessary phrases. More adjectives and less “I” could help. For example, what does it mean by “I tried to make my way”. HOW did you make your way down the boulevard? Did you stumble like a zombie? Your best imagery in the first paragraph is on the luggage pulling your over, so start with the best and go deep with description. “The boulevard zipped with cars with dizzying speed, but I could still hear the click of my luggage against the pavement, threatening to pull me down. The cars didn’t care, a man looked but turned away. I gave up. ” Or something like that. You don’t need write things like “I heard” or “I feel”. Just write what your heard, what your feel.

  47. Alyssa Phillips

    I am super new, I know it’s pretty short and don’t know if I followed the prompt fully but overall I like it. It’s about the time I visited family in England for the first time, I’m from Texas so you can imagine the differences in accents.
    ——————————————————————————————
    Here I am, sitting in a foreign land. I’m looking at the people who surround me, family yet strangers, speaking to me in a language I understand but with a tongue so different from my own. I open my mouth to speak and enterally cringe as the slow drawn out words hang in the air. My father’s eyes peer at me from the face of a man I have never met. He issues words of welcome but his stance is cool and distant. The blood between us can’t mask what is clear, I don’t belong.

    Reply
    • Adelaide Shaw

      I’d like to see more of this.
      Adelaide

  48. Craig Woodall

    Well here it is. It was more fun than I thought. Clicking the “Post” button however is like banging my head against a wall…I just don’t want to do it. Thank you so much for the challenge.

    Purple Rain

    It was the second year I had been enrolled at Saint Joseph International School in Yokohama, Japan I was now in the 8th grade. I had long since grown accustomed to the various challenges I faced. Everyone was smarter than me, their parents seemingly more capable of affording the high cost of a Catholic education and EVERYONE spoke Japanese, including my best friend Thane. He was everything his name described, clearly American with blonde hair and blues eyes, a towering figure over all of our Japanese classmates, possessing a surprisingly perfect grasp of the foreign language. He had been there forever, was Japanese was none too foreign to him.

    Beyond the slight variations of our uniform, we all wore the same thing: Gray slacks, blue blazer, white dress shirt with a crimson tie. My uniform was always somehow different. It looked as well as any of the others, yet I knew that my mother had bought nearly every piece of it second hand. About the only thing that wasn’t a hand-me- down, despite not having an older brother, was my underwear.

    There was planned, and we knew about the dance that our Sister School Saint Maurs, would throw for us at the end of the year. I had never been to a dance before, besides the fact that I had to travel an hour and a half to get to school, dances weren’t an activity my mother let me do, we (my sister and I) had to sneak our earful of secular music. If we were dancing, it was at the Holy Spirit’s direction. Somehow not the coolest look to go for at school.

    I suspect my mother knew the importance of this first dance. Until that time I couldn’t remember a new dress outfit unless it was Easter. I certainly gloried in the crispness of the slacks she had pressed, the collar that was strangling my neck creating that look I saw our pastor with in his Sunday best. I looked and felt good, I felt…Cool.

    Everything was just fine until I took the shortcut from the bus stop and reached the edge of our soccer field. I was a stones throw away from the gymnasium, where the dance was to be. I looked I imagined as good as any one of my peers. My breath was in order and my hair was freshly cut in the “Hammer don’t hurt em’ ” style which was popular in that day including the cut lines on my temple. I was different, and I knew it. I was frozen in the chilly evening air. No one said a word to me, I hadn’t ripped my pants or popped a button, hadn’t lost my dinner from the nervous waves in my stomach. I convinced myself that I was different and somehow it mattered. I was the only black person that would be there. I was panicked and sat and paced back and forth on the player-less field for an hour. I don’t know how I did, but I remembered what my mother had told me once. ” Don’t let anyone tell you you can’t do something, not even yourself.”

    I made it to the dance, the hour I had “wasted” on our grass-less soccer field almost didn’t matter. The girls in their pretty little dresses were on one side of the dark lit gymnasium, the boys on the other. For about another hour and what seemed a thousand songs, we tried to ease the chill in the air by joking and teasing. All the while cognizant of our true desire to cut it up and show are cool moves.

    I was nervous, so was Thane, together the two most different boys at the dance, decided with our own challenge. I don’t remember the exact charge. I recall only that it It put he and I on the dance floor first. Different must have been cool as others slowly followed.

    The theme for the dance was “Purple Rain”, the song by Prince was the last song. I had heard it many times before, without my mother’s knowledge. As the song went on and I awkwardly embraced the pretty young girl that had been my partner for most of the night, my heart raced, I heard the words, and felt the words, I was free and trapped at the same time. It was a feeling that I honestly had never felt before, a feeling I will never forget. I felt different and it was good. We were the last to leave the dance floor.

    Reply
    • gina

      you capture the era well

    • Craig Woodall

      Thank you! Still banging my head against the wall (practicing) 🙂

  49. FH Turner

    It has been a long time since I’ve done any long-from writing other than journaling so here goes. Thank you for this community I look forward to sharing and learning.

    Number one, I had never considered myself a number one in my life. Even though I was the eldest child in our family my Dad had been married previously and had two children from that union, one boy and one girl; I wasn’t even the number one daughter.

    They say being number one is best and yet I certainly wasn’t feeling that way on this late summer evening with the bright sun still high over the alien, low-slung building and thick humidity hanging in the air.

    I was two years shy of being able to drive myself so Dad dropped me off in front of the high school where dozens of other girls were gathered, freshmen to seniors, all showing off the signs of a well-enjoyed summer break: suntans, cut-offs and flowing hair.

    We had lived in town for two years now so I wasn’t an alien; I would start high school in a couple of weeks with the same eclectic group of friends I had in jr. high. It should have felt comfortable; I wanted to be there and yet as I stepped out of the car and it pulled away my courage went with it. My stomach flipped and I quickly searched for a familiar face. My best friend wasn’t there, she had decided not to try out for jr. varsity cheerleading squad. Why, I wondered, had I?
    Not the skinniest or prettiest or a joiner, I had considered myself mostly invisible around school. Not a number one.

    The coaches rounded us up and we gathered in the school auditorium where a 10-gallon hat sat filled with numbered slips of paper, 99 slips to be exact, to determine the order of our auditions. Going alphabetically, each of us picked a single slip, coming to the R’s it was finally my turn. With still unsettled nerves I lunged my shaking hand into the hat grabbing my slip, I anxiously opened it and
    at the least promising moment of my life it turned out that I was number one.

    Reply
    • gina

      clever! what a fun story.

    • FH Turner

      Thanks for taking the time to read my post and send along your positive vibes!

    • Adelaide Shaw

      I replied to the wrong post before.

      A very clever ending which, I would think, give you the courage you needed. If thi is a true story, I hope you made the squad

  50. Judy

    My first post…I am really looking forward to comments. Thank you!
    __________________________________________________

    The long hall to the classroom turned conference room was

    dark in the late afternoon. There were no outside windows. Turning into the room
    I realized I was the first one in the empty room. “We never start on time” I
    heard a voice joking behind me. Oh, I thought, I really don’t know the program
    here yet. Slowly people filtered in, sitting around the tables that were in a square
    shape with all the chairs facing the middle of the room. There was a general
    buzz of chatter and my nerves were a bit raw. What was I doing here, I thought
    to myself? In this place, in this square shaped room, with these people? I was
    the newcomer, and they hired me – but I really didn’t fit. This classroom, with
    its projectors and white boards was a far cry from the soccer mom world I was
    comfortable living in all these years. I was the carpool lady; I was the
    volunteer at the high school football game concession stand. I yelled myself
    hoarse cheering on my kid’s teams. What about this “team”? Ironic, I felt like
    the round peg in this square world.

    As the meeting began this new atmosphere began to intimidate
    me even more than I thought it would. There were whole discussions that could
    have been in Greek for all I truly understood. The classroom seemed to mock me…you
    wanted this, right? You went back to school to move in a different direction
    right? Ah yes, the dream, the goal. I should have known how it would be the
    moment I drove into the university parking lot those six years earlier. I had a
    minivan with juice boxes and Happy Meal toys strewn on the floor and I was
    surrounded by sporty cars with cans of Red Bull and gym bags. Now I am the Home
    Economics Extension Agent turned corporate communicator turned wife and mom
    turned professor in this square intimidating world. Over the months and yes,
    even years, the meetings continued…I continued struggling to “find my place” as
    the outsider in this academic scene until I could no longer endure. I left – literally
    moved out of the area entirely. My world seems sane again. I belong. Teaching
    is still important but structured outside of this square environment. That
    world is nuanced, intimidating, and far from the comfortable world in which I
    exist. My world is the world of practicality; of preferring the applied over
    the esoteric; the pragmatic over the profound.

    Reply
    • gina

      great topic,

    • Adelaide Shaw

      A very clever ending which, i would think, give you the courge you needed. If thi is a true story, I hope you made the squad.

  51. Anne Barrett

    OK, humbly: first attempt to join in the practicing community. This was a 15-minute thing:

    My body tracks it as 7:00 a.m., but the darkness outside is disorienting. It might be much earlier or far later. What are all these shouting, milling people doing here? There are hundreds. Waves of human sound rise and fall from every compass point, often overwhelming the only slightly more remote noises of jet aircraft coming and going. People yell at those exiting the planes. Glazed-eyed ex-passengers yell for each other while thronging around the creaking luggage conveyers. Parents yell at their children, who (having reached a hyperactive state of sleep deprivation) dash wildly among towering adults with their collected piles of bags. The smell of the weary unwashed, undoubtedly including myself, is as piercing as the noise.

    Outside the airport the drivers of a motley ground transport fleet yell, non-stop, for potential customers. In an earlier moment of confusion someone at my office apparently made arrangements for not one, but two drivers to collect me in this distant city. These individuals locate me nearly simultaneously and, quickly assessing the situation, begin to argue vehemently in one or more languages not my own, while I stand by blinking and bemused. I am too exhausted to sort it out for them. Apparently they arrive in time at a compromise: one will take my luggage while the other takes me, and we will reconvene at the hotel.

    My driver puts me in the front seat of his small sedan, and we’re off. I spend a few moments of the almost comically terrifying trip on a fruitless visual search for the car carrying my precious gear. I say with some authority that riding shotgun through a night in Chennai is not for the faint at heart.

    Reply
    • gina

      you paint a good picture, comical yet I am worried about those bags.

    • AC Barrett

      Thanks, Gina! This was a fun exercise. I’ve been poking around in my head for a short-story idea and maybe this is a way to start one.

    • gina

      great idea, keep me posted on your progress. the bags hooked me and can’t wait to see how it plays out.

    • JamesterLee

      I loved the idea of the words overwhelming the reader just as the narrator is overwhelmed by the new place. I’ve traveled to other countries before and this is pretty accurate. It was hard to understand what was going at first, because it seemed like a person just coming into consciousness. I don’t know if that was intentional or not but it seemed as though the story was becoming clearer as the narrator’s mind was adjusting to the setting. Very nice.

    • Jay

      I love how your piece so easily allowed me to picture where the character is. Even before you said Chennai.
      Hope you continue this piece! Also hope the bags don’t go missing 😛

  52. Grant Burkhardt

    First-timer here! Happy to be a part of a community like this one. This took 30 minutes:

    At the beginning of a whirlwind week, I was casually leaning against the railing of an airport terminal reading a magazine printed in a language I don’t understand. I might as well have been holding it upside down. This magazine was a picture book in my hands, and I was convinced that everyone who passed me saw right through my false front.

    I did everything I could think to fit in, but then I realized I had so much luggage. My efforts were destined to be vain ones. Clearly, I was lost in the Charles de Gaulle airport, so I just leaned farther into that metal railing and thought about the morning, while pretending to read French, which I had heard for three years of high school.

    The plane was black, customs felt like a police interrogation room, and then the world became lighter and I realized that I had touched down on foreign floor tiles. The passport worked. I was in another country.

    Now I merely had to navigate the airport to my next gate, and I needed to find my travel companion, who was living in this country and presumably better at maneuvering than I was. It was a matter of making the right turn, and then the right turn, and then the right left turn, and then, apparently, reading a magazine.

    With assistance from bilingual angels, I made it to a checkpoint. My things were being x-rayed. Plenty of time remained before the next plane took off, to the south. I breathed deeply.

    Behind me, a boy started a conversation with a girl. He was from Spain, she was studying in Egypt. He was a Real Madrid supporter. She didn’t know much about soccer.

    “Football…you’re in Europe now.”

    I guess I was. They were both in Paris for the weekend. It’s her first time here, it was not his. Eavesdropping, I was third-wheeling my daydreams. People were meeting, and I was there to share it. But I realized I was staring. I must have looked like I wanted to be a part of the conversation. That’s true, of course, but I put my head down instead.

    Security was the easy part. Hand gestures are universal.

    “Come on through, come on through…”

    Through the detectors, the new friends exchange phone numbers and pledge to explore the city together.

    And then I was acting nonchalant and terrified of communication issues facing me. A few minutes before picking up that magazine, I found out that the airport didn’t sell cell phones, or maybe they just didn’t understand what I was talking about. Either way, I had no way of finding my friend, except for blind chance.

    Luckily, soon after, when I had given up my fantasy of remembering any French I had learned, I spotted him. He didn’t see me, and then he turned and moved briskly in the wrong direction.

    So I hauled my ass and my outrageous amount of stuff in his direction, catching him just before he was about to have security call my name over the airport address system. I think about that alternate timeline, in which everyone would have known I didn’t know where I was.

    We got chocolate chip bread…I honestly can’t remember what it was called, but it was mighty sweet for it being 7:30 in the morning.

    I think that was the day I fell in love with being uncomfortable, and with airports, and with meeting people. I truly did not belong where I was that morning and for the first few days of the week-long trip across an amazing country.

    I had forgotten more of the language than I knew, but even by clinging to that railing, I was extending my boundaries or blowing through them, and in my discomfort I felt at home.

    Reply
    • Adelaide Shaw

      The discomfort and strangeness of being in a foreign land comes through. As tourists we don’t want to look like tourists, but want to fit in. Not easy to do without the language.
      There seems to some confusion in the time sequence. Beginning with the sentence “The plane is black.” Earlier you are already in the airport, now you’re talking about the plane. Maybe I’m reading this wrong.
      Adelaide

  53. Adelaide Shaw

    I posted this first practice on my blog. I spent more than 15 minutes, about 40 at least. I know it is predictable, but without editing myself as I wrote this is the result.

    YOU WANNA DANCE?

    Again, Angie was where she hated to be, standing in the back, in the shadows, watching the other girls dance with the boys from St. Christopher’s and Mount Carmel. It seemed they all knew each other from elementary school. Getting together the two high schools for boys with St. Mary’s School for Girls was a backslapping reunion for all of them. Except Angie. New to the school, new to the city, she was an outsider, a “wall-flower” at every mixer, every party, every gathering. There were a few others who didn’t seem to mix well, but that was of no consolation.

    Wearing the same style of clothes didn’t help. Full swinging skirt, short curly bouncy hair. What Angie lacked was sparkle. Not being outgoing in nature, any sparkle she had disappeared at these events. The livelier the music the more her stomach jumped and the dryer her mouth became.

    Another casual stroll to the refreshment table. Try to listen. There. Say something. She had seen that movie. Too late. Football now. Nothing Angie could say about that..

    The shadows suddenly seemed longer and darker. Some clown had turned off the lamps in the cozy tete-a-tete arrangements against the wall.

    “Girls Choice,” someone announced. Laughter and squeals erupted as girls rushed to get the boys of their hearts’ desire while the boys feigned dismay, shock, or ardent love.

    Now or never. It usually came down to never. The overhead lights hit her like a spot. Angie felt that they were only on her hesitant steps as she inched her way to a group of unclaimed boys. As if on spring loaded shoes, they took off toward the girls still looking for partners. Except one who back stepped into the shadows. Tall and thin with horned rimmed glasses the boy slouched, and shifted his feet. He was against a chair and looked about to fall into it. Now or never, Angie. Now or …

    She held out her hand. “You wanna dance?”

    The boy came forward a step, one hand held out, the other trying to hide the Honor Society Pin on the lapel of his jacket.

    “Oh, I have one,” Angie said.“But…I don’t like wearing it.”

    “I don’t either. My mom made me put it on. I forgot to take it off.”

    “Don’t take it off. I think it’s great.”

    “You do? That’s great.”

    “You wanna dance?” they said together and laughed their way out of the shadows.

    Adelaide

    Reply
    • Elise Martel

      By the end of your submission, I wanted to dance with with the guy in the horn rimmed glasses. He sounds sweet. And I found myself imagining what he would look like if he took his glasses off, even though they seem to be almost a part of his identity.

  54. Xavier

    As a football player, I have to spend a lot of time in the locker room. I have been to many schools that have decent-poor locker rooms that lack basic hygiene, but they are heaven compared to ours. I would liken it to Dante’s Inferno. This is an exaggerated description of my first trip into my high school’s disgusting locker room as a Freshman. I always feel out of place there just because of the sheer lack of standards.

    I had no choice but to venture down. On
    the level below, the dim twitching light illuminated a filthy
    corridor, that held scattered garbage and dirt soaked cleaning
    supplies. I descended the chipped linoleum steps with the support of
    a rusted beam. At the base of the steps, a fowl stench pierced my
    nose. It was the smell of human waste and hopelessness.

    I peered into the room to my left and
    beheld the source of the stench. Crooked tiles led to an aluminum
    sink on the right wall. It was filled to the brim with a murky white
    concoction that had failed to drain. The soap dispenser had been
    stuffed with balls of tissue, and the only remaining soap was a thick
    cake that lined the bottom. Above that hung a tarnished mirror with
    white splotches of God-knows-what, bordered by obscenities
    transcribed in sharpie marker. Beyond the sinks were seven urinals
    lining the wall. Urine and tobacco spit pooled in each bowl like tar
    pits. Rust streamed down the ceramic structures like rain drops on a
    window pane. To the left of the room were the stalls. A wall of black
    plastic concealed what I imagine is pure evil. The last stall on the
    end had no door, because it was sprawled on the tile like a murder
    victim. At the very end of the bathroom, there was a textured glass
    window that rationed as much light as its design would allow. To
    supplement this, unforgiving fluorescent lights were planted in the
    yellow paneled ceiling.

    My attention was drawn out of the
    bathroom to what stood before me. Two green steel doors towered over
    me like Goliath over David. It’s as if they said, “Knock if you
    dare to enter.” With a hesitant shake I raised my arm to the metal
    giants. My knuckle tapped the surface. Tap. Tap. Tap.

    The door creaked inward. I puffed my
    chest, hardened my face, and took one step into the unknown.

    Before me was a congregation of twenty
    massive human beings. At the sound of my entrance, their eyes shot
    over to me. Their faces were expressionless; their intents were
    ambiguous. There was no turning back, so I rigidly walked into the
    room. The room was an image of hell. Broken benches were nailed to
    the cement. Balls of indeterminate rubbish were strewn across the
    floors. Rusty metal chairs scattered the room. Heaps of miscellaneous
    clothes were piled in the corners. Towers of green metal lockers
    lined the walls. The stench of mildew pervaded the air.

    I moved through the silent crowd that
    occupied the benches and chairs to the back of the room. I navigated
    the clunky metal lockers and found my cell. Locker number 58 was to
    be my home away from home in the hell they call my high school locker
    room.

    Reply
    • Elise Martel

      I enjoyed reading this. You have some very vivid descriptions; I especially liked the one of the door sprawled on the tile like a murder victim.
      I could imagine you writing the scene of an actual murder from a detective’s perspective since you are so good at creating a visual feast (or bloodbath) for the reader.
      I do think that a few sentences could be reworded, like the one that says “I descended the chipped linoleum steps with the support of a rusted beam.” I initially thought that you were walking with the support of a rusted metal beam instead of walking on chipped linoleum steps that are supported by a rusty metal beam.

    • Twinss R.

      Wow, you have some amazing descriptions here! :O
      I also really liked your variety of words, there was a rich dictionary here (I am not a native english speaker and the fact that I had a couple of unknown words is a good sign 😉 ).
      However, I would suggest to give more “emotion” to your surroundings. You were very descriptive but there was a lack of feeling, or of something more than a mere visual depiction.

  55. Gwen Fay

    I could not help seeing the scar on his face. Part of one
    nostril was missing, and a thick, angry scar traversed his dark cheek. His
    fingers undulated in a slow, calculated pattern on the hilt of his machete as
    he walked, nearing me with each slap of his broken boots on the cobblestoned
    hill. He narrowed his eyes when he saw me, and I involuntarily shivered.

    The scar, I realized, must be from someone else’s machete.
    My cheek tightened as I imagined the metal of his heavy blade slicing my flesh.
    I still stood in the shadow of the lofty Catholic church in the center of the
    city square, pressed against the iron gate. My blood would run as red as the
    velvet robe draped over Jesus’s shoulders.

    His head shifted from side to side as if he was weighing me
    out. I was found deficient, lacking in the ability to defend myself. With cobra
    like decision, he moved toward me. As those dark eyes snapped at me, a chill
    crept up my spine with death cold fingers.

    Then, my superhero appeared. Suited in blue, with an utterly
    determined expression on his jowls, he stepped forward. Like Kipling’s
    mongoose, he stared down the cobra. The machete wielding man flung one last snake like look at me and kept walking. He disappeared into a small shop, a cohesion of gray tatters and gray metal. My mongoose gave me a contemptuous glance and planted himself beside me, daring any and all passersby to bother the only one of my kind in the entire city.

    Reply
  56. Blake Robinson

    “Going for a run” hasn’t crossed my mind in the last seven
    years because persistent foot and back pain has been my constant
    companion.

    Every six months or so I work up the courage to make another
    effort to find “The Perfect Shoe.” These episodes don’t come out of nowhere. They’re usually the result of pain-induced depression.

    “How can this hurt so bad when I’ve only had my shoe on for
    five minutes? It must be my imagination. It can’t be my imagination. This really hurts!”

    The thought of enduring this the whole day sinks me and my
    eyes get watery.

    Reply
  57. Op Bish

    First post! Love the idea of getting feedback in the comments. Thanks, all!

    —————————————————————————–

    As I made my way across the dark campus, the nervousness swirled in my stomach. Not many other people were out due to the cold and the fact that it was smack dab in the middle of study hours. I was supposed to be studying; everyone was. Instead, I found myself creeping in the dark, through the shadows, to the back covered patio of the condemned building adjacent to the largest boys’ dorm. As I approached my destination, I prayed that someone (he) would be there, and in my next breath prayed that he would not. What I feared most of all was that no one would be there; that I would be sitting, alone, waiting for someone, anyone, to come along and make me feel like I belonged. Like I wasn’t some pretender.

    As I walked up to the unlit patio, I could just make out the two benches sitting, empty. My stomach sank, but I couldn’t turn around now. I looked around and then ducked into the shadows and took a seat on one of the benches. The cold wood sent a shiver through my body as I took out a Marlboro Light and lit it, inhaling deeply. As the nicotine hit my brain, I began to relax. “This isn’t so bad,” I thought as I leisurely smoked and pondered my evening. “So what if nobody is out here. I’m a legitimate smoker. I have as much right to sit out here as anyone else.” Despite these affirmations, I felt the lie. I was a poser. I was out there for one reason and one reason only, to see him. And this was a wasted trip. I knew that I wouldn’t be able to come back for another few hours, lest I be pegged a chain smoker, which as cool as smoking in high school was, chain smoking showed you had a problem. And nothing’s less cool than having a problem.

    So lost was I in my thoughts and desperate attempt to seem comfortable out there alone, I didn’t even notice him walking up. Before I had a chance to prepare myself, I saw him sit down on the other bench, just adjacent to mine, and I heard the whisper of the flint as he lit his smoke. A Marlboro Red, of course. My breath caught in my throat and I could not think of a single thing to say. So for awhile, silence. Awkward, uncomfortable silence.

    Finally, I took a breath and was able to blurt out, “So, how’s studying going,” in a voice that was nothing like my own.

    He smiled at me, God I loved his smile, and said, “Same shit, different day.” He was so damn cool. I couldn’t even stand it.

    I knew I was in the midst of a rare opportunity, just him and me, sitting alone, talking. I wished with every fiber of my being that he would ask me to go for a walk. I pictured us walking to the edge of campus, slipping across the street under cover of shadows so the dorm parents wouldn’t see us. I pictured him taking my hand in his as we walked, talking to me about all of his awesomely cool bullshit while I tried hard to focus on what he was saying, instead of paying attention to the monkeys jumping around in my chest screaming, “WE ARE ON A WALK!!!” I then pictured him pulling me close and backing me into a tree, one of the tall old, oaks that lined the street, and as he was looking in to my eyes with his deep soulful stare, he brought his face closer, closer, until our lips touched.

    I shivered, jumping back to reality with a start. How long had I been daydreaming? I looked down at my cigarette. Shit. It was almost at the filter. I knew once it was done, all pretense for me being there would be spent, and I would be forced to leave, or stay while not smoking. I couldn’t decide which was worse. Had I been sitting there stupidly for several minutes? God this was awkward. No way was he asking me on a walk. Why would he?

    Suddenly, he spoke up again. “So, what brings you out here on such a cold night? Pretty stressful homework night tonight?”

    “Um, I guess. I think I just wanted to get some fresh air, haha. How about you.” Fresh air? God, I was drowning here.

    “Nah, everything’s cool, I just needed to take a break.” He ran his fingers through his shaggy, almost curly black hair, and shook it back out of his eyes. How was he so fucking cool and I was so lame? This was definitely not a fair fight.

    “So what are you working on?”

    “Calculus, my teacher is an asshole. She gave us this giant assignment knowing that this weekend was break. Fucking bitch.”

    “Yeah, I hate it when teachers do that.” I said, trying to laugh in that cool offhand way, but letting out a giggle instead. I was glad he couldn’t see my obvious cringe in the dark. Thank God for small favors.

    I looked down and realized that my cigarette was toast. My stomach tightened. As awful and uncomfortable as this was, my heart was beating so fast and I had adrenaline pumping through my veins. I didn’t want it to end. Why was this so hard? “Ok,” I said, “I guess I’m done and should head in.”

    “Yeah, later” he replied, “have a good one”

    “You too” I said over my shoulder as I walked away, my heart beating in my ears.

    Had that really happened? Had I really just survived sitting alone with him for those epic five minutes (which seemed like an hour)? Regardless of the fact that our encounter was painfully uneventful, I found myself almost skipping through the shadows back to my dorm. Giddy with excitement, I threw open the door and walked down the hall, my head in a cloud, with cigarette smoke clinging to my clothes as the girls I passed wrinkled their noses in disgust. Bitches. They didn’t even bother me. I was on top of the world.

    Reply
    • Elise Martel

      The emotion in your piece is raw and real. A few suggestions/feedback:
      1. I was confused as to why, in the first paragraph, you wrote “someone (he)”. Since you are going to tell us right away that the person you are meeting is a he, really no need for the parentheses. Maybe you could write something like “I prayed that he would be there. The one who held every thought captive. Should I tell him? Nah, that would be just creepy. I sat down, trying to appear to anyone happening to walk by that I belonged. But I sure wasn’t fooling myself. Pretender.” But use your own style.
      2. Some of your sentences are really long. Like this one: “I knew that I wouldn’t be able to come back
      for another few hours, lest I be pegged a chain smoker, which as cool as
      smoking in high school was, chain smoking showed you had a problem.” Or this one: “Giddy with excitement, I threw open the door and walked down the hall,
      my head in a cloud, with cigarette smoke clinging to my clothes as the
      girls I passed wrinkled their noses in disgust.” The content of your sentences is relevant, but few authors put that many thoughts in one sentence.
      3. Keep up the clear descriptions! I love “my heart beating in my ears”, “the whisper of the flint”, “awkward, uncomfortable silence.”
      4. I hope that my suggestions aren’t too out there. You did say that you were looking forward to feedback, so I felt compelled to deliver:) Keep writing.

  58. chrishadsell

    First post, 20 minutes, unedited and nervous to submit:

    I didn’t want to go.

    In fact, I had spent the better part of a week filling my
    schedule with everything else, anything else. The last time we talked about
    going, I sabotaged the whole thing by pretending to have a stomach bug. The
    only bug I had was avoidance.

    There was no one even there. It was just an old house
    perched in a high-walled garden, it’s chalky white walls juxtaposed to the
    green Kenyan grass and the sky-high palm trees. I can’t say that it was
    haunted, that would be far too easy.

    Truthfully, I was haunted.

    Haunted by broken relationships and unmet expectations, my
    anger with others and my obsessive need to avoid confrontation. As we pulled
    up, I felt my heart beat a little faster, not like race but more like a swift
    walk. Bum Bum Bum. There’s no one here, she’s not going to come in while we’re
    here.

    I hopped out of the van on a mission, get in, get out and go
    home. Approaching the door, I heard him say “we forgot the key, let’s wait here
    for the guard.” My anxiety turned to defiance, she wasn’t coming, I was allowed
    to be here, I practically found this place.

    It was supposed to be beautiful, a place of healing and
    rest. Instead it had become a exercise in failure and I had somehow become the villain.
    This place had been off-limits, despite my relationship with its tenants. All
    because of her and what power she still possessed over me from thousands of
    miles away!

    As the guard approached with the key, innocent of my own
    anxiety and fear, he welcomed me back to the place they call beautiful house as
    if I owned the place. His welcoming calmed me and flooded me with pleasant
    memories of first seeing this place with it’s clay roof peaking above the wall,
    knowing that this was it. Entering the vacant home there were remnants of art
    still hanging on the walls, signs that children lived here, all pointing to a
    better time.

    The boxes and bags were right where we left them, untouched
    by the vagrants who had come in the days before to steal and violate this
    precious place. Not much different than what she did, I thought.

    As we pulled away and the big African sunset beyond the
    mango trees, everything sunk into sadness. My heart was heavy for her, she was
    just young and ambitious, not malicious and conniving. When she drove away, I
    wonder how she felt, confused and alone, empty and hurting?

    It was over. There’s no one there.

    Reply
    • Elise Martel

      I was a little confused the first time I read this, but when I reread it, (mostly because of the sentence about the big African sunset beyond the mango trees), things made more sense. I can feel the trauma, the hurt, the loss. I was intrigued by the story taking place in Kenya.
      If you started the piece with the sentence “truthfully, I was haunted,” I think it would be even more interesting.

    • chrishadsell

      Thanks for the feedback!

    • Twinss R.

      Wooow, this is amazingly written! :O
      I… I sort of wish I had found anything “negative” in order to make a constructive criticism but it’s hard! It was really beautiful! 🙂
      The overall emotion in it (and even the change of your feelings and contemplation while you were facing the situation) is just amazing; it is really beautifully written and in an order as to not confuse the readers.
      And I’m glad you finally dealt with it. 😉

  59. Elise Martel

    For the record, this didn’t actually happen to me. It is based off of a bunch of random things I read about/conjured up. My mom is amazing:)

    “Mom, I can’t wear this,” I pleaded. “Don’t make me. I’ll die.”
    Mom shot me a cold look laced with weariness and hurt. “Well, I wouldn’t want to be arrested for murder, would I?” she said. She stuck her little chin out as if she was daring me to sock her with another criticism. “I go out and buy my daughter a dress, and I am accused of trying to kill her.”

    She turned on her heel and stalked out of the room, ignoring my remorseful attempts to take back my words. I could hear the buzz of the party outside my room. I didn’t need open the door to know that the pouts and betrayed looks she gave me disappeared already.

    She was mingling, being a hostess. Ms. Charming. Cue staged laughter and patient listening to sonorous lectures on the worth of the Cullinan diamond. Everyone worshiped her.

    And here I was in my room, staring at the ugliest dress of my life. They got worse each year. Last year, a bubble gum pink Marilyn Monroe monstrosity. The year before, I had to parade around in a Mantis green debacle with puffed sleeves. She eclipsed herself each year.

    This year took the cake. Each frilly piece of the dress hung downward like a leaf of the world’s largest cabbage. Dye them bright yellow, add lace to the edges, and sew
    them together, and you had my dress. I would take the green or the pink or even both together in a heartbeat over this. I would dress up like Spumoni ice cream any day over looking like a cabbage with banana yellow leaves.
    I squeezed into it, hoping that maybe it wouldn’t look as bad when I was wearing it. Nope. Who was I kidding? I weighed out my options. A, I died, or B, I wore it and then died.

    I chose B. Either way I was dead, but at least option B wouldn’t be because my mother physically murdered me. I peeped into the box containing my shoes. Brown with corduroy stripes. The chocolate sauce on top of this banana split I was wearing.
    I ventured out of the safety of my refuge, not even bothering to wish that no one would see me. It was over. My life. Gone.
    Great Aunt Ethel was the first to catch a glimpse of the Banana Cabbage Split, her grand niece. She hustled over to me, jiggling in purple velvet. “What, my dear, is that?” she hissed in my ear, jabbing at my train with her cane.
    “A fashion statement,” I whispered back with a devilish look. “They are all the rage in Paris. Renowned for a bold approach in mimicking the simple beauty found in nature.”
    “How poetic,” she sniffed. “Just because cabbages grow in nature doesn’t mean that people should wear them.” She hurled a contemptuous look and me and sniffed again, the long hair sticking out of her nose sucked in with her breath.
    I felt decidedly wicked and oppressed. Since I was going to die tonight anyway, I didn’t bother to curb my tongue. “How could you be so oppressive?” I challenged. “I thought that you, of all people, would recognize a piece of art when you saw it. At least my dress doesn’t have faded spots from the sun.”

    Seething with rage, she withdrew her eyes from me as if she suddenly discovered that I was leprous. I swept by her, headed for the stairs. At least then I could get something cold to soothe my burning throat and feverish cheeks.
    As I dismounted the stairs, the guests roving the ballroom below froze in place and stared up at me. If looks could kill, I was long dead. I felt blood rush from my stomach to my neck, face, shoulders, arms. If my dress was dip dyed yellow, the rest of me was scarlet. Great, I thought. Now I look like a giant Easter egg with a doily attached to me.

    It felt a little breezy. I looked behind me. My train was at the top step underneath my uncle’s foot. The rest of me was at the bottom step. I curled my legs together.
    “Well, at least now she looks all banana,” my father bellowed from across the ballroom.
    I fell forward. I’m dead.

    Reply
  60. Horris

    First post so go easy please. It’s really made me realise I need to think about grammar and sentence structure. I hand wrote for 15 mins and then typed making a few adjustments as I went.

    It was already pitch black despite it really not being that late. Long winter dark nights had that effect. I was glad the bus I was waiting on had just pulled in. My interview outfit
    couldn’t protect me from the bitter chill in the air but at least I could be thankful it hadn’t rained. There was a queue to board. I never understood why people were so pedantic about it when there was always plenty of room on the buses. ‘No, you are first,’ they would say and jostle you on board before them.

    The driver opens the door as soon as he arrives and for that I am grateful. I’ve
    already had to wait ten, long, cold minutes. Today, there is only one young
    girl before me. She must be colder than I am dressed only in sportswear, no
    coat over her hooded top. She flashes her pass, mutters a thanks and climbs the
    stairs to the second deck. The driver checks my ticket, I thank him, then
    follow the girl upstairs. I don’t think you ever grow out of the magic of the
    front seat of the bus. I take the front seat on the right and smile at the
    girl.

    I start flicking through the free magazine I have picked up but I am still too wired from my job interview or perhaps an overload of caffeine earlier in the day, to actually
    focus on any of the articles. I flick through it, taking in the headlines and
    nothing more. The girl opposite me is tapping away at her mobile phone texting
    or Facebooking. I can hear voices behind us starting up a conversation. I must
    have been more absorbed in my magazine than I thought, as I hadn’t heard anyone
    else come up stairs. ‘Hello James. Been a while since I’ve seen you,’ says the first voice. A second voice joins in, another man’s voice but there is something a little odd about this one. I turn in my seat and take a peak. Sometimes I listen to the voices for longer and try to imagine in my mind what they look like before subtly turning around. James is probably in his late 20s, wearing a shell-suit that looks almost as old as he is, it’s zipped right up to his chin. He has dark short hair that is greased by some kind of gel. The man who spoke first is older, his face wrinkled and hair greyed. I class him as retired as I really cannot fathom how old he is actually is.

    As the bus trundles through the town their conversation seems harmless enough. Reminiscing about days gone by, asking if they have seen this person or that person. ‘So why have I not seen you?’ The man with the grey hair and wrinkled face asks again. I don’t think any of us were expecting his full brutal honest answer.
    ‘I have been in Cherrydale. They pumped me full of drugs and told me I was insane, Dave.’ The girl opposite me catches my eye. I can tell she has been listening as well.

    Reply
  61. Betsey Heffron

    I’d lived here my whole life hadn’t I? Isn’t this the place where I felt safe and warm on the coldest and saddest of days of my youth. The place where the best thing that ever were had been shared and congratulated?
    As I stood in my parents kitchen, whose walls if they could speak, would reveal my place here. I couldn’t help but feel lost. This was where I had always been able to find myself but today…nothing.
    I had come here to discuss an idea with my parents. This was the moment I had been searching for (looking back) my whole life. I was about to stand up and make a true decision for self preservation. Independence at last. Isn’t this what we all want for our children? This I was sure my parents would openly support as I had been speeding down this road for some time. ( I thought I’d been driving a fire truck with loud sirens everyone heard, apparently it was more like a scooter with sound proofing on the wheels) I may have been expecting too much. As it turns out they weren’t thrilled.…” Mom, Daddy I’m telling Dean I wanted a divorce.”

    Reply
  62. Kate

    Ok, first time, first prompt. I don’t own a blog or share any writing ever, actually sometimes I do, in the form of letters but they generally remain unsent. Really nervous, I know my grammar isn’t up to scratch but here goes… Extreme awkwardness revisited for 15 minutes…

    It was a sunny day,
    really bright and invasive. Surrounded by an aura of perspiration I
    entered the front garden which was manicured to the extent of
    resembling a small wasteland. An archway lead into the back garden.
    A hive of social activity interrupted the seemingly innocuous
    pathway. No back entrances…

    I suddenly became
    painfully aware of a tear in my skirt. I saw two peers from my high
    school days. Their dispositions were haughty and indignant on first
    micro-expression followed by stiff, forced smiles. I spluttered
    vowels and syllables which resembled a greeting and escaped quickly
    into the kitchen. As I made my way through a maze masquerading as
    the interior of a house towards what resembled a bathroom I heard
    plastic music blaring from a popular radio station. The bathroom was
    dark, cool and quite. A small but easily disrupt able safe haven.
    Knowing I could not stay there forever I wearily ventured into the
    garden.

    Small screaming
    children were the focus of everyone’s attention, there was an
    invisible line separating the men from the women. Somehow I knew I
    did not belong there. I ventured back into the kitchen under the
    false premise of needing a drink only to be cornered by one of the
    father/husbands whose small talk dripped with gut wrenching sexual
    innuendo. I stepped fast towards the freezer as he deftly
    intercepted me with an ice-bucket and an expression of heroic pride.

    Reply
    • JamesterLee

      The descriptors in this are great. There is definitely a sense of being out of place, so much so, in fact, I couldn’t initially identify where it was. A possible next step would be helping the reader to understand what’s taking place a little more. Maybe some backstory or clarifying why the narrator is there in the first place? Great Job!

  63. JamesterLee

    Just a practice to the first prompt. No editing, written in 30 mins. I hope it’s not too rough!

    Mandy looked at everyone around her from the corner of the room. It was like a ritual, a dance processional of misfits shouting and jumping as each person moved on their queue. It was a game she didn’t understand with people she barely knew. Rather than participate, she volunteered to capture the events on camera, validating the amount of fun they were having. Obviously it had only happened if all their friends on every social network knew about it. Being the camera person was the perfect job for an onlooker who had no intention of joining.

    “What do you mean you don’t drink?” One of the athletically built, sandy blonde haired fraternity brothers asked with so much confusion in his voice, Mandy felt, for just a moment, truly abnormal.

    “It makes me ill,” Mandy responded, thinking the explanation was perfectly adequate.

    “And?” The frat boy apparently disagreed.

    “So I don’t like to.” Mandy decided short remarks were the best approach.

    “How are you going to play then?”

    “I won’t,” she dug into her pockets and pulled out her phone. She held it just between their faces, which she believed were a little too close to begin with. “I’ll take the pictures.” She batted her lashes and smiled.

    “Sweet,” the frat boy grinned. This he found to be an adequate answer.

    So here Mandy stood, in the corner of the room, playing the documentarian of a drinking binge masked as a game with complicated rules and aggressive players.

    Mandy didn’t typically attend these sporting events. She preferred a quieter night, filled with personal interaction and long dialogue. She had been tricked into attending by her roommate, Sarah, an equally athletically built, sandy blonde haired girl with more zeal in a night than Mandy had ever mustered in her life. At times, Mandy felt inadequate next to Sarah. Sarah was bold and adventurous. She was the girl every girl wanted to be, with so much spirit and radiance that she was enviable, but never hate-able.

    Mandy looked to the center of the ritual dance. Sarah was the lead, the composer, and the director all at once. Everyone followed her queues. Mandy looked on.

    I really shouldn’t be here. It was apparent in every way. She had been dressed in the guise of a sociable female in Sarah’s clothes, but her jet black hair, large framed glasses, and insistence on wearing her military boots with the dress Sarah had picked made it clear that she really wasn’t one of them.

    “I like your look. It’s exotic,” Sarah once told Mandy this in the early stages of their friendship. Exotic.

    “Exotic?” Mandy answered skeptically.

    “Yes, exotic. This is a small college town. Most people who go here, were born, grew up, and plan to die here. We have the same backgrounds, same histories. Honestly I think everyone is related in some way or another. But you, you’re different.” Sarah loved the novelty of her exotic. Mandy cringed at the idea of different, but it was true. No one else of asian descent lived in town. No matter what clothes she wore, or how she wore her hair, there was no escaping that she was different.

    Reply
    • Lucy Crabtree

      Great job! I don’t drink much, either, though a lot of my friends do (just socially, we’re all well past the college stage of frat parties and the like). They’re so nice about it and don’t really care that much, but I still feel silly ordering a Shirley Temple. 🙂 So I can relate to the narrator feeling a little out of place with the drinking, even though you don’t have her spend a lot of time on that part. You capture Mandy’s discomfort well – great description of her clothes, with the unexpected “exotic” twist at the end. I want to know more!

    • JamesterLee

      Thank you, Lucy! I appreciate the input.

  64. Lucy Crabtree

    Not expecting any critique since I’m late to the party here, but trying to do a better job of pushing myself.
    ———-
    She parked and walked in. It was a bleak building. Tan. Nondescript. Two guys waited at the elevator with her. Evie balked. They all avoided eye contact, looking to the side, up and down, but never at each other. Finally, mercifully, the elevator came, but none of them made a move to enter the carriage. One of the men gestured for her to go first, so she smiled — grimaced, really — her thanks and went in first. She didn’t ask, but punched the button to go down to the first floor. It was the only place the elevator went. The three of them rode in silence. It was just one floor, but it felt like 100. The elevator was so slow, she wasn’t even sure they were moving.

    When the doors finally opened to a dimly lit corridor, she bolted, relying on her memory to remind her how many turns to take until she found the office she needed. The two men weren’t far behind, and checked in with reception not long after she did. The lady at reception had told her to sit in the corner opposite the full waiting room. Better chance of hearing the nurse that way.

    She settled in next to an older lady who looked and smelled like a chain smoker. Evie cough and tried to discreetly cover her nose and mouth. A few chairs away sat another women, this one with a blue mask over her face.

    Wish I’d thought of that, Evie told herself.

    She watched the clock. It was 10 minutes before her appointment. Her doctor’s usual nurse came out, but didn’t call her name. Instead, the chain-smoker got up and followed the nurse down the hall. Evie could breathe again.

    She rifled through her phone — Facebook, Twitter, her blog reader. Over and over again, for something to do. She checked the time. Now it was 10 minutes past her appointment. Evie frowned. She hadn’t seen Nurse Amy anytime recently. Other nurses and assistants had come and gone, but she didn’t hear anything that sounded remotely like her name.

    The clock kept ticking. Twenty minutes. Then 30. Reception Lady walked by, saw Evie and turned back to the desk to confer with her co-workers. Evie wondered what they were saying. Were they talking about her? Were they looking at her? She couldn’t stare and eavesdrop. Not this time. Had she missed something? Did someone call her name and she didn’t know? Where was Nurse Amy?

    She kept her eye on the reception desk, just in case. Reception Lady waved her over.

    “Which doctor did you have?”

    “Hm? Oh, um, Dr. Gordon.”

    “Let’s see …”

    A few clicks on the computer. A few words with yet another co-worker. “She should be with you soon.”

    “OK,” Evie said. “Thank you.”

    Finally, a rotund man came out. He was dressed in scrubs, but Evie had never seen him before.

    He glanced around the room.

    “Evie?” he called.

    Great, she thought. I have to tell a him about my period.

    She stood quickly, dropping her purse in the process.

    “Oh, that- that’s me,” she said, leaning over to pick up her bag.

    “My name is Lewis,” the man said. “I’m helping Nurse Amy out today.”

    “OK,” Evie said. “Then you might not know that I’m hard of hearing. Could you look at me when you talk?”

    “Sure thing,” Lewis said.

    Reply
    • Eliese

      Hi Lucy. My favorite part of this story was the elevator. I could feel the tension as Evie went down to the first floor. Also the worries that she had when she saw the doctor were funny.

    • Lucy Crabtree

      Thank you, Eliese!

    • JamesterLee

      I love Evie. She’s so relatable. You can feel her discomfort. I especially enjoyed the series of questions in that close third person. It made the scene that much more tangible

  65. Eliese

    The day has arrived after months of waiting. Every night for the past 12 weeks I would cross off the date on my business sized calendar before I fell asleep. Then I would dream that I am in your arms. Soon I will no longer have to miss you.

    I am next in line. The customs officer beckons me forward. Through the glass window he asks me something I can’t comprehend. When I don’t answer he switches languages.

    “Documents?” he asks with a bored expression. I give him my blue passport. He examines it and, after a tense moment, he stamps a page and I am free. I walk through the corridor with my luggage and into a new world.

    Everything is different. The people rush by looking foreign. Children run laughing and screaming while their mother calls behind them in words I can’t understand. They answer back in their native tongue with ease. I spent a month’s practicing the language and I will never be as good as these tiny humans are.

    “Taxi. Taxi.” men in funny clothes advertise to ignorant travelers. They hope they will make an extra buck of off american like me.

    I ignore them and scan the crowd looking for you but you are nowhere to be seen. I must be in the wrong area. I examine the signs in confusion. The words seem upside-down and backwards at the same time. They are put together using the Cyrillic alphabet which I know very little of. I step forward to begin my search. I make it to a café before I decide to turn around and ask someone where to go.

    Out of the crowd the best option for help I can find are two supermodel flight attendants.

    “Can you help me?” I ask in English. They keep going so I try out my poor Ukrainian language skills.

    “Dopomha boodlaska?” They look down on me and stroll by. I am alone in an exotic country.

    I head back to the point where I arrived. I begin to panic.What if you aren’t coming? What will I do? Will I have to take another three planes just to get back home?

    I search the fluorescent lit airport one last time and there you are. I let go of my large black bag and it falls onto the linoleum floor. I don’t care. I run into your arms and squeeze has hard as I can. You smell like winter and man. I have missed this scent. I am in a land I have never seen before, but when you hold me I am home.

    Reply
  66. Guest

    Rome was only 30 kilometers distant. I
    was in the train for Rome Termini, with my mother, my cousin and my
    uncles in a hot August day.

    The hot was unbearable like my cousin’s
    small talk. We finally arrived at Rome and when I finally escaped
    out of the train I saw around tons of people in the train station.

    A big mass of people huddling each
    other. So many colors, so much confusion and so many countries that i
    didn’t believe what i was seeing. The spectacular and chaotic Rome,
    like every cosmopolitan city, where you can’t even breathe because
    other people breath your air.

    Yeah, the Roma Termini station seems so
    big, but it wasn’t. When you can’t even walk without hurting someone
    you realize that it isn’t so large and comfortable. No air, no space,
    and no movements, but your brain is full of chaos. I hated it.

    I get out the train station but i
    continued to feel like this wasn’t my city, neither my culture.
    English, Germans, Japans, Americans, Chinese and many black people
    selling gadgets. Cars and traffic around the Colosseum and fake roman
    centurions asking for a photo with them.

    That gave me a headcache, as i
    continued to see this city. I was just about to kick my chatty and
    silly cousin in the head to make her shut up!

    Oh my, oh my. Keep calm, take a deep
    breath.

    The worst part comes. In the tube, I
    never been in a tube and i come from a small city.

    I think that more people lives near,
    and more homicides will be committed. The feeling of being surrounded
    by fifteen people in a very small tube, well, it speaks alone. Just
    terrible.

    Not to talk about when I went to the
    old ruins of a roman house. They looked so weird, weird because…
    because they were our ancestors houses but, I didn’t felt them from
    my culture.

    Like I was catapulted into another
    dimension, of two thousands years ago. Maybe is Internet’s fault or
    maybe it’s just me, I can’t explain…

    And so, they day passed. I return to
    home fortunately at the end of that day, and I still remember the
    chaos, my noisy cousin, my boring uncles, my irritated mom and the
    hot of an August sunny day…

    Reply
  67. Bibi

    My first time writing in english… and i’m only fourteen. I hope is not so bad 🙂

    Rome was only 30 kilometers distant. I was in the train for Rome Termini, with my mother, my cousin and my uncles in a hot August day.

    The hot was unbearable like my cousin’s small talk. We finally arrived at Rome and when I finally escaped out of the train I saw around tons of people in the train station.

    A big mass of people huddling each other. So many colors, so much confusion and so many countries that i didn’t believe what i was seeing. The spectacular and chaotic Rome, like every cosmopolitan city, where you can’t even breathe because other people breath your air.

    Yeah, the Roma Termini station seems so big, but it wasn’t. When you can’t even walk without hurting someone you realize that it isn’t so large and comfortable. No air, no space, and no movements, but your brain is full of chaos. I hated it.

    I get out the train station but i continued to feel like this wasn’t my city, neither my culture. English, Germans, Japans, Americans, Chinese and many black people selling gadgets. Cars and traffic around the Colosseum and fake roman centurions asking for a photo with them.

    That gave me a headcache, as i continued to see this city. I was just about to kick my chatty and silly cousin in the head to make her shut up!

    Oh my, oh my. Keep calm, take a deep breath.

    The worst part comes. In the tube, I never been in a tube and i come from a small city.

    I think that more people lives near, and more homicides will be committed. The feeling of being surrounded by fifteen people in a very small tube, well, it speaks alone. Just terrible.

    Not to talk about when I went to the old ruins of a roman house. They looked so weird, weird because… because they were our ancestors houses but, I didn’t felt them from my culture.

    Like I was catapulted into another dimension, of two thousands years ago. Maybe is Internet’s fault or maybe it’s just me, I can’t explain…

    And so, they day passed. I return to home fortunately at the end of that day, and I still remember the chaos, my noisy cousin, my boring uncles, my irritated mom and the hot of an August sunny day…

    Reply
  68. Elizabeth Towns

    Here is my response to the first prompt. Be gentle.

    Initially, the ride through the lighted hallways was almost happy, lighthearted and cheerful. The walls were lined with pictures of people who had been there before or who had left a contribution to the institution. A baby grand piano was in the lobby surrounded by comfortable pretty seating. As we rolled past, I remembered seeing the pianist take his seat on other occasions. He played contemporary jazz that filled the atrium with reverberating lingering notes.

    The hallway seemed to stretch before us further the longer we rode. We passed others, walking quickly to their own destinations. Most were not concerned with my journey — they had their own personal destination in mind. A few smiled that secret smile at me, as if they were in on the secret. I tried to return their smiles, but I was beginning to feel a little terror pushing forward from the back of my mind. I was starting to slip on the edge of no return.

    There was no turning back.

    I couldn’t stop this now, it was happening. I could hear the faraway voices of my sisters and my Mom bantering and talking amongst each other as if at the far end of a long tunnel. I was starting to slide into the place of no return.

    Finally, we reached the room. It was a nice large room, big enough for all of the people who would come and go throughout the process. There was a television with a DVD player, a rocking chair and a round table with two chairs. We had a CD player for the music we chose to play. There was a small sofa. And the Bed.

    The women began to prepare me, talking to me the whole time. Then he came in with his familiar smile and mellow brown eyes. He was calming and professional, putting me at immediate ease, allaying the tension he could see in my eyes, in my posture, in my grip on the bed rails.

    The women gathered a little away from the center of the room, while he assessed me, checking out every bit of me from head to toe.

    “Are you comfortable? Nervous?” he asked, standing where he could look directly into my eyes as if to verify my answer through my soul.

    “I’m comfortable. I’m nervous now. I can’t stop this from happening. I’m scared.” Here I was telling him everything I felt. I was laid bare, with my hair pulled up in a tousled ponytail, lips with just a bit of vaseline on, and a thin gown between he and I.

    “Don’t worry. Everything will be fine. I’ll be here every step of the way. You are ready for this. We’ve worked on the plan for a while now.” He said these things while holding my hand and speaking to me like nobody else was in the room. And I believed him. And so we began.

    THIS IS THE STORY OF HOW LABOR BEGAN WITH MY DAUGHTER. MY FIRST BIRTH STORY.

    Initially, the ride through the lighted hallways was almost happy, lighthearted and cheerful. The walls were lined with pictures of people who had been there before or who had left a contribution to the institution. A baby grand piano was in the lobby surrounded by comfortable pretty seating. As we rolled past, I remembered seeing the pianist take his seat on other occasions. He played contemporary jazz that filled the atrium with reverberating lingering notes.

    The hallway seemed to stretch before us further the longer we rode. We passed others, walking quickly to their own destinations. Most were not concerned with my journey — they had their own personal destination in mind. A few smiled that secret smile at me, as if they were in on the secret. I tried to return their smiles, but I was beginning to feel a little terror pushing forward from the back of my mind. I was starting to slip on the edge of no return.

    There was no turning back.

    I couldn’t stop this now, it was happening. I could hear the faraway voices of my sisters and my Mom bantering and talking amongst each other as if at the far end of a long tunnel. I was starting to slide into the place of no return.

    Finally, we reached the room. It was a nice large room, big enough for all of the people who would come and go throughout the process. There was a television with a DVD player, a rocking chair and a round table with two chairs. We had a CD player for the music we chose to play. There was a small sofa. And the Bed.

    The women began to prepare me, talking to me the whole time. Then he came in with his familiar smile and mellow brown eyes. He was calming and professional, putting me at immediate ease, allaying the tension he could see in my eyes, in my posture, in my grip on the bed rails.

    The women gathered a little away from the center of the room, while he assessed me, checking out every bit of me from head to toe.

    “Are you comfortable? Nervous?” he asked, standing where he could look directly into my eyes as if to verify my answer through my soul.

    “I’m comfortable. I’m nervous now. I can’t stop this from happening. I’m scared.” Here I was telling him everything I felt. I was laid bare, with my hair pulled up in a tousled ponytail, lips with just a bit of vaseline on, and a thin gown between he and I.

    “Don’t worry. Everything will be fine. I’ll be here every step of the way. You are ready for this. We’ve worked on the plan for a while now.” He said these things while holding my hand and speaking to me like nobody else was in the room. And I believed him. And so we began.

    THIS IS THE STORY OF HOW LABOR BEGAN WITH MY DAUGHTER; MY FIRST BIRTH STORY.

    Reply
  69. Mich

    My first post – nervous!

    Too many people! Too much noise! Too much sun! Crowds irk me. I prefer my comfort zones and this loud swirling pool of hyped children and exhausted parents was definitely not one of them! But I have no choice you never do when you have kids. It is the annual harvest carnival and my boys wanted to go.
    It is all a crazy merry-go- round of candy floss, taffy apples and rides. As usual I am the pack horse.
    “Mom can you please hold my bag while I go on the swings?” One of my boys shout
    as he shoves the overflowing plastic bag filled with sticky sweet s and prizes
    into my already cramping sweaty hand.
    My head is swirling and buzzing. It is all I can do not to just throw the packets
    hanging from me off my panicked body and run shouting out the front gates arms
    flailing in the air like a crazy cat woman!
    I look round searching desperately to locate my so called better half. It amazes me still how he always manages to not be
    there when I needed him!

    Reply
    • DRB2930

      Great imagery … too many people, noise, sun, hyped children and exhausted parents, candy floss, taffy apples, and rides. The quote also gives me a sense of your reality.
      Good job on the metaphor: I am the pack horse.
      See if you can push yourself on finding an equally novel way of expressing your frustration in substitute for “flailing in the air like a crazy cat woman”
      Lastly, for a bit of polish, take care of the grammar details.
      But overall, good job.

    • MCD' Alton

      Thank you!

  70. Lee Grey

    First time writing here. Tried to write from a decent female perspective, but I’m not sure how I did on that part. I’m posting it raw from writing with the timer.

    I burrowed back behind my desk and tried not to glare in their direction. Did she have to invite people to our room? I was tired, and cranky (though I wouldn’t dare show it) and now, in the place that I try and try to make feel safe, my roommate brought intruders, who would look me up and down, then dismiss me as nonexistent.

    I sighed. I had been doing a lot of that lately, since I moved in with the perky girl. It WAS the Superbowl, and it wasn’t like we were close enough that I could argue or complain to her.

    I had given up on the idea of being the best of friends with my roommate ages ago, and she seemed to have done the same. We had tried twice. Once on her terms, out with her mother to go to the mall and then out to a nice steakhouse to eat an overpriced meal accentuated by awkward conversation on my part and seemingly easy chatting on hers. And then once on mine, a night in, watching a unique, yet mostly unknown, movie and trying to talk to her about how wonderful the plot and execution was as she simply smiled and nodded, checking the time on her phone at frequent intervals.

    We just weren’t compatible. So we cohabitated. She would tolerate my getting up as the sun rose. I was obliged to tolerate her bringing people who only seemed to look at me with disdain into the room.

    But why did they have to be here? I thought, as I anxiously tried to make myself look like I was doing something productive or important. I grabbed a Spanish text and began to make notecards of the new chapter’s vocabulary. My roommate and her friends were at ease, idly chatting about the commercials with their Music Theory books open. I was the alien. They did not want me there and simply accepted my presence as I desperately wished they would leave.

    If I haven’t made it obvious enough, people make me nervous and self-conscious. Or rather, I become nervous and self-conscious in the presence of people. I had come to the room to escape after a long day following a longer week of trying to fit in among them, trying to please them and prove that yes, I’m human too, but the closest thing to a sanctuary that I had was filled with girls who seemed to be trying to prove the opposite to me. Was there any place for me? Not the witty, happy person I try to be in public, but just me, without jumping through all of these social hoops.

    I was upset with her, and if I dared to show it, I would become the villian, her mind exaggerating my faults just as mine exaggerates hers.

    I got a lot of homework done that night.

    Reply
    • Scarlet Ferya Ma

      I love the opening paragraph of this and I like that you call the roommate ‘the perky girl’. I think in the second from last paragraph you needn’t have explained what her neuroses were – you were making it obvious enough with your great writing. But you really got across a feeling I identify strongly with, and definitely did the female perspective well. Really enjoyed reading this.

    • Sidney

      I’m not good at finding the words to ‘critique’ or review others’ writing, so I’ll keep it simple – I really liked this. I like the story and I love the sense of compromise and the coping strategy for dealing with the presence of unwanted guests. And the last line made me laugh, which is what it’s all about, I reckon.

    • Magz

      I like this and immediately liked and could identify with the main character. Great job with setting a timer

    • Tapiocaqueen

      Hi! I’m a seventh grader and I’m trying to improve my writing so could somebody give me suggestions on how to improve this?

      Even when I was a young puppy I was the always the last one. The last one to be born. The last one to be fed. The last one to have a name – Runt. The last one to be adopted. I stayed at the shelter while I watched longingly at my brothers and sisters being carried away by their new owners. Every time a possible owner came to pick out a dog I behaved my best – I put on my big-eye-floppy-ear-tilted-head-wagging-tail-cute-dog look, happily bounded along the adoptee, and sat and rolled and jumped whenever the shelter owner, Loren, told me to. But they never took me home in their big warm arms. They always got the small fluffy dogs or the big and friendly golden retrievers, or those snobby poodles. Even when Loren tried to persuade them to adopt me because I was “friendly and in need of a home”, they just shook their heads and said, “I’m sorry, but a cripple would be too much work.” That’s what they saw when they looked at me, a cripple. All of them except Loren, who always loved me. Even when I chewed her slippers, or shed fur on the bed, she just laughed and said, “What am I going to do with you, Runt?” And now, ten later, I finally have a home.

  71. Michael

    The six of us filtered into a room much bigger than what I had expected it to be. In the middle of the room was a very large table surrounded by six chairs. Usually I would be the first to notice a chair shortage but all things considering, I’m surprised I was able to attend fully clothed.

    After staking claim to a spot at the table and making sure mother was seated first, I finally convinced myself to take a look around the room as I removed my coat and hung it politely on the back of my chair.

    Our host entered the room and said “Oh it looks like we’re one chair short. I’ll be right back.” As she walked back towards the door she motioned to the quaint shelf hanging on the wall holding an array of coffee mugs, glasses and water jug.

    “If anyone would like coffee or water or tea, please help yourself”
    She quietly left the room, sliding the door closed behind her.

    My brother-in-law browsed the room as he waited patiently for our host to return with another chair. He took off his coat, respectfully took off his hat and shoved it into the arm of his coat so he wouldn’t forget it when we left. The room was eerily quiet except for the ruffles of jackets being unzipped and taken off. It wasn’t any colder than any other day in Northern Alberta in February but it sure felt like it that day. We were all pale and tired and restless.

    Three quaint knocks came out of no-where and startled my mother. The room door opened as our host wrestled another chair into the room. She gracefully slid it over the worn pale green and beige carpet, placing it beside my sister sitting across the table from my mother. My brother-in-law immediately sat down and wrapped his arm around my sister. She nestled her head into his chest, trying to hide her face.

    I looked over to my other sister sitting to their right. She seemed comfortable while cradling a cup of tea beneath her bottom lip with shaky hands, glancing down at her phone from time to time to await word from her husband who was flying in from Ontario.

    My baby sister sat at the end of the table to my left looking confused and slightly overwhelmed. She caught me looking at her and smiled that fake smile you give someone to say you’re ok but clearly she wasn’t.

    I looked back towards the center of the table not really seeing anything but staring at the grains of wood that leaked into each other. Without looking, I reached over to my mother who hadn’t taken off her coat and gave her shoulder a firm but gentle squeeze. She responded by reaching up with her hand lovingly squeezing it back.

    Our host went back and closed the door effortlessly; quietly. Something she has probably done a thousand times before. This time it was for us. And although it seemed like such a trivial thing to witness, I felt as though it symbolized the ultimate closure we were about to deal with.

    Our host took her seat at the head of the table, opened her binder and said “Ron is here now. We received his remains this morning…”

    Reply
    • Sandra

      I could really feel the atmosphere.

  72. Liz

    I’m here because I am not a writer. I struggle with it. I don’t want to struggle any more. Here is my first attempt at writing. This is a true story and a fairly recent event.
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    Away from home and on my own. My work for the day was finished. My brain was full and I was tired. It was about a 15 minute drive to get to the security of my hotel. The air was crisp and cold. The wind cut through me as I stood on the sidewalk waiting for a cab. There was none. I wondered if I should begin walking. Should I venture out through the streets? I hesitated. The cold wind prevented me from moving.

    Out of the corner of my eye I saw someone approaching. He called out to me. “Come here, Come here” as I saw his arms encouraging me to go to him. I stood in the cold, bundled in my coat, and with a nod I declined his request. He was a tall man in a dark overcoat. The hat he was wearing shaded his eyes but I could see his dark complexion. As I was taking inventory of his face a cab just whizzed by. I became frustrated I didn’t see it in time. Again I heard, “come here, come here, I will take you”. My voice told him, “no, I am will wait for a cab”. With his deep voice, in broken English, I heard, “There will be no cab for a long time and you will be out here in the cold”. “I have a nice car, it is warm inside and I will take you to where you want to go”. “This will be much nicer for you”. I hesitated. I looked around and did not see any cabs. I felt uncertain. He looked at me and without speaking, waved me over to him. He nodded as if all would be fine. And there I was, walking toward him, the wind so sharp and cold. I eased myself into the back seat and there I was sitting in this large black vehicle. I quickly looked around and noticed the tinted windows. Then “boom”, the car jolted as he closed the door. I sat in silence in the back seat and he drove off. I thought to myself, “What have I done?”

    I asked that he take me to the Park Plaza. “Please, the Park Plaza on Arlington”. No words from him, he just drove. I looked out the tinted windows. I was in an unfamiliar area. If I just got closer to my hotel I would know the streets. I was too far to be familiar with this area. I tried to converse with him. “How long have you lived here?” He replied with short one word answers. I thought to myself, this didn’t feel right. Intuition? Instinct? I became anxious as he kept driving. No one from the outside could see me. I was alone in the back of this large, dark SUV and no one knew I was there.

    He spoke, in his deep voice, broken English “I need $50.00”. I told him I wouldn’t pay him $50.00 as that isn’t what the fare would be in a cab. His deep voice became louder, I told you $50.00. “You are in a nice vehicle and you need to pay me $50.00”. I became frightened and raised my voice, “I didn’t want this vehicle, I wanted a cab and I’m not paying you $50.00!” My own loudness startled me. My mind began racing… what am I doing? I want out. I watched the streets. It was getting dark. In the distance I saw a familiar street. I was relieved. But then he turned. He turned this large black SUV away from where I needed to go. I panicked. I yelled. “Let me out!” He kept driving. I yelled louder “Let me out of this fuck’n car!” He kept driving. I saw the amphitheater. I knew the area. I have walked there in the past and I knew it was in an isolated area. I can’t go there. Not with him. Not alone. Why is he taking me there? Oh my God!

    I grabbed my phone. I yelled. I was very loud. “I’m calling the police!” “You fucker!” “Get me out of this fucking car!” “You are going the wrong way!” “Don’t take me there you fucker!” He stopped. It was abrupt. He turned around and looked right into my eyes. He looked panicked. His deep voice told me “Do not call the police”. “I do not want trouble.” We were stopped. All of a sudden there was silence. I could hear the wind whistling. His voice, “I want you happy”. “I want you to be nice”. I was frozen in my seat. I wanted to open the car door. I wanted to run. But I couldn’t move my arm. I so desperately wanted to open the car door but fear took over. It was dark outside. Cars whipping by. No one could see me inside.

    I looked him right into his dark eyes. I didn’t blink. I spoke very calmly and with conviction. “I am going to give you $20.00. I will then open that door and get out”. “You will then drive away.” “I never want to see your fuck’n face again”. He just stared at me. I laid $20 on the seat. Slowly moved over to the door never taking my eyes off of him. Slowly I pulled the handle back. My heart was beating so strongly. I slid out of the car and stood on the street. It was dark. I was out. I gently closed the door and heard the click of the latch. There was finally distance between the two of us. Did he have a gun? As I stood there I wondered if he was going to shoot me. I couldn’t move.I was cold. It seemed like an eternity before he drove off into the darkness.

    I made it to my hotel on my own. When I walked into the safety and warmth of the lobby I approached the Bell Captain. I began to shake as I explained what occurred. He was aghast and told me women are getting picked up while waiting for cabs. They are robbed of their money and jewelry, sexually assaulted and sometimes murdered. He told me how lucky I was. I told myself how lucky I was.

    Reply
    • Sandra

      wow that is really good writing. What a scary story that is!

    • Liz

      Thanks Sara. I struggle so much with writing and appreciate your input.

    • Liz

      Sandra thanks for your input … yes it was scary.

    • Elissaveta

      I agree with Sandra, great writing and a story that flows. Sorry this happened to you but glad to see that you channelled it into a great piece of writing.

    • Liz

      Elissaveta.. This was my first attempt at writing.. thanks for the encouragement.

    • Anna

      I was terrified reading this, it’s sooooo amazing I wish I could write like you!! That last line just topped it, sent shivers down my spine too my goodness :O

    • Liz

      Anna .. Thanks!

    • Magz

      That was very good and could grow into something.

    • Nisha Uchil

      you are very good writer… make career as your profession..i loved this piece… keep up the good work..

    • Nisha

      i mean make writing as your profession 🙂

    • Liz

      Thank you Nisha!

    • Justine

      I read that you struggle with writing. Writing is clearly not your problem, that was an amazing piece of prose. You need to start telling yourself that you are good and get out of your own head (easier said than done for us writers). Keep writing and keep posting.

    • Liz

      Thank you Justine I really appreciate your comment. 🙂

  73. Maymunah Rose

    I tried, but couldn’t quiet place my feelings in things on this one. I’ll have to try again.

    It was the first day of Eid. Everyone is supposed to have a wonderful time on the holidays. At Eid prayer everything opened up to me embracing me in loving arms. Then my brother’s friends wanted them to come to the Eid party at the park. It was a bit shaky at first because we were told we had to call someone, you were supposed to let the people know before, blah blah blah. We ended up just having to bring drinks. Smiles and hugs were given. The area was decorated. We entered and the boys started playing immediately. These were all the people I knew from my old home school group. I tried talking to some of these people, but it was very shortlived. Everyone was running around joining in the activites around them. Though it was cold, water balloons were being tossed around in that giggling strategic matter when you are just having a fun time. I was doing face paints as these things surronded me. I do not like getting wet when not prepared to. I tried to join, but no team was really welcoming me and kept running off in there little circles. Their looks, the way the smile just was fake, something around me and my old friends had changed. I accepted it. The relationships just weren’t the same.
    When it came time to eat I went to a table in the distance and munched on the food myself. Not a single person came to sit with me. One boy came and asked why was I here alone. I merely replied, ” I do not like eating in front of many people.” That is true, but it was more of those jealous stares that kept me back. Jealous? For what reason? Or just haughty? Has something happened while I was away from this homeschool click? What made me feel unwanted?
    People can be weird sometimes.
    I spent the rest of my time with the younger group who seem to be the only creatures who are naturally always open to people. Only the drooping willow trees and obeying face paints were sympathetic. Alien around these people I knew, or used to know.
    My brothers were having fun, and so was my sister. I was happy for them.
    When I left my car soothed me with it’s familiarity. My family was always there for me. And like everything, things pass and change…

    Reply
  74. Jay

    I am so sad that I just saw this now! Amazing advice throughout the 14 steps… I will get on the bandwagon though, however long I have to run after it.. watch this space.

    Reply
  75. Jay

    Unedited

    I knew straight away that my gut had been right. The bright lights
    hurt my eyes and the smell of expensive cigars took my breath away.. or
    maybe it was that of cheap perfume.

    As I took in the room around me I felt more and more uncomfortable.
    The women looked as though they had fallen straight out of a music
    video… or maybe I had fallen into one. That made more sense. Even the
    building seemed to ooze ego. I looked down at my chuck tailors and baggy
    jeans and felt my stomach lurch. How had Eric not warned me? How had he
    let me out the house looking like his, knowing we were coming to a
    place like.. this.

    If Wealth had a business card it would be a photo of this club.

    I walked up to the bar and even the staff were dressed better than me. A young guy came towards me with a skeptical look.

    “Can I help you?”

    I took my drink without tipping him, the small act of defiance felt like a victory and the bourbon started to take the edge off. I started to look for
    Eric. That was when a woman so beautiful I questioned my sobriety,
    spilled her drink on me.

    Reply
    • Scarlet Ferya Ma

      Love this.’Ooze ego’, that’s brilliant. That’s how I’m describing the next prick I meet to my friends… Also love ‘falling into a music video’. The overall piece reads really well and gets across a good sense of unease. I take it the beautiful woman takes away your anxiety in the next chapter??

    • Jay

      Scarlet thank you so much for your comment. 😀 Glad I gave you a new phrase to use. You are on the same wave length as me :’) The beautiful woman turn out to be really down to earth and sweet and leads the character further in a much better mental space.

    • Sidney

      I swear I used ‘oozed’ in mine before I read this 🙂 My first attempt at writing in public and I look like a person who does plagiarizing (is that a word?) already.
      I like this story, especially the ‘If Wealth had a business card..’

    • Jay

      Haha it’s okay Sidney we can share it! Glad you enjoyed reading my piece 🙂

    • Kirsis Concepcion

      This was fun to read! I like a sense of humor and a strong personality shinning through what I read and it definitely does here. I love the uncertainty in the beginning with the “…or maybe it was that cheap perfume…” “…or maybe I had fallen into one.” It really makes me want to know where it is that he ended up. That one line “if Wealth had a business card…” is pure wit, personifying wealth as a person and giving him a business card that would be a photo of the place is a fun short and effective way of communicating to the reader how lavish the place is and why the narrator doesn’t fit in. Awesome job, totally keep expanding this it would be delightful to see what it becomes.

    • Jay

      Thank you so much for taking the time to read my piece. You’re comment has made my day. I will definitely not let this end here 🙂

    • Nisha Uchil

      Lovely piece. Felt professional. by the way, you started with ‘I knew straight away that my gut had been right’. But what was that about?

    • Karlie

      This is beautifully written!!!

  76. Sandra

    I step in the room. It’s full of desks and chairs. Bell rings. The sound of foot steps and shuffling, 30 or students can’t do anything quietly. Everything is wild and noisy. I look around the room looking for a spot. Finding the right seat to sit in is no easy task. Other people have someone they know from another year together and they bunch together like bugs to a light. I know only one person here, and she vowed never to talk to me at the end of summer vacation. So that leaves looking around the room hopefully. Someone sitting alone with that won’t you sit by me look. But the spaces that are open are in the middle of the classroom, dangerous for me.

    Finally I see a place on the front corner, as far away from the life of the class as I can get. I walk gingerly to my seat, practically tip toeing. That alone catches a few unwelcome stares towards me. I try and talk to the girl next to me. She has two neat braids of hair and is wearing a purple shirt and jeans, she seems to look neat and nice. Too cute for me, she could end up being popular. But then again, she does look somewhat approachable. “Hi.”

    “Hi.”

    “You ready for 6th grade?”

    “Yeah. Are you?

    “Oh yeah I think so.”

    The teacher steps to the front of the class. The class is now a rumbling river of chatter. “Excuse me” she says. No one notices. She then rings a little bell that chimes in a mystic sort of sound like buddha’s monks probably have played in their temples. And the class, inspired by it, quiets themselves. I won’t tell you all about her lecture to us. The general lecture on the first day of class that seems to be the same in every class of every school except which jokes they choose to tell to make them likeable. These lectures with catch phrases like, “These are the rules and we take rules seriously here. Be polite to each other. No running,” etc. She was very round, like a walking snowball. She wore bright colors all year long, and often wore festive pins for the appropriate occasions. When she spoke, she often smiled or laughed. And perhaps she was Santas wife, who really had a day job as a 6th grade teacher. A big merry laugh. And every one liked her despite that she looked more like a cartoon than a person, or maybe because of it. Because despite that, she was fun. Serious at times, but fun.

    Her room wall was blued out with a giant blue construction paper ocean, and in it were cut out tropical fish of all sorts. She had octpi and scuba divers wading in her tropical scene as well. She was like that, a tropical party. And so were the students, it seems as a whole, everyone was a big merry bunch of tropical fish. Like class was a grand party they all got to go to. She valued socialization. Saying being able to communicate affectively, while isn’t a grade in school, was a skill that would be valuable your whole life long. So not surprisingly groupings would be common. Right now she wanted us to find someone to partner up with and interview each other for music preferences.

    The ruckus of children escaping their chairs echoed and chorused around me. Bright happy kids, loud almost seemed like they were shouting to each other their names and other somewhat relevant information. I didn’t fit in to it though. I could not be that way. Loud and free like that, I could not even pretend. I stayed in my seat and peered over the room, I looked at my neighbor, hoping she would want to partner with me, but the seat was already empty and she had found someone else.

    To my horror I found that the people left was swiftly diminishing. My stomach twisted. I got up and wandered around, hoping to find someone. There was no someone. And then the teacher asked if everyone found a partner and who did not have one. I raised my hand only as high as I had to. The room appeared monstrously big all of a sudden and the friendliness of the room and the kids and fish had a new tone of malice behind it. Like it was not okay to be someone who was not a part of the big party that was happening. For what seemed like forever the teacher started asking for a group to include me. And finally someone took me in. Sheena. She sat at the very center of the class. I liked being a part of her group. I liked just listening and not being looked at. My stomach relaxed.

    Reply
  77. ampriverside

    Hello, new to this, would appreciate some feed back..

    With a flush face and fifteen minutes to spare, I make it to the
    front lobby where two heavy set women sit behind their workstations;
    one, fiddles with her computer, the other reclines on her chair, both
    reveling in uncontrollable laughter. Having no time to wait until they
    compose themselves, I press close to the window that separate us, both
    women still squirming in breathless hysterics jerk out of their reverie
    at my presence, turn to face me and smile. With a residual chuckle and a
    glare, one of the women greets me with a, “what can I do for you” but
    really meaning, “Why did you ruin the best thing out of my long day”!
    With an apologetic look and a panic in my voice, I anxiously tell her
    that I have an appointment 2:15 with a doctor at this hospital, but do
    not recall where. Perhaps it was the edginess in my voice or their
    desire to get back to the hysterical gossip that I interrupted, both
    women resolve to get me out of their hair. Whatever the reason, they
    inform me that my appointment is downstairs in surgery. Considering why I
    was there, the idea of surgery make my heartbeat quicken. As I make my
    way downstairs, I can not help but think the worst, kicking myself for
    letting it get to this point, and wishing I could be anywhere else but
    here.

    Until this very moment, I really did not notice my surroundings.
    Faces and things are in a blur sequence, registering only peripherally. I
    cannot even recall details from events before this time. My short-term
    memory compromised by fear and anxiety. Yet, one word, artifact,
    encounter can draw a polar affect on the senses, making everything
    hyper-real, reaching a state of self- awareness and euphoria, a
    conscious awakening. With every step I take, my skin react, my ears
    perk. I feel my stomach tighten and my throat thirst. I am aware of
    every slight transition the chipped paint on the staircase rail forms,
    and the moisture accumulating in the crevices of my palms. I cringe at
    the thought of all the numerous hands that have clung for support. The
    clunking of my clogs on the tile sound like horse hooves announcing my
    arrival, making me wish I had worn sneaker. I make my way to the
    reception desk, a sterile cubicle with no evidence of ownership, only
    stack charts next to an outdated computer, a box of tissues, half filled
    bottle of hand sanitizer, and a pen taped several times to what was a
    white string, looking as pathetic as the scene before me.

    I plop myself onto the nearest chair and wait, until a man in light
    gray scrubs walking by, asks in Spanish if someone has helped me, in
    which I reply in English, somewhat annoyed at the presumption, “no, my
    appointment is at 2:15 and I need to sign in”. Aware of his mistake and
    my irritation he makes himself available, forgoing his previous
    destination. We begin a ritual of questions and answers without any real
    investment for each other’s approval. That is until; he sees what my
    appointment is for, at that moment, we hold each other’s gaze. At that
    moment, looking into his eyes, I could see him really looking at me. I
    am present; I am real, not another chart to stack. Locked in a silent
    exchange, his dark brown eyes, with specks of black, reverberate with
    empathy. I feel my skin flush, pulsing at the intimacy. The breeze of
    someone’s stride cools me, and for a split second I am not in front of
    this man. I am not in a place where every other sound is a cough and the
    aroma is anything but artificial.

    Thrust back to the present by some unknowable sound, we nervously
    look down and finished the paper work. I signed my name and he coughs,
    “ok Miss Perez, your all signed in”, as if nothing transpired. I am once
    again revert to a series of numbers on a piece of paper. I shyly looked
    up at him, searching for the softness in his eyes but find only a blank
    stare. I do not fault him though; one must protect one self from
    feeling too much, especially in this line of work. I grab my things,
    turn in search of distance, as if that will some how erase the
    awkwardness. I find a spot near the payphones where I arrange my things
    in a sort of fort, creating a barrier between them and me. Waiting, I
    want so much to retreat to that place his eyes took me to. Frustrated at
    my failure, I pace the room, when the urge to protect myself further
    has me making a beeline towards one of the many sanitizers in the
    waiting room. I squirt some on my palms, working it into my skin, and
    once again I fade into myself, Into a place that feels warm and safe.

    The smell of rubbing alcohol and a poor attempt at a flower’s aroma
    engulf my senses. The fragrance similar to that of a particular lotion
    you can always find at the local swap meet, with its gold lid and round
    pastel color jar comes to mind. The kind my mother wears. I smile at the
    thought of my mother and her warm inviting hold. Her red sweater and
    her gold earrings that stretches her earlobes, salt and peppered hair,
    always in a tight bun. The ticking of her artificial valve and warm
    pillow breasts sooths my soul. My eight-year-old self lost within the
    folds of her embrace. I inhale with urgency, I do not want to leave, and
    my breath desperately suck in the smell; the sound of my pleasure
    escapes me. I am in another place, a safe place. I smile again as I open
    my eyes, only to find myself sitting on a dirty chair, next to a man
    who enviously stares with slightly perverted eyes. Upset, I glare at him
    for trespassing, turn my body around and wish I was anywhere else but
    here!

    Reply
  78. C.A. Violeta

    ((First time doing this. Will appreciate all comments. Thank you! Will do this with no edits.))

    Almost stumbling out of the public transport vehicle, I straightened pulled down my black pencil skirt as I tried to regain my balance on my four-inch black stilettos. The building before me was gray in color, years of rain and dust evident on its walls even from a distance. Sweat broke through my face, seeping through the foundation that I used generously in an attempt to hide and prevent the stress of riding and transferring vehicles for three hours just to get to my destination. I fished out my handkerchief, modestly wiping the buds off of my nose and forehead, realizing that my palms were sweaty as well as I made my way to the entrance. Sweaty palms. Not a good sign.

    There were others as well entering the building. Despite the raging heat, they looked fresh from the shower as they stepped out of their private vehicles. Lucky. Some would pass me by without a second glance while others stared at me from head to foot, sizing me up. I looked away, a squeezing sensation strangling my spirit. Collectively, we were a mass of black suits entering the building. Invisible chains were on my feet as I tried to regain my self-confidence as I walked. I had every right to be there as the next person in the crowd! My lips curled up in determination though it disappeared quickly as a young woman three inches higher than me – yeah, I checked the heels and it was just two inches high – passed by. She was stunning. Period. She was a crushing boulder to what little pride that I had.

    After what felt like an eternity, all of use were already settled in our seats. The room was large enough to fit all of us without looking too cramped. I wish I felt the same. We were seated in five rows of twenty seats each. An aisle was made in between separating the rows in half. In front of us was a single desk hiding two chairs behind it. I made sure to sit at the back, not wanting to draw too much attention to myself. Fishing out my mirror from my bag, I glanced at the girl looking right back at me. I thought she was beautiful but now? After seeing all those glorious faces and slim forms? I felt like mush.

    The front door of the room opened wide. Two women around their forties arrived and made their way to the two empty seats in front. They looked at us with vulture-like eyes dressed with perfectly-line eyebrows. One of them pursed her lips, blood red in color as it brightened up her already bright face. Dang, I wish I will look like that when I get old. Red Lips looked down at the sheet on the desk through her half-moon glasses, I could see her eyes run up and down the long piece of paper. Oh please, not me. Not me. Not me. “Jessica Jayme.” She called. Of course, it had to be me. If I was not scared to death, I would have been fascinated by her foreign accent. Rising up clumsily as the chair made a loud, screeching sound, I made my way towards the aisle. Trying my best to ignore all the narrowing eyes locked on me, I smiled. Here goes nothing.

    Reply
    • Twinss R.

      Wuaaah, what happens next??? 😀
      Your story was amazing! 😀

      I really really like how you wrote your emotions and movements, what your eyes were seeing… You wrote everything in a way as to not be tiring or extravagant, and I also like how you used more “common slang” like the word “dang” or when you say “yeah, I checked the heels and it was just two inches high”.
      Through this way you managed to make your story “friendly” towards the readers (young audience), so it’s really nice. 🙂 I felt like I could easily read a book from you. 😀
      You wrote in a way that intrigued me, I was reading with intense, desiring to see what was going to happen… and then you ended it like that! I guess the 30 minutes time was up? 😉 Still though, really beautiful! Keep up the amazing work! 🙂

  79. Eileen B

    Just started 14 Prompts. Would love any feedback you guys have to offer!

    I raced up the stairs as quickly as my legs would carry me, hoping I wasn’t too late. The rusty metal steps shuddered under my feet as I climbed, their echoes bouncing off the narrow enclosure that surrounded me on all sides. Seconds ticked by, and my breaths grew short and ragged. The cold air stung my face and dried my lips as I rapidly drew it in and out of my lungs.

    At last, the ground leveled off and the staircase opened onto a wide, open platform. Without the protection of the enclosure, a surge of bitterly cold air hit me in full force and a violent shiver shot through my arms and chest. The day’s overcast sky did little to stave off the piercing November chill. I hastily shoved my exposed hands into my pockets and bowed my head away from the wind. A few fellow passengers waited on the platform beside me, their faces obscured beneath bulky winter coats and hats. A man to my left stamped his feet aggressively to keep warm, the force of the movement sending vibrations through the wooden planks beneath me. Several long moments passed. A woman behind me coughed. Finally, a pinprick of light appeared in the distance. The train was coming.

    As the doors opened, I stepped into the car and took a seat. The dingy fabric was threadbare and faded, but otherwise unsoiled. A few scraps of paper and a fast food wrapper lay scattered across the floor at my feet. My only companions — an elderly African American man and a middle-aged Latina woman – sat apart on the opposite end of the train. The gentleman’s eyes were closed in an uneasy doze, his heading jerking periodically as he nodded off. The woman’s eyes passed over me without seeing, then stared blankly out the window, watching the city pass by in a gray blur. I could hear the heater whirring loudly in the background, but it couldn’t keep the chill that seeped in through the steel wall beside me at bay.

    Eventually, the train entered a part of town I recognized by name only. I extracted a crumpled piece of paper from my pocket and unfolded it. Nodding to myself in confirmation, I returned the paper to my pocket. This was my stop. I stood up again and made my way toward the door, almost losing my balance as the car jerked and swayed to the side. When the doors opened, an icy chill blasted my face and I braced myself to step into the wind.

    Though the sky was overcast, it took me several seconds to adjust to the light after the dimness of the train car. I squinted and looked around. My eyes landed on an old staircase at the far right end of the platform. The large white sign posted above it read “EXIT” in faded red letters. I made my way swiftly toward it.

    When I reached the bottom of the staircase, I found myself at street level beneath the tracks. The light was dimmer now in the shadow of rusted metal girders, and the air smelled faintly of garbage. I glanced left and right, unsure of my next move. Some ten feet away, a man in tattered clothes sat leaned up against a nearby building, muttering to himself as he sifted through the various belongings that lay in piles on the frozen ground beside him. Abruptly, I turned to my left and began walking, pulling my scarf up over my mouth to warm my face. At the end of the block, I peered at the address on the building beside me. The small black letters on the store’s barred door had begun peeling away from the glass. 500. I clutched my bag closer to my side and kept moving.

    When I arrived at the front door, I hesitated, once again unsure. The building’s high glass windows and sterile appearance contrasted so sharply with its surroundings, it looked like the only remaining survivor in a city ravaged by time and weather. I checked the address again to be sure. The number 573 stared back at me in my own handwriting. I re-folded the paper once more and stuffed it in my pocket. Taking a deep breath, I reached for the polished gold handle in front of me and stepped inside.

    Reply
    • Twinss R.

      Woo, this is really beautifully written! 🙂
      (it was quite long though; did you seriously manage in 30 minutes? I guess I must be writing slow :P)

      I must confess that by the end of the story I had started feeling chilly myself haha 🙂 You did a really good job at describing the weather and I also loved the simile you wrote about the building towards the end (which was your final destination).
      I could also see myself in the place of the protagonist (well, “your place”) as I always re-check a million times the addresses and the like when I go somewhere I haven’t been to before.

      Anyway, all in all it was really beautifully written, but for some reason I didn’t feel all that much the anxiety (or whichever hesitation/stress etc) you were feeling while heading towards your destination (unless there wasn’t any?). I don’t know exactly why, maybe it feels like you emphasized a bit more on the weather than the worries that you might have in mind while heading towards your way. I’m not saying to mention your “thoughts” but, like it says in the prompt, to write how you feel through your surroundings (project your feelings onto the things around you).

    • Eileen Briar

      .Thanks so much for the feedback! It was really helpful and constructive. I definitely see your point about focusing more on the feeling of anxiety versus just overall bleakness and how that changes the tone for the reader. Perhaps if I were to do it again, I would focus more on jarring noises or other parts of my environment that created more stress/adrenaline. Thanks again for the feedback, and if you have anything you’d like me to critique, let me know! My email is eileenbriar@gmail.com.

    • Twinss R.

      Hm, if I respond here and do not send you a message to your email, will you receive it…?
      I’ll take my chances. 😉

      Yes, I would actually love it if you could critique something that I wrote… 🙂
      However, I do not want to force you into it, so if you start reading it and get too bored right away, at least tell me what made you bored and unable to continue reading. 😛 (I know some stories are less interesting than others)
      Ah, I have actually posted my story here (the 1st prompt: Out of Place) but I don’t know how I could “link” it to you though? >,<

  80. Emily Vanderhaul

    Hello! This is my first write up that I have just finished. Please let me know your views and whether you like it.

    Hunger! It is the state of a being which compels him to devour food helplessly. On a summer morning, just out of bed, I gulped down a cup of hot coffee, just to realize
    that my stomach needs more than coffee. I walked into the kitchen, opened the refrigerator
    door and my eyes lay upon this unusually big box occupying too much space. My
    curiosity got the better of me and I opened the box. And voila! There you were –
    the most delicious looking cake I had seen in months. I took you to my bedroom
    and softly moved you onto a glass plate. Ah! I surrender to the joy you have to
    offer me. I take the first bite off of you and you just ever so lightly melt in
    my mouth – oh, but wait! You’re not just a cake, you’re a cheesecake! I immerse
    myself in the ecstasy that is your blueberry jelly, to your cream cheese body,
    to the fine crumbly crust. I love the way you feel against my tongue – soft,
    yet firm. Blueberry Cheesecake, you are The One! In moments, you have given me
    the ultimate – a deep satisfaction.

    Reply
  81. nswinters

    I was sitting at a table for seven at the Snooze Café on
    Broadway. As a rather big metropolis there was no shortage of snooty brunch
    joints around, but snooze was the worst. The plush chairs were upholstered in
    soft pastels that made me wonder why the restaurant dreamed of serving
    strawberry topping on their French toast. The crystal chandeliers twinkled at
    even intervals from the ceiling casting a sparkling reflection throughout the
    dining room which in combination with the large store front windows gave the
    whole place a light and sparkly air. Looking around at the pressed and polished
    ladies I realized they all matched the decore, pretty hues of light pinks and
    greens adorned their summer dresses or their snazzy blazers. Catching my own
    reflection in the mirrors behind the booths lining the inner most wall of the
    restaurant I realized what I must look like sitting with all these prim looking
    ladies.

    No pastel pant suits for me, no soft colors. Instead I was
    wearing my favorite black slacks, and my dark midnight blue blouse. I had
    closed toe and short heels on. Very conservative, very plain, very solid, very
    bold colors. I stood out among this gaggle of women the way a fresh bruise
    stands out on fleshy pink skin.

    The girls around me chatted busily in a way that reminded me
    of birds. Flittery and fluttery and noisily. Unlike birds though, the sound
    wasn’t musical and it wasn’t pleasant. I felt like I was being barraged by wave
    after wave of sound and speech and the worst part was none of it seemed
    remotely relevant to me. I mean who cares?

    Suzane and Paulette were deep in conversation about the
    benefits of this macro-biotic something-or-the-other diet vs the latest paleo
    or vegan trend.

    Bobbi with a y, and Sandi with an I, were discussing the horrible
    decision of Celebrity X when he decided to cheat on Celebrity Y and how he and
    Celebrity Z will never make it since their relationship began in such a
    deceitful way.

    Christina and Sara were having a heated debate over Dior vs
    Valentino in the upcoming spring collection.

    Since I had nothing of value or interest to add to these
    conversations that left me to smile at the waiter as he approached. Clearly not
    used to being noticed as more than a prop in a restaurant such as this he blushed
    only slightly before smiling back.

    “Good morning Miss” he greeted me, “my name is Marcus and I
    will be your server today”

    “Thank you Marcus, I’m Connie, these are my friends from
    highschool, we’re having something of a makeshift reunion, “ I half shrugged as
    I indicated the other ladies whom were still so absorbed in their conversations
    that they hadn’t even acknowledged the handsome mans prescense.

    “Very well, can I start you ladies with something to drink,
    we have bloody mary specials this morning made with fresh clamata juice, as
    well as mimosas made with our best champagne”

    The ladies quieted at the mention of high-priced booze,
    Bobbi indicated to the entire table and said “mimosas it will be”

    Marcus made a quick note on his pad, “wonderful, I’ll be
    right back”

    Touching his elbow lightly as he turned to leave, “Just
    orange juice for me, I’m not much of a day drinker” I said

    “Very good Ma’am,” Marcus chuckled, “I’ll be right back”

    Looking back at the table of women whom had resumed their
    exclusive conversations I couldn’t help but picturing a different table in a
    different time. Only six short years prior the seven of us had sat around the
    cafeteria table in the High School cafeteria discussing our life that was to
    being in only 3 weeks when we graduated
    and would take on the world.

    Reply
    • nswinters

      This ends abruptly as I realized I had gone over my 15 minutes and had yet to make my point as to why she’s feeling out of place… Perhaps I’ll continue with this story, or maybe shelve it for now.

  82. Yass

    It’s totally figurative. I’m more of a poet than a storyteller, that’s why. But really, it’s been a while since I last wrote, so I hope you bear with this.

    “I often felt like a lost crow among the eagles.

    They graced their wings with full nobility and pride. Every stroke on their feathers made them a living canvas of royalty. That’s how everyone saw them- the glorious kings of the sky.

    Knowing I was different, I always knew them otherwise.

    I was just a smaller bird dipped in their colors. Though I was part of their brotherhood, I was not one of them. On other days, I believed in the pretensions when my dyes felt real. But before I sulked myself to sleep, the truth always recollected.

    Their wings and colors were nothing. They were just cannibalistic predators who had, if none, little mercy on anyone below them. Greatness only ran through their bloodline. They were great as themselves, but they weren’t great for the world. If they were kings of the birds, they wouldn’t feast on their subordinates. I knew that they were rather feared than honored, but I opted not to say a word.

    I resented the system. I denied my ‘brothers’. I don’t want to take part in the brotherhood anymore, but where else could I go?

    I’m just a pained blackbird deprived of true home.”

    Also, it may sound like it’s about racism, but it isn’t. It’s about me being a part of an organization with a messed-up system. I do appreciate it if you comment down or email me your criticisms, thanks!

    Reply
    • DJ Liu

      Nice job! I didn’t think racism. What would be interesting to see is what happens after “but where else could I go?”…did you find a new organization (if it’s a job, a new job?) or what did or didn’t you do to ease your dilemma? I also entered a short passage about a similar topic…the time I was working at a company where everyone was out for themselves and put up a false pretense as if they were interested in helping me out…luckily i found a new job:) cheers

    • Yass

      Thanks so much! And ooh, haha you have a point there. Prob if I wasn’t too time-bounded, that could’ve been a good addition. But yeah, in my situation, I just waited for our entire term to finish so that I could be free (I couldn’t quit, and also a little part of me didn’t want to quit haha). It’s a love-hate relationship really. But it’s all over 🙂 I’ll honestly miss it hahah

  83. James Alfred

    This is my first short story. Not really sure what I am doing yet. Thank you for taking the time to read it.

    James

    It was time
    to go to the party. I was dressed for a nice night out with friends as was my
    wife too. We had been fighting a lot and just at each other all week long. We
    both just needed to get away and kick down a few drinks. I drove like I always
    do, I know just how many I can have and when it is time to stop, so that I am
    okay to drive us back home. We got there around 5:00pm she headed right into
    the Jacks house. He was a good friend, a little goofy looking. He had long hair
    down to the middle of his back, super big glasses.

    I stayed
    outside for a bit to smoke and then went in. I came around the corner and there
    she stood running her fingers down Jacks long hair. I just stood there didn’t say
    a word. Then she opened her month. “Oh yet James, I been have sleeping with
    Jack.” It was really rough standing there in the room with ten of the friends.
    It got so quiet you could of heard a pin hit the floor. Talk about disrespect. I
    could feel the tears starting to build up and knew I need to get out of there.
    I looked over at Jack “Make sure she makes it home tonight please.” I turned
    around and walked out.

    Reply
  84. DJ Liu

    I couldn’t stop shaking. This wasn’t my first tour as they say in my profession, and wouldn’t be my last. I did everything within my power but think about how it would actually feel to face my oppressors on day one. This wasn’t planned. In a cold alien environment where the faces of what I thought were my allies, I was dead wrong. The language was nothing of this world. The interactions between these beings seemed plastic in nature yet all with the familiar roots of human greed and selfishness in tact. Although they made it appear like their goal was to help you, the weight of their true motives could not be kept from my senses as if I were in a vice of unrelenting pressure.

    ~~~

    “If you wanna survive in this place, you better make sure you process those tar balls as soon as they get to you,” demanded the man without emotion. Odd, yet as he said this I felt as if I was trapped in a manufacturing assembly line forced to process human brains that I might have once done in a previous life.

    ~~~

    “Ok, but…I got it” I replied catching myself before showing any sign of weakness. I was new to this place, a foreigner in my own world but I needed to prove my competency so that I could execute everything that was given to me without hesitation.

    ~~~

    I spent 3 months in this hell-hole. As I looked around on my last day on what felt like a room fool of androids facing the Hudson I remember the feeling of being rescued…my phone rang. My new captain was working to get me out of there and transported to a completely different battle station. This was my time.

    Reply
  85. Lola

    I shouldn’t have agreed to this. I looked next to me at the waves easing past my feet and crawling back into the depths wishing desperately it would drag me away. I keep walking with him. I look into the faces of everyone we pass. They can see how odd, how dangerous this pairing is. Why had I listened to him? We are too far now for me to turn around. He asks me questions and I answer. Each question makes me writhe in fear wondering why on Earth this strange man needs this intimate information. I can feel a chilling ulterior motive with his every word. I am too scared to not answer. I am only 15 and I guess he is in his 20s. What is he going to do to me? My body is in autopilot mode while my mind is paralyzed with fear. I keep walking. I no longer recognize where we are and it is getting dark. I think of my family. Are they looking for me? Thoughts of a news anchor describing my disappearance fills my head and I stop walking.
    “I need to go now.”
    “Please don’t.”
    “No, I am going.”
    I turn around and start walking back. I see his steps align next to mine. I try not to panic. I look at the beach houses and hotels as signs of how close to safety I am. With each step, my feet sink into the hot sand and I can almost hear my legs telling me to slow down. After 30 minutes of walking back towards my hotel, I can see it.
    He could try to follow me into my hotel. What if he figures out where I’m staying? I tell him I have to go and dart into an elevator of the hotel 3 doors down from mine. I ride to a random floor and look out over the beach. I see him lingering for a second, then he walks toward the hotel. My heart is pounding. But for some reason, he stops, turns around, and walks back along the shore. Probably looking for another girl to lure away. I watch him until he’s far enough away I can go back down the elevator and onto the beach without him seeing me. The elevator doors open and I sprint towards my hotel.
    I go up the elevator, down the hall, turn the corner, and I’m back. I pull my key card out and open the door.

    “Hey, pizza’s here. I was starting to worry about ya.” My dad says.

    —–
    I wrote this in about 20 minutes. It’s about when I was 15, this Haitian guy told me he was writing a book and needed inspiration for a character and wondered if he could interview me. I agreed. We walked as he asked me some pretty vague questions but when we started getting farther away he asked some rather off the wall, personal questions. I could tell something was weird.

    Reply
  86. Juan

    I turn my head,
    just in case. I know its unreasonable to be this nervous, but my gut tells me
    otherwise. It’s supposed to be the nice part of town, lights shining over the
    renissanse buildings and luxurious shops. But those lights are just masks,
    covering the darkness that lies within. I walk in a straight line. I’ve got no
    idea of where I am as I got separated from my group while looking for a nice
    place to eat, which are apparently scarce. So I keep trotting, steadily
    increasing my pace, and glancing behind more and more.

    I don’t really
    have the money to afford one of those expensive restaurants, so I end up
    settling for a small salad bar down a dark alley. It’s dirty and badly illuminated
    the people inside obviously as desperate as I am for some food, or maybe their
    grimace is just their normal expression. I walk up to the counter, and, using
    what would pass as nothing more than a broken variation of their language, I’m
    able to order what I think is a Caesar salad.

    I wait for the
    black lady hand me my order, and go upstairs to find a place to sit down. The
    upper floor is nearly deserted, but for a hooded man in the back, seemingly
    asleep and a bottle of wine in his hand. Just in case, I decide to seat in the
    front facing the sleeping thug, and under the white, clinical tube lights the
    whole place is lit with, I gather the courage to actually start eating my
    salad.

    It’s tasteless,
    the lettuce soft and gummy, and the chicken, or what should be chicken, is rock
    solid. I munch at it for a while, my appetite completely vanished. I really was
    in no hurry, given how I still had about an hour and a quarter for my group to
    re-gather, and it was virtually impossible to find them in the milliard of
    shops and houses and buildings that was the city. And so I wait, sitting still,
    detailing in my mind every nook and cranny of the plastic like room. A
    cockroach walks by my feet.

    Half an hour
    goes by, and the same black lady comes upstairs and kicks me, and the sleeping
    guy both from the bar. Apparently its closing time. “Just great” I think to
    myself. I’ve walked through the whole of the main street at least thrice
    already, and I’m not courageous enough so as to go wandering off through one of
    the side roads. And so I wait sitting in a bench; thinking of what anecdotes I
    should make up, of why, when I was so far away from home in a once in a
    life-time trip, I was just waiting and fearing, fearing like I’ve never feared
    before.

    Reply
  87. Walker

    All I could see was lights. The place was hot. It smelled like sweat. It even felt like sweat. I hated the place, and yet here I was, once again. For so long, the only thing that kept me coming was the pills. Now there was no excuse.

    X-heads are an odd bunch. They like to ramble on about feelings they couldn’t hope to understand if they were sober. They’re just chic lushes. All their feelings are bullshit.

    “I love you” is a phrase you’ll hear often at a rave. But it’s hard to take someone seriously when their eyes are rolling into the back of their head.

    Ecstasy is a purely visceral experience. But it feels so good that people make it spiritual. When I was really into it, I thought about devising my own religion. I thought clubs would one day replace churches. It was only after getting clean I’d realize they already had.

    People need community. That’s why they come to raves. People need love, that’s why they take ecstasy. Because it melts away all your fear. Because it makes you feel gooey inside.

    People form “cuddle puddles” upstairs in the lounge area. This is where you go when you’re “floored”, because downstairs is a mess of sweaty bodies dancing and shoving each other to get to the stage. Or the bathroom.

    One dance floor is dedicated to “Electro House”, a pulsating, grinding sort of music with repetitive bass lines and catchy synth patterns.

    The other floor is “Dubstep”. Dubstep is disjunct, chaotic. People don’t even know how to dance to it. They assume they know where the tune’s going and turn out looking like morons.

    I’ve been out of place here for months. I don’t know why I still come. Looking around the deck, everyone’s smoking cigarettes. That’s about the only thing I have in common with these people anymore.

    I can see Andrew. I fucked his fiance for two months, a few times in my car while he was inside the club.

    I can see Corey, a tatted-up industrial kid who thinks he’s a DJ. I’ve never heard him spin.

    I see Darren, the cocky fuck who got me into this mess. He’s got a big, gregarious smile on his face as usual. He laughs louder than anyone here. He’s got a drink in his hand with a black straw, but he acts drunker than he is.

    Truth is, I stopped enjoying this shit when Shaun went to jail. After that, this place started to look like a circus.

    Reply
  88. Trent

    Names changed for privacy reasons.

    We drove through the parking lot, weaving past obstacles until we reached our spot. Kyle, the driver had been driving recklessly. He had been texting and boasting about
    how he was going to fuck the new SGA president. She had a boyfriend but of
    course he didn’t care about that. Douche, I thought. No matter what I thought
    about him, I dare not say it. After all, he was my ride home. We walked up to
    the restaurant, the cold air nipping against my skin. It’s April, for fuck’s
    sake. How is it this cold in fucking April?

    The Theater Club members were standing in a circle, with the two biggest guys smoking their cigarettes. Nate was the Alpha Male of the group. Even though he was no longer Theater Club President, many members still deferred to him, including me. His long black hair was slicked back and the left side of his face was paralyzed into what seemed like a mini-scowl. James was a big guy with puffy hair on the top of his head and
    on his face. I liked James, maybe it was because he was one of the few Theater
    Club members who didn’t scare me. Same goes for Charlie. He had a childish
    attitude which made it easy for people to like him. There were also two girls,
    Emma and Kelsey, neither of whom talked to me that much.

    We were at Friday’s which I had grown to like throughout my first year of community college and which was also a favorite of the group I was with. We sat down at the corner booth which was routine for them. I ate earlier but my stomach was growling and I had a craving for mozzarella sticks. I needed something to get my mind off of this situation and
    my loss in the SGA election. I could tell that they didn’t want me or Kyle there.
    I kept mostly quiet while Kevin kept up his immature jokes and his obnoxious
    laughing. Whenever Kyle opened his mouth, the table grew quiet and everyone
    gave each other annoyed looks. Shut up, douche. My stomach was growling and
    twisting. I don’t want to be here. They don’t like me. They barely talk to me.
    I deserved that SGA position. I just want to go home.

    The plate of mozzarella sticks was placed right in front of me. That smells delicious. I took a bite. Hot gooey cheese filled my mouth. I felt a little better. Food was always an easy comfortfor me. The size of my stomach was a testament to that. I polished off my mozzarella sticks and my water. When they were gone, I felt empty again. I had no excuse for being here. Any conversation topic I tried fell flat. I slumped down in my
    seat. I just want to go home.

    Reply
  89. K8

    Out of Place

    I reach up and touch my neck, its empty. All around me the women are wrapped in
    pearls, diamonds and chokers. Not
    me. I’ve never felt self conscious about
    it before. Youth needs no decoration.

    I’m fifty and youth isn’t my friend any longer. The only thing that will help my sagging skin,
    wrinkled neck is a choker.

    Youth wasn’t the only thing that kept me decoration. My husband could afford it but doesn’t want
    to. I’m sure that my best attribute when
    he met me must have been my simple, more modest background. “She comes cheap” he thought. He brought me to his country and I learned
    the language, the customs, when to open my mouth, when to simply smile. “When in Rome, Kate.” And yet, he never
    treated me as Roman where it counts.

    So I am sitting among the wealthiest in the country,
    millionaires, ex presidents, defense ministers and celebrities, but now I’m
    invisible. He is happily laughing with
    them all. He is dressed as they
    are. He is calling one “Uncle” and
    another “Cousin” and I am a spectator.

    I smile at her comment, hoping to be included in the
    conversation. I’m asked a question, here
    is my chance, “Yes, the crime is very worrisome. I am hoping that the new admiration does
    something to rectify the situation. My maid
    has been worried about traveling back home by bus everyday. I really don’t know how much longer this can
    go on.”

    “Ah, listen Sophia!
    How cute Kate talks, I love her accent.”
    The smiles are imitated around me and the conversation moves on.

    I look over at my husband and touch my neck again, this
    time, feeling the choker.

    Reply
    • farhad bordbar

      how beautiful you write….honestly.

  90. David

    The banks were closed.

    Reply
    • David

      The bank was next. I pulled my daily limit from the ATM.

  91. Twinss R.

    This took me exactly 31 minutes to write (I was stuck in the last sentence :P).
    I will truly appreciate your feedback. 🙂
    A small note: when I write sentences in between ‘this symbol’ then it is a thought. I would have used italics if I could. 😛

    I was standing still, waiting for God knows how long… Conversations were taking place around me, yet the words seemed almost foreign to my ears. The dim lights that gave life to the place felt neither warm nor cold. It was as if they were trying to welcome me to their world but without much success.

    After an uncomfortable amount of time, the man I had been waiting for finally approached me, his wide smile silently asking me to calm down and try to enjoy what was ahead of me. Well, this experience wasn’t something new for -him-, he had already turned this place into his second home but I was far from feeling that way.

    With a simple “Follow me” he lead me deeper into that place, that soothing smile still plastered on his face and after greeting a couple of his friends, who were also comfortable at their second home, he asked me to step on one of the devices which, unlike the dim lights that were trying to make me feel at home, didn’t seem all that welcoming towards me.

    I had some difficulty since the decide was somehow trying to throw me out of its back but eventually I managed to position myself correctly. Two men passed in front of me, carelessly discussing of matters insignificant to me and not once did their eyes turn around to glance at me, as if my victorious feat of sitting properly on the device was almost comical for them to care.
    ‘Well, that’s a relief…’
    I sighed weightless, my subconscious slowly realizing that the hostility I was feeling wasn’t based on any facts.
    “Hm, this is no good.”
    I hear a feminine voice stating troubled and then I see the woman I was previously introduced (and whose name had completely slipped through my mind) looking at the device with a questioning look.
    “Get up.”
    It could have been an order if she hadn’t voiced it in a kind tone and as I did as I was told, she made some rearrangements to the machine, changing the seat’s height and reducing the weights on the back.
    “Try again.”
    She told me with a smile and another internal sigh was emitted into my mind, finally consciously seeing through the lie of my delusion.

    I sat once more on the device and the cold steel under my hands felt a bit warmer at my second touch. I moved my body again as I was told for the device to properly train my body and I could almost sense a mute acceptance from all that surrounded me at that moment; the device was cooperating happily with me, the woman that was watching over my movements suddenly reminded me of an old friend, and even the men I didn’t know, who were roaming around the place, trying the different devices and chatting with no worries in mind, had taken the form of a needed background scene to a movie -as if there was a constant rhythm that was supporting each of my actions.
    “You will repeat this fifteen times, then have a small break and then repeat it again. Okay?”
    The man asked when the woman left and I just smiled in response; happily embracing what would shortly come to be my second house without any reservation.


    This was about my experience on the first day when going to the gym. 🙂

    English is *not* my native language so if you see any spelling or grammatical errors don’t hesitate to correct me.

    Reply
  92. Penny Darcy

    “We’ll begin with an icebreaker!” says the perky sorority
    sister. I cringe inwardly. I came to this gathering for the
    campus tour and the superficial friendships; I need someone to eat dinner with
    until I make some real friends in my library science classes. I did not come to
    make a fool of myself.

    “This first one is called ‘move your butt,’” says the
    sorority sister. I think her name is Kayla or Kaitlyn or Kaylee. Some with a “K.”
    “I’ll start off by saying something
    about myself. If it’s true for you, move your butt and switch places with
    someone in the circle. If you’re left out, it’s your turn in the middle and you
    have to say something about yourself.
    Okay. Ready? My favorite color is green!”

    There is a flurry of movement and the weakest, slowest member
    of our group is stuck in the middle, thinking of the next asinine statement. I pull
    my long hair around my face and try to avoid eye contact.

    The next game is worse. Kay-something demonstrates several
    ridiculous motions and sounds reminiscent of a day at Sea World. I have to
    stifle a giggle when she lays on the dirty floor and proceeds to bay like a sea
    lion. I glance around our circle now, searching for someone who shares my
    exasperation.

    When the game starts and I refuse to move, Kay-something
    bounces up to me and says in a sing-song voice, “If you don’t do it, you have
    to sing us a pirate song!” She seems to speak in exclamation points. This is such an extrovert activity.

    Everyone ceases being sea creatures and gazes at
    Kay-something and me. Apparently I said that last thought aloud. I’ve broken
    the icebreaker. Kay-something is no longer smiling. Oops.

    “These games help form a sense of community,” she says. She
    sounds like she’s quoting a handbook at me.

    “How?” I ask.

    She seems to be at a loss for words for once.

    “I’d much rather get to know these people-really get to know
    them. I don’t want to roll around on the floor making sea lion noises.”

    I walk to the door, feeling more confident in front of a
    group of people than ever before in my life.

    “I’ll be in the library if any of you decide you would
    actually like to talk to each other.”

    I note a few scowls scattered throughout the group and I know
    I’ve made several enemies today. But I still feel a glow of pride when four
    people sit down across from me at a table in the library, coffee in hand. We
    glance shyly at each other for a few moments. Then, we begin to talk.

    >>>>>
    This is my first bit of writing on this website! I wrote it out on paper first, then typed it, so this piece has had one minor re-write. I appreciate any feedback. Commas are a tricky subject for me, so help me out there especially. Thanks!

    Reply
  93. xchelsealeigh

    First attempt at writing, in 15 minutes without editing. (true story) I havent written much, so any critiques welcome! 🙂

    He left me. How could he just leave me here in a city I don’t
    know, without any way of getting back home? I began to walk without any idea where
    I was heading. I could hear noises all around me, the loud gusts of wind
    blowing my hair across my face making it hard to see. I kept walking, thinking
    to myself over and over again “everything will be okay” in hopes it would calm
    my nerves, but then I heard the noises again. I looked around, there was no one
    to be seen anywhere. I began walking faster I was desperate to get to a main
    road or somewhere public. Then I felt it, terror rushed through my body as I
    looked down at my right arm to see a man, holding my wrist. He looked me dead
    in the eyes and whispered to me “don’t you dare fucking scream, or I will hurt
    you” I thought my heart was going to burst out of my chest, I didn’t know what
    to do. I was horrified. He left me there and let this happen to me, and now I’m
    going to pay for his stupid mistake. Why me? But I kept my mouth shut and did
    what the scary, tall dark figure told me to do. We kept walking, him holding my
    wrist as if I were his, and for that short period of time, I was. We passed people walking down the main street
    and I so desperately wanted to scream out for help but I knew it wouldn’t end
    well for me if I did that, so instead I tried to attract people with the
    horrified look on my face. People looked, and they kept walking. How could no
    one notice my current emotional state? It was plastered across my whole face. Tears
    streaming down my face, god I hope he doesn’t notice me crying.

    We got to a secluded area in the cities park lands, he told
    me to lie on the grass, so I did. He began taking off his clothes. I didn’t want
    to even look at him, the thought of him touching me made me want to vomit, and
    I felt disgusting. He sat down next to my face, leaning in to whisper into
    my hear, before he got the chance another tall figured emerged from the
    darkness of the trees surrounding us. “You better step the fuck away from her
    right, or so help me god I will kill you” a sudden sigh of relief when I heard
    those words from that strangers mouth. He glared at me before jumped up to a
    stance ready to take a hit, and he did. The stranger struck him, so hard he
    fell straight to the ground and didn’t get back up. I stood up and started
    running towards the tall figure, he grabbed my arm and we began to run. We ran
    for a while before stopping at a taxi rank. We had been running for so long, I
    needed to catch my breath. “Thank you so much, I don’t know to know what he
    would have done to me if you didn’t come along” I managed to get out in between
    my deep breaths. The kind stranger just smiled, handed me money for my cab and
    wished me a goodnight.

    Reply
  94. disqus_y1lYz5pVbN


    hi to all here, this is my first post and would love to hear on suggestions and comments. i have always wanted to write but i always get stuck many times. hugs
    _____________________

    It was still a dawn. The birds have just started to chirp a
    little. There was clam mistiness around. Sounds of people rising to the early morning
    could be more heard gradually. Sun was
    about to appear soon now. in the everyday
    mundane early morning of everyday, a little child aged around 6 slowly appears
    peeking out of one of the house gate in that neighborhood. Wearing
    a worn out faded blue shorts, a bit grayish t-shirt, a bit fearful he looked as the eyes scanned his surrounding from right
    to left. He slowly brings his body out of the gate and stands in their timidly carrying
    fear inwardly. He looked as if he was
    not sure which direction he should be heading. He looks left and then to the
    right and then holds his glands looking down to his feet, closely placed
    together as it was supporting each other to make his body stand there for that crucial
    moment. Somewhere the dark circles underneath his eyes were visible in the light
    of the glowing dawn. His long and think lashes where slugged with morning sleep.
    He needed someone to hold him, give him some care, or maybe for now a
    direction.

    The roads were getting a little crowded that early, as he
    looked thoughtful. A cycle suddenly halts in front of his small body, he looks
    up and the milk guy hands him 3 packs of
    milk saying – “kancha , here. Sorry I am little late.” He looks at the milk man
    with a smile that was trying hard to come out, hiding something that was just his’’.
    Takes the milk packs and pretends to go back inside the gate and the milk guys
    curves his other leg the paddle and cycles away.

    The boy waits behind the closed gate or the milk guy to go. Then
    the loud shouts comes from the house. “ KANCHA, KANCHA….ABHAYA…KanCHA….where
    the hell is this boy.”

    The voice makes his head turn suddenly toward the house, he
    drops the milk packs right there and runs outside the gate. The voice of his
    owner, his heartbeat rising, his eyes filled with tear and shivers of fear runs
    his body. Without deciding his destination, he had chosen to move to the
    unknown direction. He had just plunged into the unknown without knowing his
    brave heart.

    Reply
  95. disqus_y1lYz5pVbN

    i would so appreciate the critic or anything that would help me be better:)
    ________________________________

    I had not received that call
    for more than a decade now. ‘ you have to come!!..u must, it doesn’t happen
    often you know that!!’. That voice was playing in my head coming from the other
    end of the phone. I was feeling a bit anxious, tensed also I suppose. Then I
    thought ‘well, ill just face it when I reach there.’ Then I let the thought
    pass by as I cuddled myself in blanket, with a big sigh I turned and switched
    off my night lamp. It was few of the twists and turns before I really made it
    to sleep. The flashes of bloody letter, ‘ he is not a bad guy Riya!’ ‘ Just
    talk to him once’, me walking back from the school, all these flash backs and voices appeared just like in movies.

    I woke up quite early the
    next morning. 12 at noon was the high school reunion. They had organized a
    brunch and it was the first that I was going after I missed the last one which
    was 5 years agao. I hadn’t seen anyone since I left high school and specially
    Ray. Ray had perused me desperately in high school. But somehow I was never
    attracted toward him nor I ever liked him. And end of it all was that bloody
    letter I received and a slap from me that followed. I wondered if he would be
    there as well, would he still look at me in the same way? I’m sure things have
    changed! Was it wrong for me to treat him the way I did?? All the voices were
    chattering within me, as I was getting ready. I realized I was getting a bit of
    goose bumps and nervous. Maybe it was a thought of encountering him again or
    maybe it was cause I was scared to be treated like a celebrity, as I have
    become a famous actor now. At present I have become this person who all have
    started to idealize, living in that world for more than a decade now I fear
    maybe I’ve lost my ordinariness. Maybe I feared being treated like one. I got
    ready hours before needed, looking at myself in the mirror, enacting how would
    I behave when I meet all, what I would say, and revising my body language. Then
    I just sat by the corner of the bed, looking dazed out the window for a while.
    It broke with Dad screaming from downstairs. He was drooping me off to this
    park. Quite I was through out the way, wondering if I was dressed appropriately
    on my jeans and hunter neck top.

    ‘Have a great time darling’.
    I smiled at him as I shut the car door and started to walk toward the place
    from where noises were reaching me. Giggles and laugh of girls, shouts of the
    boys. I realized my nervousness more vividly now. Heartbeat was faster then
    normal, I was oblivious to the green grass on which I was stepping. I couldn’t celebrate
    the joy of the crispy sunlight piercing its way through branches of the tree
    making its way in the spaces between the shadows, the floating smell of the
    barbeque. I was meant to enjoy but nothing was affecting me. But the wind was
    the savior, offering relief to my perspiring heated and nervous body.

    As I got visible to all of
    them, I realized almost all were there from high school. Then I heard someone
    screaming my name ‘Riyaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa’ and a smile broke on my face as it
    breaks in every formal event I mostly attend. Then came the hugs. I tried to hold my breath thinking maybe it would slow
    down my heartbeat. Then slowly questions popped up from the school friends, on
    my thoughts and feeling on becoming a celebrity, how I handle my private life,
    and then I realized I was being treated like a celebrity yet again. The very
    thing I feared. It felt very welcoming but they were welcoming the Riya who was
    a celebrity now. Forgotten as the Riya from the high school who use to have fun
    with them. The drinks, food were all
    brought to me, I was not even asked to help myself. I was placed just right in
    the brunch. I was a guest like. It was a very awkward moment. The moment where
    I was lost and I was someone who everyone else wanted me to be. Sadness was there
    in my heart but a constant smile accompanied me through out which I have gotten
    so use to. As I was I the midst of it sharing what was being asked, nodding an
    smiling, I happen to glance over shoulder of a friend. A guy. Leaning against
    the big pecan tree, looking toward my direction, holding a drink, causally
    dressed, smoking a cigarette. ‘RAY’ the voice shouted within as he has stared
    to walk toward me. This time the wind was not even helping me. I had started to
    perspire holding my breath would suffocate me this time.

    Reply
  96. Anastasia

    This is my first attempt writing and please excuse my english cause it’s my second language:

    I can’t wait to get out of here, that’s the only words shouting in my mind. I keep my eyes down to John Green’s The Fault in Our Stars, as I hear my so called best friend ignoring me in the corner of class. I see her in the corner of my eye, talking with my other classmates like there’s nothing between us, like I’m invisible or sort of quiet loser sitting in the table. Nobody wants to talk to me, which is a good and also bad thing. Good thing is I don’t mind trapped between Gus and Hazel’s love story without being pulled back to reality, but also at the same time, there’s a part of me that makes me wanna cry and jump off from the 5th floor building where my class is.

    Reply
  97. Michael

    Here is my first shot. This kind of just popped in my head when i heard of stance places. I would love to get some feedback. Happy writing!

    I told the large 6 foot 5 doorman that could have been a black viking with a shaved head and a braided goatee I had a meeting with Mike. He wasn’t expecting me. He looked me up and down and decided i was telling the truth and he took my word for it because he thought he heard they needed a new guy. He walked me down a trash smelling hallway to what he called the “front room” of the bar that was unused for the night. Most of the lights were off, so it was hard to get a good look around and It smelt of old beer and bleach. The floors seemed to be washed but there was still a small sticky feeling from past spilt drinks when you walked across it. He had me sit on a stool and wait while he went up a steel staircase that ran along the wall to notify the manager I was here. I watched him climb the stairs and noticed the dropped celling over the bar was made up a mesh steel and you could see fans and some storage above. I heard the doorman open a door and the room was illuminated slightly trough the ceiling when the door opened and closed. The room was long and narrow with a long bar across the side of the right of venue with a unlit stage at the back. The whole place was party weathered, paint peeling, and splintering wood. If walls could speak… Meanwhile, another room of the venue had some type of heavy metal band that could be heard clear as day despite the wall between us, it was even making the wall of booze behind the bar buzz a little when the bass was strum.

    I sat in the front room alone for about 15 minutes listening to the metal band scream when the opened from above and seemed a bit brighter since my eyes had adjusted to the darkness.

    Reply
  98. Lulubelle

    This is my very first stab. Here goes:

    I feel confident. I’ve got this. My qualifications are impeccable. I sit down and begin writing out responses to the question prompts. There is a test. We must write a letter for the assistant principal telling a parent what school policy is and how what
    they’ve done is in violation of such policy. And write it as the assistant principal’s representative. Whom I’ve yet to meet. About a policy I know nothing about. Got it.

    They call me in to the interview and there are seven people sitting around the table, including the office manager, who introduces me and states the name of my son who is a student at the school. It is quiet. Do some of these people know my son? The principal exchanges a glance with the office manager.

    Who are the others in the room? How do they relate to this job? There is no time for me to ask.

    The questions begin. The format is that each person around the table reads one of the questions I’ve been working on in the waiting area. What’s the rush? As soon as I answer a question, the next one is read. The assistant principal is reclining in his chair and gazing out the window.

    The office manager, who I know through our professional group, seems awfully professional. Why did she mention my son? I finish the questions and am excused. Seventeen minutes have passed since I entered the room.

    The next applicant is in the waiting area. She smiles at me and says “hello.” She is wearing a designer dress with a linen jacket and heels….

    Reply
  99. Mariam Mahmoud

    Drowning in the river, the sweet river of love.Shouting for help, but no one answers. It’s a one way road, no turning back.My heart is leading me to my destination. It was a dark day when i first met him. He gave me hope, when i was rejected by everyone, He accepted me and gave me chance. I loved him.His smile could make a rainy day becomes sunny. His touch makes feel safe and warm. But he brings out the dark in me.
    The day i confessed my love to him was unpredictable.
    “I love you”
    ” You know i’m married ”
    It was the shock of my life, i have never felt this way before.
    “But you know i love you too, i can’t leave my wife, i can’t destroy my home, i can’t promise you with a future, but what i really can’t do is to live a life without you, to imagine my life without hearing your voice or seeing you infront of my eyes.
    He said these words and made me forget the idea of loving a married man. I imagined a future with him. I felt that he was created to be my destiny, even if he wasn’t mine yet. I have never thought i would take a man from his wife even if he doesn’t love her.But you can’t choose your destiny. He’s my love and i’m in a rocky road which has one ending. I can’t decide if it is happy or sad ending. But love can make miracles, and this could be my miracle

    Reply
  100. Mariam Mahmoud

    Drowning in the river, the sweet river of love.Shouting for help, but no one answers. It’s a one way road, no turning back.My heart is leading me to my destination. It was a dark day when i first met him. He gave me hope, when i was rejected by everyone, He accepted me and gave me chance. I loved him.His smile could make a rainy day becomes sunny. His touch makes feel safe and warm. But he brings out the dark in me.
    The day i confessed my love to him was unpredictable.
    “I love you”
    ” You know i’m married ”
    It was the shock of my life, i have never felt this way before.
    “But you know i love you too, i can’t leave my wife, i can’t destroy my home, i can’t promise you with a future, but what i really can’t do is to live a life without you, to imagine my life without hearing your voice or seeing you infront of my eyes.
    He said these words and made me forget the idea of loving a married man. I imagined a future with him. I felt that he was created to be my destiny, even if he wasn’t mine yet. I have never thought i would take a man from his wife even if he doesn’t love her.But you can’t choose your destiny. He’s my love and i’m in a rocky road which has one ending. I can’t decide if it is happy or sad ending. But love can make miracles, and this could be my miracle

    Reply
  101. Elissaveta

    Ellie here, new to The Write Practice. I followed the book and wrote for 30 minutes. Not exactly the longest text – I am a slow writer – but I hope it’s enough for a feedback/critique of some kind – Thank you!

    **********************************************************************************************************

    It was a big gathering. Hundreds of eager, young graduates, beaming from ear to ear, proud and confident. People chattering, drinking cheap red wine that stains your teeth, glasses clinking. All in all, a loud brouhaha of confusion tainted with nostalgia.
    I did not belong there. Not anymore. I looked at all those enthusiastic faces and for a moment, I felt as though I was looking at a mirror, in the past. I had been one of them once. Eager, young, beaming from ear to ear, proud and confident. But it was all gone now. Washed ashore like a myriad of worthless pieces of trash.
    A stranger walked up to me. A tall, slender girl with skin as pale as alabaster. Her lips – painted with a garish orange – spread to form a smile; she raised her eye brows and let a squeal escape from her mouth.
    “Oh my god, it’s you!”
    It was me. However, I had no clue as to what version of me she was referring to. I felt a tingling sensation spread across my chest, like a hundred little knots forming all at once.
    “So… Mrs Architect! How is it going? How successful have you become? ” She asked with a grin.
    I wasn’t successful. I wasn’t an architect, either. They all assumed I was, because that is what my diploma says. My diploma, framed behind glass, hanging on the wall, gathering dust. But the real world was different. In the real world, a diploma is just a piece of paper with some words spat on it, they may or may not make sense, they may or may not have a purpose but the fact of the matter is that they are just words. Powerful for some, insignificant for others.
    “I… well… I can’t complain” I mumbled, feeling like I have just swallowed a clump of dry mud.
    Lies. It’s all lies. Deceitful words that we use to fool society into thinking that we belong. When in fact, all we want is to do crawl away unseen, find shelter somewhere silent, somewhere quiet, and do what we really want to do. Not what a piece of paper on the wall says, not what our parents think, not even what that deafening voice in our head echoes relentlessly, but rather what we love. And do it somewhere where we belong.

    Reply
  102. Harry Pehkonen

    Thanks for using my photo! Because of this post, when I googled “Film Noir,” my photo was the 23rd one.

    Reply
  103. Scarlet Ferya Ma

    Hesitantly, I climbed the steps up and was plunged into a
    blue darkness. All around me there were
    flashing lights, as if a police car were parked outside and sending its
    distressed flare into my eyes and mind.

    I was jolted forwards and stumbled through a narrow corridor;
    hands with menacing talons reached out to keep me upright, and the scratchy
    clawing made me shiver as much as the ground I was standing on.

    My ears filled with an endless screeching, repetitive and
    high-pitched. All around me, faces
    laughed. Faces that were tinged green by
    the ever-revolving siren lighting. Grotesque
    faces, with toothy smiles and dark, heavy eyes.

    My heart was pounding – was everyone looking at me? Suddenly, a glass was in my hand. Drink. DRINK! the faces seemed to say as
    one. Afraid, I placed the glass down. As I was jolted forwards once more, I sprang
    forwards to save it from spilling, but it was safely confined in one of
    hundreds of holes cut into surfaces so that they might shackle the draughts of
    toxin without anyone losing a drop.

    I felt behind me – there was a seat. I could just sit here, keep my head low and
    my eyes closed. I could probably endure
    this journey, as long as I could be sure it would end.

    The faces continued to whirl around me, and it seemed they
    were getting closer and closer to each other.
    They were forming a multi-faced crest on which one chosen face could
    surf. They chanted a name over and over,
    they put the chosen face in the middle of them all and they lifted her. She grinned a wide grin and screamed out to
    the rhythm of the high pitched screeching that had been blaring since we
    embarked.

    The faces cheered and moved as waves, lifting and lowering
    the chosen face. It was hot and dark and
    the rhythm of the ritual seemed to be creeping into my blood. I felt compelled to rise, to glide towards
    the faces, to join them and throb with them and chant, chant, chant…

    Another jolt. The
    flashing and the screeching stopped. The
    many faces turned suddenly away from the chosen face and scrambled, chattering,
    for their handbags.

    I knew I would never get on a boogie bus again.

    Reply
  104. Fachow

    Columns of smoke rose up to the ceiling in the bathroom
    at the deserted wing. My coughs echoed throughout the stalls and shadows. I stood
    in front of the mirror and inspected my face. The face I was born with stared
    back at me, but everything around started to have that hazy feeling.

    I walked back to my room, my pace not unlike the turtle
    at the race. Only I had no hare to follow and try to beat. I did not allow any
    eye contact with the familiar faces flitting by me, a foggy tunnel vision
    closing in on my sight. My sole focus was to relieve all focus and displace my
    ego.

    The room was empty and silent; a perfect setting for my
    state of mind. But it was not to be. I grabbed my bag and headed out again.

    Out in the field that separated the dorms from the office
    complex, the sun’s bright figure shone from behind the clouds. The chirping
    birds were flying around and resting on the peaceful trees. The picturesque landscape
    put a smile on my face that I would take throughout the day.

    Inside the office, my greetings raised some suspicion, as
    I have never been that excited to work for the day. At least I never showed it.
    As I sat down at my table preparing my things for work, I knew that it would be
    a good day.

    And it was.

    Reply
  105. Miles To Go..

    I walked into the classroom wearing a cream-coloured blouse with a printed line across the buttons and a dull red skirt. My feet must have had some plain shoes on – I can’t remember exactly, but since I didn’t particularly own a very large variety, it was definitely
    something unnoticeable. I carried a canvas backpack – one of those horizontally wide ones – on one of my shoulders. Just one because using both straps on either shoulder made one look ‘uncool’ and very childish. This was middle school, after all.

    My aunt (‘Maasi’ in Hindi) was with me. We went directly to the teacher sitting on a chair at the front of the room. She was wearing casual clothes and had her hair in a tight bun at the back. Apparently, Maasi had already spoken briefly to this teacher earlier, with regards to my admission in this class.

    While she was exchanging a few words with the teacher, I stood with my side profile towards the class. On the outside, my eyes were looking at my new teacher but on the inside, they were flitting crazily in anxiety. I was conscious of about forty-two people staring at me, albeit not silently. Their stares were interspersed with whispers, chatting, remarking and idle-talking. As their voices grew louder, the teacher took her eyes off us and faced the class squarely before yelling, “No Noise!” in a purely phonetic accent. The noise subsided. She directed her attention back to us and almost immediately, the noise started again, making the atmosphere feel ‘normal’ again.

    I was also conscious of how unattractive I was, especially my side profile. I mean, I was about to be thirteen. If there was an age to start having self-esteem issues, this was it! My rough, wavy hair tied into a loose ponytail and my moderate height and shape did not add
    anything remarkable to my personality. My pounding heart, jittery nerves and an
    inexplicable anticipation summed up my existence in those moments.

    Soon enough, the teacher faced the class again and yelled, “Who can she sit with?”. Assumed in this question was my introduction, the announcement that I was a new addition to the class, the fact that I needed a place to sit and the admonition that someone better be friendly! All of this simply in “Who can she sit with”! In fact, I wondered if even these five words would have been said at all, if Maasi wasn’t standing right there next to me.

    Now, while every child would like to think that there would be a mad scramble in the room as soon as the offer to have me as a partner was made, no such thing happened. After a few embarrassing moments that seemed a lot more than a few, a girl raised her hand, while shoving aside her backpack with the other. An invisible sigh of relief seemed to vibrate through the room. Most eyes were now averted from me. Maasi left and I traipsed
    along to the girl who said ‘hi’ in a tone that was more condescending than
    friendly. I would soon find out that she was the most popular girl in the class
    and to some extent, in the school too! Lucky me. Now, to fit in!

    Reply
  106. Andrew Shaw

    Saw somethings that I wanted to change while writing, so I edited while I continued my story. So I humbly wait for your critic:

    It was an early morning wake, and an early morning drive. There was no rush or fuss. Just a feeling of solemn excitement. We all piled into the van, food for the hunger, hoodies for the cold, and games for the boredom. At the first rest stop, I got
    out, stumbling out as if I were drunk. It took a moment to learn how to walk
    again, but I wasn’t focused on that. So far upstate, the freshness of the air
    took me back to a small island in the Caribbean.
    I haven’t had that feeling since I was four. Heck, I didn’t even remember I had
    that feeling until just that moment. When breathing, one of the simplest things
    you can do, stopped all thought in my head. My guardians beckoned to me. Having
    exhausted our food thus far we needed to replenish.

    When you visit fast food places long enough, you tend not to notice anything. You know what you want, you order it, you pay, you wait, your number gets called, you
    check your receipt, you take it and you go. It’s funny though how visiting the
    same place, with the same menu, same color scheme, same logo, becomes
    absolutely foreign. I felt like a tourist in the state I grew up in most of my
    life. I turned my head, slower than usual, to take in my surroundings like I’ve
    never been in a McDonalds before. Now that I reflect on this moment in my life,
    over four years ago, I realized what it was. The pace. New York City is know for the rushing demanding customers, the quick and almost robotic employees and tempers so
    short, Gordon Ramsey would look on in disbelief. What made that moment,
    traveling upstate to start my college career, so distorting to me was that I
    could take my time. No rush in or out. No dead look form an employee trying to
    get the line down. No tempers flaring wildly. Just a warm smile, some small
    talk, an order taken, a wait time that wasn’t noticed, and if we weren’t on our
    tight New York City schedule, maybe we could have enjoyed the scenery.

    We scrambled back into the car and made our way again. Waiting for me at an
    institute for higher learning would be a mountain of moments that would make me
    turn my head, slower than usual, to take in my surrounding, like I haven’t been
    in New York before.

    Reply
  107. Guest

    I must admit I made edits while writing. I humbly await your response.

    It was a early morning wake, and an early morning drive. There was no rush or fuss. Just a feeling of solemn excitement. We all piled into the van, food for the hunger,
    hoodies for the cold, and games for the boredom. At the first rest stop, I got
    out, stumbling out as if I were drunk. It took a moment to learn how to walk
    again, but I wasn’t focused on that. So far upstate, the freshness of the air
    took me back to a small island in the Caribbean. I haven’t had that feeling since I was four. Heck, I didn’t even remember I had that feeling until just that moment. When breathing, one of the simplest things you can do, stopped all thought in my head. My guardians beckoned to me. Having exhausted our food thus far we needed to replenish.

    When you visit fast food places long enough, you tend not to notice anything. You know what you want, you order it, you pay, you wait, your number gets called, you
    check your receipt, you take it and you go. It’s funny though how visiting the
    same place, with the same menu, same color scheme, same logo, becomes
    absolutely foreign. I felt like a tourist in the state I grew up in most of my
    life. I turned my head, slower than usual, to take in my surroundings like I’ve
    never been in a McDonalds before. Now that I reflect on this moment in my life,
    over four years ago, I realized what it was. The pace. New York City is know for the rushing demanding customers, the quick and almost robotic employees and tempers so
    short, Gordon Ramsey would look on in disbelief. What made that moment,
    traveling upstate to start my college career, so distorting to me was that I
    could take my time. No rush in or out. No dead look form an employee trying to
    get the line down. No tempers flaring wildly. Just a warm smile, some small
    talk, an order taken, a wait time that wasn’t noticed, and if we weren’t on our
    tight New York City schedule, maybe we could have enjoyed the scenery.

    We scrambled back into the car and made our way again. Waiting for me at an
    institute for higher learning would be a mountain of moments that would make me
    turn my head, slower than usual, to take in my surrounding, like I haven’t been
    in New York before.

    Reply
  108. Jeffrey Whitney

    I’ve never been in war; I’ve never picked up a gun, pointed it
    at somebody’s head, pulled the trigger, hoping for a soft squish. It would have
    been better to have something to compare it to, something to say ‘I’ve been through worse than this,’ but I came up empty that day at the party. My knees were twitchy when I stepped out of the car, and I couldn’t seem to get enough air. So this is Beck’s new house.
    Not bad. Better than what I’ve got. Several pairs of eyes see me coming down
    the block. I wonder if you can feel it when someone has you in their
    cross-hairs? I wonder if any poor sucker ever knew? Beck’s whole side of the
    family is up there, out on the lawn and up in the garage. Everyone is stiff;
    they talk in groups, but they’re not looking at each other. Everywhere my eyes
    scan, people are turning their heads away, so I can tell that they were
    looking. Jesus, where is she? I see Hopie coming out of the garage door. I’ve
    got a cheap-ass gift for her, a worthless bauble that she’ll say she loves.
    I’ll be gone by the time she opens it. “Hey, Dad,” she says, and she hugs me. I
    know what her loyalty is costing. “Hey sweetie,” I wheeze, wiping the moisture
    from the corner of my eye. “Happy Graduation.”

    Reply
  109. Sidney

    They don’t smile at me when they turn. The bar shrinks away into a wedged corner, surrounded by a net of bodies, a lobster pot. Sport noise blares from tinny speakers while nobody looks at the screen; they’re all watching me.
    The glasses are milky fog stained. The tables have too small chairs. There’s no air.
    “Onde esta a casa de banho?” I try.
    The reply comes fast, a nasal schlurrr. I still don’t know where the toilet is. I look at him with the best beseeching eyes I can do as, again, he machine guns what might be directions at me.
    “Desculpe, nao compreendo. Fala mais lentamente? Por favor?”
    Why couldn’t he just point. His head shakes while his hands shuffle glasses.
    The ceiling fan whirls smoke at my face. Posters, notices, signs, pictures, butter the walls, oozing foreign. The door’s blown closed; I can’t remember whether it’s a push door or a pull door. Windows on the far wall. To the left a saloon door swings, wafting dirty chip pan smog. A cigarette machine blinks red code. Then a portal glows in a distant corner, a shimmering light that beckons, just as I feel the seep and creep of hot red onto my left thigh.
    “You not eat or drink, pay 2 euros for use bathroom.”
    I thrust my hand into my pocket, clutch at coins, stop them from hopping and sort their oddly indecipherable little forms, extend my offering. Both thighs now sticky red. Flies zoom in from all around, drooling, gasping, slobbering down their chins.
    “I play with you, English Girl, put your money away.”

    Reply
    • Wolf271

      Awww cringe. That must’ve been a seriously uncomfortable situation!
      You should be more confident-you write really well. The whole situation was awkward and uncomfortable and you made the atmosphere and your surroundings match that. 🙂

    • Sidney

      Hi, thanks for your comment – as you can imagine I’m just sitting here waiting for some feedback! It’s not a true story, thank goodness, but a combination of some regularly felt anxieties 🙂

  110. Jeffrey Whitney

    I’ve never been in war; I’ve never picked up a gun, pointed it
    at somebody’s head, and pulled the trigger, hoping for a soft squish. It would
    have been better to have something to compare it to, something to say ‘I’ve been through worse than this,’ but I came up empty that day at the party. My knees were twitchy when I stepped out of the car, and I couldn’t seem to get enough air. So this is Beck’s new house.
    Not bad. Better than what I’ve got. Several pairs of eyes see me coming down
    the block. I wonder if you can feel it when someone has you in their
    cross-hairs? I wonder if any poor sucker ever knew? Beck’s whole side of the
    family is up there, out on the lawn and up in the garage. Everyone is stiff;
    they talk in groups, but they’re not looking at each other. Everywhere my eyes
    scan, people are turning their heads away, so I can tell that they were
    looking. Jesus, where is she? I see Hopie coming out of the garage door. I’ve
    got a cheap-ass gift for her, a worthless bauble that she’ll say she loves. I’ll
    be gone by the time she opens it. “Hey, Dad,” she says, and she hugs me. I know
    what her loyalty is costing. “Hey sweetie,” I wheeze, wiping the moisture from
    the corner of my eye. “Happy Graduation.”

    Reply
  111. Wolf271

    I wasn’t sure what to write about as I haven’t really been in many uncomfortable situations, but I did remember this from primary school.

    It was just as bad as I’d imagined. I examined the other kids’ uniforms and yes-they were all from some snobby private school or other. Great. Just great. The teacher/supervisor man came towards me.
    “You’re the last to arrive. We were just about to start. Please take a seat,” he said, obviously trying to ignore the school badge printed on the front of my jumper. I sat down at the closest available space and pulled out my pencil case. I was painfullt aware of the girl sitting next to me shuffling closer to her friend. The two of them immediately began a whispered conversation, throwing unfriendly glances at me. Trying to ignore them, I looked around the room. The walls were grey and splattered with marks, as was the grey carpet. The teacher/supervisor began to talk,
    “Today we will be writing about… transformation!” he said, excited, waggling his hands about. He was looking at the private school kids, completely ignoring me. I looked down at the table. It was nothing special, just plain wood but I was sure there were scratch marks on it, lookinf suspiciously like words. Engraved into the wood were the words ‘SAVE ME’. Glancing quickly at the other kids, I pulled out a pencil and added an ‘SOS’ and ‘GET ME OUTA HERE!’ I looked up and realised everyone was staring at me. They were starting to look more like wolves than people, wolves who were very hungry.
    “What?” I asked, reflexively.
    “If you weren’t interested in writing then your school or parents should not have signed you up for this workshop and you shouldn’t have agreed to come,” snapped the teacher/supervisor man. I blushed to my roots with humiloation. I hadn’t agreed to come! It was my mum’s fault-she thought that being with other kids who had similar interests would be good for me.
    “Why don’t you tell us what you were thinking? What would you transform into?” he asked.
    I looked down at the desk. I could’ve easily made something up but I figured he wouldn’t appreciate it.
    “She wasn’t thinking about anything,” piped up the prat sitting next to me, “I saw her writing on the desk!”
    “Not to mention she doesn’t have the brain capacity to think! She goes to a /state/ school!” sniggered her friend, quitely so the man wouldn’t hear.
    “Oh, really?” asked the man. “Would you like to share?” All the kids were staring at me now. The exit was suddenly looking very welcoming.
    “Do they not teach you how to talk at state schools?” he added, smirking. I could’ve died of embarrassment! I knew what I wanted to turn into now: a chamelion, so I could camoflauge into the background.

    I suddenly wondered if my mum’s wrath could ever be worse than the rest of this writing workshop.

    Reply
    • Annie

      Nice job! I am sitting here actually cringing!

    • Wolf271

      Hahaha thanks! 🙂

  112. rellik4life .

    I looked in the mirror one last time before walking out the door. I wanted to make sure I looked presentable for my first dance. It was about six in the evening , and it was started to get dark. “Mom I’m heading out!”
    “OK son, be careful and have fun!”
    “I will, see you later mom”
    I shut my apartment door and ran down the stairs. I was wearing a green and brown sweater and some green corduroy pants. This night was really important to me, I even got a haircut after school to make sure I looked good. I was hoping this would be the night that I finally get my first kiss.
    When I finally arrived at school, I could hear the music thumping from the lunch room. My friend Gary greeted me, and we heading inside together. Everyone was dancing in the middle of the floor and I had to squeeze my way through to get to the refreshments. I wanted to dance so bad but I was a little nervous to ask a girl to. My friend Victor must of gotten tired of seeing me sitting and asked a girl to dance with me.
    “Hey what’s your name?”
    “Rhonda”
    “Hey Rhonda, I’m Victor, do you want to dance with my friend”
    “Where is he?”
    Victor pointed in my direction and told me to come over. I walked over to him and the cute girl he was talking to.
    “Here he is, he’s a little shy but his name is Taurean.”
    ” Oh, well I’m kind of tired from the dancing I did earlier, so maybe later.”
    Rhonda gave me a kind of “Yeah, I’m not dancing with this guy” look
    That really shook my confidence and I felt as if she thought I was ugly or something. I asked a few more girls to dance that night and not one of them gave me a chance.
    I couldn’t wait for the damn party to end so I could go home. “This was a huge, freaking waste of time!” I said to myself.
    When the party ended, my friends ask me why I didn’t dance with anyone. I honestly couldn’t tell them that all the girls I asked turn me down. So I told them that the girl who I wanted to dance with wasn’t in attendance that night. When I went home, I spent a few hours staring in the mirror, wondering why no one wanted to dance with me. “I’m I that ugly?” I asked myself, as I wiped the tears from eyes. What made it worse was, I knew that I wouldn’t hear the end of it when I went to school on Monday.

    Reply
  113. Allison Reed

    First attempt – 30 minutes
    Out of place and out of time. That’s what I was thinking. I was at a party with people I
    didn’t know. The people I arrived with had long since either left or disappeared into the dark confines of the huge building. Now that I think about it the place did seem eerie, haunted even. Sure haunted by the souls of those who had gone before. I was in the “Tombs” in New York City. The holding cell was small and filled with a number of young women that I did not know, nor did I want to.
    The day started out as any other. I was visiting friends and listening to music. Scotty got a call from his ex-girlfriend and we all trouped out the door. We were all going to help Scotty save his ex from her latest tribulation. It was early summer and the trees were light green and swaying in the breeze. The sun was in tune and we were all laughing and joking. During our two plus mile walk to his ex’s home, Scotty handed me a gun and said, “Here, put this in your purse for me, so I don’t have to carry it. Oh and here are some bullets too.” I put the bullets in the change compartment and the gun in the main part of my stylish crocheted purse. When we got near to the ex’s house, a Volkswagen pulled up next to our group of six. We all glanced at the scuffed blue beetle as two men jumped out with guns drawn and started shouting. “FBI!! Everyone show us your hands. NOW!” With gun pointed at me, the taller of the two shouted, “Put your bag on the hood of the car!” If you have ever seen a beetle, you know that the hood is sloped. Had I put my purse there it would have slid off and hit the ground, specifically a large oil stain. This was my new white crocheted purse, so I said “No. I can’t do that. I will open the purse and let you take what you want.” I was nonplussed, as though I had guns pointing at me all the time. I wasn’t on drugs, so I can’t really account for my total calm. As I attempted to open my purse they both started shouting at once to drop the purse, and I heard this strange clicking noise. I found out later that was the sound of their guns cocking in prelude to shooting. OK, I finally got rattled and dropped my purse in the oil. The zipper was open by now and the gun fell out. They jumped on the purse like ugly on ape and pulled everything out onto the ground. At some point while this was gripping my attention, a couple other vehicles arrived and they actually looked like authority figures from some police-type agency. They cuffed only the guys and pushed Scotty and me into the back seat of the VW. I guess they had already determined that I was either mentally challenged or just stupid. As soon as we got in the car, Scotty asked me not to tell them the gun belonged to him. Hmmm. Odd.
    We arrived at the police station. I guess the FBI had a satellite office there. The two agents proceeded to question me, while the police officers put the five boys in holding cells somewhere in the building. They wanted to know where I got the gun. I told the
    truth just leaving Scotty’s name out of it. I stuck with that story throughout the afternoon and evening. I did get breaks from the questioning, like when I had to type my own police report. I got frustrated watching the officer two-finger my info into the
    typewriter. I offered to do it, and he accepted. I think by now they realized that I was a victim of circumstance. They also sent me across the street to get donuts and coffee. I think they were taking bets as to whether or not I would return. I was law abiding, of course I returned. Finally,a Perry Mason look-alike informed me that the ballistics report came in on the gun and it had been used to rob a liquor store, in which the owner had been killed. Yeah, I told them what they wanted to know.
    I was then taken to the Tombs aka Manhattan Central Booking,
    which is where this story starts. The rest is public record. I served no time,
    nor probation. I was charged and the charges were dropped. I think I was
    really released for being stupid.

    Reply
  114. Laurie Berke

    Unedited as well, 15 minutes, here goes:

    I hardly knew any of these people. They looked like strangers to me. Children all grown up with children of their own. I used to know the people, but that was long ago, and far away, a whole different time warp.

    The middle aged people had been much older, but contemporaries of my daughter, who had married into that family while she was quite young. She had her first child while they were having their third, fourth, fifths. My son had played with the older boys. So this is the age he would have been now…

    Most of these people didn’t recognize me. I’d never been close, except thru my daughter. Some gave me querulous looks, as if I was vaguely familiar to them, but they couldn’t place me. I was just as glad, if they recognized me, they’d talk to me, and I really didn’t have the energy to socialize.

    I gazed at the pictures hanging throughout the memorial site, and dreamed of better times. My daughter’s face, my grandchildren’s faces, eerily my mother’s face, all peered back at me through the dappled sunlight. How quickly time passes. How close to us still, are those who are gone. How slippery our memories. How sad we’re alone.

    Reply
  115. Selene Garcia

    Unedited, this is my actually first writing assignment that I’m sharing with anybody. i hope you guys like it :).

    Gathering my things getting ready to sleepover a friend of mine house, she was very outgoing, she was in love with life and also curious. Lying to my mother telling her ill be going straight there made me cringe since I’ve always lied about going places with my friend because almost everywhere we’ve been to was mostly dangerous and adventurous. “Selene where are you I’ve been waiting for 10 minutes why do you always take your time?” the loud girl sound of my friend screaming because she was so impatient.
    “Im heading there now i had to run errands for my mother, I’m sorry.” i murmur grabbing my bag running out the door, i obviously lied about running errands even though i did run errands for my mother, i just wanted tot take my sweet time because i was starting to second guess everything.
    Walking up the stairs to the A train was truing and i was obviously second hguessing everything the whole way there, i listened to arcade fire and wanted to go home, but i also didn’t want to seem like a baby so i ignored my instincts and went up the stairs. When i sat on the train my mother sends me a text ‘Have fun and be careful i love you:)’ Her sending me that text made me definitely want to go back, tonight i was either going to get drunk or get pressured into hooking up with a guy i literally just met. I smile warmly sending ‘Love you too and i will’ My phone goes off again from my friend “Selene what is the deal, where are you?” i rolled my eyes the people started to look at me weird because they heard how loud she was yelling. Feeling embarrassed i flushed and looked down at my hand, “Ill be there in five okay?” i hang up feeling annoyed I’ve done so much with this girl it makes me upset.
    I start to play some calming downtempo songs and start to read my book off of my phone. Feeling calm i started to drift the train became dark, all i can hear was the music nothing else.
    I woke up to hearing the doors open loud, i jumped up at my stop nervous and feeling queazy from the party that was about to start. i pulled out my ear plugs and walked to the entrance where she said she’d meet me. While walking up the stairs in broadway junction, the station filled with tons of people heading in many directions, they’re either loud, smelly, or they try to hit on you. Passing through crowds of people i see her standing against the wall her nose into her phone, her hair looked beautiful always, her makeup done as if she were a model, her outfit so different yet so unique and gorgeous, she poked her head up showing her beautiful smile. she shoved her phone in her pocket running to me for a big bear hug, even though i think i saw her the week before she always showed she missed me.
    “WEENIE! Are you ready to get some tonight?!” i hated that nickname, my mother and father called me that when i was so young its made the back of my neck hairs prickle.
    “Yeah, where is this ‘party'” i shoved my phone in my bag throwing my duffle bag on my shoulder in a comfortable way.
    “Well its in bedford my friend from the bar is throwing it, liquor, weed and i guess a lot more.”
    She showed her evil grin and winked, great. We started talking about work and our majors, the new people we’ve met, i only met one person and me and her barely spoke. She bragged about how many guys wanted to date her and take her to have fancy dates, showing me hot guys on her social website showing the comments.
    I’ve always hated this about her trying to make me jealous, i felt uncomfortable and insecure, when she would gossip and talk about herself i blocked her voice out. Sitting on the train i didn’t listened the train was dark she faded out with the rest of the people and across from me was a large mirror that showed my imperfections but magnified 100x more.
    I began to start biting my nails and tears started to prick the sides of my eyes. when i came back to reality from her
    “Selene? Are you okay?” she had a concerned look on her face.
    “Yeah I’m just really tired” throwing our a fake yawn i through a fake smile after.
    “Well let me finish telling you about this guy named chris.” I bit my tongue and held my breath literally not listening to what she had to say through out the whole train ride.
    After that long train ride of agony we walk off and start walking out of the train station and head into the streets of bedford. We start to walk towards I’m not really sure what avenue but it wasn’t that far from the train, we start to walk down a quiet street and hear music from the corner. “Look who decided to show up!” A tall attractive guy stands outside of his house with his arms folded, i flush and start to get nervous since I’m not that pretty and i probably look ridiculous.
    We start to walk up the small steps into the house, opening the door the music escalates, and theres numerous young adults drinking, laughing, dancing, on there phones, taking pictures, and smoking weed and cigarettes.
    MY friend starts to pull me towards the bar they have and forces me to take 4 shots then her friend brings a joint to my mouth and i have no choice put to take a pull. All of these people i don’t know start to talk to me grab me My heart starts to thump, i began to feel light heading, the room gets dark, and i begin to wander until i find a bathroom. I throw myself in a locking the door behind me feeing anxious, all i hear is my thoughts i can’t even hear the music the fact that I’m here starts to fade away. i stare at myself in the mirror, my hair is a mess my eyeliner smudged, i begin to fall to the floor.
    The feeling of this is uncomfortable, i hate it why am i even here? I start to get up slowly since I’m dizzy and my face is extremely hot, i wash my face grab my duffle bag and start walking to the door. Before i leave i see my friend standing in the arms of that attractive guy, her hair frizzy, her face sweaty and red, her lips plump and ready to kiss him. He grabs her and they begin to make out. I scoff and open the door, walking slowly down the stairs i start remembering how i got here to get on the train to head home. I might be able to sober up by the time i get home.
    Before i start to walk down the stairs my phone vibrates, the screen shows her face, 15 missed calls, i ignore it and walk down to the train. Never again, I’m going home where i belong, yes i will look like a baby but i don’t like this, and i don’t want to be under pressure yet again.

    Reply
    • Wolf271

      I think we all have that annoying friend who wants to do exciting things while I just go hide in the corner! Your writing is very descriptive and you set the scene well. I really like this post! 🙂

    • Selene Garcia

      Thank you so much!

  116. Annie

    3..2..1… Lift off…unedited right from the tip of my pen..

    Bitter is not a color I wear well. It clashed with the jewels tones I prefer. The mustard green reflect so poorly on my skin. So why do I wear it so frequently?

    Bitterness swells as I look around yet another social encounter with my best friends. Its seed are sown by my inability to laugh at some poor joke, to join in desiccating others, or in the ceaseless congratulatory tone for having amassed so much stuff we all look like gifted hoarders.
    Don’t get me wrong. I love my stuff, I earned my stuff. I worked hard at a job for 35 years, never moving up the food chain to give my stuff a home. But why do I feel so awkward, unable to fit in anymore with people I have known for 40 years, so isolated in an insular group. I can no longer find comfort here, my well worn sweater now has holes and cannot protect me against the chill. Why do I hate that I have to be here again? I look at their faces, to seek beyond the brittle skin to seek the youth of our carefree years.
    There it is, a spark, a kindness, a genuine smile as they share a grandchild story.
    Why do we wear our children’s accomplishments as diamonds? I didn’t get any diamonds. All I got was was used lockets, tarnished and marred by the world. The group looks at me as mundane, so dull and staid. I have become the tarnished locket in their sea of diamonds and pearls.
    I smile, I nod and caress each locket I wear, each charm on my wrist for I know away from their tiny eyes lies a treasure hidden from their view. I sit quietly as the leadership of their country is trashed, as their abysmal state is denigrated, wishing once again I had excused my self from their presence.
    “What about you?”, they ask.
    My kid lived through another week. Its been 3 months since the last ER visit, a new record. My other kids didn’t get the promotion, and the other kid faces so many roadblock after detours that’s she’s about to become her own Donner party.
    Its all for the best, they quip. Another door will open, they offer trite empty phrases that off no comfort. My sweater has holes and that mustard green threatens to shine through. Why do I feel so alone?
    I reach for my heart where my lockets lay hidden. I open each and see the path my children take and the light that shines on their journeys.
    Maybe diamonds are cold, devoid of color in their perfection. Maybe my lockets with treasures hidden, with each scratch well earned will sustain me.
    Maybe I need a new group of friends.
    Or even an ice cold beer.

    Reply
    • Wolf271

      I love this! I love how you capture the atmosphere so well, I love how you have contrasted the diamonds with the lockets, and I especially love the ending. Great!

    • Annie

      Thank you!

  117. Deanna Brooke

    Unedited. Taking a gander at this. Been a while since I’ve written anything, and needing to get my creative juices flowing. Feedback is always welcome. 🙂
    * * *
    It had been about fifteen years since I had been to this city. As I was clumsily driving down the highway, desperately searching for my exit, I felt the traffic wash over me, like a wave washing over a stone. “Breathe,” I reminded myself, as I accelerated a bit more, hoping that the feeling of being boxed in would dissipate. It did not. Luckily, my exit fast approached, but my triumph was short lived. I had no idea where I was going. My Garmin announced where to go and what direction to turn, but I ended up driving my little green Mazda in circles.

    Frustrated, I dialed my friend. “I have no idea where I am, or where to find you,” I blurted into the phone the minute he answered. He was able to guide me on where to pick him up. As I pulled up to the curb, I spied him waiting there in his geeky t-shirt and fedora. He put his stuff in my backseat and hopped in.

    “Hi!” he smiled, half hugging me awkwardly across my bucket seats.

    “Hello,” I hugged back. “Have I ever told you how much I hate this city?” I half-heartedly laughed.

    We made it to his hotel for him to check in. It seemed more like an old dorm than a hotel, but since he was only staying one night, it didn’t matter. It smelled of bug spray and fresh paint. That, coupled with the heat, made me long for the comfort of my own place.

    “I don’t know about you, but I’m hungry,” he said. “Let’s go eat, we can walk somewhere so you don’t have to drive on these crazy streets.”

    I nodded, and we ventured on to the main walkway. There were so many people walking about. The gum-stained, paint-splattered, trash-littered sidewalk felt like some kind of side-scroller video game I had to maneuver through as we made our way down the street. I wondered if I looked like a tourist, I certainly felt phony. Like any minute someone would point accusingly at me and proclaim, “FAKE!”, thus outing me as a non-local forever. I didn’t at all feel like I authentically belonged in this place. There was a rawness to it, like a scraped knee when you fell off your bike and onto the asphalt as a kid. You wanted to wipe the dirt off the wound, but it hurt too much to do so. Yeah, it was kind of like that.

    Reply
  118. Kieran Meyer

    This is an unfinished draft of this prompt, written in about half an hour. Any feedback would be greatly appreciated.

    It was loud and surprisingly hot. My feet stuck to the floor, and the
    concrete walls of the windowless room felt like a prison, or a cage- a fitting metaphor, since I felt trapped.

    During orientation week my freshman year of college I didn’t
    go out every night partying like a lot of the kids. I was perfectly content to
    take it easy and make the adjustment to college without throwing in new things
    like booze and drugs. Besides, social skills weren’t my strong suit.

    A couple people I knew from high school asked me if I wanted
    to go out partway through watching a crappy movie- I think it was Robin Hood or
    something- and I thought “why not?” What’s the worst that could happen?

    I didn’t immediately regret my decision. John thought we had
    to take Park Street a ways, but the rest of the group thought the house was in
    a different direction. I was just along for the ride; there was no point in
    chipping in to the conversation. After a couple wrong turns we began following
    the pounding bass. That had to be the right direction.

    Butterflies started dancing in my stomach. I lived a
    sheltered life, and everything I knew about college parties I learned from my
    friends and the media.

    The first thing I noticed was the house: the source of the
    pounding bass It wasn’t really a house, more like a stylized dorm. One half
    looked nearly identical to my floor: a narrow, carpeted hallway with easily a
    dozen doors on either side. Some dude in a t-shirt and backwards hat let us in
    and mentioned something about the basement. I can only assume he did, since
    that’s where my group started meandering.

    Three tables were set up with red cups on either side. It
    wasn’t terribly crowded- more dudes in backwards hats were flirting with
    attractive girls while they played pong. Some people were sipping on beer, some
    were throwing their drinks back. Me, I just stood to the side with my friends.
    I couldn’t say anything to anyone, it was so loud, nor would I have known what
    to say. That’s when I started to regret coming.

    A big guy with light brown hair and jeans walked over and
    started talking to us. The rest of the group engaged him with no problem. I
    continued to awkwardly stand there, answering questions when he asked me
    directly. My awkwardness wasn’t entirely my fault- more often than not the
    music drowned out everyone’s voices. Since joining a fraternity, I realize he
    was probably rushing us and asking us the basic questions such as “Where are
    you from?” or “What are you majoring in?” It also explained why he offered us
    all shots.

    My heart raced. The last time I tried alcohol was when I was
    twelve. It was a sip of beer, and my uncle joked that the sheriff was going to
    arrest me that night.

    Reply
  119. Nikki Riley

    Here is my first attempt of putting something out there for critique. Not going to lie I am nervous about it 🙂 I did this in a little over 15 min. I hope someone likes it!

    The ten minutes before ascending the creaky old wooden stairs was the worst. I felt the butterflies in my stomach rapidly turning into full blow waves of turmoil. They were making me uneasy on my feet, so i reach over and placed my chilled clammy hand on the matching wooden banister. As soon as the surge of fuzziness left my brain I started back pacing in the contained area I was being forced to wait in. With the lights dimmed low and the musky smell in the air I felt like a neglected childrens toy thrown in an old toy box and forgotten. If only I could see someone everything might calm enough for me to shove air into my pinched lungs. As I am looking up at the mint green metal door at the top of the steps a parade of words kept scrolling through my head; over and over and over again. It is almost as if I had a song on repeat except I could not make sense of which words belonged where. Heaving another staled breath of air into my lungs I re-positioned my hands and forced them to still at my sides; breaking them from rigorous ritual they had developed of sliding along my legs. If only i could creep up those stair, avoiding all of creaky spot that I knew like the back of my hand, and open the door to search for a pair of familiar eyes, then maybe I could gain some control. I just needed a glimmer of hope to keep these rolling waves at bay.

    “Two minutes, two minutes everyone” a harsh whisper slid along the back of my head waving over me like a soft caress on my shoulders.

    I quickly turned to see who it was, only catching the back frame of a lanky person dressed in black walking away. There probably went my last chance for some comfort and reassurance from a familiar face.

    Sure, I have been constantly encouraged and told I would ‘knock it out of the park’ by numerous people who had caught sneak peaks. I had even been told everything was perfected and I didn’t need to tweak a single moment of it.

    A moment, that what this is; someone else moment not mine. I would just be portraying it from my own viewpoint, How easily could I have forgotten this? As that soothing thought started to take root in my head, I felt my inner turmoil start to calm, allowing me to supply more air to my yet again light headed and fuzzy brain.

    “Thirty seconds”, someone whispered along with tapping me on the shoulder this time. I cast a sidelong glance in their direction while nodding my acknowledgement; finding a pair of light green eyes truly smiling at me in encouragement.

    “Break a leg.” He whispered his superstitious luck phrase; yet it was just the encouragement I needed. At that moment the cheerful first chords of the opening number rang out filling my confined corners and I quickly transcended into my role. I might not be comfortable being up there as myself, but this story needed to be told……by her through me

    Reply
    • Nikki Riley

      **Not edited by the way. I just sat down and started writing so please excuse the errors**

  120. Anna

    First post, nervous! Still working to improve my writing since I stupidly stopped for ages. Feedback is much appreciated; I know it doesn’t really fit any sort of form either sorry guys!

    Reply
    • Anna

      First post in my picture above, nervous! Still working to improve my writing since I stupidly stopped for ages. Feedback is much appreciated; I know it doesn’t really fit any sort of form either sorry guys!

      It’s incomplete, or possibly just short and sweet: about that feeling when you’re young but you’re a lot farther in life and have been through a lot more than your “still growing up: friends have. It makes you feel left out I guess, lonely. But it’s always lonely at the top isn’t it? Just a way I’m starting to learn gratefulness I guess. Anyway, enjoy! – Anna

  121. Anna

    First post, nervous! Still working to improve my writing since I stupidly stopped for ages. Feedback is much appreciated; I know it doesn’t really fit any sort of form either sorry guys!

    It’s incomplete, or possibly just short and sweet: about that feeling when you’re young but you’re a lot farther in life and have been through a lot more than your “still growing up: friends have. It makes you feel left out I guess, lonely. But it’s always lonely at the top isn’t it? Just a way I’m starting to learn gratefulness I guess. Anyway, enjoy!

    ***

    Here I stand

    redeemed, saved, unashamed

    even after I have wronged in the darkness.

    Along with guilt, I guess comes salvation.

    My reflection at the back of my mind,

    not as strong as I perceived myself to be.

    Lost love, lost hope, lost myself

    so I’ve resorted to my narcissistic,

    materialistic pool of elated self-worth.

    So I’ve resorted to loving my career more than I could ever love any man

    – as it should be: persevering day in persevering day out .

    Strength is not so unless you beat the world’s weight alone.

    If this is the worst thing that has ever happened to me,

    then my life must be so wonderful after all.

    Reply
  122. Audrey

    The walls were closing in; not literally of course, otherwise this would be a lot more serious, but the hallways were suffocatingly tiny.The sterile white that shone down the hall projected like an an arrow to the nearest exit, but I wasn’t going to let that get the best of me. I closed my eyes, a comforting blanket of darkness washing over me, and I took a deep breath. Then another. And another. And continued the cycle about thirty times before I conceived that continuing along was likely a good idea. When I opened my eyes, the blinding qualities of the light had died down, and it seemed the school building itself had taken a breath, as any claustrophobia that it exhibited had vanished.

    Reply
  123. simplymajaa

    The sliding door at the airport opened at the approach of steps, prompting the sensors to react. Sudden coat of southern heat brushed my unexpected face as I made my first step onto the land of free. The unusual temperature shift and until then unacquainted humidity lingered on the skin. A brief walk to the car followed in that unknown climate that took months to adjust. The car sped onto the highway taking us into the darkness of the night passing through the emptiness of the interstate. Once we took the exit, nothing much has changed in a scenery. The hollowness continued all the way until we reached the desired destination. A duplex in a color of red brick became our home where we could start a new life, a life in between.

    The expectations of the next day failed to meet the standards and slowly started to develop a sense of disappointment. After all, this was not what a sixteen year old girl had expected to see. Nothingness stretched everywhere, with few houses along the way forcing me again to experience that melancholic sensation of home never rediscovered. This place lacked streets where I could walk under the street lamps; the place was a destitute replacement of any city I had visited before. The bare roads, and only occasional car would be a companion if one chose to cruise the streets at night with the possibility of being approached by cops. This new life lacked the glamour and at the same time simplicity of spatial movement, it lacked heart and soul of people mingling next to each other on daily basis. In big cities, one is never truly alone, all one has to do is take a walk to feel a part of the larger humanity, a significant particle in the universe. Here, the quiescence prevails and forces one into the darkest abysses of mind.

    Every day became easier and more comprehensible, yet the desolate surrounding harmed the progress of the soul. One adapts, adjusts, shapes according to the environment to preserve, to survive. The extrinsic influences aid in shaping the surrounding and one sooner or later succumbs to those forces. Yet, those are only temporary occurrences because luckily our conscience awakes at the moments of a dire need and presents itself in a shape never imagined before. Eight years later I found myself in front of a different set of doors that welcomed me in and I instantly knew that at least for now, I found home.

    Reply
  124. deborah ellery

    It took me by surprise,her words ringing in my ears. I fumbled with my coffee cup, tears threatening at corners of my eyes. “Mom,” she said softly.
    The only sound in the room was a clock ticking softly over kitchen sink. My hands were shaking as I tried to hang onto my coffee cup. It tumbled from my trembling fingers, hitting the floor with a shattering crash,hot coffee pouring over my bare feet.

    I lost control and began to sob,deep convulsing sobs. My daughter, Elizabeth reached for my shoulders but I turned away from her,burning my head in my hands.The arguements had become too much between us, harsh, ugly, cutting words.

    What had started as minor disagreements between us months earlier had become an all out war of words. Blow by blow words that cut deep filling me with anguish and breaking my heart.

    Elizabeth,being my eldest child was always my most head strong, determined child. She grown from a somewhat testy, challenging but manageable child, to an angry, unhappy young adult. It was breaking my heart.

    Reply
  125. Neatmia

    I’ve just joined The Write Practice and this will be my first post/prompt. Unedited and fresh off of the handwriting method (hoping to get the creative juices flowing more freely). Love some feedback.
    ———————-

    It wasn’t in the best of places. More a seedy side of town, with old cars from the 70s, souped up and decked out on large rims and hydraulic systems that gyrate their bodies like Jamaican hips. I parked next to Honda Civic, figuring it was the safest bet, since they’ve been around despite the decade or side of the tracks. Sluggishly, I dragged myself toward the entrance and opened it after a short countdown to get ready. 3, 2, 1, open.

    No “ta-da” or “voila!” Just all eyes on me. By the bugged out eyes and swiveling neck rolls, i went. Toward the receptionist counter. The heat of the eyes on me, cemented my feet in place.

    “You got an appointment?” she questioned with smirked up lips, a loud teeth-sucking smack, and just as much attitude drenched in her tone. I guess it was service, but it had nothing to do with the customer.

    “No. I’m a walk-in,” I felt myself shrink down with lowered eyes.

    “It’s gon’ be ’bout fiteen minutes, but you could take your hair down while you wait.”

    I scurried over to an empty seat, haphazardly smiling at a woman in the waiting area, whose face contorted quizzically, as if I’d just told her she had ugly kids. To pass the time, I took the first magazine atop the pile and gave my best impression of someone actually interested in the content. I mean, hair is hair, right? But, I needed someone qualified to handle mine. It isn’t fine or flat, but big and full. Massive and wild. Beastly, even. And, it requires taming. Someone to whip it into shape with two hands and all the right tools. You wouldn’t eat a steak with a spoon, so hair like mine could never be maneuvered with a regular comb, brush, or plug-in curling iron. It needs pressing combs, mar cell irons, and blow-dryers with fierce combs that sometimes get the teeth knocked out them. Super relaxers, oil, and grease–the clumpy, gooey, hardcore petroleum stuff. If I didn’t need such a specialist, might not have been in such a cavernous den.

    Sitting there with my bushel of hair nestled in a hot mess, I peered above the top of the magazine at the women who’d stopped talking since my arrival. They could’ve easily been a paint sampler strip with their complexions ranging the full spectrum of browns–Ebony dew all the way to Sand Dunes. I saw Ebony Dew look over at me and take in my whole get up from head to toe. I figured my regular Saturday uniform of jeans and tee would be up to par, but a scan around the room let me know I hadn’t got the right memo. Apparently Sunday’s Best was weeklong attire.

    I’d never been to this place before, but I’d been here. A place where there was always a competition between light and dark. “The darker the berry, the sweeter the juice,” my cousin would always say. But my berry wasn’t that dark. It’s more of a dark-challenged berry. So, did that mean I couldn’t be sweet, I always wondered. Where I came from, I wasn’t light enough to be white, or dark enough to be black, so I lived in a complexion purgatory.

    This place was no different. Only the geography had changed. Swap out the wind in the city of the palms and beaches. New coast, same skin.

    The stone-faced stylist waved me over, “what are we doing today?”

    “Relax and style,” I muttered lowly.

    As her fingers combed through my roots, she lingered in my new-growth. She was more of a Hazelnut Butter with honey-colored eyes. I couldn’t tell where she was from, but as she massaged through my tangled troubles, I could tell she was familiar with my struggles.

    “So where are you from?” she asked softly, spreading genuine interest over her sharp edge.

    Reply
  126. Wendy

    I know it probably needs a little elaboration and perhaps better vocab words, but over all did you get the point of what is going on or does it seem a bit confusing? What do you think is going on? Thanks.

    ___________________________________________________

    I threw the blankets that just a few seconds ago were wrapped around me like a burrito. They landed on the floor. I crawled to the now empty but still warm, left side of the bed and scooted out. Gently walking to the closet, I threw on a white tank top, no bra and a pair of “No Fucks given” jeans. Then, I walk towards the bedroom door where you are sleeping.

    “Brenda,” I whisper.
    “I’m awake.” you respond.
    “Let’s not go to work today. I’m still too drunk and it’s way too far to drive.”
    “Okay.” You say.
    “Going to make coffee. I’ll be downstairs.”

    I’m now shuffling through the cabinets as my mind recalls the night before.

    “You and I were enemies.” Your face didn’t seem to believe the words that you were saying.

    “Maybe rivals.” I reply. We chug our drinks at an unusual rate. Well… unusual for MOST people.

    I pour the water into the coffee maker and turn it on. It immediately begins to brew. I should probably eat something but I have no desire to.

    You walk into the kitchen and ask for some water.

    “Tap water.” I said.
    “Thanks.”

    You and I awkwardly exchange words here and there.
    We were two sober strangers. Sober. That word is strange enough.

    As we sit on the couch watching “America’s Most Wanted”, my mind kept going back to the night before.

    “Let’s call James.” You laugh.
    “Okay.”

    Being as discreet as possible so as to not wake up my new current, we tip toe to the back yard, through the rain and into the gazebo.

    “Don’t say anything. I don’t want him to know we are together. I want you to hear him talk about you. ”

    I nodded.

    You begin to dial the number, with your finger pressed against your lip. I smile.
    It rings. Twice.

    “Brenda! Hey how are you?”

    “I’m great. I’m just hanging out at home.”

    “Oh yeah. It’s so great to hear from you. Did you go to Wendy’s?”

    “I did. She’s doing great. She really is a nice girl. You were completely wrong about her.”

    “I know I was. And I’ve given it a lot of thought. Wendy will probably never get back with me. She has Mark. I do love her but I love you too, Brenda. I know you are with Brandon, but I can’t help but to think you are still willing to be with me.”

    “James, when we were together, before you met Wendy and before I met Brandon, I wanted you to marry me. I wanted you to move me in. I wanted you to build a future with me. And Wendy told me that she wanted the same thing with you before she got with Mark. You’re never going to change.”

    James took a breath.

    “Well.. I think it was going to be too difficult to keep Wendy happy. She wanted too much.”

    I laid my head on your shoulder and began to cry. Call us rivals or enemies. As I sat there in the cold rain listening to the desire in his voice as he spoke to you, I felt like I finally had somebody that understood.

    “James, I wanted the same things she wanted and you couldn’t give them to me.”

    The conversation didn’t last much longer .. and I realized you were asking if I wanted to order pizza. “America’s Most Wanted” was suddenly on again and you were suddenly sitting next to me. My Enemy. My rival. My friend.

    Reply
  127. Lorey Lyons

    I woke to darkness. My eyelids heavy and thick, temples pounding, ears ringing. I tried to sit up, but nausea forced me back down. I tried to take in my surrounding by I didn’t recognize anything. My mind felt heavy with a fog of confusion, where was I? What was the last thing I remembered?

    Coffee. I remembered being at the coffee shop to grab a smoothie and I ran into that guy who spilled coffee all over my jeans. I unconsciously reached down to my thigh and then I did sit up. Nausea and dizziness punching me in the gut like a prize fighter. But I didn’t care about any of that because I wasn’t wearing any pants. I squinted hard at my naked thighs and tried to remember, but there was nothing. I pulled at the oversized shirt I was wearing, it was grey, the band logo almost faded away. It wasn’t mine.

    My breath caught in my throat and choked me, why couldn’t I remember? I stumbled up, barely holding my balance. I tried to close my eyes, but the spinning was worse. Terrifying. I pushed myself forward until I slapped into the wall, I was shaking. I couldn’t grip the handle, my palms sweating. I tried again and again, and I moaned, choking back a sob. I leaned against the wall forcing myself to breath. The spinning of the walls and floors finally starting to slow. “Stop it.” I ordered myself, my voice rusty with disuse. My throat raged at me.

    I put my hand on the door knob and straightened my shoulders. False bravado or no, I was opening this door. I gripped the knob tightly and felt it give as I turned it. My body sagged in a breathless type of relief. Anxiety like a starving animal clawed at my insides. I pulled the door open and saw them. 2 young men and a young woman, sitting on an old, beat up couch. The cheered at the players on the television screen, and I gasped. Then I laughed. Then I sobbed. A tear slipped down my cheek, and I felt a bubble of hysteria pop inside of me and I laughed again.

    Katy, an old friend whom I had ran into after leaving the coffee shop last night sat on the couch with her boyfriend and brother. As soon as I saw her my night flashed before my eyes… It was the last time I would ever play Vodka Pong.
    ___________
    Totally grungy draft, straight of the timer! Just came across this site today, so I’m behind everyone else, but here’s hoping I can still get some feedback!

    Reply
  128. Magz

    OK. I only just found this site yesterday and would love to exercise and improve. Be gentle but I truly appreciate any feedback at all. THANKS

    I only saw grey with squiggly lines as though I was looking
    at a television with no station. I heard
    a loud, constant buzzing in my ears. I
    opened my eyes slowing trying to focus on anything other than the constant
    buzzing and spinning sensation that made me feel the need to vomit. The floor was cold, cement or concrete of
    some sort. Sounds filtered back into my
    head first before the visualization of my domain. There was loud banging, yelling and metal
    rattling sounds, somewhere further was a
    woman screaming for help, metal scraping along the floor and heavy boots
    falling. I was lying on the floor of
    somewhere in a place that was load and unfamiliar.

    I propped myself up onto my elbow and slowing with great
    care tilted my face upward. Shit, I thought. I slowing return my head and arms horizontal
    to the floor and closed my eyes. I was
    cold and just wanted to drift back to unconsciousness. I
    pictured myself lying on my bedroom floor and tried to slow my breathing. Now I could feel the fuzzy softness of the
    plush carpet and hear the crackling of the fireplace that was recently
    installed in my bedroom. Off in the
    distant the constant tick and tock of the Grandfather Clock that was received
    as a wedding gift.

    The wedding should have been the warning. I should have realized I was heading for
    something dangerous. The guests groom
    and even my mother had looked the other way as it was my wedding day. It was a once in a lifetime, fairy-tale
    celebration and a very convenient and rational assumption that my behavior
    would be once in the lifetime not the remainder of my lifetime.

    Reply
  129. Nush

    My first post – Written for fifteen minutes. Looking forward to feedback. Thank you ! 🙂

    Pushing the glass door slightly forward,i crossed the threshold of the restaurant. I found myself in a quite large room where tables and chairs have been neatly arranged on the shiny parquet floor. At first glance, i knew at once that i did not belong over here. The atmosphere was filled with aesthetic luxury, sophisticated attitude and enticing perfumes. I could notice that the guests present were somewhat exhibiting some common behavioral patterns that drastically narrowed my self confidence and self esteem. The ladies, with the hair neatly brushed and dyed, seemed to relish the complex words they were using. They were trying so hard to be in the spotlight that the beautifully dressed children opted for silence. Whether they felt intimidated to get involved in the conversation or they simply preferred to savor their delicious meal, it was hard to tell. The men, handsome and smart, resembled much like their female partners. Some were engrossed in the middle of a passionate argument while others were openly discussing about their lucrative businesses.

    No matter where i turned my head to, that insecure feeling kept on swelling inside of me. Suddenly i heard my name being called from the table found in the right corner of the room. I took a deep breath and made my way to my colleague. It was a dinner invitation that i had no other choice than accepting it.

    Reply
  130. Kirsis Concepcion

    I awoke to the warm faint sunlight that seeped through my window–stirring my hot soaking eyes, head pounding synched with my heart, coupled with a deep loud ringing in my ear while dark dream images aroused my mind’s eye.

    I dragged through the day clouded with melancholy, fighting the hot tears that burned to break through. I saw yet saw nothing, I smelled, yet smelled nothing. The day felt lethargic. All seemed foreign for I watched my day-in-a-life tick by without grasping where or even why… just knowing I’m here and alive.

    *****************************************************************

    This took me 20minutes. I’m a very slow writer so I most definitely need practice. I am also very critical about my own writing and this is also my very first time posting online something I’ve just written.

    Reply
  131. Aayush

    How’s this for my first try? Its only a paragraph i tried writing. Suggestions to improve would be highly appreciated

    I wake up bewildered. I turn around and find nothing, I see
    nothing. Where am I? I ask myself. But my mind is empty. I don’t know where I am
    and suddenly it occurred to me that I don’t know who I am. I feel strange. I sense
    a sparkle of fire inside me barely alive, trying its best not to go out. I can
    sense a thirst inside me that cannot be quenched, but I cannot figure out what
    it is. After what it seemed like an hour of pointless thinking I ask myself, “Am
    I dead?” No I can’t be dead. But what if this really is death? What if there is
    no hell or heaven like people imagine there to be after death but only this
    emptiness and loneliness’? What if I am bound like this forever unable to do
    anything but to stare at the white emptiness above me trying to figure out who I
    am? The thought sacred me, so I try to dismiss it from my head but I can’t.
    Slowly I realize I am losing consciousness, “What if I never wake up again?” I whisper
    to myself and try as hard as I can to stay awake but in the end I fail.

    Reply
    • Tapiocaqueen

      I like it!! 😀 It gives you a lot of questions but not a lot of answers. Also, at the end, maybe you could write “…as I can to stay awake but in the end I fail and fall into an endless sleep” or something like that. Can you look at mine to?

  132. Tapiocaqueen

    Hi! I’m a seventh grader and I’m trying to improve my writing so could somebody give me suggestions on how to improve this?

    Even when I was a young puppy I was the always the last one. The last one to be born. The last one to be fed. The last one to have a name – Runt. The last one to be adopted. I stayed at the shelter while I watched longingly at my brothers and sisters being carried away by their new owners. Every time a possible owner came to pick out a dog I behaved my best – I put on my big-eye-floppy-ear-tilted-head-wagging-tail-cute-dog look, happily bounded along the adoptee, and sat and rolled and jumped whenever the shelter owner, Loren, told me to. But they never took me home in their big warm arms. They always got the small fluffy dogs or the big and friendly golden retrievers, or those snobby poodles. Even when Loren tried to persuade them to adopt me because I was “friendly and in need of a home”, they just shook their heads and said, “I’m sorry, but a cripple would be too much work.” That’s what they saw when they looked at me, a cripple. All of them except Loren, who always loved me. Even when I chewed her slippers, or shed fur on the bed, she just laughed and said, “What am I going to do with you, Runt?” And now, ten later, I finally have a home.

    Reply
  133. Mahnoor

    ” ‘Imagine a car that just won’t start. You check the fuel gauge and it’s full because you’re always careful enough to keep it full. So you open the bonnet and check if something is out of place but on the surface, everything seems to be alright. Frustrated, you bang your fist on the door but regret it a moment later as pain shoots up your arm.’

    This is what she always felt like when it came to writing something. Oh sure, she wrote really good essays for school assignments but that wasn’t the same thing. She wrote a few short stories for the school’s blog and an article or two for a local magazine but that was it. The irony was that she was a voracious reader. She loved to read ever since she could and that was what aroused her interest in writing in the first place. Friends and family also encouraged her but when it came to actually writing anything, she felt as if her hand had turned to stone and her mind would go numb. She just couldn’t understand why. It wasn’t as if she didn’t have any good ideas; she had plenty of them! But she just couldn’t write and it was frustrating as hell because she knew she could write well. Even with all the encouragement, she was unable to, and gradually her family stopped pestering her to write anything. She felt like a talentless loser. After all, she had no other hobbies except reading and she wanted to write so that there could be SOMETHING that she’d be good at.
    ‘People have blogs and they post everyday’, she used to think. ‘Why can’t I do it?’
    She never found the answer to that question. “

    Reply
  134. Ranconteur Wannabe

    Clubs aren’t made for introverts. That was the thought I had as I walked into the dimly lit club with the bar illuminated as if it were the only oasis in the sea of sweat and wall to wall bodies. I followed my co-workers leas as I did the sideways shuffle and two-step to find an available table. At the least, now I didn’t have to be a wall flower, sighing as I plunked down on to the chair of a nearby open table.
    I glanced around the room performing my favorite past time – people watching. I wondered how long I had to stay before I could beg off for the night saying, “It’s late…I’ve got to get up early…I got a long drive so…” The one thing I knew was if I didn’t at least stay till midnight, I’d never hear the end of it.
    “You want a drink?”, my girlfriend asked as she leaned into me, grabbing my arm for to gain my undivided attention. I glanced from my arm to her hand with a levered eyebrow I raised my eyes to me hers only to be met with a glassy stare. Her normally bright alert eyes were dulled and droopy. I had no idea what she had taken from the office to the club but one thing was for sure, the party had started before we’d ever reached the bar.
    I flexed my arm and twisted effectively sliding out of her grip and answered, “Yeah, rum and coke.” Dear God, this was going to be a long night.

    Reply
  135. MargS

    My daughter can crawl and say 100 words. I have them written on a crumbly piece of yellow legal pad paper, so I know. Duck and mama and house and love. I could stare at her all day but I need to find other baby friends for her.

    I meet a fellow mom at the grocery store and we exchange numbers. She’s blonde and clean and has a group – a baby play-date group up North. North Dallas where I rarely venture.

    I drive with my baby in her car seat listening to catchy baby tunes, her little voice chattering along happily.

    The bright green grass is short and even. The house is brick and looks like the others in the cul-de-sac. The smooth sidewalk leads me to a door with a big window. I peak in and tell myself to breathe. Remember, my baby needs playmates. I lug in her bag, my bag, and a community snack. I smile. I try to meet their energy.

    Lots of couches. Seven babies on the floor. Brightly colored plastic toys surround them. Moms are saying, “share” and “no”. I hear snippets of conversation – about pediatricians and sleeping through the night and colic and bottles and husbands.

    I start up a conversation with my couch mate. I tell her my baby loves grapes.

    “Oh my, you can’t feed your baby grapes. That’s terrible,”she says.

    “Well, I cut them up small so she can’t choke,” I say.

    “That doesn’t matter, I’ve read you never feed baby grapes.”

    “Oh no,” I explain, “that’s only because it’s a choking hazard and if you cut them up, it’s fine.”

    “No, you can’t do that,” she says and begins talking to another mom.

    I get brave and declare to the group, “babies are amazing and don’t you just love watching them learn and explore? I am high on babies – I think I’ve found the meaning of life.”

    Wide eyes look at me and a couple of moms nod slowly. It’s quiet for a moment. Then I hear talk of church families and juice boxes and teaching kids to share. I smile and get quiet.

    Someone hears my baby talk and says “how did you teach her that?”

    “I didn’t teach her,” I say, “she just loves words.”

    The carpet is gray. The babies are well-behaved and disciplined. Mine doesn’t want to sit on blankets. She wants to explore. I keep apologizing. Babies have to stay in the blanketed area. She’s bored and wants to nurse. No one else is nursing. Maybe I should go. I search my mind for an excuse. I can’t find a good one.

    I keep grabbing my baby in mid-escape and returning her to the blanket. My chest is tight, my jaw hurts, I feel the beginning of a headache.

    I get three messages asking when I would like to host at my house. I don’t respond and they quit asking me. I make excuses when I’m invited back to their group. Finally the host gets angry with me for never coming and says if I’m not interested to just tell them I won’t be participating.

    I finally say I’m just too busy. I can’t be honest. I don’t fit in to this baby group. I’m not sure how to be a mom.

    Reply
  136. Markie

    I don’t know how I talked myself into this. A date with a stranger! I’m not ready for this. How the hell can I tell him about my life? He won’t understand and will only thing badly of me. Ugh!! I’m not going to do this. I have really had enough stress and emotional turmoil in my life that I just do not need this!
    It’s ten till 7 and he should be here soon. I am early which obviously shows I am desperate! What is wrong with me? I put my coat back on and start to get up. “Are you Kristen?” My heart skips a beat and I say yes.
    “Hi, I’m Ben.”
    “Hi Ben, nice to meet you.” I swallow hard and sit back down. I guess I’m doing this. I order a glass of wine and smile like I’m happy to be there. Just don’t talk too much about yourself! I start asking him benign questions about himself and he seems very happy to tell me all about his business, his family, and his goals. Wow! Great guy and nice looking too! I better not get too excited about the prospects.
    “So what do you do?” I hear him ask. “I uh, I work in HR for a big firm in town.”
    “Do you have any children?”
    “Yes, just one. She is 22.” Okay now I’m out of here! “I’m sorry Ben, I have to go” I start to put my coat back on and he actually looks hurt and confused.
    “What’s wrong? Something I said?”
    “No no you seem to be a great guy. I just can’t talk about my life. It’s too depressing. You won’t want to stay if I told you. So I’m just saving you some time.”
    “I’m sorry” I picked up my purse and headed towards the door without looking back. Tears started down my face and I told myself to wait. Cry in the car, like usual. I breathe in through my nose and focus on the task at hand, getting the hell outta there!
    I find my car and can’t get in there fast enough. Help me get out of here! I just want to be home in bed. I open the door, throw my purse in and sit behind the wheel. Ahhh, the click of the lock combined with the permission to cry make me feel safe. More tears fall and I turn the ignition. Home bound. Where no one can judge me. No one can hurt me.

    Reply
  137. Chris Jay Becker

    It was a well-lit, airy, faux Irish Pub in an underground shopping mall in downtown Los Angeles. A woman I’d been “talking to” online for a month or so had recommended it because she lived nearby with her husband.

    I’d texted her when I’d come up from the bowels of the 7t St. Metrocenter Station, but she must have been busy.

    Oh, well, I told myself. I was used to drinking alone.

    My iPhone had about half a charge. That was good because it was just the two of us tonight, me and the white iPhone 4.

    The host sat me at a single table next to a pillar facing the bar. I could see all of the TVs behind the bar.

    I don’t recall exactly what I ate or what I drank, but I was drunk as a lord in short order. The bright, shiny couples to my left and to my right kept laughing way too hard in that kind of exaggerated, touchy-feely, pawing way couples do on first dates.

    Fuck. Just my fucking luck. Me, the drunken, depressed, writer/comedian surrounded by shining happy people. Like that REM song.

    There was no juke box. Too bad, I could use some Black Sabbath right now… something doomy like War Pigs to bum out the Perky People.

    I started writing one-liners in my Moleskine reporter’s notebook. The new jokes made me laugh, but I knew that it was because I was ‘faced.

    I thought about that woman who lived nearby with her husband. They had an open marriage. It sounded… interesting. But I also knew that I wasn’t built to handle adultery well. The booze didn’t make me happy, either.

    I was still hungry when I left the shiny pub.

    There was a McDonald’s across the hallway.

    I only like Mickey D’s when I’m drunk.

    I smiled. “Then it’s a good thing ah’mm drunk…”

    Reply
  138. Christopher Faulkner

    Unfamiliar Places

    Is it haunted? Our voices echoed back at us and seemed to mix with the awkward shadows cast by bare lightbulbs on ceiling lights. The floor creaked and cracked with evry step. The old, naked windows stared bleakly into the unlit night. A pit started to form in my stomach. No furniture. Bare walls. No pictures. If it wasn’t haunted, it should have been.

    We were to camp out here tonight. Of all reason, we had to protect our recent rental from homeless people who had been breaking in while it was abandoned. A handyman was fixing locks and windows as we set our stuff in one of the empty bedrooms. There were no beds, so my wife and I would be sleeping in a sleeping bag on the cold hard floor.

    As we lay down to an imperfect rest, freezing cold (did I mention no heat, either) made the spectral shadows and hard floors even more inhospitable. The nightly trips to the bathroom were excersizes in courage. With the lights turned off, the weak yellow light from the streetlights outside cast long grizzly shadows on the wall. Around every corner (and there were lots of corners), we expected to see a wraith staring back at us.

    The night strecthed on and on. every noise made us instanty alert.

    “Was that a window sliding open?”

    “Did you just hear a door close?”

    And on it went through the long winter night.

    Salvation came in the form of the morning sun and birds chirping! Goosebumps just seem to melt away when birds are hapily singing just outside the window. In daylight, the house didn’t look much better. It was still drab and old and creaky. But at least we could see! And as we checked all the doors and windows we happily found everything secure; there were no visitors, real, or imagined during the long night. There have been few times in my life when I was more happy to go to work, where the familiar surroundings made me feel human again.

    Reply
  139. Faye

    The twinge felt painful against my chest that December, 5 years ago. I feel its ghost right now, as we speak.

    It was such an easy, small action what set it off. After being away from my family and friends for almost a month and sent to a cold culture, this was the first time I felt like crying.

    It was, after all, just a hug. A hug from my host mother to my host sister after dinner. It was a warm, loving embrace that matched perfectly the yellow walls, the reds and maroons in the Christmas decorations and furniture, and the strong light above the dinner table. But unlike them, blue got over me. Cold and sneaky like the snow raging outside our window.

    Those were the kind of hugs my mom gave me and my siblings. Love-filled embraces in a tropical country, thousands of miles and a 12 hour flight away.
    It had already been confusing to adapt to a cold culture and an even colder weather. But then in front of me was a reminder of the warmth back home. A lit house and a strong hug, all in the middle of France. I wanted to partake in it.

    I didn’t want to be cold anymore.

    Reply
  140. Laura Evans

    There are about eight people in the upstairs area of the bar, all seated in a semi-circle making idle chit-chat with each other. In the area before them, a sheet is spread across the floor with a few scattered cushions, all illuminated by an upright lamp. I am the only one not participating in the conversations. Instead I am standing on the periphery. I suppose I could approach and maybe introduce myself, but really
    that is not necessary and may even be deemed strange behaviour. After all, I’m not here for the same reason as everyone else. Quite the opposite. I resolve to
    remain invisible for as long as possible.

    However, the man in the middle calls my name, and it is suddenly my cue to step in front of the crowd and be noticed. Except it’s not really me they’ll be observing. They’re not interested in my name or how old I am or where I come from or what I do for a living. They are not concerned with my thoughts or feelings at that moment I stand before them in nothing but a sheer satin kimono. The man nods and the only item of
    clothing obscuring my body from public view falls to the floor.

    I am instructed to make my first short pose, which I had pre-prepared mentally. The only thing required of me at this moment (apart from the necessity for me to be nude) is to remain as still as possible; any movement could ruin the works of art being created by the diligent pupils with their sketch pads. In order to do this I fix my gaze at
    something directly in my line of sight, which for this pose happens to be a particularly ornate mahogany chair. My eyes follow the curves of the pattern calved into the backrest, the smooth edges and the way the light bounces off at certain angles. I stare so intently I could memorise every grain, every shadow and every almost imperceptible imperfection.

    This must be what the artists see when they look at me.

    Reply
  141. Heather McNamara

    I had let my mom talk me into coming to the pastoral center to help wrap the gifts that were for the parishioners, but I knew I’d be out of place, which turned out to be true. There were only three other women there, all middle-aged like my mother, and I tuned out of their conversation as though it were a radio station I wanted to change. Their chirps and chatters were nothing I could relate to since I’ve never had kids, haven’t worked in over ten years, and have never cooked a Thanksgiving dinner. Pushing their small talk aside, I took to the task of wrapping the gifts. I would take a book from one of the boxes in the center of the long table, wrap it up in the appropriately festive paper, tape it up, shove it on the pile, and repeat. It was a comforting, soothing process. The motions of folding, wrapping and taping helped me forget that no matter where I went, I would always be a fish out of water, a stranger in a strange land, even in my own hometown.

    The rustle of the wrapping paper drowned out the ceaseless chatter of the other women and my own thoughts. When I taped the packages shut, I felt as though I were wrapping up my worries and getting ready to ship them off to Abu Dhabi or some far-distant place where could be of more use. I drank in the good cheer of the patterned paper; the ruby red poinsettias, the fluffy teddy bears in Santa Claus hats, the glinting gold and smirking snowmen. I lost myself in a Christmas wonderland, where all problems could be solved with warm hugs and hot chocolate. I forgot my worries, for a short while. For now, I was Santa’s little helper, and that was all I needed to be. It didn’t matter for once that I was a 34-year-old virgin on disability payments who couldn’t converse her way out of a paper bag. All I had to do for now was wrap presents like a good little elf and it would be all right. If my life had ever taught me anything, it would always, eventually, be all right.

    Reply
  142. Alfredo Jimenez

    Out of place

    A. Jimenez

    Now I am preparing my coffee
    and slides of bread with peanut butter (as my wife like it) at home. But five
    months ago, Oakland, San Leandro and San Lorenzo were strangers to my eyes.

    I have arrived to the Oakland
    international airport around 5 O’clock. Always with the incertitude of a new
    adventure. I was coming to teach, but for a while, my feelings were a little
    bit opposites, some excitement but some incertitude too. I have been an address
    in hand, but incertitude any way. It would be the right place for me? Could be enough
    money in my pocket to survive my next two or three months?

    I took a taxi to the address,
    but in the same taxi I have almost come back to the airport. Taxi driver brought
    me to a motel 6. Until next day I were able to know about the address in hand.
    For good or for bad, there was not any place to lease.

    I walked for a while
    looking for apartments available. Soon I realized the difficult it was to get
    an apartment!! With a need of something in my stomach I went to Panaderia Guadalajara. I ask the women about spaces to rent. She was
    Mexican, then we spoke in Spanish. I she told me his son was looking to rent a
    room. It was the best thing happening to me in my second day with incertitude.
    She gave me his phone number. I had been just bought a cellphone, and then I
    have contacted him. That lucky coffee has saved me to face the difficult business
    to look for an apartment as a new arrival with no papers to prove my identity!

    In addition, went I
    came back to the Motel, my stuffs were out. I didn’t pay for other night. I
    just waited for that confirmation of rent. Around 9 O’clock. Miguel was calling
    me to confirm they were be able to rent me the room. I was lucky to receive his
    help too for bring my stuffs to my new room.

    Reply
  143. Lizzie

    Hi. Writing and editing took about 20 minutes.

    I knew something was going to go terrible wrong, from the top of my ponytail to the bottom of my converse. I forced myself to get out of the car.

    “See you later, Mom,”

    Oh crap. My own stupid pride wouldn’t let me pretend to be sick, or not-so-accidently brake my leg.

    I closed the car door and turned to face the public school. It didn’t look *that* bad.

    I walked in. It smelled like popcorn. Weird.

    First left. Door on the right. Quite a large part of me wished it would be the wrong room. I could go home and tell them there hadn’t been a class that day.

    But nosuch luck. I could hear people talking inside.

    “No time like the present,” I muttered to myself. Actually, I would have been happier with anything *but* the present. Reality sucks that way.

    I took several steps forward and entered the driver’s education classroom.

    “Hi, Lizzie,” the instructor said. The walls were white. The floor was tiled. Almost every single seat was taken, and a lot of people were looking at me.

    Suddenly, I forgot what normal people do. They smile, right? No, not that much. Too much smiling was creepy.

    “Are you new?” A girl asked.

    “No. I’m homeschooled.”

    There went her interest. I caught sight of it flying out the window. I turned on the spot, and saw an open chair near the front of the room.

    “Can I sit there?” I asked.

    “Sure,” a different girl said. She was wearing glasses.

    I breathed a sigh of relief and sunk into the chair. I looked at the white walls, adn tried not to draw any attention to myself. I didn’t say anything. Facial expressions were out of the question. I looked at the table in front of me, or the floor, or the instructor. Once in a while, I stole a glance at the other kids in the room. About thirty of us.

    8:30 to 11:30. Two breaks. One test.

    I shoved the manual in my purse, pushed in my chair, and shot out of the classroom. I still didn’t talk to anyone. The sunshine was white when I made it outside.

    “How was it?” Mome asked later.

    “It was good.”

    Nine days left.

    Reply
  144. Heather D.

    I smoothed out my dress, the first one I’d worn since the birth of my son, three years earlier. It was snug in unflattering places, which had been hidden behind sweatpants and my husband’s oversized shirts, now exposed to the crisp air whisking around my face, tangling the mess of hair I had tried so hard to tame that morning. One last deep
    breath and I rang the bell, about to enter a world I no longer knew and subject
    myself to the stares and hushed whispers that were about to swallow me
    whole.
    Emily greeted me at the door, with her bright, cheery smile and heels so high they dwarfed me in my flats and slouched shoulders. I sunk a little lower into the floor, and envisioned how lucky that Persian rug would be to have me snuggling with it in a far corner. The fragrant flowers on the table were beaming brightly and had clearly quenched their
    thirst in that tall vase of gleaming water. I contemplated slurping it up right from the vase to save my suddenly parched lips from cracking. Another fake “hello” from Victoria and she pried the wedding gift out from my clutches, the last line of defense before my baby
    stained diaper bag was revealed, and behind it, my protruding muffin top that
    had been following me relentlessly since I had last seen these girls.
    The City Girls. My childhood friend’s group of poised, single, sophisticated ladies that I’m sure were nice in their own right, but in their presence I was but a mere gnat in their champagne. A married mother of two boys, living in the ‘Burbs and nothing like these women, who still partied til 2 am and knew nothing of burping babies, scrubbing toilets after dirty little potty-training boys, or eating pureed carrots because it happened to be the first thing you saw in the fridge.
    But it was Jen’s day to shine and be the light of her shower, so I gulped down my wine spritzer and sunk into a corner chair, praying I would go unnoticed, at least until after dessert!

    Reply
  145. JD

    New and approaching this with some trepidation–and eagerness. Responding to the First Prompt with an autobiographical piece in close third person…

    The van driver assumed that Jordan knew his way around and dropped him at the Boy’s Entrance. New boys were deposited at the imposing Main Door—once, and once only. Returning boys got dropped outside swinging doors at the bottom of a long, steep stairway at the side of the Tudor building.

    Jordan stair at the wide stairs, endless it seemed, the opp quite out of sight. Suitcase in two hands, he climbed. Each step was edged in metal, a stratagem to prevent wear under the polished shoes of boys, grades eight to twelve. His own new brogues clumped noisily on each step, echoing into the void. Trying to keep his grunts low, Jordan heaved the suitcase, one step at a time until he could pull it up and over the last step.

    He looked around. No one. He was at the centre of a cavernous lobby, hallways stretching into the gloom in three directions. It was unreal, a scene from or slasher film, or more appropriately, from Tom Brown’s School Days which he had the misfortune to watch before leaving home. Jordan could feel the brown battleship linoleum shifting under his feet, the walls throbbing as he shuffled down the hall. “What do I do now?” he worried.

    Nervous at the sound of rapid footsteps approaching, he watched as a dim figure in a uniform strode through pools of light, blond hair flashing and momentarily reflected in the polished oak paneling before disappearing into darkness, only to reappear a couple of metres closer. I looked as it the figure grew with each reappearance—a trick of the eye but one that startled. Then he was right in front of Jordan.

    “You must be Chambers. Dickson, House Prefect. Follow me.”

    And with that, Dickson flipped a switch to reveal a stair where there had been a black pit. He climbed up and was out of sight at the landing before Jordan had lifted his bag again. Clomping up the stairs, he tried to catch up.

    “Shhh!” He looked up to see Dickson’s frown peering over the railing. Then he was gone again.

    Reply
  146. theinkquill

    The waiting room walls were covered in framed images of professional athletes who I didn’t recognize. I adjusted my frames on my nose and checked my slacks again for any lint. Dammit, I thought, I should have worn lighter colors. In black dress pants and a black top with ruffled, short sleeves, the outfit looked better on the hanger. Under the fluorescent lights and among the bright sports magazines surrounding me, I was a blackhole of plainness and nothingness.

    Vanessa stepped into the room and greeted me without using my name. I guessed I was the hundredth person she had spoken to so far that day and it was barely seven o’clock. As she opened the door, dance music blared from somewhere behind her. I followed my new Field Manager into the executive suite, made up of a few annexed offices that branch off of a main conference room.

    “I like your shirt,” Vanessa said as she set a stack of pre-employment forms in front of me.

    “Thanks,” I shrugged with a sleepy smile. “I found it at a thrift shop.”

    “I usually just tell people I got my clothes at Ross,” she said.

    My face and armpits heated up. Had I come off as resourceful or lower class? Was that just small-talk or was she giving me advice on how to present myself, now that I was in the big leagues? I decided to keep my responses short for the remainder of the day.

    After I finished filling out a stack of legal documents, Vanessa returned and asked, “Are you ready?”

    “Yep,” I said, remembering to keep my responses short. Ready for what? I didn’t know. But I was a fast learner, as my cover letter had boasted, and I needed to show blind enthusiasm.

    Reply
  147. Mark_Hark

    I could shuffle comfortably enough around the kitchen floor,
    knocking into the “island”, as they called it; “they” being” wife,
    daughter-in-law, her friend Tanya and her little boy Ely with his hair chopped
    off roughly, his parent or guardian or someone they had hired had donned a
    blindfold and with a rusty electric razor that ran strictly on direct current
    (supplied by an auto battery) laid waste to the poor kid’s hair.

    The kid didn’t give a damn, I sure as hell did not but his
    image way beyond me was the only one open to me; he sat cross-legged on the
    fireplace rolling a toy truck on the carpet, in back of the others in the
    living room, their images closed off to me. Their moving mouths shot words to each other, the family of others whorode on byways in a small lonely county north of Fort
    Worth.

    None of their verbal bb’s scratched my skin or popped my ear
    drum. Then one of them pulled a real gun with bullets out of his pants pocket,
    pointed at my head which I knew I had but no way could he see it. To prove that,
    he fired at that groove under my nose and above my mouth, and since I was not
    there it went through the ectoplasm that was my head and penetrated the door of
    the refrigerator behind me.

    Reply
  148. JD

    The First Prompt (hoping there may be others participating as it looks like about a year since the last post…)

    The van driver assumed that Jordan knew his way around and dropped him at the Boy’s Entrance. New boys were deposited at the imposing Main Door—once, and once only. Returning boys got dropped outside swinging doors at the bottom of a long, steep stairway at the side of the Tudor building.
    Jordan stair at the wide stairs, endless it seemed, the opp quite out of sight. Suitcase in tw hands, he climbed. Each step was edged in metal, a stratagem to prevent wear under the polished shoes of boys grades eight to twelve. His own new brogues clumped noiily on each step, echoing into the void. Trying to keep his grunts low, Jordan heaved the suitcase, one step at a time until he could pull it up and over the last step. There, he looked around. No one. He stood at the centre of a cavernous lobby, halls stretching into the gloom in three directions. It was unreal, a scene from or slasher film, or more appropriately, from Tom Brown’s School Days which he had the misfortune to watch before leaving home. Jordan could feel the brown battleship linoleum shifting under his feet, the walls throbbing as he shuffled down the hall. “What do I do now?” he worried.
    Nervous at the sound of rapid footsteps approaching, he watched as a dim figure in a uniform strode through pools of light, blond hair flashing and momentarily reflected in the polished oak panelling before disappearing into darkness, only to reappear a couple of metres closer. I looked as it the figure grew with each reappearance—a trick of the eye but one that startled. Then he was right in front of Jordan.
    “You must be Chambers. Dickson, House Prefect. Follow me.” And with that, Dickson flipped a switch to reveal a stair where there had been a black pit. He climbed up and was out of sight at the landing before Jordan had lifted his bag again. Clomping up the stairs, he tried to catch up.
    “Shhh!” He looked up to see Dickson’s frown peering over the railing. Then he was gone again.

    Reply
    • Ayse Nur

      • I think there was just too much info-dump in the story as in “Each step was edged in metal, a stratagem to prevent wear under the polished shoes of boys grades eight to twelve**.”

      • The first paragraph felt out of place; probably because the focus abruptly changes from the driver to Dickson.

  149. Jordan J

    Here we go:
    It was a Sunday morning just as any other. I had woken up to the vibration of my phone beckoning me to open my eyes for the new day. Needless to say, I don’t really much like my phone in the morning. I sat up and stretched my arms above my head like in the movies to seem dramatic- an emotion I thrive at betraying. As I followed the normal Sunday routine of jumping into the shower, brushing my teeth, and throwing on some fresh clothes for the day, I began to feel uneasy.
    “Oh no.” I thought, ” I’m going to a new church!”
    Now to any normal person this would seem like no big deal, but believe you me, it was, in fact, a BIG deal. New people freak me out especially in a church setting. It’s like a bunch of try hards stuck in one room feeding on any fresh meat that might have wandered off the beaten path…well, to me at least.
    I was in the car now with my grandmother, who so graciously decided to bring me along with her, at the front wheel. Left and right there was a never ending vortex of strange sights and new people.
    “Where are we?” I mumbled silently under my breath. We couldn’t have gotten that far from my house and yet, we were well into new terrain. It had only been about thirty minutes when we pulled up to the lovely place of worship. Well, I wouldn’t call it “lovely”. It was located in the back roads of the inner city, where I suppose the head of the church decided to rent out a building. As we made are way in I suddenly felt myself being stampeded by compliments and greetings that I never bothered to take into careful consideration. I don’t know these people. How would I know if they’re being sincere or not? Maybe, I’m just awkward.
    Once the music began to bounce off of each of the four walls surrounding the congregation, I couldn’t bare it anymore. I wanted OUT. I could barely muster more than a few simple phrases and kept a badly etched smile plastered across my face the entire time. I was a happy face swimming in a pool of discomfort and watching eyes. The whole situation was unbearable. I even considered trying to enjoy myself at one point, but all I wanted was to be back in the comfort of my own home. Luckily, I soon got my wish and was back on the road again.

    Sad to say, this moment wouldn’t be soon relived.

    Reply
  150. Briana

    When I first started Middle School, I felt very out of place. Walking down that long auditorium, which reminded me of Fifth grade graduation. Seeing different people, seeing a new beginning it was a lot to face. While I was walking this teacher with this check-board asked me my name and I told her. She told me which class I was in and which row I was, so I followed her orders leading myself to this teacher who had a bunch of paper. I was like OH GOD NO! Right then and there I knew I wasn’t in that class. I definitely wasn’t mainstreamed. While walking away I asked a different teacher in fear of looking stupid which row am I in? A cherry bright voice said, “Right here darling!” And I followed it to see the teacher of my dreams. To see my old classmates in Elementary school. To see this is a new beginning for me.

    Reply
  151. hmarieb9

    “Children, boys and girls, we have a new student. Margaret, would you please go sit
    in the empty seat in the third row?”

    I smiled my automatic please-be-nice-to-me smile and walked quickly, head down, to my new seat. This class seemed huge. Twenty-six staring faces all attached to similar looking blue-grey uniforms and white blouses. Once again, I was the new kid in school.

    My father was in the military, and every year like the Christmas infant, I arrived on the doorstep of a new educational dwelling. No glorious angels or wise men to pay me homage though. Instead I would be doing the best I could to figure out the pecking order and then paying homage to the reigning clique. I had learned this survival tactic in my previous years.

    Miss Brown, my new sixth grade teacher, returned to the lesson at hand – order of
    operations. Gradually, the children’s eyes left me and settled on her presentation.
    I pulled out a notebook and busied myself with taking notes about parenthesis, exponents (what is an exponent?!) and so on. When all heads seemed bent in similar
    concentration, I glanced around the room eyeing the charts, the math posters,
    the bookcases full of textbooks, the pencil sharpener (good to know) and the
    teacher’s desk (stay far away).

    Next, I observed my classmates. Unfortunately, as I turned my head to the left, my neighbor had turned her head to the right. Caught! She snickered quietly under her breath and rolled her eyes. Great! I looked at her notebook page and saw it was
    covered in doodles of cats and dogs chasing each other. I giggled. My neighbor followed my eyes and turned to the previous page – more cats and dogs! Only this time, they were chasing their own tails. I giggled again.

    Miss Brown cleared her throat, her eyes on my neighbor and me. “Did everyone get ALL these notes down?”

    Ducking my head behind the red-headed boy sitting in front of me, I finished writing
    down the information. Luckily I understood the math and was able to work on the practice worksheet with satisfaction.

    The red-headed boy in front of me stretched back, way back, until I couldn’t see my
    paper. Then he yawned loudly and asked to go to the boys’ room. I looked at my
    neighbor. She rolled her eyes again. Her warm brown eyes made me wonder if perhaps she would be a potential ally. My neighbor held up her worksheet. This one
    was covered in little puppies with large, sad eyes, begging for a treat. I shrugged my shoulders, and she reached for my erasure. Her own tooth-marked pencil’s
    erasure had been completely annihilated. I handed over my erasure and smiled.
    She rolled her eyes again. Then she grinned. Not at all a bad beginning for this time around.

    Reply
  152. Simon Kelly

    Criticism welcome! Thanks in advance for taking the time to read this.

    The party started at ten thirty, so I left home at eleven. I didn’t want to go, and I surely didn’t want to be the first one there. I always seem to be the earliest out of everyone. I was convinced by Kristine to go to the party. She said there would be food, drinks and good people, but I didn’t know anyone who was going to be there except for her.

    I walked into the apartment around eleven fifteen; I got lost outside but eventually found my way. Inside, Kristine was cooking; she even had on an apron. She looked like a cartoon of a suburban housewife from the projects in the fifties. Not like herself at all. As much as she contrasted with what I thought of her, she blended into the apartment. All the furniture and accents pulled together to fool you into being in the presence of well thought out, creative design, but somehow in all its order the apartment looked skewed. Almost like the set of your favorite TV show, and I was the fourth wall. I was simultaneously a part of and detached from this fantasy.

    “Hey! You made it!” Kristine said as she smiled and opened her arms to hug me.

    “Of course I did!” I said, trying to emote comfort with my inflection, “It smells great in here. What are we having?”

    “Tacos. I’m finishing up the meat now. Sit down! Put on some music.”

    Did I mention I had somehow managed to be the first guest to arrive? Why can’t I ever release control and just let myself be late?

    I fumbled for the remote and searched for music. Whatever I chose would inadvertently be an exclamation of my private thoughts. They would be conveyed in the subtlety of the key or the tempo. It was powerfully overwhelming so I pretended not to know how it worked. Caught in the act, Kristine’s friend Melanie entered the room. She, too, resembled a disfigured Stepford Wife.

    I had remembered seeing her once before, at Kristine’s birthday dinner. She was harassing the waiter about why it was taking so long to get the food. She seemed to transfigure into a creature with three heads, each with a different grievance. She was demure and poised when she was sitting still and listening to the conversation, but when she went to speak, everything else seemed to shrivel up and fall away. All that was left was her and her disdain.

    Melanie and I exchanged hellos and she proceeded to ask me what I thought of the dress she was wearing. It looked like it had been vacuum sealed by Satan; it hugged her in all the wrong places. Don’t get me wrong, she was in great shape, but it twisted and mangled her figure. She more resembled a young girl dressed up as a Bond vixen than a young woman hosting her first adult party. And don’t even get me started on the icky color.

    “It’s beautiful,” I lied. “Is it designer?”

    “Are you kidding? No, but it was expensive.”

    “I can tell.”

    I should have stayed in, luxuriating in the comforts of my own home where every piece of furniture and accessory was actually set in its right place. I should have been in my Monet instead of being trapped inside of this disfigured Dali.

    Reply
  153. Frank Faine

    This is my somewhat edited response to the first prompt. Comments and feedback are welcome. Thanks

    I met him at The Mermaid Room, a seedy gay bar in downtown Miami, just
    one block over from the YMCA. Go figure. After getting my drink I ambled over to the jukebox. He was standing there; his eyes reflected the glaring, garish neon light. Intent muttering under his breath, he thought aloud, ‘Strangers in the Night’, that’ll be a good one”. He plunked in a quarter and pushed the buttons.

    Glancing at him and then around the bar, my stomach tightened. I gripped my glass a little tighter, my mind a whirl of questions. “How did I get here?” “What was I looking for?”

    As these questions kept piling up, he looked up.His rugged, handsome face, model –like, a bit past its prime, smiled at tme. We began to strike up a conversation, exchanging the required opening lines first exchanged in bars.Things like our names, what we did for a living, what brought us here tonight,the usual wisecracks about we really didn’t belong here.

    But,something about his gaze, his sexy, unkempt hair, the basic uniform of faded
    jeans and tight white tee shirt beckoned me beyond lingering uneasiness. Without thinking I told him I was a college senior, home on summer break, just out for a night on the town and decided to stop here. He shared he was recently discharged from the army, was a model, but was between jobs.

    I don’t remember how our conversation drifted there, but he invited me back to
    his place, just north of 79th street. Getting off the bus, since neither of drove that, night, we walked around the corner of the Midtown Federal Bank building. Unlocking a side door he motioned me up narrow stairs to his cramped studio apartment.

    Flipping on the pole lamp by the door, he motioned over to the unmade bed over against two partially open windows to the street below. Sitting next to him, holding
    hands, backs to the windows; fragments of our separate tales began to emerge.
    Pointing to a faded snapshot on a nearby rickety dresser, his visceral grief of
    this lost love hung like tattered curtains as he squeezed my hand. I tried to unpack my struggle between family obligation and my sexual desires as I started to rub his leg. Secretly I prayed each of us could physically escape into the other, and leave these stories behind.

    Abruptly,he took my right hand from his leg and holding it in his left again. Announcing
    in a quiet voice, “I’m lonely, not horny”. Reaching under his pillow with his free hand, he pulled out a pistol,waving it around at the picture and toward him. “This has been my companion now that Doug is gone”,he added almost whispering.

    I can’t remember how long I froze in panic at this surreal scene. Sliding the pistol back under his pillow,dropping my hand he stared at me. I took this as my cue to leave. Pushing myself off the bed, I stammered, “Maybe, I’ll run into you again the next time I’m at the bar”.
    “Perhaps you will,” he said.

    And run I did for the two blocks to get the next bus home.

    Reply
  154. Valeria

    So here it goes my first attempt at memoir writing, thanks for the space I will be reading and commenting too!

    Not in my shoes

    I had been spending my first days settling
    down in this city new to me. Cleaning up a sub-let apartment, buying furniture
    and building it, supplying myself with proper winter gear for this weather, all
    in the aim for getting ready and feeling in place at my first business meeting
    in New York.

    And there I was, the subway station was
    farther away than I expected from the meeting place and it was probably the
    worst weather since I arrived. It had been snowing very hard and just that day
    began to rain and rise temperature. The street corners were flooded by the
    melted snow and ice was still at stake on the sidewalks making it slippery and
    harder to give each step. But this was not enough: in my attempt to dress not
    only warm but according to the circumstance of a business meeting (never before
    experienced), I also bought high hilled ankle booties (which later I learnt are
    not meant for winter in NYC). I thought I would be ok on them, but not in such
    weather and with the natural stress of that day.

    I took the walk as a meditation, each step
    was a challenge and meanwhile … sweating was not an option. I was lucky to be
    on time for a slow walk, which took me actually half an hour to get from Union
    Square to the Highline, under the rain.

    I did get myself an umbrella on the way,
    and just before going in to the meeting I stopped under a roof to clean my
    glasses and blow my watery nose… using a shop window to align myself, putting
    my hairs in order after getting rid of my hat.

    God, if at all existing, knows how I looked
    as I entered the office, but luckily enough that woman was kind and patient,
    she reminded me the mother of some primary school friend: they look at you with
    sweetness and care.

    As I began to get rid of jacket, pullover and
    backpack, She offered me something to drink, to which I made my first mistake
    by saying yes. Once on the table that glass of water had to be touched, and I
    could barely swallow my own saliva since all of my attention was on performing
    the gentle, intelligent, practical and moderated sales representative of this
    real estate marketing provider I work for.

    But the glass was on the table and it was
    part of the performance to not leave anything unattended, so when I thought I
    could handle it I did take the glass of water and … no way, I didn´t mange to
    coordinate hand and mouth and water was dripping off through me towards the
    table. I naturally took the glass away as if nothing had happened but it was
    obvious that my hands and chin were wet, so I simply apologized… and she,
    playing her kindest role said: – no problem please!, which I completely
    believed, as I normally do.

    I still have some cards to play with this
    client and I tend to comfort myself thinking she probably appreciated my
    spontaneity…

    But never again shall I accept any drinks
    or wear new shoes at a business meeting.

    VP

    Reply
  155. Valeria Primost

    So here it goes my first attempt at memoir writing, thanks for the space I will be reading and commenting too!

    Not in my shoes

    I had been spending my first days settling
    down in this city new to me. Cleaning up a sub-let apartment, buying furniture
    and building it, supplying myself with proper winter gear for this weather, all
    in the aim for getting ready and feeling in place at my first business meeting
    in New York.

    And there I was, the subway station was
    farther away than I expected from the meeting place and it was probably the
    worst weather since I arrived. It had been snowing very hard and just that day
    began to rain and rise temperature. The street corners were flooded by the
    melted snow and ice was still at stake on the sidewalks making it slippery and
    harder to give each step. But this was not enough: in my attempt to dress not
    only warm but according to the circumstance of a business meeting (never before
    experienced), I also bought high hilled ankle booties (which later I learnt are
    not meant for winter in NYC). I thought I would be ok on them, but not in such
    weather and with the natural stress of that day.

    I took the walk as a meditation, each step
    was a challenge and meanwhile … sweating was not an option. I was lucky to be
    on time for a slow walk, which took me actually half an hour to get from Union
    Square to the Highline, under the rain.

    I did get myself an umbrella on the way,
    and just before going in to the meeting I stopped under a roof to clean my
    glasses and blow my watery nose… using a shop window to align myself, putting
    my hairs in order after getting rid of my hat.

    God, if at all existing, knows how I looked
    as I entered the office, but luckily enough that woman was kind and patient,
    she reminded me the mother of some primary school friend: they look at you with
    sweetness and care.

    As I began to get rid of jacket, pullover and
    backpack, She offered me something to drink, to which I made my first mistake
    by saying yes. Once on the table that glass of water had to be touched, and I
    could barely swallow my own saliva since all of my attention was on performing
    the gentle, intelligent, practical and moderated sales representative of this
    real estate marketing provider I work for.

    But the glass was on the table and it was
    part of the performance to not leave anything unattended, so when I thought I
    could handle it I did take the glass of water and … no way, I didn´t mange to
    coordinate hand and mouth and water was dripping off through me towards the
    table. I naturally took the glass away as if nothing had happened but it was
    obvious that my hands and chin were wet, so I simply apologized… and she,
    playing her kindest role said: – no problem please!, which I completely
    believed, as I normally do.

    I still have some cards to play with this
    client and I tend to comfort myself thinking she probably appreciated my
    spontaneity…

    But never again shall I accept any drinks
    or wear new shoes at a business meeting.

    VP

    Reply
    • Valeria Primost

      I really look forwards to critics! anybody our there? best.v

  156. Virginia Winterstorm

    The place I felt awkward and out of place is when my immediate family are all in the same room. We are blood related. I given birth to them yet they have come strangers to since they have become adults.
    I am the elephant in the room. The atmosphere is filled with fear as to what someone might say that would trigger a bad chain of reactions.
    I feel as I do not belong any more. I fee as I have been pushed out and pushed back. They have out grown me and succumb to the mentality that when you are older than them, you don’t know anything. We know what you are going to say or do based on who you were when we were little.
    Granted, when they were little they were under the influence of a generation who thought as they do now.
    Strangers, co-workers, long distance relations, you would expect to be in a position of awkwardness and out of place. The people don’t really know how your are or care as much as the immediate family is intended or expect to know you. The strangers and coo-workers giving you a welcoming atmosphere vs. the family.
    The immediate family surroundings should be accepting, encouraging; discipline to help you stay on the right path and grow. Setting your foundation for when you go out into the world that will make you feel awkward and out of place.
    Though I consistently feel this way, I truly try to find that happy place where we can laugh ask questions without judgment. However, I leave an emotional protective wall up to block the negative vibes.

    Reply
  157. Lisa Dean

    My first go at presenting my writing on this site! I read the prompt from the eBook which recommended a 30 minute writing period instead of 15, so my entry is longer than others. I’m looking forward to feedback!

    The car seats smell of stale sweat and musty cologne. Dewy early mornings usually evoke a sense of hope for the hours that will follow. Today is different. The taxi speeds along city roads. Visions pass outside the window: palm trees, busted store fronts, and dirty buildings with window air conditioners that threaten to leap from their lofty heights.

    I open the map on my iPhone to watch the blue dot draw closer to my destination, and I look uneasily at the back of the driver’s head, hoping that he does know where he’s going. The traffic light blinks green, indicating a soon change to yellow and red. I breathe a sigh of relief as the driver moves into the left-hand turn lane. I’m almost there. Indian men lie on the grass beside the road, faces covered, each clad in a blue long-sleeved coverall indicating their duties as street custodians. In the suffocating heat, I look at them with sympathy.

    The taxi turns, crossing the road, and stops. Adding a tip to my fare, I pay the thankful driver. I exit the car and adjust my t-shirt, suddenly conscious of my bare arms. As I walk to the entrance, the sidelong glances and questioning looks are palpable.

    Entering the building, my eyes shift across the scene, seeking someone to help. To my left, rows of chairs bolted to the floor face me. I meet the eyes of men—all men. To my right, a security officer leans against a table but offers no welcoming words or assistance. Beyond him is a doorway with a sign that reads “waiting room: men” followed by indecipherable arabic characters. I walk forward across the dingy tile floor and approach the centrally-located desk. Two men talk across the desk in arabic. While waiting, I pull out my papers and check for the third time since leaving my apartment—do I have everything?

    The man behind the counter is wearing a white garment that covers him from neck to ankle and shoulder to wrist. A white scarf adorns his head. He turns to me and smiles. Thank God he’s smiling. I present my papers and tell him my purpose.

    “I’m here for the medical tests required for residency.”
    “Do you have copies of your passport and temporary visa?”
    “No,” I hesitate, “just the originals.”
    “He will make copies for you,” he says pointing to a young man. “One dirham for each copy. Then take your papers upstairs.”
    “Thank you.”

    I turn aside to the boy who is presently surrounded by outstretched hands offering papers. I wait until the crowd is gone, and he accepts my money and documents without making eye contact.

    Copies in hand, I find the wide staircase and reach the women’s waiting area. I take a number and pick a seat. The room of 100 chairs is nearly full meaning my wait won’t be a short one. I hear sharp vocals behind me and turn to find that a man is being prevented from entering the room; he’s likely in search of his wife or maid. I settle into my seat and pull a book from my purse. I can relax for a time, for now.

    Reply
  158. Cat

    Someone get me out of here. I should be having fun. Everything about this situation is angled toward good times. It’s summer. I’m in Beijing. I’m on a rooftop. There is a hot guy playing the guitar. But there is a mist of unease. I shoot my friend a sideways glance – she feels the same, I can tell by her focus on the door instead of the hot musician guy with the long hair whom she would usually have been gawping at.

    It’s not that I don’t want to meet new people on this trip, but there’s just something about this crowd, you know? Something untouchable, something Abercrombie, something that screams “we are so comfortable with ourselves, why not join us?” But I can’t, not these guys. They’re Just Not Me. I know it instinctively. No one has made a self-deprecating joke or even had a brush with sarcasm since we’ve been sitting here. There have been at least 3 song requests for songs I have never heard of. And everyone is doing that serious head nodding thing that people who take music too seriously do.

    One guy wearing too many fabric bracelets asks me if I’d like another beer. I say yes a little too enthusiastically. The hyperactive Jewish guy lights up a joint. They pass it around delicately, dragging, squinting. Aren’t we all having a great time? My phone rings – it’s the nervous girl from our hostel wanting to join us. I send two of our ‘gang’ to meet her, as if I have known these people, and indeed her, for more than 3 hours.

    That’s the thing about travelling. Friendships are forged hastily, hungrily, with the vague hope of shaping a life-changing experience, or at least an amusing anecdote for the folks back home. So the guy you met yesterday who shares your bunk becomes your life-long companion to onlookers. The woman you sat next to on the overnight bus? She’ll be the one explaining your allergies to the doctor pumping your stomach after a heavy night.

    More often than not, exploring the unknown can be life-changing. But sometimes, you just wind up perched on a precarious stool on a precarious rooftop swaying precariously to music played by a guy whose grasp of a tune is for the most part…precarious.

    Reply
  159. Cat

    Someone get me out of here. I should be having fun. Everything about this situation is angled toward good times. It’s summer. I’m in Beijing. I’m on a rooftop. There is a hot guy playing the guitar. But there is a wave of unease. I shoot my friend a sideways glance – she feels the same, I can tell by her focus on the door instead of the hot musician guy with the long hair whom she would usually have been gawping at.

    It’s not that I don’t want to meet new people on this trip, but there’s just something about this crowd, you know? Something untouchable, something Abercrombie, something that screams “we are so comfortable with ourselves, why not join us?” But I can’t, not these guys. They’re Just Not Me. I know it instinctively. No one has made a self-deprecating joke or even had a brush with sarcasm since we’ve been sitting here. There have been at least 3 requests for songs I have never heard of. And everyone is doing that serious head nodding thing that people who take music too seriously do.

    One guy wearing too many fabric bracelets asks me if I’d like another beer. I say yes a little too enthusiastically. The hyperactive Jewish guy lights up a joint. They pass it around delicately. Dragging, squinting. Aren’t we all having a great time? My phone rings – it’s the nervous girl from our hostel wanting to join us. I send two of our ‘gang’ to meet her, as if I have known these people, and indeed her, for more than 3 hours.

    That’s the thing about travelling. Friendships are forged hastily, hungrily, with the vague hope of forming s life-changing experience, or at least an amusing anecdote for the folks back home. So the guy you met yesterday who shares your bunk becomes your life-long companion to onlookers. The woman you sat next to on the overnight bus? She’ll be the one explaining your allergies to the doctor pumping your stomach after a heavy night.

    More often than not, exploring the unknown can be life-changing. But sometimes, you just wind up perched on a precarious stool on a precarious rooftop swaying precariously to music played by a guy whose grasp of a tune is for the most part…precarious.

    Reply
  160. Devan

    This is my first time ever doing this. Feedback is appreciated. Sorry if it’s chalk full of typos and run on sentences. 🙂
    I look a round. I don’t look like these kids. I don’t feel like these
    kids. I suppose we aren’t kids. We’re young adults. I hate that phrase
    young adult. Either you’re an adult or your still a child. In my mind
    there is no in between. Except for maybe right now, and the inbetween
    is me, feeling awkward.

    I desperately wish I hadn’t worn pink. Why did I think that was a good
    choice this morning. All the other counselors look like they spend
    their life eating bark in a tent somewhere. They’re all wearing
    Jersulalem cruisers and pants made from the same material as
    parachutes. For some reason I thought pink under armour was a good
    choice. Just because I bought it at Dicks sporting goods does not make
    me outdoorsy.

    I’m already getting glances as I sit criss cross applesauce on the dry
    brown grass. It scratches the backside of my thighs and I wish that my
    shorts were longer. The sun over head is sweltering. I wish they would
    just let us go to our cabins, that way I can be alone, and people won’t
    be staring at me anymore. They know I don’t belong here, they know I’m
    a fraud.

    I’m not at a university like most of these “young adults.” I’m at a
    community college. I’m not a tee totaler that thinks drinking and sex
    are a one way ticket to hell like most of these kids. I wear bikinis, I
    smoke Marb red 100’s and I party with my friends on weekends.

    Crap. This is going to be a disaster. Any minute now they’re going to sniff me out and declare me unfit to care for children.

    That brown haired woman who looks about 10 years older than everybody
    else is already looking at me suspicously. In fact, oh no, she’s
    getting up to come over here. I squirm, my arms pits feel extra sweaty.
    Surrpetiously I give them a sniff. It’s that awful stress sweat that
    smells worse than any other kind.

    Oh thank God, someone intercepted her. Some extra wholesome looking guy
    with brown hair, birkenstocks and a WWJD braclet. I feel her eyes leave
    my face and as they do my whole body relaxes. I heave a sigh, blowing
    the hair out of my eyes thats sticking to my forehead. Whew. That was
    close.

    Reply
  161. Martin

    First post:

    I sat in a yellow cab as it headed north. Perspiration moistened the underarms of my polo shirt as I looked out the window upon my new neighborhood. The sight was bleak. Tattered Storefronts and worn apartment buildings dominated the landscape.

    The cab reached my destination and I swiped my credit card to pay for the trip. My right leg began to shake as I sat waiting for the payment to process. The transaction completed and I took one final breath in the air-conditioned car. My shirt was already drenched as I opened the door and entered the June heat.

    The sun beat down on my pale skin as I grabbed my two suitcases from the trunk and carried them towards my new home. As I walked, I made eye contact with an elderly Dominican man sitting in a folding chair that was expertly positioned on the street corner. He looked tired and beaten down, much like the buildings of the neighborhood. His soft brown eyes hardened as they connected with my blue pair. He held his gaze as my eyes shot towards a nearby fire hydrant in search of refuge.

    I accelerated my pace as more pairs of eyes fixated upon me. My pasty skin reddened and my heart began convulsing. Beads of sweat formed on my neck and scampered down my back. I approached my new house and attempted to open the gate. It was locked. For the first time in my life, I was a minority. For the first time in my life, I was acutely aware of the color of my skin.

    I was stuck in the Bronx, with nowhere to go.

    Reply
    • Madlen

      Having been a foreigner in every place I’ve lived for the last 20 years, this really caught my attention. I know what it’s like to know that everyone is watching you even when you can’t see them doing it. You did a good job of describing how uncomfortable it can be to do something as mundane as getting out of a taxi and walking up to your own front door, and the big question that this evokes, which is how much of that tenseness comes from the outside world’s reaction to us and how much from our reaction to them.

  162. jessica

    Very good question. There are two answers. One is quite simplistic and one is developing. Taking the prompt at its word, I sought to view my experience through an object that was in the room. Since the curtain was the largest thing in my line of view, I chose to make frequent reference to it. As the scene began to unfold the curtain became more than just a hospital curtain to me. It was a theatrical metaphore where the ER becomes the stage, the nurses and such players, and myself a backstage actor waiting for my cue. If I should have continued through my whole experience in the hospital we would still find the curtain playing a roll everywhere I went, sometimes blocking me out and sometimes hiding me, but always there.

    Reply
  163. Meghan

    Great points, Claire! Thank you so much for the feedback!

    Reply
  164. Madlen

    I can totally relate to this experience, and I like the way you write about it. I love the awkward tension running throughout the piece that just builds up until the end, and then lingers. I can’t help but want to know more about the character and the circumstances.

    Reply
    • Claire

      Thank you for taking the time to give me such encouraging feedback Madlen.

  165. Madlen

    Love the ending because I never expected it. Up to then the whole piece had a ‘happy ending’ vibe and I thought it was going to end with a group hug. The understatement with which you present the complete change in atmosphere, when contrasted with the detailed preamble, is very powerful.

    Reply
    • A. Royall

      Thank you, Madlen! I sure thought it was going to end with a group hug too. You win some, you loose some- Ha!

  166. A. Royall

    Thank you, Claire! It was the church I attended that brought the silence. I should have made it more clear in the beginning that the support group was offered by a different church than I attended.

    Reply
  167. Kaitlyn Winterton

    Thank you Claire. It was really something to attend and now I love what I do and I love helping people!

    Reply
  168. maya c

    Claire, thank you so much for giving me my first feedback on my first share ever. It’s great to hear your words of encouragement – thank you!

    Reply
  169. Kiki Stamatiou

    (First Prompt) Upon Our Arrival, Everyone Who Entered The House Was Stamped
    By Kiki Stamatiou a. k. a. Joanna Maharis

    It was back during the fall of 1990. My college roommate and some others on the floor of our dorm hall were excited to go out for the evening. They asked me to come along. even though I was hesitant, I agreed to go out with them. Like them, I got dressed up semi formal, wearing some blue dress pants and a colorful knitted sweater I bought
    at Hudson’s two weeks prior to that when I went shopping with my brother and my cousins.

    My college room mate and some others got into the car belonging to the boyfriend of one of the girls on our floor. He drove us to the party.

    My stomach was in knots the entire time.

    Upon our arrival, everyone who entered the house was stamped, so those who gave the party knew who belonged at the party, and who didn’t.

    We went downstairs into the basement. The folks I came with went off talking to some other people at the party, while I ended up sitting on a seat by myself, sipping my bear from a plastic cup, feeling bored and anxious.

    This guy came over to me and sat down next to me, discussing his bodily functions. He says to me, “When it happens, it happens.”

    “I guess so,” I said, while getting up and walking away from him.

    On the other side of the room were some foolish guys who tipped each other upside down, taking turns on after the other, guzzling beer from a huge keg, clapping and shouting, “Go! Go! Go! Go! Go!”

    Moving right along, I walked up to the corner where my room mate and a couple of the girls from our dormitory floor where talking to a couple of guys. The one girl hung onto the one guy with her arm, while holding her cup of beer in the opposite hand, saying,
    “That’s so cool. I never knew anyone can go that fast on a moped, or a motor cycle, without crashing.”

    “Why would anyone want to drive above the speed limit in the first place. First off, it’s not smart, because accidents can occur. And second, a person can either end up killing themselves, or worst yet, they’d end up killing someone else in the process for their foolishness,” I shouted to be heard above the noise of the loud music and their voices.

    “I believe the young lady was talking to me,” said the loud mouthed punk, while dangling his arm around her with one arm, and clumsily holding his plastic cup of beer with the other. Clearly, he and the girl were drunk.

    It made me wonder why any of them would conduct themselves in such a manner. Although I took a few sips of beer at night, it wasn’t much in my system where I’d be drunk. I approached my room mate who was talking to some other people nearby. She wasn’t drunk, although she was half way through with her cup of beer and headed over
    to the keg to get some more. Noticing me behind her, she said, “What do you think of the party so far? Are you having a great time?”

    “It’s alright. I appreciate you and the other girls inviting me and asking me to come along. Believe me, I do. It’s just that some of the guys here are strange. This one guy approached me, and started discussing his bodily functions. I wasn’t impressed, so I got up and walk away,” I sighed while taking a sip of my beer.

    Getting some beer from the keg, she said, “I’m so sorry. It’s obvious he’s an idiot, and most likely drunk. Some guys have no class,” while filling her plastic cup, and walking back to the crowd she was socializing with earlier.

    I went back to the chair I was sitting at when I first entered the basement, seeing as how the disgusting young man who talked to me about his bodily functions had already left from that spot, and I started taking some more sips of my beer while observing the rest of the crowd.

    I thought to myself, What the heck am I doing here? Clearly, I didn’t want to come here tonight, because it didn’t feel right, at least not for me. It just isn’t my thing to be around folks who were drinking, especially to be around those who drank to get drunk.

    © Copyright, Kiki Stamatiou, 2015

    Reply
  170. Patty

    Feeling uncomfortable in situations has been a part of my life since childhood. Puzzled as to why I would repeatedly put myself through the experience of feeling uncomfortable? Puzzled as to why it never gets easier? It does get easier for some situations. Like when you live in a town/city for many years. You visit the same market, stores, post office, bank, restaurants, and coffee shop. You get to know the workers and they get to know you. That first experience in a new place fades away to familiarity.
    I was the oldest, so there were many times that I experienced feeling uncomfortable in situations during those years. Most of us experience the first day like the first day of kindergarten, where you are separated from all that is familiar and safe. There is another adult, if you are lucky is nice, but still this adult is a stranger. Being that kindergartener is scary, you are expected to do things that you have never tried before and follow a routine that does not match up to what you did at home. Its is all strange and like other times, it becomes familiar and your teacher is no longer a stranger.
    Many times as the oldest I was asked by my parents to check the deepness of a river or lake just because I was the oldest and knew how to swim. We camped a lot so this happened many times. This does not seem so bad, now add in a fear of snakes and things that might crawl or swim by your leg. Those times were very uncomfortable. I would keep telling myself that there is nothing there, there could not be anything cause there is too much noise and splashing. Then I feel something brush past my leg. My heart starts racing, I twist around, then back and forth, searching the water. Nothing is there. I am always looking till after a time the brush on my leg is forgotten as I play and swim with my sisters.
    Later years it was that first interview, first time leaving home, first job. These all can be uncomfortable. You worry about the impression you make, will they like you, how you look. Your mind is racing with questions and wondering what you will say and then there is that moment when your mind goes blank and you have been asked a question. You panic inside, hoping that your outward composure does not give you away. You feel yourself growing warmer, the sweat building up under your arms. You hope that your sweating is not visible to the other person This is how I felt many times at anything new that I did for the first time. I could not stop life and what it threw at me.
    I would continue to hope that the nervousness would be less and if it did not, I knew I would get through it. These times are what many of us go through. My sharing of the testing the depths and feeling something brush my leg is just an example of the physical that I and many others might experience when that first new and unfamiliar situation comes up. You would think it would get easier. Nope, it does not.

    Reply
  171. KShu

    This is my first time doing something like this, ever! Ok here goes…

    My tongue felt thick and immovable. Had I ever been able to
    talk? My mind glazed and my interest in making an effort evaporated. Shame set
    in and I wanted the interaction to be over with, now. I smiled a half smile,
    handed over a bill that was surely large enough to cover the total, and avoided
    eye contact with the clerk. She asked me something again, and all I could do
    was apologize and say I don’t understand in my hesitant Chinese. Finally, with
    my groceries bagged and my face blazing—both from the overzealous heater and the
    stain of my own inability—I walked out of the supermarket into the heavy but
    cool night air.

    In the weak lamplight, I was still obviously a foreigner,
    but no one could read my embarrassment at feeling useless. We’d only lived in
    Taiwan for a few weeks, and I was learning the language slowly, but the
    experience of being almost childlike in my helplessness was entirely new and
    entirely unwelcome. As the very busy mother of three young children, and still
    recovering from an adrenaline high spanning years of transition and trauma, I
    knew logically that I needed to give myself time to adjust. Language learning
    doesn’t happen overnight, and even my national friends told me I was being too
    hard on myself. “They are probably more ashamed than you, for not knowing
    English,” explained a Taiwanese co-worker.

    My mind snapped back to the present and I breathed in
    slowly, reminding myself for the hundredth time that my goal in life isn’t
    actually to be perfect. But how does anyone believe that in their heart?

    My next errand in Zhuwei, while my daughter was in her dance
    class and the boys were back home with their dad, was to check for crafty
    supplies at what we called the dongxi store, or stuff store. Three levels of a tightly
    crammed blend of junk and treasures made my heart sing, for a reason I couldn’t
    quite place. Maybe it felt like home to find a wide variety of things in one
    place, in a country with a separate market for every category of goods. Or maybe
    I was just enjoying a shared bond between myself and the Taiwanese: the love for
    whimsical, ridiculously cute things.

    I made my purchases, feeling the sting of yet another stilted
    conversation, although this time I realized the clerk was asking if I had a
    bag. What was the word she used for bag? I would ask my language helper on
    Monday. At least I knew “you meiyou” : “do you have?” Maybe I could do this.
    Maybe the entire city of Taipei wasn’t actually staring at me in disgust and
    wishing I would go back where I came from.

    I started meandering back to the dance class. As I glanced
    over the cityscape, backlit by the reddish glow of millions of lights that
    never go out in this metropolitan Asian city, I felt my heart lift with tentative
    joy, because despite my insecurities, this was becoming home.

    Reply
  172. Alex Schiffer

    This is my first response to this first prompt, written without editing. I don’t feel like it conveys a lot of awkwardness, but that’s why I’m practicing. 🙂 I’m excited to be a part of this community!

    “Where are we supposed to turn?”

    I fumbled with the directions, flipping through two sheets
    before finding the one I wanted. “Right here, turn right.”

    Dad was going faster than I would’ve liked, especially with
    all of my stuff crammed into the backseat, ready to slide forward and knock us
    both unconscious. He jerked the wheel and we pulled onto another street. I had
    no idea where we were supposed to go. The directions took us to the university,
    but then where?

    “There’s a sign that says information,” I said. “Go there.”

    He obliged, and we walked up to the desk to find a woman
    checking her nails. She pointed out where my dorm was and said that we didn’t
    need a parking pass for today. Ten minutes later, we finally arrived at my
    dorm. Kids swarmed around the complex carrying their luggage. They’re all in the same boat as you… all as
    nervous as you. Somehow, this didn’t console me in the slightest.

    After getting my key and checking in, we approached my
    building. I braced myself as we entered. My
    roommates are going to be potheads and partyers. I’ll never get any studying
    done. My room was tiny and completely empty. Maybe they won’t show…. Then I’ll have the whole place to myself.

    They did show, and it was like something out of the movies.
    One of them wore thick glasses and spoke of nothing but computer games and
    math. The other wore a cut-off tee and immediately started talking about going
    clubbing and raving. What am I supposed to say? I have nothing in common with
    either of these people.

    Reply
  173. MAHickman

    I am new at this but really wanted to get some feedback on my writing. This is unedited.

    I knew he had gone to the hospital, so I was expecting the
    call when it came in late last night.

    “Hello” I answer a little too quickly.

    “Hey” he replied in a shaky whisper.

    “Are you ok? How is…” I started

    “He…oh God…he’s gone. Just gone.” He sputtered out

    He wasn’t making any sense. “Gone?” I questioned
    breathlessly as it started to sink in.

    “My dad…He’s gone, he’s dead” He clarified as his breathing
    picked up.

    “I’m on my way, I will meet you at your place” I instructed.
    I knew he wasn’t capable of a clear thought so I made the choice for him.
    Weather it was right or wrong, I have no clue but I was not letting him be
    alone the night his father passed away.

    The sun is too bright, much too cheery for a day like today.
    It stings my eyes, still puffy and dry as sandpaper from such a restless night.
    Trying to make sense of it all, his father was still young. Taken so unexpectedly,
    just some every day mundane thing, an allergy attack so severe it shattered
    lives. I look over at him as he drives, holding his hand knowing full well he
    is not here with me, he has mentally traveled across time, lost in a memory
    that is helping dull the pain if only briefly, just a reprieve, a breath. We
    pull up to his Grandmas house and he takes a deep breath as he runs his hand
    done his face, opens the door as he puts his glasses back on. I gently squeeze
    his hand and the warm spring breeze flows by in silent caress as if it knows
    today is not one for singing birds and musical leaves. As he opens the front
    door I swallow to try and dislodge the pit of rocks that have taken up
    residents in my stomach. As we step in through the entryway, I suck in a
    breath, the despair and heartache in the air is as thick as an early morning
    fog on a fall day rolling in off the Pacific Ocean. It’s suffocating; I take in
    as much air as I can. His mother and grandma shuffle over to us and I give them
    a gentle hug. Then they both grab him onto him, hugging him saying “it will be
    ok” and he just nods, staying strong, because that is all he has said all
    morning “I am all they have left, I have to be the strong one for them” and so
    he stays strong, all 3 of them nodding stern bobs to each other, it will be ok.

    “Joe” I hear a shaky voice call is name from behind me. I
    turn and see his little sister stand up from the couch. That’s when he drops my
    hand as she runs over to him and collapses into his arms. She is only a couple
    years younger than me but in this moment she is just a toddler holding onto her
    big brother who chases everything scary away and makes the world right
    again. His mother crumples to the love
    seat next me, in these heart wrenching sobs at the site of her children’s world
    shattering.

    We have only been dating a few months, and we are still so
    young, me 21, him 22. However, I do so care for this boy in front of me that is
    so desperately trying to hold his sister together while losing his center gravity.
    I want to be here for him, be his grounding force tethering him to this world
    in this time his universe is shattering.
    But now, right here, in this moment, this personal page from a diary
    that should be hidden behind a lock and key… A part of me wishes I could be invisible,
    absorbed into the paisley print wall paper, made a different choice when I got
    that call. But I didn’t, and I am here
    for him, in this fog of despair that makes my skin sticky and cold, so I slowly
    lower myself to the love seat next biting the inside of my cheek listening to
    the wales of an entire family morning the loss of their rock.

    Reply
  174. Rachael

    This is my first post. I originally gave myself 30 mins but my pen continued so this is a little longer than I intended. I edited when I typed it up. I was going to take a small portion of it to post but I couldn’t take anything out:
    —————————————–
    It begins early: my anxiety for going out. I struggle between my desire to go out, meet people, and make friends. And my other feelings and thoughts. I don’t want to go out, I’m not comfortable, I won’t enjoy it. I fight against my wish to cancel the plan to meet one of my friends, my only close friend here. My anxiety is in my throat constricting my air and my stomach feels like an empty vessel lost in storming seas. It comes in waves
    throughout the day.

    I take action around an hour before I have to leave the house. I send a message to my friend checking to see if our plans are the same. She might have to cancel if she has a booking for dinner to take. If she does, I don’t want to get too far along dressing up if I have to dress down an hour later. My anxiety builds as I wait but I go for the shower while I wait for her answer. There’s no booking: the plans are still on. My anxiety calms enough so I can enjoy applying make-up but quakes when I have to pick out clothes. Do I wear something a little more glam and pretty? Or should I go casual? What will others be wearing? If I go casual maybe others will be dressed up. But then I think about previous times. Casual is best everyone else will be dress in jeans and t-shirt, just put on some nice jewellery.

    I’m all set but I’m too early. This is Africa: if you’re early, you’ll be arriving before anyone (including the host) is ready, it’s considered rude. My anxiety builds up as I think about the call I’ll have to make to the taxi guy. He doesn’t know much English and my Swahili
    is limited. Add to this my poor hearing when it comes to phone calls and I’m really pitching over the sides. Enough time passes so I begin the next stage. Calling the taxi, waiting for him to arrive, then remember the 101 things I forgot to do when I had the time. Changing shoes, grabbing a scarf, putting on lipstick, putting my things back in my room.

    He’s here but my anxiety is not. Instead relief that something has gone right and I’m on my way to town. I ignore the scary driving, that’s part of the norm here and I’ve grown use to it. At least he’s not drinking like some other taxi drivers are prone to on Saturday night. But anxiety does make an appearance the further away from home I go. The streets are dark. The main streets are lit by dim lamps, weakened by a week of heavy rains and long power cuts. The taxi swerves to avoid the dark pot holes. Another sign of the heavy rains and traffic on poorly constructed roads.

    I’m dropped off at the entrance of my destination. I feel my spirits plummet and I take action in throwing positive thought buoys to strength myself.

    The one room lounge/bar is busy. A dark mass of moving bodies in the dimly lit room. The project is on showing a sports channel and the bar is lit up behind the counter but that’s basically it. The garden is darker. A black hole envelopes the path between
    myself and the bar. I can hear disembodied laughter and the aroma of weed and nyoma choma (BBQ beef skewers). I begin scanning my surroundings. I try to find familiar
    faces in the seas of unknown faces. The closer I approach the louder the heavy distorted noise from the speakers becomes. I feel of balance. I’ve plunged in to cold water. My vision blurs, hearing is muffled: I can’t focus on anything. I’m completely
    disorientated.

    My name is called from near the bar. I recognise some faces and I exchange greetings as I pass. I go get a drink: a beer because I can’t decide what else to drink, but it’s a choice I agonise over anyways. I join my friend who has found a group of her friends. I barely know them but I’ve met them a few times. The group is in the middle of a discussion. They talk about people and places I don’t about. So I just listen the best I can and wait for an opportunity to join in where I can. This happens a few times but sometimes I feel I’ve said the wrong thing. Some faces look confused or my words are ignored as insignificant. The conversation drifts into waves that I understand and follow, then I’m disorientated again. It sounds like they are using a foreign language, maybe it is. My brain goes into overdrive. Some of the group might be Dutch or Italian. No. They aren’t speaking another language. It’s definitely English. I recognise the words but not the meaning of the words grouped together. I concentrate harder on deciphering the words and smile to disguise the difficulties I’m having.

    Someone asks me something, but I’m so focused on the other conversation I don’t hear a word they’ve said. I ask them to repeat but the noise from the speakers makes it sound like no sound is coming from their mouth. I ask them to repeat again. I see the
    annoyance plan on their face as they say the words again. But I still can’t distinguish a meaning. Its random words strung together. I know there will be no point asking them to
    repeat: it’s a lost cause. ‘Sorry I can’t hear what you’re saying. This music is too loud. Sorry’. I see the relief clear as day on their face. Their attention is drawn away by
    someone. Someone else tries to talk to me at the same time another person says a sentence I finally understand. But I’ve got myself into a mental knot. Who was talking to me? What did they say? Who do I answer first? What the hell do they think of me? This person that barely speaks, only smiles although that smile slips and when she does speak it there is no connection to the question asked.

    As time passes I become bored of the talk. I don’t understand it anyways. I’m distracted by my surroundings. I people watch, listen to the music, and watch the sports on the screen. But it’s all too much: my mind is divided and folded in a hundred different ways. I head to the toilet for a moment to catch my breath and regroup my thoughts. I check
    the time on my phone. It’s only 8.16. I tell myself ‘I will stay at least 2hrs more. It’s a struggle. I’m longing for the comfort of my bed.

    I re-join the group for more of the same difficulties. I last just under 2hrs. As soon as my phone time reaches 10pm that’s my cue. It feels like the longest time I’ve experienced in my life with repeat toilet breaks and hopefully inconspicuous glances at my phone time. I’m done: tired and now complete bored. I say my farewells and grab a taxi.

    My anxiety is replaced with relief as the taxi driver follows the familiar roads home. The street lamps almost glow a warm shade of orange yellow. The security guard welcomes me at the gate along with the guard dogs. When I enter my home I’m greeted by my dachshund, Roxy. She’s so happy to see me. She’s missed me but I’ve returned.

    I’m home.

    Reply
  175. Guest

    Just downloaded the 14 Prompts. Here is my first go at Prompt 1

    Feeling Awkward and Uncomfortable

    Writing Prompt 1

    By: Tammi Johnson-Young

    The closet was dark and cramped. The wood walls pressed
    against my back. All I wanted to do was disappear into the wood and hide, but I
    couldn’t. There was nowhere, nowhere to
    hide. Dad kept pressing into the closet, trying to grab me from my hiding spot.
    I could clearly see the sharp pocketknife in his hand. Though just a simple, ordinary pocket knife,
    at that moment it looks large, long, and sharp.

    He kept slurring, “I need to cut her hair. Her hair is too
    long.” Dad was not a successful man at
    the normal things, but he did excel at being an angry alcoholic. This skill he perfected. Behind him I could see my mom struggling to
    pull Dad’s 250 lb. frame out of the closet. Her petite body did everything it
    could to rescue me from the demon pressing in. She clawed and pulled, cajoled
    and argued with him. Her words were
    desperate, angry, and pleading that my hair was fine and didn’t need a cut.
    “David! Leave her alone! Her hair is fine. It doesn’t need a cut. David! David!”

    The terror washed over me and enveloped my body like a heavy
    fog. My heart pounded loudly, thudding
    in my chest as the panic rose higher and higher with the realization there was
    nowhere to go. The tears flowed down my
    cheeks in rivers. There was no stopping
    the anxiety or screams that erupted from my throat. It was dark in the back corner of the closet
    and I hoped, in vain, to make myself small and invisible.

    The wood was cool and warm at the same time. It was rough
    and smooth. Pretty redwood planks that quickly became my ugly prison. The spot
    I scrambled to hide in was a recess within the closet with walls on three
    sides. At the moment, my drunken dad
    blocked the only exit with his enormous, angry body. His sole focus my long hair.

    My hair was long, to my waist, and a beautiful shiny, dark
    brown. Some thought it was almost a black, but I knew it was an espresso brown
    with hints of gold. It was silky smooth
    and soft. It made me feel pretty in a
    world that told me I was ugly. The
    horror that my dad wanted to cut it all off without provocation, the confusion
    of being attacked in the safe realm of my bedroom, cornered like a small animal
    in the corner, defenseless against the alcohol and rage that seeped through my
    dad overwhelmed my young mind. These
    behaviors were not normal for most families, but they were an everyday normal
    to me and my brothers. The unprovoked
    attacks, anxiety, and terror were ever present in our lives.

    I was alone, isolated, and abandoned by family and the
    world. Trapped in the closet amplified
    what the world already told me – I was literally and figuratively trapped. I knew there was not speaking of the terror
    of what happened. No one would
    understand. No one ever did.

    Reply
  176. French Robin Designs

    I recently downloaded the 14 Prompts. Here is my first go at Prompt 1

    Feeling Awkward and Uncomfortable

    Writing Prompt 1

    By: Tammi Johnson-Young

    The closet was dark and cramped. The wood walls pressed
    against my back. All I wanted to do was disappear into the wood and hide, but I
    couldn’t. There was nowhere to go,
    nowhere to hide. Dad kept pressing into the closet, trying to grab me from my
    hiding spot. I could clearly see the sharp pocketknife in his hand. Though just a simple, ordinary pocket knife,
    at that moment, in my young eyes, it looked large, long, and sharp.

    He kept slurring, “I need to cut her hair. Her hair is too
    long.” Dad was not a successful man at
    the normal things, but he did excel at being an angry alcoholic. This skill he perfected. Behind him I could see my mom struggling to
    pull Dad’s 250 lb. frame out of the closet. Her petite body did everything it
    could to rescue me from the demon pressing in. She clawed and pulled, cajoled
    and argued with him. Her words were
    desperate, angry, and pleading that my hair was fine and didn’t need a cut.
    “David! Leave her alone! Her hair is fine. It doesn’t need a cut. David! David!”

    The terror washed over me and enveloped my body like a heavy
    fog. My heart pounded loudly, thudding
    in my chest as the panic rose higher and higher with the realization there was
    nowhere to go. The tears flowed down my
    cheeks in rivers. There was no stopping
    the anxiety or screams that erupted from my throat. It was dark in the back corner of the closet
    and I hoped, in vain, to make myself small and invisible.

    The wood was cool and warm at the same time. It was rough
    and smooth. Pretty redwood planks that quickly became my ugly prison. The spot
    I scrambled to hide in was a recess within the closet with walls on three
    sides. At the moment, my drunken dad
    blocked the only exit with his enormous, angry body. His sole focus my long hair.

    My hair was long, to my waist, and a beautiful shiny, dark
    brown. Some thought it was almost a black, but I knew it was an espresso brown
    with hints of gold. It was silky smooth
    and soft. It made me feel pretty in a
    world that told me I was ugly. The
    horror that my dad wanted to cut it all off without provocation, the confusion
    of being attacked in the safe realm of my bedroom, cornered like a small animal
    in the corner, defenseless against the alcohol and rage that seeped through my
    dad overwhelmed my young mind. These
    behaviors were not normal for most families, but they were an everyday normal
    to me and my brothers. The unprovoked
    attacks, anxiety, and terror were ever present in our lives.

    I was alone, isolated, and abandoned by family and the
    world. Trapped in the closet amplified
    what the world already told me – I was literally and figuratively trapped. I knew there was not speaking of the terror
    of what happened. No one would
    understand. No one ever did.

    Reply
  177. Isaac Palmer

    Doing jury duty with your heart racing because you’re
    secretly listening to music in one ear: out of place.

    Tweeting Keith Chegwin 140 character critiques of his most
    recent one liner: out of place.

    Interviewed heavily by Alan Sugar’s business mates whilst literally shitting yourself: out of
    place.

    The above examples are red herrings. As you probably felt, reader,
    the suffix ‘out of place’ was just that – out of place. Better suited would
    have been, respectively, ‘out of apathy’, ‘out of irony’ and ‘out of your
    fucking head.’

    Reply
  178. Karley

    My eyes made their way to the clock yet a fourth time. Was this thing even ticking? I squint my speculative eyes and observe as the second hand indeed does its job. I murmur an impatient slur under my breath. Funny how time drags on when you are somewhere you simply do not want to be.
    My mother quickly flashes two angry eyes in my direction, and they were telling me to hush. I pretend not to notice and begin tapping my foot as I scan the church pews for something to occupy my mind for the time-being. Mother promptly places her cold palm atop my knee to stop the commotion with the swift timeliness of a clock hand who just struck the midnight hour. I answer this unwelcome physical contact with a dull, unappreciative glare. I follow it up with leaning towards her and whispering much too loudly: an act sure to discourage future gestures like the previous incident.
    “Hey, I’m going to go to the ladies room”, I say, “BECAUSE I GOTS TA PEE!”
    I giggle devilishly, obviously pleased with myself, as the women within earshot of us shoot my mother and I with judgmental glares. Bang, bang, bang. If looks could kill!
    “Oh give me a break”, I mutter under my breath as I awkwardly bump past the condemning feet leading to the aisle.
    My heels click and clack the entire walk down the pathway, which just so happens to be twice as long as it looks. Upon exiting the auditorium and entering the hallway, I think to myself that this moment of relief couldn’t have come soon enough.

    Reply
  179. Jeannie L.

    my first post. arrrgh!

    People moved in and out of the store entrance at a steady pace. Some smiled as they glanced our way while others pretended they didn’t see us, keeping their eyes cast downward as they hurried past.

    I, too, looked down, my anxious eyes hidden behind my sunglasses as my hands fiddled with the information flyers and freebies on the display table. I wasn’t used to mingling or talking with strangers. Suppose someone walked up and asked me a question?

    The lady in charge of our even, Mary, was a talker. She talked to people as though they were long lost friends, laughing and smiling, all the while encouraging a donation with her warm-hearted nature. In no time at all a hand reached into a wallet, while the giver half apologized for not having more cash. “I’ll catch you on the way out” someone else would say with a wink and a smile. Yet another came by with a bag full of just bought supplies and left them in the donation box.

    I gathered my feeble courage to speak as the next person approached. Surely I could be brave enough to do something as simple as this. Picking up a mini-flag I waved it in the air and managed to squeak, “Please support our troops.”

    A man with two little boys approached the table and took the flag. I grabbed for two more to give to the kids when the man said, “No, thank you. Don’t you know these are made in China? It’s kind of hypocritical don’t you think?”

    I had no answer. Instead, I retreated once again behind my sunglasses, a coward.

    Reply
  180. C. Stella

    So…this one’s based on my very first job interview in a business firm as a know-it-all 17 year old kid. It’s also the first time I met an eccentric manager, who, overwhelming as he was, soon became one of the most memorable mentors I had.

    —————————-

    It wasn’t the unsettling silence that bothered me as much as it was the lack of attention people had for each other in that room.

    “Hello, is Mr. Paulson here? – Hold on, sir, let me check. Yes he’ll be with you in a moment, please be seated. – I’m here for the two o’clock meeting. – Your name, ma’am? Alright, go on ahead. The security will escort you in. – Document for Roy, the finance department. – Sign here please, I’ll hand it to him soon.

    Chin up, chin down, mouth open, mouth closed.

    The receptionist moved like a well-oiled machine. No “how are you” this or “thank you” that. Just a clean recited smile – a toothed smile – and it’s on to the next person in line. She didn’t even blink when I asked her about the interview, even though I swore that I heard my voice stutter there. “Uh, e-excuse me, I’m here for an interview with uh, Mr. Eddie Tan? “ The receptionist didn’t even bother asking my name. A dial on the phone, an answer, ten seconds later, and then it’s that toothed smile again. “He’ll be right with you. Have a seat and fill in this application form, ma’am.” I turned and found an empty seat in the corner of the room.

    Good, at least she didn’t stare at me, I reassured myself. I’m gonna be fine.

    I spent the next ten minutes worrying about my appearance and posture.

    Polished, emotionless and stern; efficient was the right word to describe the reception room I was sitting in. The reception was a small dark wooden desk in the center of the small room, tall enough that you had to lean over to actually see the person’s face behind it. The desk backed an oversized company logo and a wide frosted glass wall. Two cubical visitor meeting rooms lined up on the right, separated again by glass walls. A door stood to the left of the reception, and a black palm-sized fingerprint device hung on the adjacent wall. It went “beep” every time somebody walked through the door. I lost count at number 32. People moved in and out with the speed and determination I haven’t seen since Steve’s burrito incident from ninth grade. Everybody was either carrying a briefcase, a folder or both. Sometimes they carried an open laptop as well, the bright screen blaring out hurriedly made Excel charts, judging from the colorful mess. I could do better, I muttered in mind. But pretty graphs and petty arrogance didn’t matter as much as the paper in my hands. I looked down away from the busy traffic and focused on the application form in hand.

    Name, Address, Gender, Birthday…it was relatively mundane at first. Boring, that is, until I’ve gotten halfway through the first page of the two-page application. I stared at the words, and the words stared back at me. The paper started getting uncomfortably heavier the more I read and wrote.

    Position applied for? Sales administration.
    Previous Education? High school.
    Employment history? None. (They generously gave me three giant empty rows to fill out.)
    Previous work experiences? None. (Another three empty rows.)
    Personal hobbies? Comics and games. Drawing and writing. (At this point the petty arrogance sank and died.)

    The further I went, the worse it got. The paper took on its own life and seemed to have started laughing at me, saying “Are you scared yet?” The form looked so empty by the time it’s done that I might as well have left it blank with only a name and number to proof that I (at least) existed. It even made my handwriting look awful. Was my ink too thick? Should I have used cursive instead? Isn’t that what professionals use? Did my signature look weird?

    Beep.

    Another one resounded from the fingerprint scanner. I looked up again – realizing then that the beep had become the bell to my inner Pavlov’s dog. A mutt in a kennel of German Shepherds and Dobermans, I laughed inside, unsuccessfully trying to calm the mind with sarcasm. A short, stubby man walked out, different from the rest of the suit and briefcase men I saw. This one wore a bright green Polo shirt, and had a face that looked like a happy Pit Bull; his short buzz cut and giant eyes making it seem as if he was always on alert mode. The man didn’t waste a minute, quickly turning his head to the receptionist and asked, no, demanded. “Where’s the interview kid?” His voice was sharp, authoritative and without bullshit. The receptionist pointed at me. Self-consciousness flooded back like a returning tide in a brewing storm. I quickly formed a smile on my face and stood up, scrambling to fit all the papers and pen in one arm. The man took two brisk steps towards me with an outstretched hand.

    “Hi. Did you wait long?” His handshake was firm and solid. No bullshit, like his voice, I reminded myself. He had an awkward way of introducing himself, and I didn’t even have a chance to tell him my name before he led us straight into one of the visitor rooms.

    Reply
  181. Janice Gabriel

    Testing

    Reply
  182. Janice Gabriel

    Here goes…I am not a writer….yet…the only place my words have been read is in my journal that I write in daily.
    The gig was up. No amount of smiling or nodding politely could get me through this.
    The days leading up to this presentation were fraught with emails from me to my management team that fell on closed eyes and closed hearts. I’m better at speaking, I explained, although that wasn’t always the case.
    In college I had to take a sedative before delivering a simple oral book report. Throughout my 30-year airline career I grew accustomed to speaking in front of hundreds of people at the boarding gates at busy LAX. As deafness set in I called upon this new-found skill that I loved. My need to communicate in a hearing world became a fixation. With the advent of the computer age I could communicate with people I could no longer hear by writing to them. I could still work because I could still communicate, with passengers and colleagues alike.
    Fast forward to the dreaded presentation with colleagues from various departments filing in and taking their seats. I knew I would not be able to answer their questions…not because I didn’t know the answers, but because I could not hear the questions! Would it have been too much to ask to allow me to introduce our team and give an outline of the information we were going to discuss? I could have been brilliant –I could have made people laugh as I peppered the introductions with humor and anecdotes about our department.
    But it was not to be and I took my place on stage in a line-up with my colleagues who were poised to answer questions about what we do. How confident they must have felt! Then it happened…a question for me. The unforgiving florescent lighting shone brightly upon me as the walls closed in around me. I was the proverbial deer caught in the headlights, terror ripping through every fiber of my body. I was in a crowded auditorium but I felt so alone and isolated. I couldn’t hear them but I could see their eyes and feel their impatience as I struggled to hear the question. I tasted my salty tears as they dribbled down my red hot face. After suffering what felt like a lifetime a colleague answered the question for me. An act of kindness would have included conveying the question to me so that a smidgeon of dignity could have been restored. I did not belong there anymore…I didn’t possess the necessary skills to survive in this company any longer, and the skills that I had developed were not valued.
    My world is quiet, but quiet is good. Quiet helps me think and to write. Closed captions on the television help me to feel connected with the outside world. A connection…that is what all humans need, whether it is in the form of a hug or an unspoken act of kindness. Kindness speaks volumes that all can hear.

    Reply
    • Joe Bunting

      This was great Janice! You captured the scene well and gave us a perfect glimpse into the emotions you were experiencing. I’m only sorry you had to go through such a difficult experience. Thank you so much for sharing it with us.

  183. Xandir

    There you are again today…I don’t know what to say. It has
    been three days since you came into this place, three whole days of not knowing
    what to do around you. You make my head spin, what, with your stunning beauty
    and uninitiated words. You stand there and pretend like nothing is happening –
    little do you know I am dying inside.

    What does it matter? It has only been three days, three
    mind-numbing days. I walk into the room and pretend like you are not there, you
    see me, I know you do. Why are you looking at me like that? What did I do to
    you?

    I project my feelings of uneasiness to the other nurse. She
    has no idea that my heart is about to be carried away in a hearse. I just want
    to say something to you, I just want to speak. Your endless beauty is turning
    me into a freak. What the hell am I supposed to say? “Hello, my name is Kay?”

    That sounds so stupid; I cannot even entertain the thought.
    I need to be someone I’m not. AHHH! What
    can I do? I cannot even talk to you!

    I walked in at the wrong moment. Everyone looked at me as if I was supposed to
    speak. I had nothing, you make me feel weak. Just by you being there, how can
    anyone ever know what we have shared?

    You will not allow me to speak about that night, that night I
    put up a big fight. You had no right to do what you did. I went home and hid. I
    cried myself to sleep, paralyzed in a cold dead heap.

    Now you’re standing there right next to me, my new co-worker…how
    could this be?

    Reply
  184. Mikayla Kinzer

    This is about going to a new school which I feel most everyone has been through.
    ——————————————–
    Thousands of dark creatures swarmed in front of me.
    Giant ones with hulking prowess and small ones with conniving grins and long
    hair. The hallways were a dark forest and there was no yellow brick road to be
    found. I closed my eyes before taking a deep breath and melding with the golem
    and imps that were to be my classmates. My hands played with the wires on my spiral
    notebook as I looked for my homeroom, home seeming to be ironic to me. It wasn’t
    a place I was comfortable. I didn’t sleep there. In fact according to schedule
    we only went there once a week. How was it
    homeroom.

    I
    stumbled along the speckled tiles until I found a cold, gray, metal door with
    the number 19 on it in faded black paint. That mixed with the horror movie
    lighting really made my hand shake as I reached for the door knob. I turned the
    handle and stepped into a carnival. The golems and imps from before were
    painted up as clowns, dancing around the class, messing things up. They
    bellowed and cackled and I tried to make my way through to the back. These
    creatures were calmer but not much better. Some were shy, others were gross.

    The teacher was no help. He sat at
    his desk on his computer. Not a creature but it was as if he couldn’t even see
    them. A human next to faeries

    Reply
  185. Karlie

    I’m 17 and I am from WV. I’m currently writing an autobiography. This is the first chapter.
    I had gotten into trouble at school for passing a love note to a boy. Either my mother or father had to sign it. Daddy found it funny. But I was positive Mommy would be furious with me. The last thing she needed was her fourth grader gettin’ into trouble on top of her being in the hospital ate up with cancer.
    She didn’t look up from the note as she spoke. “Lord, already passing love notes at only nine. What am I gonna do with you, girl?” She laughed at me. That was a relief.
    She folded it gingerly, looked at me, and smiled.
    She handed it back to me. “Ya Daddy already signed it so I don’t reckon I have to.”
    I climbed up into her hospital bed with her for a few minutes before we had to leave. We chit-chatted about school and boys.
    Daddy sighed, “Well, it’s gettin’ late. I best be gettin’ this youngin’ home and in the bed.”
    He patted my foot at the end of the bed. “Say ‘bye’ to your momma, Karlie.”
    I looked up at Mommy with sad, blue eyes and whispered, “I love you, Mommy. Goodnight.”
    She petted my hair. “I love you too, baby.”
    We exchanged hugs and Daddy kissed Mommy goodbye. We walked into the hall and I kept my eyes on her through the window in her door until the wall blocked my view.
    That would be the last time I laid eyes on my mother.

    Reply
  186. Rishav Kumar

    Here’s my attempt:

    Was it Keats or Yeats -I don’t exactly remember- who said, “A thing of beauty is a joy forever”?

    I am standing, right now, in a room, all pink. The walls, the floor, even the ceiling fan is painted pink. There’s a girl amidst all of this, the center of the room. She’s wearing a white tank top and a mini skirt that says Hello Kitty. She looks thin, almost as if she’s been hungry for days now. Her toenails and fingernails are pink, glittery. Her face looks rather pale, white more like, as if she’s a zombie or something. She’s looking at me, coyly, twisting strands of hair. But I, I am just not there.

    “So”, she says, “Are we going out today?”

    “What?!” I say, suddenly shocked by the conversation.

    “You don’t have to be so surprised you know”, she says, pouting. “We’ve been going out for a while but we rarely ‘go out’. She’s using air bunnies.

    “It’s fine here. There’s no reason why we should head out. It’s very hot out there.”

    “Oh! You’re always making excuses. Come na, it’ll be fun, please, please?” She’s pouting again and blinking her eyes madly, like an epileptic.

    “Alright fine. Where do you wanna go?” I ask, tired.

    “Yippee!” she shouts and is dancing in circles around the pink bed. Next moment she takes out her cellphone with a pink cover and is dialling a number. The call connects and she’s excited like hell.

    “Guess what? We’re finally going out!” and she screams like banshee. “I know, I know…” She goes on, but I am not listening. I’m looking at a nondescript calendar, full of pictures of distant islands, and instantly, I’m feeling very calm and relaxed. They’re beautiful.

    She finally gets off the phone and shouts,”LET’S GO”

    “Like this?” I’m curious,”Why don’t you wear…something?”

    “Oh you’re such a prude. Always talking about equality and women’s rights, but you won’t even give me a chance to flaunt myself?”

    “Alright. Fine” I’m really not in the mood for a debate. I’m looking at her emaciated figure. “Atleast eat proper. Last time I ordered a pizza, you ate just the olives and said you were full.”

    “Oh puhleez, size zero, size zero” and she goes dancing again, repeating the words ”size zero” like a retarded kid.

    “Fine”, I say, exasperated, “Let’s just go.”

    She almost says okay when she’s suddenly scared, almost crying. Then she remembers, and is excited again, for the very next moment, she’s standing in front of a cabinet, replete with cosmetics, staring at them, as if in a trance. I don’t even know what they are for, but there’s a plethora of names – Olay, Avon, L’Oreal, Neutrogena, Nivea, Lancome, Dove, Schwarzkopf, Pantene, Lux, Christian Dior, Garnier, Maybelline, Rexona, Oriflame, Revlon…

    The list goes on.

    Pulchritude has lost its essence. It has been kidnapped by consumerism and has been experimented upon extensively, turning into a grotesque mutant of sorts. The pretty girl I fell for is long gone. She’s been eaten up, gobbled by materialism and spat out as an ugly by-product, no longer recognisable. Craving for things she doesn’t really like, falling into depravity for things she doesn’t really need, I cannot connect with her anymore.

    There was a time when she would show up in a salwar kameez and it would turn me on that instant. Now here she is in a tank top and a mini skirt, and I’m looking at a calendar for comfort.

    This is what passes for beauty these days.

    Reply
  187. bernabe marchan

    Funny, but this is my first draft. I don’t really write that much. I only write when I am idle. Pardon me for the use of words…an obvious work of a freshwater sailor like me. Please don’t be rude when you give your comments, okay.

    That cracked aged narrow cemented road has led me to that
    old ancestral house. That house situated in an overly populated community where
    children usually play along the way, thin and rugged and mostly with skin
    severely sunbathed for months. Side by side, sewerage shares its bounty of
    stench and rotten creatures, freshly retired from this unfair world. It seems
    to me that even these diminutive animals had endured so much. Even in their
    retirement, they seem abused by miniature crawlers consuming on their every
    part.

    As I slowly made my way, I see faces of hunger. Maybe hunger
    for food, or perhaps hunger for attention – of sympathy from those above them.
    Mothers seated on their stairway, silent but on their eyes are feelings of
    sadness. “What do they do?”, I asked myself. I was born unfortunate, but I wasn’t
    like them….I wasn’t like these kids who seem so carefree about tomorrow.

    I passed by them as I hear their whispers of who they are
    seeing. A stranger… probably is on their minds. Bowed down and hands stuck
    inside the pockets of my denim pants, I reached her house.

    After a few knocks on her door, she made it open and greeted
    me. How I missed looking at her expressive eyes so beautifully crafted. Her
    shiny tan skin that I always love so much…Her smile that shows her innocent and
    pure being…these simple things made me so longing about her.

    It’s been months since we last saw each other. Prior to
    that, I remember we were so happy and content with ourselves. When we’re
    together the world stops and paves us its way so it could witness how our bodies
    entangle up the peak of joy, dripping in sweat, and exhausted. But even so, it
    always makes our day together.

    Today, it’s different. As we headed on to where I send her
    to, I saw every speck of details on the soil where my eyes are centered. The
    fallen dried leaves joined together by the chilly air from the east, the tiny colored
    pebbles differently carved by nature, old brown twigs slender and crooked- they
    made the soil touched by my feet as I and she walked coldly together.

    Gone were the days where I hold her hands as we walk even on
    a crowdie place. Gone were the days where we stare at each other’s eyes so
    lovingly…

    Today, it’s not me and her…we are not ourselves… we are
    strangers.

    Reply
  188. marimed

    “They’re staring, it’s okay, just stay cool, it’s not your first time.”, I thought to myself as I took my seat in the very back of the classroom. I hate schools, the teachers, the lessons, the home-works, the maths and physics, and most of all the students.
    Changing schools in the middle of the year is the worst. I sat down calmly as I could fake. The wooden chair felt cold, but not as much as their stares. They were evaluating me. “Just look at the blackboard, they don’t matter”, still I could still hear them whispering.
    I tried to focus at the lesson, to only listen to the teacher as he explained, to ignore them, but I couldn’t.
    I’ve never belonged in any school, or anywhere else, I’ve never had friends, I’ve always been mistreated and laughed at, I am clumsy, I walk weirdly, and fail at making conversation with people. People find my hobbies weird and useless. I am out of place in my own country, and with my own people who I share the same routs, language and religion.
    If you can’t fit in your own people, where else would you possibly fit in?

    Reply
  189. DRB2930

    I’m grateful to have this forum to practice and welcome your feedback. Thanks.

    I’m in my twenties, standing rigid by my father. He gazes
    through a rivet of tears as his mother’s simple coffin is cranked into the dark
    earth. I squeeze his hand. Although my heart is soft for this woman I barely
    knew, my eyes are dry and my skin flush with shame. I am silent, still, hoping
    to be less conspicuous in my black suit – the only one I own, the one I use for
    job interviews, the one I’ve just been told is an inappropriate color for this
    Jewish funeral.

    Looking back now, I take pity on her – the younger me who let
    shame cloud her vision and clamp her voice shut. It’s in this nomad’s land of
    vulnerability and armor that I grew up and grew weak. Lacking Hebrew and a
    Batmitzvah, I was not Jewish enough. Lacking the lilt vowels, the devotion to
    Christ, the traditions of tailgates, barbeques, sweet tea, and football, I was
    not Southern enough for this forgotten Baptist town.

    I’m in my twenties, standing with my father, yet standing by
    myself, years from self-acceptance.

    Reply
  190. a.f

    Hi so this isn’t really my entry, but my friend’s 🙂 She told me to post it since she couldn’t access the internet at the moment, but here goes:

    It was like waiting for an eternity when the train finally showed up. I expected it to be free of space since I was late for school, anyway, but, to my surprise, it was filled with businessmen. Businessmen, they’re always busy, always wearing black. At that moment, even the white colored train seemed to be sinking into the midst of the dark color. The last thing I want to happen is for my sky blue shirt to drown in the same color as well. Apparently, they were all engrossed in conversation — conversation with their phones. The train was a falm sea, no interruptions or explosions held.

    It was at that moment I decided to plug in my earphones to drone out the silence and for once, fill my day with at least a bit tinge of color. The playlist started off with a punk rock song, one that was hard to imagine being brightly colored, which made everything look dull, even my fingernails seem to be suffering the same color the train was being colored in. But, it at least helped. It dropped a bomb, caused noise, gave sound. If one of whom I know sees me in this black sea, I’ll instantly be the odd one out. I’m a loud, bright person stuck in a sea of calm black.

    When I couldn’t bare it anymore, the train halted. For one minute, I thought it was my stop. But no, it wasn’t. I was disappointed and wished for the blackness to come pour onto me too. But then, they stood up, one by one, as if all were programmed to follow a specific lead or pattern. The chairs were all sighing in relief once their butts got away from them, which resulted into the revival of its redness. The floor letting out the breath they’d been holding when their shoes finally clanked out, making it regain its cold, rusty, mettalic gray. And, when all were out, the whole of the train flowered in its original white color, yelling in happiness for they were back home. The vehicle was now filled with life, though I may be the only person present. The song being played in my phone was now chirpy, a sunshine yellow if I were to color it. And, I made myself feel at home — I slouched, and started eating. Everyone was back at home.

    I was back home, too.

    Reply
  191. Charles

    Here’s my go at the first prompt and at any sort of writing since I left school over 20 years ago:

    I could hear the clock ticking as I waited nervously, the tension rising in the back of my neck, spreading out to my shoulders.

    Everything depended on the outcome of the next 15 minutes and I was starting to feel the pressure.

    It was weird being on this side of the fence. I was used to being the judge in these scenarios rather than the one being judged.

    I was out of practice and I knew it, but would he pick up on it? I was counting on the filter that the technological wall between us would provide to mask any signs of
    nervousness that was fighting to make itself known behind the mask of confidence
    and control I was portraying.

    Would he see through it?

    Before I had time to dwell any further on this internal turmoil, it began. I quickly forced all thoughts out or my mind and focused on getting through the process one step at
    a time like I had mapped out on my plan and reassured myself with the knowledge
    that he could not see my cards, so to speak.

    There was a soft chime, I pressed the green button on the interactive screen and heard his voice. It was friendly and non-threatening with a soft Scottish burr. We exchanged pleasantries and that was when I noticed the glitch.

    Must stay calm. Don’t panic. Quickly assess the situation. He can see me but I can’t see him. Is it a problem at my end or his? Was he deliberately blocking so that he had an advantage? Should I bring it up? If so, I’ll have to do it now so it is not awkward later.

    To my relief he raises glitch himself. “Can you see me?”, he asks. “No I can’t”, I reply. “Oh boy, I’m really sorry. I’m still learning to get to grips with the system. Do you mind
    continuing? It might take longer for me to get this to work perfectly and I don’t want to waste your time”. “I’m happy to continue” I say, with my nerves settled
    again.

    The process continues with both of us going back and forth with details and information, probing clarifying. All the while I remain honest and positive without being over eager or over enthusiastic, trying to come across as competent and as business like as possible while remaining personable.

    We seem to get on as time goes by, building trust and confidence in each other and at the end of the allotted 15 minutes he asks if I have any further questions. I ask for a breakdown of the next steps straining my powers of concentration to tease out any
    potential reluctance or reservations on his part to moving ahead. Fortunately, I did not pick up on any hesitation.

    We brought our exchange to a satisfying end and the screen went blank as I terminated the connection, yet I stared at it for a few moments as it was full of information in my minds eye as I reflected on the encounter..

    I could feel the tension in my back dissipate as I knew I had got past the first hurdle.

    I was relieved to know that a face to face would happen once our intermediaries had been informed and the formalities dispensed with. I knew the date and the place for our meeting and now all I had to do was wait.

    Reply
  192. Michael

    The voice of a whisper can be so loud at times, depending on the strength of the words that follow behind. silence is the enemy of the scream and the yell and condemns all noises to the fiery pits of hell. What will life feel like without the sound of a voice or opinion of a word that gives you a choice, can body language become the new voice of the times, like a language that’s foreign to all of mankind, let’s us be grateful for the words that we speak not gossip or criticism from a story that’s leaked. Let’s speak from our hearts and let others know that we care refuse to talk nonsense and be willing to share. knowledge is powerful there’s no end to learning be open to new thing and be safe on your journey.

    Reply
  193. Emeka Enwere

    Why was I in this miserable state? How did I get into this dark alley? I shut my eyes in a bid to get a grip on my thoughts and the emotions that were swirling around me. I was
    struggling to reconquer and control my faculties.

    I did not see this coming else I would have taken precautions. I strove to embrace the knowledge of what was happening, but it was like trying to grab a specter. Each futile attempt left me choking with desperation.

    I was at my desk in the office starring at my PC without seeing the contents on my screen. This is not me acting. However, in a speedily executed coup de tat, my entire members suddenly connived to inform me that I had no business being where I was. I hated my job
    and I just realized it.

    Reply
  194. T.K. Summit

    Hi everyone, here is my attempt at Prompt #1 – Out of Place. I’ll explain more at the end so not to ruin the mystery:

    The area was crowded with all kinds of people. Drivers, passengers, professionals, world travelers—people from all over the world. I couldn’t hear what the man in front of me was saying as my eyes shifted endlessly, trying to catch up with the scene. The place was very lively and fast paced. It was my first time stepping into this kind of grounds so it’s possible that I’m just not used to this new, untouched environment.

    “Sir…SIR. You need to take the train” said the man in front of me, a rep that assist those new to the land. I immediately snapped out of my daydream, dazzled by all the commotions.

    “I need to…what?” I said, slowly and awkwardly, glaring at him.

    “Yes. You need to take the train to get there.” He insisted. He continued to pull out a map and started pouring out word after word, providing me the necessary direction to locate the train. I consistently made eye contact with him to show that I was following along, but I wasn’t listening, not a single word. How could I? From the moment I heard those words, that I need to take the train, everything just seems out of reach. My mind went completely blank. I’ve just got here to this unknown territory, and now I need to find this so-called train to get me to where I wanted to be.

    He finally stopped speaking and pointed his hand to the left, his eyebrows forming a shape that questioned whether I understood everything he had just said. I looked at him blankly and just nodded as I started walking towards the path he pointed.

    “The train will be at the end. Good luck!” he yelled, but I’ve already disappeared. Yet, I can still hear those final words echoing out of my ears. I’ve never been here before, it was supposed to be an easy walk to the next path, but now they’re telling me to take the train? I’ve come to accept myself as an outsider.

    Strangely, the world suddenly seemed smaller, darker, and full of obstacles. I tried to pull myself together, reminding myself why I’m here in the first place. Even though I can feel a rush of nervousness flowing through my body and mind, I have no choice but to move on.

    “It can’t be that bad” I mumbled to myself. If I can already make it here, I can definitely
    break through the next area. I squeezed my legs tightly to calm my anxiety, and began to walk ahead, accepting the challenge.

    ———————–

    This was when I was flying into Europe. It was my first time out of the country and I rarely traveled before that. I had to take the train in order to get to the next airport from my current stop, which hopefully you can tell by my writing, strikes me with anxiety and made me felt lost, as getting to the train in a limited time wasn’t a piece of cake.

    Any critique/comments is appreciated!

    Reply
    • Catarina Vu

      This was really excellent, I really enjoyed reading it. I liked the rumination a lot, it was very realistic. My only suggestion is: add some details about why the scene was so different and why the environment was so unfamiliar.

  195. Michael Schrag

    First time writing here. I decided to take a very bleak perspective in this prompt. Let me know what you think.
    ———————————————————————————————————-

    She longed for death. Not like one merely longs for a burger
    when he is hungry, more like a burning, ravenous desire of one who is starving,
    and that burger would be their salvation. Except she did not want salvation;
    she wanted deterioration.

    Mag, as her friends called her, had a “disease”. All of
    the doctors had called her a miracle, a breakthrough in the human condition.
    They poked and prodded her, trying to decipher why her cells kept regenerating
    as if she were a small child; why she was so different from the human race. And
    that was before the almighty federal government had learned of her amazing
    ability. No, they did not swoop in on helicopters and kidnap her from her bed
    in the middle of the night like paranoid action movies often portrait. They
    dogged her. Day after day scientists, doctors, and officials begged her to
    think beyond herself. And it wore at her, but she persisted- that is until the
    media became involved and thousands of people she had never met were picketing
    her front door. There was support for her plight, but mostly there were tears.
    She could not stand to look in the eye of another mother who thought her DNA or
    her saliva might save her daughter or son. She could not abide the religious
    fanatic who thought that she was the second coming of Christ. She was a 30-something
    year old high school dropout who had never “made anything of her life” as was
    so often quoted by her mother. And she was happy, until she was given this “gift”. And she signed that release paper. And she was shut away from the world in a 6’x8′ padded cell.

    Reply
  196. Chris Mulé

    The music was screaming at me. People gawked at every step I took, as if I were a lion out of its cage. The old, rigid building was watching me, haunting my every thought. The pictures on the wall described a better place, of men who held the highest of values.

    Truth is, very few of the people pictured gave a rats ass about anything but ass itself. Truth is, many of them were just obsessed with the sweat that crawled down their faces, the very same sweat that was drowning me. The girls acted as if they couldn’t be happier. They all wore the same skanky outfits, clothing meant for a stripper, and danced the night away. Truth is, on the inside, their hearts were just as cold as the men who were framed on the walls. All those memories, plastered on the aged wood, deserved to be misplaced. Not forgotten…. No, nothing so sinister could be forgotten.

    These people were sick. Dead inside, maybe… And somehow, I was the one who got all the dirty looks.

    I walked outside, in a panic, as the pounding in my chest couldn’t take it any longer. The porch floor creaked, as my boat shoes treaded across the scratched surface. I settled in. From the corner of the porch, the entire street could be seen. A cigar found it’s way to the grip of my hand, a potion once hidden away in my pocket. As a flame met the tobacco, my tired eyes became aroused. Just for a second.

    The cigar, once perfectly shaped, was cindering away with every minute’s puff. My breaths began to gain back their ground.

    “You okay, man?” he asked. I didn’t notice him before, leaning against the wall behind me. He must’ve been studying me. That, or he was high. “Yeah.” The smoke followed no pattern. The sky consumed it. “She was in there.”

    “Well, as far as I can see…. You’re out here.” We moved our frail bodies against the wooden fence, which surrounded the porches’ perimeter. The roads looked furious that night. People were marching by, all dazed and confused…. all of them, trying to find another basement to rot in.

    “Yeah, I guess you’re right. I am out here.” I found my way home. I dug myself deep beneath the covers and I never slept better.

    Reply
  197. Ahmed

    English is not my first language. Let me know, how I did?

    It was Friday, I got a call from my boss. He
    said, he hired a CFO and he wanted me to give my room to him. Reluctantly, I
    said yes to him but deep inside, I was not comfortable.

    The new place was spacious than my previous
    room: I had an L-shaped desk and there were four rectangle shaped cubicles on
    my left side. Each cubicle had two desktops with soft boards on them, pinned
    with yellow stickers and printed emails. The room opened in a hall-way from two
    separate places and I could see people walking throughout the day.

    The noise of ringing tones, grinding coffee,
    people chattering; felt, I was out of place.

    Reply
  198. narose07

    I’m shy and this is my first time to post something and English is not my first language so please be gentle with me.
    Deep breath. *sighssssssssss. Okay, here it is.

    The library was locked. “Tsk. Where did that librarian go?” I thought as I looked through the glass window. I couldn’t see if the librarian was there because several huge bookshelves was blocking my view. I sighed as I gave up trying to enter the library.

    I turned around and stomped down the way of the stairs. I walked the always quiet hall that will lead me to the guidance’s conference room where my friends are.

    The guidance’s conference room, quiet and air-conditioned, perfect for a hang out place.

    Psh.

    Laughter and giggles of my friends welcomed me as I walked through the door. The guidance room was bright from the light, yet it looked dull for me. There was a small table, few sits and then bookshelves that contains different brochures from different universities. I walked to it and get one. The school was once famous but now, a small number of students were only studying.

    I sighed again as I look around. I wish I have a cell phone. It can come in handy when I don’t have anything to do. I returned the brochure and went to the conference room.

    I grabbed the knob of the door and heard them still laughing but as I open the door and walked through it, they suddenly stopped. They looked at me like I grew four heads so I gave them a timid smile.

    Okaaaayy.

    I walked around the big table to sit and rummaged my bag. It suddenly got awkward. What was that about? Do I have something on my face? Do they have a secret that I shouldn’t know?

    “Where did you go?”, One of my friends asked me.

    “At the library”I told her as I stopped rummaging my bag and faced her.

    “Ah.”, she replied, her eyeballs looking around. That’s weird.

    I stayed quiet as I finally layed my head down the table.

    I looked at them and they were snickering to themselves and whispering to each other. They won’t even look at me.I stared at them hard as they talk to each other.

    I got up and told them that I gotta pee and walked out of the door. As soon as I got the door closed, they’re voices were back to normal. “Do you think she heard us?”, I heard my second friend asked.

    I walked fast and went to the comfort room. Great, I probably needed some comfort.

    Reply
  199. Catarina Vu

    Here goes nothing, here is my response! Constructive criticism would be fabulous!

    Seconds crawl by and I anxiously check my phone for the umpteenth time. I was ten minutes early, I had plenty of time. Relax, I tell myself. Take a deep breath and observe your surroundings. One breath in, one breath out. I am sitting in a chic restaurant’s outdoor patio in the fashionable district of the city. The sounds of traffic fill the air and the chattering couple near me lend their voices to the cacophony of sound. Yellow taxis speed by and shoppers amble around, looking for new treasures to take home. It feels impersonal, alien; I was a stranger in a foreign city just observing the life and activity around me. I didn’t belong here. I want to go home.

    The young waiter swings by and asks me if I am ready to order. Startled, I mutter about waiting for my friend who was running late. He gives me the unmistakable look of pity. I begin to feel cold, my stomach sinks just as a hot flush rises. I check my phone again. 30 minutes late. I hide behind the menu trying to escape the pitying stares that I knew didn’t exist. Why would anyone care if this girl was stood up? After all, I was only a stranger. I check my phone again, pretending to text my friend. 31 minutes late.

    Reply
  200. Catarina Vu

    I like the descriptions but I would try chunking the entire piece into paragraphs. It was intimidating to read at first because it looked like one huge paragraph. I liked how you started with the choppy sentences, it definitely helped portray the nervousness but it’s good in moderation. Too much and the piece feels stilted. All in all, a good read. It just needs a bit of editing.

    Reply
  201. Daphine Priscilla Jack

    I was waiting to see if I was going to get this new job. I would check the new hire list everyday all day. I felt like I ace the interview I the feeling was so strong that I was going to get this job. It was made, I can smell it and I feel it. I am preparing my for this new job. The interview committee was so interacting with the interview, they made me feel so comfortable and made me feel like yes we want her at our company. The new Public Relation Coordinator. I would be responsible for all of the interacting with the media, the spokeperson for the company that was going to hire me. This is my new job!

    Eva Smith was a beautiful middle age woman, very smart, very witty, and very confidence about herself. She decided that it was time again for 9th time to change jobs. After being turned down so many time and not really trying to get apply for another job again. She found the idea position she felt like she could retire from, so she applied and got the interview. She prepared so well and rehearse and was ready.

    The day of the interview she prayed and told God well this is it. This is the dream job. Eva went in the interview and sweep the panel off their feet. When she left the interview she felt she had won first place in the marathon.

    After a few days she did not hear back from the company. She waited a few more days and was being patience. She was so ready for the phone call to tell her the start date of her new position. So she decided to call the HR of the company to ask the status of the position and the HR told her unfortunately we decided to hire from within, but thanks for your interest in our company and we will keep your application on file for 90 days.

    Eva’s world was crush, she could not stop the tears from flowing like a river. She felt as if all that she believed in herself was worthless, she felt as though God let her down. Just when all was lost. Three days later she got a call from another company she had applied at months ago and was told that they was not hiring at the time. They called and offered her a position and a salary that was almost ten times more then the job she thought was her dream job.

    So just when all else fail, keep pushing forward. It is okay to think normal such as feeling hopeless or a failure. But look at it this way their loss you are smart, and only God knows what is best for you. Remember your time is an immediate time, but God’s time required patience!

    The End

    Reply
  202. Nadia

    Non-edited
    “Welcome to my home” Eris said, walking into her house before me. Her house was classy; a large dining room and a long, skinny kitchen. Her living room was where a stair case spiraled up to the second floor. The walls were painted a light beige color, and the floor was a shiny, red wood. It was indeed fancy.

    Eris’ mother came in after me, walking into the kitchen to start dinner. Eris went along with her, so I had no choice but to tag along. I wasn’t going to be alone in a house I don’t know of.

    Mrs. Robinson started to talk to someone who was displaying pots and pans on the counter, along with multiple ingredients. Flour, tomatoes, basil, eggplant, mushrooms; to my embarrassment, there were some fruits or vegetables that I didn’t recognize. Mrs. Robinson spoke very fast, giving instructions to the middle aged woman. That is when I saw the woman more clearly; she had a maid uniform on. Maids? I blushed to myself. My family didn’t even have a dryer, we just hung our clothes up on a line outside. Eris didn’t seem to notice, pulling me to her room. She pushed her door open to a room that could easily be four times bigger than mine. She sat down on her queen sized bed, pulling the earliest apple iPhone there was out of her pocket. I, on the other hand, had a flip phone.

    “Come here, Nadia, we need to start homework” she said, patting the spot next to her. I sat down, and started to get things from my book bag, which had to be stitched up because buying a new one cost too much.

    Reply
  203. Kareena K.

    Very first writing prompt, and very first time sharing! Thanks!
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~

    I entered the square and open facility not knowing what to expect. There were high ceilings and wooden accents. The front desk lay straight ahead and “Trilogy Dance Center” splayed elegantly across the walls. I moved closer to speak with the young, vibrant-looking blonde behind the desk. She was engaged with laughs and giggles with one of the dance moms, who was preparing a check for her child’s tuition. I had time meanwhile, amidst the pleasantries, to glance around.

    There were tiny and petite teenagers everywhere, all in spandex dance suits, short, flowy skirts, hip-warming shorts, pink tights. Some wore ballet shoes, some roamed barefoot, dance bag in hand. A few younger boys bulldozed between and past the females. The girls huddled together, entering and exiting the classroom as one. None of them looked a day over sixteen.

    I was twenty-two.

    The only people I felt as if I could relate to in appearance alone were the blonde at the desk, and the mother paying by check. I, too, were just about to use a check to pay for my ballet class.

    The mom finally retreated and I was able to make pleasant conversation of my own. I told the blonde that it was my first time there, that I’d wanted to take an intermediate class–not beginner–since I’d grown up in dance. Pleasant as she was and not combative at all, she pointed in the direction of the room where the flocks of teenaged girls had situated themselves. It would be my class.

    They were there, in the room of smooth and shiny hardwood flooring and wooden barres lined against three walls. They sat facing the one mirrored wall carefully pinning high buns atop their heads. Some stood and stretched their legs behind them, up and over their heads with not even the hint of effort.

    The blonde said I could change just down the hallway. I thanked her and walked towards the dressing room at the rear of the building, passing two classrooms on the way; one blaring contemporary alternative, and the other classical. The one playing classical was a room chock-full of heavy-footed, blundering adults, probably thirty and over attempting ballet for sport. These, it was evident, needed a means to acquire a good sweat, and had little desire for the art of the activity they partook in.

    With that thought I moved purposefully into the dressing room of another ten or so young girls, each talking about the various classroom periods of their day. The mention of “having so much homework to do” instantly threw me back to days in which trigonometry was interesting, lockers were addresses, and student council was revered. Their eyes bore into me. Not in condemnation, but rather, curiosity. Questions in more than half of their minds of whether or not I’d be taking their class instead of the adult ballet? as I peeled the jeans off my legs exposing my own pink tights.

    It wasn’t until we all lined up in the classroom and took our positions at the barre that we all became equals. It wasn’t until this time that all the smiles were genuine.

    Reply
  204. Jeannie George

    “THINGS ARE NOT ALWAYS AS BAD AS YOU THINK”

    I woke up this morning sensing a cloud of doom hanging over me. I felt as though something bad was going to happen to my grandson because he’d been bullied at school the day before. I tried everything to get rid of this feeling, but as the day dragged on, it became progressingly worse. I went through the motions of doing my normal tasks at work, but this feeling would not pass.

    Then suddenly the phone rang and I heard my son’s voice. Well, mom I’m calling about Tyrese, he’s in trouble again. My heart sunk in my chest as I realized that the dread I’d felt earlier was the news I’d just heard.

    “What is it this time, I asked? Did he get in a fight or did someone hurt him? My son paused for a moment, and then he responded.” No Mom, the coach accidently locked him in the Locker Room at school and it made him miss two of his classes. What? I exclaimed, you mean to tell me that he was locked in that room for over two hours and no one even checked to see why he wasn’t in class?

    That’s not all Mom, while he was locked in the locker room, his book sack; gym clothes and coat were stolen. The news I’d just heard catapulted my emotions to another level. My feelings were a mixture of dismay and relief all at the same time. The news I’d heard wasn’t exactly good, but it wasn’t as bad as I’d imagined earlier that morning.

    Reply
  205. Sinead Langing

    Writer-in-waiting, so I thought I’d give this a try! (If anyone from my college finds this I’ll die…..)

    Out of place, that’s what the forest felt like. She had been in the rushing, bustling city mere minutes before. But now, now, all was oddly silent bar the chirp of a bird here or a rustle of leaves there. It was almost calming, making her shoulder relax and loosen her hold on her jacket that she had been clutching to keep it around her, her footstep lightened as she walked the small pathway, a smile gracing her lips and softening the business lines that surrounded her mouth that was always turned to a frown, lines that ran deeply across her forehead became less noticeable and for a moment it was as if she had walked into an enchanted forest rather then a shortcut.
    Almost had soon as she had entered, she exited the enchanted area. Her sigh was barely audible above the honking of horns or the shouting of teenagers. For now she had returned to reality, but a longing glance backwards was the forests confirmation the woman would return to their enchantment soon.

    Reply
  206. summerek

    It was like being reborn, stepping onto the land of a new world. The buzz of people whirling around me blurred into the background as if I was five years again fixated on the merry go round at a carnival. It was exhilaration, promise of the future, hope for a new start. It was freshman year. Then the anxiety set back in as the days passed continually on into sophomore year. Suddenly the bounce in my step turned into awkward stiffness derived from the notion that everyone was evaluating my every movement. “Shoulders back, eyes down, watch your step” turned into the rhythm my feet moved to as I walked to class. Sitting in class was worse than the process of getting there. I made myself as small as I could in my seat but never small enough. I could hear the thoughts of people that I made eye contact with. They were noticing the frizz in my curly, unflattering hair. They were consoled by the fact that their nose wasn’t as wide as mine or their eyes as little. I knew they were thinking these things because I know they couldn’t possibly look at me and see “pretty”. Surrounded by beautiful youth in their physical prime while mine was lacking hurdled my esteem to hell. A surge of restless anxiety permanently implanted into my bones causing every move to be as uncomfortable and awkward as the last. It was a darkness that refused to be lifted.

    Reply
  207. Anjelika

    Just joined and here’s my first attempt though I confess, it took more than 15 mins!

    Endless Days

    As soon as I entered there was a heavy presence. Darkness was alien in the midday sunshine and my pupils adjusted slowly.

    ‘Come through. Sorry about the state of the place. I hate this kitchen. I hate being downstairs.’ Her tone was erratic and defied her gaunt appearance.

    ‘It’s good to see you,’ I said, giving her a hug. She tensed.

    ‘I’m a state I know. You know me. It’s not me is it? I was petrified when you called but I’m glad you came. Look at me I’m sweating.’ She was wringing her hands.

    I held her and kissed her cheek. ‘Relax, I’m here now,’ I said glancing around. ‘And the place is immaculate.’

    ‘I need to move that wire by the tv and that picture isn’t straight. Look at those lamp shades. I bought them and I can’t stand them. I have to keep cleaning the crystal pendants or they don’t shine.’ I was taken aback as I glanced around. The room was like a shrine. A huge crucifix dominated the wall shelf. It sat between photographs of my dead sister and recently deceased brother-in-law. ‘I can’t look at any photos of him still.’

    I followed her as she hurried from the lounge to the kitchen; her speedy movements had my head spinning. She pointed at the pristine work tops. ‘Look at the state of the place. I can’t keep up with it. I do try. I was cleaning at 3 this morning. Do you want a coffee? I hate this kitchen.’ I watched her as she picked up some antibacterial spray and scrubbed the drainer before filling the kettle. Her restless stance had my eyes darting like a ping-pong ball.

    ‘Why were you cleaning in the middle of the night?’ I asked the question, but already knew the answer. I was exhausted watching her.

    ‘I couldn’t sleep, even after two diazepams.’

    ‘Shall we sit down and talk?’

    ‘Come upstairs. I’ll show you my bedroom. I hate it down here.’

    Upstairs, above the bed were more photographs of her father and a collage of holy cards. She immediately pointed to one.

    ‘That’s Saint Jude. He protects me. Paige did that to make me feel better. I didn’t have the heart to moan about the pictures damaging my wall. She’s a good girl. I feel terrible, she’s been helping me and she’s only ten for God’s sake.’

    ‘Where is she now?’

    ‘She’s at her friends, for a sleep over, poor kid. I drive her crazy.’

    I smiled then walked over to the window. The child had taken over the role of the adult and I feared for her.

    ‘Shall we let some daylight in?’ I asked, opening the blinds tentatively. ‘I can see the pictures better now,’ I said, touching her arm gently. She bowed her head, dropping her eyes to the floor as brightness lit the room. Her late father’s portraits presented another shrine. His eyes followed me from everywhere. I swallowed.

    She lifted her grief-stricken face. ‘I sit in the dark every day. He slept in that bed before he was admitted.’

    ‘I know. You helped him Em. You did the best you could.’

    ‘But I couldn’t be there at the very end though, could I? I couldn’t watch him take that last breath.’ Tears welled up and spilled down her cheeks. ‘I don’t know how you did it with mom, but I know how you felt nursing her now. I can’t stop thinking about him in my bed.’ She brushed her tears away frantically and turned to her wardrobe, grabbing a box.

    ‘You need some of these. He’s got loads. Just look at them all.’ She tipped out various holy medals purchased from the local Catholic Church. ‘And these, choose one of each.’ She sorted through silver bracelets and charms. ‘He had these made for us but I want you to pick one.’

    ‘You keep them, Em. Those are your treasures.’ I needed nothing from him. Although I felt her pain, he’d betrayed my sister leading a double life. My father swore that the grief had given her the cancer and there was a divide in the family after her death. His other woman and his two other girls attended his funeral over twenty years later. My anger towards him had now been replaced with pity and sorrow for his girls. I didn’t want to be in the room.

    ‘I want you to have them, please. I’ve got loads.’ She thrusted a silver bracelet into my hand, followed by a medal. ‘We’ve all had loads of stuff.’

    ‘Thank you,’ I said, not wanting to distress her further.

    ‘I don’t need all this stuff. I don’t want to be here. I want to be with him.’

    ‘You have to be, for Paige’s sake. She needs you, now more than ever.’ I told her gently. ‘Has anybody booked the counsellor yet?’

    ‘The psychiatrist said I’ve had a mental breakdown. The CPN’s come in three times a week but they just want to dope me up. I’ve tried, I really have, but I don’t want to live.’

    ‘Focus on Paige, you’re all she’s got now her dad’s gone to prison. I know it’s hard, but you have to try.’

    ‘I know, but I can’t live without my dad.’ She became calm. Her eyes were staring at me, empty, as though her soul had already departed and she was devoid of further emotion. ‘I’ve still got his Oromorph. I hid it and I sip it sometimes.

    ‘That’s morphine, Em. It’s really dangerous. We need to tip it away.’

    ‘I’ve taken lots of stuff. Yet I’m still here.’

    ‘It will get better in time, I promise.’

    ‘I need help, don’t I?’

    ‘Well I’m here now and I’ll get things sorted for you, starting with some fresh air.’

    ‘I…I can’t. I haven’t been out of these four walls for months.’

    ‘I know. Small steps, Em, otherwise they will admit you.’

    ‘They tried but guess what? They haven’t got a bed.’

    Reply
  208. Lele Lele

    He sat on the corner staring at the blinking lights above.

    He put his hands over his eyes for a moment then the blinking lights blinded his eyes again.

    Dark shabby clothes. He looked at himself. With a deft touch he straightened the irritating creases on his wear.

    An old bust across his left. He walked behind it and breathed a sigh. It’s tall shadow hid him. His clothes weren’t old anymore. He didn’t look dirty anymore.

    Dazzling lights. Shining jewelries. Their pearl white smiles filled the night. They tittered and laughed and drank their sparkling wine. His stomach grumbled. The food table was void of people but the food looked expensive. And very expensive.

    A tap on his shoulder.

    “Hey dear,” she said. Her hair reflected the ceiling lights. He covered his eyes.

    “Na-ah,” she said removing it. “You’ve been hiding all night dear, come socialize.”

    She grabbed his arm and moved away. Her golden watched glittered on her hands. He didn’t move.

    “Dear?”

    He cleared his throat. He was bathed in the shadow of the statue. She was cast in the spotlight of the night. “I, uh, uhm. I’m fine here.”

    She huffed. “Dear, you are not fine. I can tell.”

    A small smile appeared on his lips and he curtsied. “I’m o-okay, Miss. Just don’t trouble yourself please.”

    Her shining eyes got wide. “Okay, if you say so.”

    She moved away. She approached one gentleman and started talking to him. She didn’t look back at him once.

    He was pushed forward. Half in the light half in the dark. He blinked. His legs froze.

    “Ah,” he said. “Ah, haha.”

    A grin formed on his lips.

    “Stupid party, haha.” He shook his head. “Stupid clothes.”
    A grumble from his stomach. His other arm was light in the light the other dark in the shadows. Grumble again.

    “Ah, fuck it.” He strolled towards the food table clutching his abdomen.

    His clothes reflected the night lights as he reached and grabbed as many food he can take.

    Reply
  209. ohita afeisume

    One day long ago, I found myself in Luanda. The island nation looked so inviting with the surrounding sea and beaches. It was my first day out on the streets to take a walk. I was determined to beat jet lag after long hours of sleep indoors. I was thrilled to see a lot of people- men , women boys and girls going about their business. I turned this way to speak to a young lady resplendently dressed in rainbow clothes with matching high heeled shoes . She turned away like a scared cat. On my left were two youngsters in conversation. I said, “hello” and they looked at me bemused. After a while , I saw a man moving towards my direction. Perhaps he saw my predicament and wanted to help. He was dressed in suit,like a business executive. “Sure this man understands,” I murmured to myself. Upon turning round to ask him a question, he shook his head vigorously as a sign he could not understand. Then he began to speak in Portuguese. It was my turn to look bewildered. Of course, I replied in English! The next thing was that a little crowd gathered around us. Now all were talking animatedly around me. I could not hear make out a word of what they were saying. I tried hard to let them know I was new in these parts .If only in this crowd, there could be found an interpreter to make sense of this babel. I looked, helpless as I turned from one face to another, beckoning, almost pleading.I did not know whether to go forward or backward. How was I going to live here for the next one year? I did not know sign language. For the first time I felt strangely lost. I had imagined that everywhere I went If I spoke English there would be someone to understand me. I had travelled with my husband to a few countries and I could feel at home as I communicated with English. Here I was with people of colour just like me yet…

    Reply
  210. Leana Jose

    This is what I came up with. Please bear with me, I’m still starting with all this creative writing. I’d love any feedback as long as its constructive. Thanks!

    I felt very small, half my size-which wasn’t a lot to begin with-in the midst of the taller figures that pressed in from all sides. When I inhaled, I breathed in the heavy air that tasted like salt. A drop of sweat dripped into my eyes–God, it stung so bad. I blinked, hoping nobody would see and think that I was crying. The last thing I needed was for anyone to think I couldn’t handle public transportation at rush hour.
    My moist fingers gripped my raw arms. I was tired of being shoved and jostled by the ever shifting crowd in the small train car. My legs ached, especially at the knees which felt like they would break any minute. Someone was breathing against the back of my head, urging my scalp to perspire. I couldn’t breathe.
    The doors slid open and I could hear people talking.
    “Excuse me.”
    “Let me through please.”
    “Please cooperate, so we can all get home.”
    I shuffled to the right, pressing myself into the crowd as people brushed by my side on their way out. Someone’s elbow was jabbing into my back, and I was sure my head was blocking someone’s line of sight.
    There was a breeze, I could feel it passing by the doors. But then the doors slid shut and I was stuck in the rectangle of humid body heat.
    The train lurched to a start and I bent my knees–they screamed in protest. I ground my molars together, my fingers digging into my sweaty skin. Steady as an old tree, I thought to myself.
    Someone moved and something hit the back of my leg, too close to my ass. I tried not to flinch as I moved away as much as I could–which wasn’t very far.
    Fifth avenue.
    I was almost there. One more stop and I wouldn’t have to breathe in the stench of humanity. I couldn’t see the windows anymore, too many bodies in the way. I couldn’t see the ceiling anymore, too any people towering over me. I couldn’t look down to see my feet, too many people pressing in.
    The colors of clothes, the feel of skin and fabric brushing against my skin…It was all too much. My stomach lurched and my hands flew to my mouth. Don’t do it. Don’t.
    The train lurched again, the lights flickered off and my foot slipped. I bit down on my tongue to stop the scream from escaping. My ankle was probably twisted. Don’t cry. Don’t cry, I chanted as the lights flew as the train began picking up speed, but I could feel my lower lip trembling as my eyes stung.
    From the corner of my blurry vision I could see someone looking at me. My jaw tightened and I wiped at my eyes with my already damp handkerchief. Don’t cry, don’t cry.
    The throbbing pain in my ankle continued until the train screeched to a stop. I tipped sideways, into the man on my left. My knees felt like jelly. “Sorry, sorry,” I chanted as I righted myself, my hand instinctually reaching to the clasp of my bag. Couldn’t lose my ticket, they wouldn’t let me leave the station.
    And then the doors opened and I was carried off by the crowd of people eager for home or fresh air, or both. It was an odd sensation, like being carried off by a current.
    My feet slammed down onto the cold station floor and I staggered to get away from the pushing crowd. There was a pounding in my head, and my ankle still hurt. I clutched at the safety railing to stop my hands from shaking.
    “You okay kid?” A middle-aged man with a shinny head was peering at me. He’d stopped like a rock against the swarming horde of ‘commuters.’ I tried nodding, I wasn’t sure if I succeeded. “You’re as pale as milk,” he shook his head at me, but moved on to the ticket checking machines.
    Tomorrow you’ll have to do that again. A voice in my head said. And the day after that, and after that, until the end of the semester.
    Something was dripping down the side of my cheek. Whether it was a tear or more sweat, I wasn’t sure. I felt a wretched taste growing stronger in my mouth and scurried off to find a comfort room.

    Reply
  211. Will

    The cramped low lit room was a tremendous contrast with the open space outside. It’s like I had suddenly stepped into another period in history; a different place, a different time, different people.

    God, the people. I didn’t know anybody. And I was supposed to go up to them and ask for directions to my examination rooms. It was like the shadows leapt out, encircled the crowds and bathed them in an evil aura.

    I walk around in steps so small I don’t make a noise. If someone were to touch me now, I’d be done for. Have a heart attack, collapse in the middle of a bar with a dozen people looking at me. (There were only a dozen people, yet they scared me more than a crowd – how could it be?)

    There are no waiters here; I can sit down without anybody coming up to me. Please, let me have a little corner, the darkest, tiniest one there is.

    There is one, and once I’m there I take deep breaths. I must prepare myself. I can’t afford to collapse in front of the people sitting on the white table. Oh no, there they are. They’re the only thing i can see now – can they see me?

    Using more strength than I could have thought, I walk up to the girl sitting closest to me.

    “Excuse me,” I whisper.

    “Yes?” she said. Perfect, friendly, polite. No reason to collapse over, right?

    “I was told to get my directions from this room,” I said. I can feel the dizziness building up, in the back of my head.

    Reply
  212. Unidentified Me

    I stepped uneasily out of my asylum and took a few cautious steps down the narrow hallway. The florescent lights were flickering strangely and I felt the pressure of what I had to do pressing down on me. Turning the corridor, I was assaulted by a tall man wearing a newsboy hat. I heard the words “sorry” come breathlessly out of my mouth in a soft whisper as I moved past him. I staggered down luxurious staircase with the plush ornamented carpeting. I stopped at each floor, unsure which would give me what I had come searching for. I was being watched, but at least my audience wouldn’t be able to laugh at my absurdity. The imposing figures of war veterans, hunting dogs, and pure bread ponies would watch but remain silent. I heard nervous chatter coming from a group of offices on the 6th floor, or was I on the 5th? It seemed promising so I ventured down the tight corridor peaking around every corner hoping to find what I had come so far for.

    Unexpectedly I bumped into him. He was wearing a neon yellow cable knit sweater. His hair was white and he was slightly stooped but this did not make him any less dignified. My steps became mechanical until they stopped working altogether. A rush of excitement hit me in the aftermath after my brain had finally processed who he was. He hobbled past me, then stopped and retraced his steps back. Of all things, he introduced himself to me! A man needing no introduction, especially in that place. Like a flash, the encounter was over and to my horror I realized I never uttered a word in return. I did find what I had been so anxiously searching for but in the end it didn’t matter compared to that one encounter.

    Reply
  213. Alexander Gomez

    The one time I felt awkward or out of place was when I was with my friends at a party. The reason why was that all my friends had brought their girlfriends and cars to the party. It made me feel that I didn’t belong in this party and only popular people did due to the fact that all my friends had everything as their loved ones and their car. In addition, they all started dancing and in the meanwhile I was just sitting down in the table alone and I felt uncomfortable because it felt like the people in the party were staring at me just thinking that im a weird person and a creep. While the couples were dancing, one of the couples stopped and came towards me and asked me “How come aren’t you dancing” so I replied ” I don’t belong in this party honestly because no one wants me and I’ve always been disliked.” So, after I said that, all my friends came back to the table and started drinking soda because they were thirsty of all the dancing. Time after it was time to go so I had to get a ride home from one of my friends which had a girlfriend and I had to sit in the back and I felt awkward due to the cause that my friend and his girlfriend were talking all the time and holding hands along the car ride. Eventually we ended up at his girlfriends house first but he just dropped her off which took time and I felt uncomfortable since it wasn’t my car and after time past he came so then he actually took me home. Once I got home I was relieved but in overall my whole day was just really uncomfortable and out of place since I wasn’t in the same style as my friends.

    Reply
  214. ernie gomez

    My whole life i felt out of place. Even in my own home growing up. I’m different than everyone in my family. Im shy, quiet, smart, calm, less social, and i’m not as ghetto as them. My family does many things that i’m not comfortable doing because it’s simply not me. When i’m home or even out with them i feel out of place. My family is really loud and ghetto and act loud and ghetto in public. That is something i can’t do because i am uncomfortable on what others are going to think about me. When we get to many public areas or leave home my family is really social. They aren’t afraid to talk to people. However i am. I’m not like them i’m shy. I just can’t talk to new people like them. My shyness separates me from them. People don’t believe that i’m one of them. No one in my family is fully related to me so we’re all different. However they all share some traits that i just can’t share. I’m not like them and i can never be. Being with them makes me feel out of place. It confuses me why they are the way they are and im different. I dont like it. It always makes me feel lile i dont belong. I am nothing like them. They are good people who have fun in life. But i cant be like them. Im scared to be like them. Ive always been different and it bothers me. I want to be like them. They have alot of dun by just bieng how they are but its just not me. Many people lool at me as if i dont belong with them and its true. I always feel uncomfortable because im holding them back. They make me feel out of place.

    Reply
  215. Margarita Alfaro

    As a kid I was always singled out because of my age with my sisters. My sisters and I are about one year apart. With me being the youngest girl and all my sisters didn’t like spending time with me. My sisters are completely different from me. Jessica, the oldest, never liked talking to me because she thinks I don’t understand life like she does. Jessica and I can’t be in the same room by ourselves without arguing with each other. Jazmine, the second oldest, her and I get along but, not all the time. They never really played with me or spent any time with me just with each other.

    It’s not only with age that I feel that I been singled out with. My sisters are so much alike mainly because they have the same father. I for one have another dad that I don’t know. I feel that this is why they hang out so much. My sisters hardly leave anywhere without each other. When Jessica was still in highschool, they hang out with the same friends and ate lunch together. They are never really apart for long because they even share the same room. Then and now I still am singled out of my sisters bond between each other. I feel that this was a good thing though because I started at a young age to be my own person.

    Reply
  216. Melody Del Cid

    I didn’t really feel out place, but I had to find the place I wanted to be.
    In middle school and high school, I did feel out of place from time to time because entering middle school, I would overhear my friends talking about classes they had similar; while, I would have none that were the same. However, that didn’t last long.
    Another time I felt out of place was in high school with the same situation, but this time it was quite different. I didn’t feel out of place around my friends, but instead I felt out of place or awkward in my engineering class because I was the only girl in a class overthrown by boys. Who wants to be the only female in a class full of males? This meant,I couldn’t really socialize. It felt like I didn’t belong there because there weren’t many girls in the class. However, it wasn’t about me feeling out of place, it was about my determination to be strong and know that I need the class in order to pursue my career. I wanted to be there and show my worth in the class.
    Now, I found the place I want to be. I want to be in the engineering class in order to pursue my career in the future. The class has helped me so much to get where I am now, I’ve showed my worth and realized my place was in that class full of boys, it didn’t matter who was there, I know my place.

    Reply
  217. Melody Del Cid

    I put my head down, hood on. I didn’t want to be seen in that room full of light. It was the first time I’ve seen the place. The place was enormous and I was merely an ant. I was the new ant in the ant farm with no idea what my role was in society. The society would be full of lies, the truth was hidden, to brainwash me. Was the good job or great effort, I spent time on not enough for them. That is time that I cannot regain. Time doesn’t stop for anyone, it just keeps on going.
    All the time, I put into my work was not good enough for the commanders. I couldn’t help it, but give up. Giving up was the only solution. However, I do believe in not giving up but this time it was different. How can I not be good enough in this society? The society that lies, the one that keeps the truth hidden, the one that brainwashes its players. I couldn’t help it but give in. I got the sharp end of a blade, pressed it to my skin, and just let it happen with this red liquid escaping my once sealed skin.
    That wasn’t the end, the knock on my door stopped the rest of the act, my mothers voice just replaying itself in my head. I couldn’t help but think, “How would my family feel, if I was gone?” I stopped and let this society, do what it did best but I was going to change and not let it get the best of me, from there on out.

    *** From a time, I was at school (felt uncomfortable) and got criticized. “commanders” portrays those who felt as if they were better than me at the time and would criticize my work/me behind my back, until I found out. Time well spent was lost forever.

    *First time, writing on something on a deeper level.

    Reply
  218. Celso Villanueva

    I love it!!!! the last two sentences got to me got to start writing more often.

    Reply
  219. Lidia

    Something to think about.

    Reply
  220. Jose G.

    I liked the article it was good it makes you think about life. It was worth reading it was out standing hope to read more and hope to for you to come out with more stores like this.

    Reply
  221. maryely

    I think this article has a very good point of putting people to think about their own lives. I think writing for fifteen minutes helps me think about what I want an what I don’t want in my live.

    Reply
  222. bluecave

    I was born in the wrong town, maybe even the wrong state. Perhaps I was born in the wrong family as well. But actually, upon further examination, it has been that out-of-placeness that has spawned the quirky self that I am today.

    The tragedy is that for many years I tried to tell myself that I did belong. But I didn’t. I just could not care about the things my family cared about. I couldn’t care about sports, or making money, or having a fancy boat. I couldn’t care about movies to the point of knowing the first name of every actor, actress, and director, and yet speak nothing of the deeper meaning behind the images and screenplay.

    The things I wanted to say I could not. I could not make them palatable to people who did not think or create, but rather got drunk and gossiped. I was shut out of the conversation because I didn’t follow the narrative. And when I tried to express my real feelings, I felt a subliminal silence, as if my words had gone straight to the graveyard, never to see the light of day.

    Some of my family members actually read books. But for heaven’s sake, they never talked about them. It was such a private matter. Privacy is not such a bad thing. I mean it’s important to know what you think and how you feel without the influence of others. But at some point you have to come to the conversation to trim and pluck and prune your ideas. We were not a talking family, only a hurting family. And we didn’t talk about hurting either. No, we did not talk. We either silently kept to ourselves or silently kept to ourselves in front of a TV.

    As a young woman trying to figure out life I made some poor choices, including my spouse. There were many hours in front of the TV, and just for spice, the computer. I had been well-trained in not expressing myself. This led to also not knowing myself, and ultimately I think, to hating myself. When you hate yourself, you allow personal assaults of every shade, including emotional. Emotional assaults are the sneakiest, the foggiest, and I was definitely in a fog of vagueness that left me dazed as if I had just received a left hook.

    The left hook came daily. There were days I was in the corner trying to pep talk myself without a coach. I got very good at this. There were days I was flat in the middle of the ring silently telling the ref to go fuck himself. Eventually, I became a flat line in the middle of the ring, ignoring the ref and feeling nothing. There is a relief that comes when you just don’t care about anything anymore.

    Oddly, this extreme position was probably the event to trigger an important change. I began to peck at my cage, at first timid, but then bold and daring. I began to like myself again. When the cage door finally opened, there just was no stopping me. It took a while to get used to the freedom. But the more I exercised it the more I liked myself and the more I trusted myself. It’s not as if I don’t make mistakes or have regrets from time to time, but I own them fully and I accept them as part of me, along with all the more likeable things. I say what I think and feel and no longer fear that graveyard, which was the figment of a young child’s imagination.

    What is feeling out of place? It is when you invent a fake you so that you don’t stand out, so that you fit snugly in with everything around you. Now that I listen to the real me and don’t try to hide it, I no longer feel “out of place.” Instead I have found my own place, a place of strength that doesn’t rely on blending in. I have an inner coach to pep-talk me and the ref no longer holds me hostage. The match is now even and if I were you, I would be careful of my left-hook.

    Reply
  223. Celso Villanueva

    I love it!!! The last two sentences are very thoughtful.

    Reply
  224. Chelsea Sandoval

    One of the times I felt most akward and uncomfortable because one time when I was in the grocery store called el super and I felt very uncomfortable because I would always hear that about that store and that it had many bad reviews about having bad fruit and bad meat and I would always see people ordering lots of meat and they’re would be people protesting outside and they would get arrested but I think it’s uncomfortable because you buying meat from a grocery store where they’re have been pictures on the news on cases that the meat from them comes with flys and other bugs and that the vegtables look nice and fresh and ready to eat but once you start cutting them they have mold inside and also with the fruit I once stopped eating oranges because they had small bugs inside and then I went to superior and the oranges were the best oranges I seen and they were fresh and sweet. I don’t trust going to buy anything no type of meat or fruit or vegtables they most possible thing I would buy from there is the sodas when they are on special but besides that I wouldn’t buy anything. The super Market has man bad reviews on the internet and I suggest they should shut down that market because many people agree that they have bad quality when it comes to purchasing food and they should make pettions to see how many people agree and they’re should be a certain amount on how bad quality and should they shut it down. It’s akward when many people say that grocery store is they’re favorite and they recommend to purchase merchandise there because many people dis agree with that Idea. They should have a health inspection and to see if they pass and if not they should shut down al el super stores.

    Reply
  225. America Villalvazo

    That was deep but nice. I was already thinking something different when he said cash $, anyways here’s what I came up with:
    It was raining and I was thinking and think will he get out soon, but I never found out until I asked. My father told me that he was being held for 15 years but he didn’t know for what. He went to court and hearing and everything he had to do but the judge told him he had to a get a lawyer. We got a lawyer and we paid our downpament for him. Now they are thinking about the sentence and what will happen with him today. Lately my days have been dark and drowsy because of the stressed later on me. These dark days are getting easier and easier that I am feeling even better and I’m getting my help that I need. Friends and family is all I have left and idk what I would do without them.

    Reply
  226. NS

    We were getting ready to head out to a party one night. By eleven pm our ride was outside in the dark lonely street. In the car were three guys who we couldn’t see their face due to the darkness. We got in and drove off down the dark alleys. The car wasn’t in good conditions so it felt really unsafe being in there. Since the party was said to start until another hour, the guys decided to go to a park and just chill and pass time. They started doing their own thang and I just watched and put caution. I wanted to get off the car and leave but how if I didn’t have my car. I was starting to feel trapped and anxious. Everything that was happening was making me regret tagging along. But I sucked it up and waited for everything to be over and thankfully it did. We then headed to the party and things calmed down. The rest of the night was pretty chill I had a good time after all.

    Reply
  227. Jalen Jackson

    This was a great story i enjoyed all of the suspense and i feel like you illustrated it perfectly and ill take your advice and make use of a new place you’ve never been to to have fresh material for a story, also i thought it was a gun you bought at the end.

    Reply
  228. Dave C

    I think the most awkward moment was when I was walking late at night to my house. I was a couple of miles away from my house and I walked pass an alley and I saw a couple having sex in the alley and as I was walking by I saw them but they we’re making eye contact with me as I walked by and I felt awkward with them doing that. And I walked pass them and they yelled out “hey” and I started running cause it was late in the night so I didn’t what was going to happen anything could have happened.

    Reply
  229. Juan Espinoza

    There you are again today…I don’t know what to say. It has
    been three days since you came into this place, three whole days of not knowing
    what to do around you. You make my head spin, what, with your stunning beauty
    and uninitiated words. You stand there and pretend like nothing is happening –
    little do you know I am dying inside.

    What does it matter? It has only been three days, three
    mind-numbing days. I walk into the room and pretend like you are not there, you
    see me, I know you do. Why are you looking at me like that? What did I do to
    you?

    I project my feelings of uneasiness to the other nurse. She
    has no idea that my heart is about to be carried away in a hearse. I just want
    to say something to you, I just want to speak. Your endless beauty is turning
    me into a freak. What the hell am I supposed to say? “Hello, my name is Kay?”

    That sounds so stupid; I cannot even entertain the thought.
    I need to be someone I’m not. AHHH! What
    can I do? I cannot even talk to you!

    Reply
  230. Bogar

    I think it was the way they looked at me ,when first stepped into the room or the way the people spoke to me but it felt strange. I sat far behind and I think it was the way they looked at me ,when first stepped into the room or the way the people spoke to me but it felt strange. I sat far behind and waited for her to walk in yet i felt like no 1 could see me.

    Reply
  231. Member of the Tribe

    First time on the site, nearly procrastinated on getting started but thought to take a shot. Here’s my unedited attempt in 15 minutes. Looking forward to your feedback and hoping to write more 🙂

    ——-

    Leaving the office that afternoon for our daily coffee break seemed innocuous enough. I had been apart of at least 10 afternoon coffee trips by now. The new guy trying to fit in and adopt the culture. I was never a big fan of coffee, the taste never differed from cup to cup. But this group that embarked on coffee break trips was different. They were connoisseurs who could tell you the backstory of the bean. They had specific tastes that they longed to satisfy during these trips.

    Each afternoon it seemed that we trekked further and further from the Kuerig in the office that I was perfectly happy with. Today was no exception. We arrived at the location of what was supposed to be a new Mecca for the coffee purist. There were the usual New York passerby, uninterested in everyone and everything. Head down and constantly pushing forward. However, at this stop I saw no inviting sign – no coffee pun infused banner that welcomed crowds into its hallowed hall. All that greeted us was the dingy sign of the local subway station stop. I looked around, sure that I missed something. But the group pressed on, into the subway. Surely, we would not be catching the train to get coffee. That cannot be possible during a trip that was supposed to last only 15 minutes – a trip I was not even interested in.

    As we walked through the poorly lit station, the leader of the group, my manager, dipped into a storefront that held no sign. It seemed to be as insignificant as a dwelling with people can be. It looked to be a gap in the wall of the station. But inside there were two workers, a single coffee machine, and bar stools and counter space for patrons. There was a woman in a trench coat on the far right, sitting by herself reading a book and sipping her brew. How could it be possible that she decided to spend her time in this dark place where natural light could not penetrate.

    The workers, two young men in their mid twenties, energetically greeted us. While one worked on refilling their milk, the other engaged in conversation with us. Well with them, my confusion of what was happening kept me by the door of “the gap” in the wall. He seemed amiable enough, almost too happy. Like a man in a post-apocalyptic world that has stumbled upon other people for the first time in months. I felt as though this was all a rouse, some gag on the new guy. That my manager would finally look at me and laugh at the absurdity of it all. “Did you think we’d walk to a subway station to get coffee?”, he’d say.

    But he didn’t. He was proud of his decision. So I watched by the door, accepted my coffee, and pretended to taste the hints of this or the other that differentiated this from all other cups. The woman to the far right never looked up. The crowd outside never looked inside the store. My coworkers never seemed to feel this entire experience odd at all. So I stood there and drank my coffee, chuckling under my breathe.

    Reply
    • Christina

      I loved reading this. I think your style is easy flowing and so well described I could picture the entire scenario in my head (isn’t that the point of writing?) I laughed because of how foreign and weird it was through your eyes.

    • Lev Stefano

      The scenario and setting work well. Definitely sounds like an odd experience.

      Be good to have more about why the main character wants to be part of this group? Maybe some focus on the members of the group that would enable readers to empathise why he wants to hang out with them in this way.

  232. Jenny Pineda

    Many people feel out of place at any place, whether is a party or even with their own family.
    My dad and I decided that it was right for me to play a sport. I chose soccer, primarily because my dad loves soccer, but I didn’t know how to play soccer. So we went to the administration for me to register to be in a team.
    One day, my dad got a called saying that they found a team and that I was required to go to soccer practice to get along with my team mattes. Little did I know that for me to play soccer I had to know at least the rules and know how to play a little. I felt like I didn’t belong their.
    The coach was aware that I didn’t know how to play soccer but the girls didn’t. They where making fun of me and giving me faces. So the coach changed me teams because I couldn’t play, then I really felt out of place. It took years for me to learn how to place soccer, but when we where in the finals with the team that didn’t like me ,because I didn’t know how to play soccer, which was funny because we beat them and I got the MVP trophie. Maybe feeling out of place is a good thing, but sometimes it cant be hard.

    Reply
  233. Christina

    The party started promptly at 4 o’clock. There were people running around the house, fixing up the last details and decorations before the guests started to arrive. There was a table set up in the living room that looked like a snapshot straight from Pinterest; topped with an assortment of glass vases and jars, filled to the top with red and blue candies. Above the candy bar on the wall was a sign, hand made from red and blue construction paper with three of my cousin’s names, and “Class of 2016”. Outside there were 8 tables, each topped with mason jars and even more graduation decorations. The sun was shining brightly, and the heat was intense and dry like a desert; still a beautiful day for a graduation party.

    By 5 o’clock the house was full of people I hadn’t seen for years. Music was blasting, kids were running around, planes were flying by overhead, and I was seated quietly with my plate of pastor street tacos at a table by myself. I could feel the vibrations from the bass of the music travel through the concrete and up my body. I could hear the laughter of twenty people, and bits and pieces of conversations from the tables surrounding me. I could hear everything, loudly, except for my own thoughts. Incessant chatter about nothing, here and there, and intruding yet common questions being asked about my life by people who never kept in touch over the growing span of years that had passed. They are family, but I could not see home in any of their eyes. Surrounded by a sea of strangers, so shallowly connected to me like the depth of a children’s blow up pool sold at Walmart.

    Reply
  234. Crystalyn Davidson

    Unedited. I’ve been studying writing more than actually writing. I’m hoping these exercises will help me change that.

    The white convertible mustang skidded and stopped inside a ditch. Silence filled the night for a second before a voice screamed,” Everyone get out!” The car shook from side to side and all was quiet again.
    I didn’t move. I stared ahead at the field under the bright stars.
    A voice called,”Kiki get out! It could blow!”
    I turned my head slowly. The three of them were looking at me. They were panting. What were they worried about?
    I looked the other way and saw a the biggest brightest orange moon that sat on the midnight blue horizon. There was a ring of rainbows around it. So beautiful. My father was there.
    I tried to get up. Something was holding me down. The seat belt was still latched on. I fumble with the buckle, and click sounded my freedom and I climbed over the wall onto the thick mushy grass and headed toward the orb under the twinkling stars. Mounds of dirt tripped me and I kept falling to my hands and knees. Each time I got back up and continued my journey.
    “Kiki! Where are you going?” an echo called. I shrugged the voice away. It wasn’t important. I needed to go this way. I kept going.
    A pair of hands grabbed me and spun me around. A voice spoke. “Kiki, where are you going? We have to get help.”
    I pointed toward the moon and said with a hollow voice,”My father is that way.”
    I saw the face of the person speaking to me for the first time. Crystal’s eyebrows creased and she frown. “Kiki…You told me your dad died when you were four…”
    I did? My dad is dead?
    Then reality snapped back into me. That’s right, we were in a wreck. I looked at the beat up car. The hood was down.
    Didn’t the car roll? I know it did… What did I hit my head on.
    I felt my scalp and looked at my hand. My heart thudded at the sight of dark blood on the back on my hand. Then I realized the blood was only from a cut on my middle finger. I felt my head with my other hand and saw that my head wasn’t bleeding after all.
    I looked back at the car, which was now surrounded by cars, a firetruck, and an ambulance. My mother came running.
    How’d she get here so fast?
    “Oh, baby! Are you alright.” She hugged me. Honeysuckle perfume filled my senses, making me feel more alert.
    “I’m fine, Mama, only a scratch.” I gave her a weak smile.
    A brightness behind me pulled to me. I turned and saw the moon was no longer orange, but white and further away.
    I turned back to my mother. She stared at me, like she was waiting for me to attack her or something. “Mama, I’m fine. I only got a cut. Really.”
    She relented,”Alright, let get you checked out.”

    And that’s all I got in 15 minutes.

    Reply
  235. Roscoe

    My romantic relationships have all ended passively, at least from my perspective. Women “break up” with me. I’ve usually been told politely with assurances like “it’s not you, it’s me” and “we can still be friends”. On one occasion, a woman moved out of state. When she gave me no indication of how we would remain in touch, I was too afraid of rejection to ask.

    A month ago, I decided to break up with a woman in my apartment building. Our morning ritual was for me to wait for her downstairs before we caught the subway station downtown. Rather than telling her my wishes, one morning I boarded the train by myself at the previous stop, making sure to sit by another commuter. When the woman saw me, she said my name with a hesitant smile and a questioning tone. I simply said, “Hi.”

    I learned from her roommate that she had passed out in the shower, had bumped her head, and had lost consciousness for a couple of hours. The implication was that I should go visit her at the hospital.

    I had no way of knowing whether our breakup, my thoughtless actions in fact, had upset her and had contributed to her fall. Whether they did or not, would she be upset to see me? What would be the message if I took flowers? Would she think it was an apology or even an overture to get back together? I did harbor feelings of regret on top of being embarrassed but were those thoughts because I had no other prospects?

    I stopped outside her room, flowers in hand. I gently tapped on the partially closed door. She said, “come in.”

    Reply
  236. Bhavisha

    Out of Place

    I sat down on a rusty old bench by the park at the end of the main road. I looked around and I could feel the panic starting to rise within me. My heart began to reach a pulse it’s never reached before. Being in a strange place. Waiting for a stranger. All I could do was sit and embrace myself for what is to come.

    So that’s my introduction for my “out of place”. I need help finishing it. My problem is that i never know where to take it after that. My essays turn out boring.

    Reply
    • Sgarr

      Hello

    • Bhavisha

      so glad i made your day

    • Sgarr

      Hey why won’t u talk to me or send a pic

    • Bhavisha

      hi. you haven’t told me a fantasy yet. still waiting for a good one

    • Sgarr

      Where you at

    • Bhavisha

      heres my email roxyabc8@gmail.com u better send wat im waiting for lol n ull get what u want promise

    • Sgarr

      I sent it waiting on you

  237. Samiya

    out of place

    I don’t know what is was maybe it was the stares or the gossiping or maybe the whispering but everything seemed so judge mental.
    I must have been standing around for hours .Waiting for someone to tell me what to do where to go to.
    Explain to me what do I do and when will I be able to find my class so I can hide in there and don’t feel like if I’m on display like raw meat about to be savaged by a pack of hungry wolves.
    At last I saw the person I was waiting they told me. ‘’when you hear the bell go to that big building that’s the auditorium, we will have prayers and then the principal will tell you where to go and what to do’’ I replied “thank you.’’
    Finally the bell rang I made my to the auditorium being careful not to get pushed by the other students.
    When I arrived I went to the front and kept my eyes strained on the principal when she told “ all first formers wait in the auditorium we will tell you where your class is after we send everyone else to their level heads.”
    At last I hear my name call for 112 the level 1 form one I enter the class when I saw two teachers come in a male and female and they said “welcome to secondary school we will be your form teachers now can everyone say your name so I can mark the register” everyone replied “yes teachers.”
    The male teacher then said “when the three bells ring that means to go straight home.”
    As I arrive in the car my mom asked “how was your first day of school” I replied “I felt so out of place.

    Reply
  238. Alex Crenshaw

    I’m probably a few years late to the party, but I thought I’d share anyway. This took me about 12 minutes to write.

    The walls looked familiar. Furniture was arranged in all the places my mind remembered. The people too were ones I had seen my whole life. The girl sitting next to me was a shadow, face masked by deep clouds of grey. We sat so close, but our minds were like the tides of two continents, ever rippling with waves, but continuously in opposite directions. Words seem to echo in the room, bouncing off the shifting walls that grew closer to me every syllable. My head seemed to cave-in on itself. Pressure built around my brain squeezing my thoughts into a cerebral tunnel. Vision blurred and my heart stopped. And then everything stopped. Words stopped. Thoughts stopped. The clouds around the girl cleared. Behind the condensation lay a stranger. Even the clouds had an appearance of familiarity, but this personage was unidentifiable.

    She looked at me as a person looks at someone who bumps into them on a busy sidewalk. Brows slightly furrowed, eyes scratching only the surface of me. No recognition, no intimacy. Weeks ago she laid in my arms, elevated with each breath taken into my lungs, hearts beating in unison. Her eyebrows tilted into a look of worry, almost fearful of what she sees. Perhaps it’s more of what she feels. Nothing feels strange, nothing when there should be something. Like opening a bottle of water and putting it to your lips to quench your thirst, but nothing comes out, it is empty. The stranger stood and walked out of the door, but just before the door closed I saw a glimpse of an old lover, one I had forgotten about. In an instant she was gone. I walked to the kitchen in my house, with its familiar walls. I looked at the furniture in all the places it had been for years. And I stared in the eyes of my family who I will never forget and who will never be strangers to me. I was home.

    Reply
  239. Dawn

    Melanie looked outside at the swaying branches of the towering pine. It knew its place, it knew where it belonged.

    She pulled her chair in closer to the round, smooth, cold kitchen table. Grace came into the room chatting with their teacher, Rita. “I’ll make you some breakfast from what I brought,” she said to Rita.

    “Oh lovely, I’d love that,” Rita said, pulling up a chair and bumping the table, spilling Melanie’s tea. Melanie dabbed the table with her napkin.

    Grace opened the fridge door and her upper body disappeared into it, she pulled out containers and aluminum packages and set them on the table. Rita scurried about, opening cupboards and drawers, pulling out bowls and silverware. She set two places for them, spreading out white napkins as placemats, arranging the silverware just so around the bowls.

    Melanie’s heart pounded as she spooned up her soft, cold yogurt into her mouth, its sour bitterness made her eyes water. She wondered if she should speak, Rita had asked them all to not create social bonds or friendships with one another, she wanted them to pursue this shamanistic path she was teaching with integrity.

    “Good morning,” she said to Rita.

    Rita jumped, looking up, alarmed. “Oh my god, I didn’t see you there. Melanie. You scared me.”

    Grace turned her back to Mel, stirring their oatmeal in a small saucepan on the stove. “Rita, I’m loving your weekend workshop … again!” Grace said.

    Rita smoothed a curl off her round, youthful face. “Oh I’m glad, Gracie, it’s whatever you want to make it, you know?”

    Melanie put her spoon down and picked up her tea cup, pressing it into her hands for warmth. The tea had gone cold.

    Reply
  240. sara

    here’s my first attempt at writing within 15 min:
    We landed on the dot, as was mentioned on the boarding pass. Passed through the wired immigration check point and handed our passport for stamping the entry to this mysterious long anticipated country. The lady was rude, she ask why, what and so on and finally looked at her colleague and remarked in her language which I assumed I understood she said “this red passport never saw one before” her college retorted, that’s the passport from M.E. She turned towards us and handed our passports as if we had come to invading her country.
    We collected our luggage and headed for the taxi. It was exactly 2.30 pm, a sunny day but pleasant. We waited in the queue for our turn to take the taxi. Luckily the taxi driver was a friendly middle age person, the drive to the hotel was a pleasant one, the greenery was pleasing to the eye as in contrast to where we came from. The fresh of the afternoon air hit my senses like the morning dew. Finally we arrived to our holiday home…..

    Reply
  241. sara

    ): my first attempt is a mess………what do you think?

    Reply
  242. Luna

    It was a dark, cloudy Saturday. But the weather didn’t seem to have mattered much inside the grand hall I was in; filled with the sound of clicking footsteps of elegantly-worn high heels against the cold hard floor and seemingly distant murmurs from the narrowing wall of crowd.
    Parents and teachers were all about the singing contest that’s being held live on stage, as their children or relatives are competing in the upcoming event. And unfortunately for me, I was one of them.
    Dressed in such a delicately picked sleeveless dress, I stuck out like a little black bird in the middle of a flock of cooing pigeons. Parents did not perform; therefore, wore their usual attires. Teachers wore formal clothing for this once-in-a-year occasion, but not grand ones. Heck, even the competitors don’t wear clothes like this.
    However, the biggest problem was right underneath my feet, in which case, was burning in pain.
    My leg was awkwardly wobbling like an injured duck’s with my high heels on. It felt like someone poured a liquid version of the word pain inside of them.
    As I slowly floundered after my singing teacher into the nearest prep room, I was knocked miles away from my comfort zone by skeptical stares.
    My teacher sat me down and expertly put my make-up on, making me wonder if she’d done it just to make me look good on stage or if she’d like to make me look like a different person. When she was done, I was rather confused of who I was seeing in the mirror she gave me afterwards.
    After all the time we used up, they finally called the next event’s competitors to the back of the stage. My teacher didn’t follow me, unfortunately. They gave us numbers for ordering who performs first. I was placed second.
    After I fully grasped that bitter fact, I couldn’t look anywhere but down. If only stares could kill, there’d be a burnt hole in the floor as a memorial.

    Reply
  243. Chair Furnitair

    “Say your name and number”, said the man with the fancy outfit.

    “Lisa, 0883”, I said, trying to not care much.

    “Why are you here?” His voice sounded like he wanted to be friendly, and failed. He could not hide the bad humor of a long day of meeting with an unreasonable amount of annoying children, including me.

    “I’m here for showing I am worthy of living in Ocuu, sir”.

    “Why do you think so?” He forced a smile; I couldn’t help but notice the piece of lettuce trapped between his incisors. The mysterious light dramatically coming from behind of his body made him look powerful, authoritative. And made me feel small, and powerless.

    “Because I have the skills.” Oh no. Did I sound too disrespectful? Too proud of myself? Mom told me these people liked self-confidence. Was my answer correct? Does he feel even more annoyed? I don’t even know anymore.

    “Hmmm…” He wrote down something. No good. “And those skills are?”

    I swallowed before answering. “As you have already seen, as well as your people behind the walls, I have proven to be able to solve absolutely every test given to me since I came here.”

    “But your scores were not perfect. Most of them were barely able to let you pass.” He narrowed his eyes, expecting my answer.

    “…well, sir, I passed them. That is enough prove!” I was looking at him in the eyes; those emotionless spheres that desired my doom. After all, his work consists in making me fail. Break me down. Find my weakness, and pressure me until I run away myself. It won’t be hard. I am already nervous.

    “That is not an answer. This interview is taking too long, don’t you think? You have ten seconds to tell me five of your strenghts. Just five. Begin now.”

    Ten seconds? Only ten seconds-
    No, no! There is no time for this!

    “I-I am smart, I can play violin and piano, I can…”
    I can what?
    What else could I say?! I am smart. I can play violin. I can cook? Still better than silence.
    “I can co-”

    “Sorry, young lady, but your time is over. Your results are not very promising. We will have to ask you to leave. Thanks for trying. The exit is right in front of you”.

    I didn’t fight. I didn’t kick. I knew I had no other option than leaving. I tried not to cry, but in the end, every child who went through this door was crying… including me.

    ———————–
    I know its bad. Please be gentle

    Reply
    • Lev Stefano

      It’s not bad. Don’t be silly.

      The use of rhetorical questions are used really well to explore the feelings of the character. At times you show the reader the underlying thoughts and feelings of the characters but at other times make it perhaps too obvious.

      “He forced a smile” subtly suggests the pretense the man in the outfit is putting on without making it obvious, whereas “The mysterious light dramatically coming
      from behind of his body made him look powerful, authoritative. And made
      me feel small, and powerless” could be described in a way which shows the difference in power between the two rather than telling the reader.

    • Rico Elhady

      It wan’t bad at all. I enjoyed reading it. There was one word ‘prove’ that may want to be changed to the present tense. The word is at the beginning of the story.

  244. Josh Lee

    I walked onto the yard at five in the morning. That’s what they called it. The yard. It was actually part of the parking lot of a hardware store.

    It was my first day working for a construction company in south Texas. And it was cold. I didn’t think it was ever cold in South Texas. I came from Tennessee and wasn’t unaccustomed to cold weather. But this was different. The radio said it was 45 degrees outside but it was the coldest non-freezing temperature I had ever felt. The sky was dark and I immediately felt like I didn’t belong.

    I passed through a few groups of Latino guys and made my way to the door of the trailer.

    “What the hell is this?” I thought.

    I had driven 18 hours to find myself at a place that called itself a construction company with a trailer for an office situated in the parking lot of a corporate hardware store. But I persevered and knocked.

    I heard a gruff response and opened the door. Sitting behind the metal desk in this wood-paneled room was a small man named Smurf. His desk was littered with papers and there was a row of scratched up hard hats sitting on a rack behind him.

    “You Josh?” he said.

    “Yes, sir.”

    “So what brings you to Texas?”

    “Just looking for a change, sir. Tim said you could help me out with a job.”

    He looked at me then. I could tell he was trying to gauge my worthiness with a simple look.

    “Alright. You’ll go with Paco today.”

    The oddness of the names around here didn’t pass me by.

    “Eric! Tell Paco to get his ass in here!” he yelled to the guy standing next to him.

    Eric walked past me in the disorganized office and called out the door. A few seconds later a guy twice my size with tattoos covering his body came in out of the chilly, dark morning. He ignored me on his way to the desk.

    “What’s up, boss?”

    “This is the new guy. He’s gonna ride with you today.” Smurf said.

    The tall, heavyset gangster looking man shook my hand and told me where I could find him when I was done inside. He left me alone with Smurf.

    “You need anything else?”

    “No, sir. Thank you.” I lied.

    I needed so much. I was in a strange place and had no idea what I was doing or what type of people I was doing it for. I had started a new life and this was where it began. A wood paneled trailer office in a cold, dark parking lot.

    Reply
    • Lev Stefano

      Like the scene as a whole. It bookends nicely to feel complete. Second paragraph is really good – the tangential thoughts of the character offer really good insight. Dialogue is believable and avoids adverbs/embellishment nicely.

      If I have once criticism, the description of Paco is a bit clunky. Referring to him as a ‘gangster looking man’ is too leading for me. The tattoos and heavy set nature already put me on edge, he works in construction, the gangster bit seemed a bit guiding.

    • Rico Elhady

      Very nice. I like it very much. But as the comment below said. You may need to organize your writing when coming to describe a character. But other than that splendid story,

  245. Lev Stefano

    First post from me. Not much to show for 30 minutes but I tend to think to much instead of write. Will spend a few minutes looking and feeding back on some other posts. I would appreciate some comments. Mainly on the style, this isn’t part of a larger story I’ve got planned or anything.

    Out of Place – SK Leverton

    She towered above me. I kept a respectful distance. The
    beast she sat on shifted its’ feet edgily. It was unfamiliar to this
    environment. While the overall atmosphere of the event seemed relaxed (now),
    the immediate space around us was nervy. I could tell there would be trouble.
    There were people around, yet she was frowning.

    “I’m going to take her to the school.”

    “Ok.”

    “Go fetch me a bottle of water.”

    “Sure.”

    And with that, she was gone. I took my inappropriate shoes
    and headed around the event centre. At least she didn’t ask me to get some
    specialist equipment. I don’t know my shimmy from my wither.

    We’re so early I get served straight away. As I’m paying, I’m
    momentarily distracted by the news on the radio. The bell above the door to the
    café dings. A cursory glance observes a symmetrical family of four. The
    matching pattern jackets, hats and shit-eating grins walk smarmily to the
    counter.

    I edge to the side. The father heads the pack, gives me a
    nod and the school-age waitress a wink. His wife follows, head bowed, eyeing up
    my footwear before meeting my gaze and flashing me a pitiful smile.

    Their two children position themselves the other side to me
    but I pick out their conversation. “It’s so unfair, mummy. I’ve so much work
    that it’s either ride and compete or face repercussions.”

    “That’s awful, dear. I can speak to your tutor, if you like.”

    I tut. I didn’t mean to. It was involuntary. All
    slightly-too-symmetrical eyes turn to me. “Problem?” says the father.

    “Me? Oh, no. I was just, er, struggling…with my wallet.”

    Reply
    • Hikaru

      I like your descriptions of people, particularly the symmetrical family. It’s a simple description that gave me an immediate image of what they were like. I liked your style as well. The one thing I thought of was maybe varying your sentence lengths a little more, especially at the beginning and end. It would be interesting to develop this into a short story, too. I’m curious what the riding, competition, and beast are about.

      Also, I found your comments on other people’s posts insightful and encouraging. Bravo!

    • Lev Stefano

      Thanks for the feedback. My first feedback of any kind. I must admit me enthusiasm for completing the tasks and commenting dipped when no responses came. This has picked me up.

    • Rico Elhady

      Nicely written. I enjoy very much how you explained really everything in the story.

    • Jordan

      I definitely felt myself being drawn in!

  246. Sunil S. Prasad

    Flashback: 9 years back most of the used things – one used to buy by going to Craigslist. Now, we have so many sites and they can be shipped. You will all agree the list of Craig was the first one and popular one.

    Today, when I went to check something it took me to the memory lane and place which then seemed totally Out of Place flash backed in front of me.

    It was cold January of 2008 and I was looking for some used Blackberry phone to take it to India for one of my friend.

    Over the Internet, the look and price seemed to be alright. The only thing it was many miles from my place. Since it was for my friend. distant did not matter and spoke over the phone to the (supposedly) owner of the blackberry and decided to meet at a Coffee and Donut place instead of the front yard of person home.

    I reached on time even after taking a wrong exit. I wanted to go to the restroom but this place did not have one for their customer. It was real bad and unusual not to have for the customer. Everything seemed to be out of place to me from the people hanging out there and my heart rate was going up every second. I called the number and a person raised the hand sitting on next seat. I was shown the phone and it looked something not what I envisioned. I was very nervous and wanted to move out of the place as quick as I could. At this point, I remember the quote of Swami Vivekananda which gave me some positive vibe ” Be not afraid, for all great power throughout the history of humanity has been with the people. From out of their ranks have come all the greatest geniuses of the world, and history can only repeat itself. Be not afraid of anything. You will do marvelous work”.

    I asked for the phone and reason for selling. The answer was not very compelling yet I was about to write a price for the total amount. I heard its only cash. I said I have 60% of the asking price. The person pointed me for ATM and I said, I have no ATM cards. We were at a point where we both realizing the old saying, ” Cash is a King”. I purchased the phone and walked with confidence and never looked back till I got into the car. I even forgot I had to go to the restroom.

    My next stop after many miles was to an Oasis on a highway for a bio break and caliber my breathing.

    Well, that’s all from my side. Have you been to a place which seemed, ” Out of Place”? Would love to hear your story in the comment.

    Reply
  247. S.Ramalingam

    Out of place

    Several years ago, when I was working in the department of telecom as legal assistant, I went to New Delhi to meet our standing counsel in connection with a revision petition filed by him for on and on behalf of the department of telecom In the National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission,New Delhi.It was during the month of March,1987.

    When I alighted from the Tamil Nadu express in a Railway platform in the New Delhi Railway station, it was aroud 0340 p.m.Still I could feel the scorching summer.Within few minutes of my arrival in New Delhi, I felt something strange. I sweated profusely all over the body and I was terribly thirsty.It was entirely a different climate that I was not inured to.I felt that my body was draining its water as speedily as possible.Immediately I ran to a nearby bunk shop to have a few bottles of water and coke.I was astonished to note that I had emptied the contents of all the water bottles and cokes within twenty minutes.I could also notice that my purse was getting thinner at a faster pace.But I could not quench my thirst despite having plenty of water and coke, since I had been sweating profusely.I looked around.I heard some Hindi dialogues to which I was not used to at Tamil Nadu.On the one hand I was terribly thirsty. On the other hand I could not hear my native language Tamil.For the first time, despite being an Indian I found that I was out of place.in New Delhi.

    Reply
  248. joel

    hi

    Reply
  249. imane nina

    this is my first try i am not a native speaker so it is hard for me to be free with words but i am here to learn so why not : The room felt small ,the lights were dim, I sat there not known what to do, everyone around me were talking and laughing, meanwhile I sat there like a statue, I kept looking at the faces of the strange people around me some of them looked bored others out of place with all the happiness they were showing . It felt strange like I was standing in the middle of the woods while, tall, dark and old trees srounded me everywere with a dark sky and a chilling night . The place did not suit me people around me were much different than me, while everyone seemed tall I was small, tiny and skinny even the dirty brownish, worn out table seemed bigger than me. After sitting there for an hour and a half it was finaly time to leave the classroom; people around me scattered like flying leaves in a storming day. I stood in the middle waiting for them to leave as they did it was time fo me to go home, i was never glad in my life to do so than that day.

    Reply
  250. Jenny Haniver

    Here is my attempt (I hope it’s okay; I spent thirty minutes, though, because I couldn’t see a reason to abandon my escape from reality):

    Ripples of turquoise rise and fall over my head, whispering in my ears and chattering over the shore. Everyone else is no the golden beach, sand spilling everywhere like a treasure chest opened by disrespectful, intrusive hands. Laughter reaches me, only to be snatched by the waves and dashed to pieces upon the clusters of eighty-sixed pebbles. A small group of boulders cower beneath me – lonely guests at a party finding refuge in each other.

    Soft aquatic hands bathe me in the water: water that has been drunk by dinosaurs and hummingbirds, kings and queens, despots and beggars, each a tiny part of millions of people. Perhaps the friendly green and blue molecules that hug me encapsulate Dickens or Shelley.

    I fly through the water, pulsing in time with the dancing wavelets and the bending seaweed in a rhythm that I could never achieve on land with the gawping, giggling people in their paper houses. I am the seal, cumbersome on stones but fluid and graceful in water. This is my home.

    Gulls wheel overhead, angels of the azure duvet which blankets me and me alone: the others do not see past their shiny sunglasses. Paintings of aquamarine sparkle on the seabed. Briny water is all around me, keeping my safe, the tears of the gods, the mantle of the Earth, the eternally changing mass of water that stretches all over the world; and as I send a stream of water away from me, it reverberates its way across the Atlantic to another child down by the water, like a gypsy coming home.

    The ocean is everlastingly mortal.

    Underwater is a beautiful world. It is a magical world of kelp forests, teeming with crab kings and crab queens, alive with fish, all worshipping the moon, submitting to her commanding beat.

    “Oi! Jen? You coming back to the beach?” A harsh voice shatters my peace, and, as if in response, a ferocious wind picks up, and shatters the calm water too. The waves are huge now, bigger than skyscrapers, rearing serpents raising their heads of foam. Wind whips my skin, salt spray aggravating the flagellation. Wolves stalk the skies above, immense thunderclouds crackling with static.

    I plough back to the beach, insignificant amid the mountains of spasming sea, back to the hell of social awkwardness.

    Yet, I gather the power of the oceans in my arms, feel the spirits of the sea creatures in my heart, breath in the energy of a thousand storms into my lungs, and step out of the water.

    Robed in marine majesty, I rise.

    Reply
  251. erin

    I backed into the parking spot, but not too far in (Susie had told me once that since my car was front wheel drive, backing in would make it easier to get out of the mud that would soften as the day grew warmer, but I didn’t want to take any chances). I hurried into the building with my eyes lowered, not really worrying that anyone would try and talk to me on the way in, they never did. Once inside I smiled at the few students milling about in front of the office and said good morning. The students, I could relate to. They were the only reason I kept coming back. I signed in at the office as quickly as possible and made my way down the hall to my own office. I set my purse, and my water bottle, on my desk, unsure whether or not I would actually drink the water (I promised myself every morning that I would drink more water that day, but drinking more water of course necessitated more trips to the bathroom, and a trip to the bathroom required me to walk through the staff room, which I would avoid at all costs). I turned at the sound of the door opening, and saw Lyle, a twelfth grader, peering questioningly into the room to see if it was OK to come in. “Morning. I just got here. Haven’t made coffee yet,” I told him (I definitely can’t drink the coffee; I’d be in the bathroom all day). Wordlessly, Lyle took the coffee pot from its place and left to fill it with water. I smiled at him gratefully upon his return. I really did love the kids I worked with. Soon three or four more of them wandered into the office in search of coffee, and as they chatted, I learned about their classes, and their friendships, and their weekends. As usual, they made sure to ask about mine in turn.

    Reply
  252. Christina Morain

    This is my first writing prompt so I’m sorry for grammar errors as I just typed away with what ever came over me. It is short and I need to work on getting more out faster.

    My Wonderland
    Every time I leave the house I feel as if something is looming over me. The feeling of death is always lurking. Like I have to on my P’s and Q’s and if I let my guard down for even a second it’s going to happen. All I want is to let my hair down and enjoy the world around me. Yet I can’t. I’m afraid! I leave the house telling myself everything is going to be okay. A pep talk you could say. I start to feel confident. I get the kids ready and in the truck with seat belts on and put it in reverse to back out of the drive way. The whole time telling my anxiety to buzz off. Kids are in the back anticipating their friend’s birthday party with so much excitement that I’m envious! A small smile on my face as I here all their plans to play with their friends and how much fun they will have. We pull in go inside and I feel the pressure building up in my chest. My heart is beating as if I’ve never met these people before. Deep breaths as the kids run off to join in on the fun as I set back and focus on breathing. Praying no one comes over to make small talk I set back and observe my surroundings. The fake laughs and smiles rumbling from parents around me and I say fake because just the other day she was downing her sister-in-law and her parenting techniques along with the way she treats her husband. Yet acts as if she’s never said a bad thing about her. I don’t want to be here around all the fakeness looming around. I want to be back in my oasis where I belong. Where I control my surroundings and know what to expect. I’m in a crowded room and feel as if I’ve never been more alone. Yet it’s my fault setting over here by myself. The minutes ticked by feeling like hours and the inevitable of the small talk lingered around me like thick humidity in the air. The sounds of their voices go in and out like a bad signal on an A.M. radio picking up every other conversation. Somehow nodding my head in all the right places. I tried to focus on the laughter and screams of the children and the beaming glow radiating from them. Relief came over me as the party was coming to a close. No more fabricated stories of how great their lives are or gossip spewing from their mouths like regurgitated nonsense. The drive home came natural as I am finally at ease knowing I will soon be where I fit in, in my own little wonderland.

    Reply
  253. Noname

    I am not a native speaker and this is my first try at this. This is about the time I went abroad to India, chennai. This all I could write in fifteen minutes…

    The motorised three wheeler taxi bumped along the road as it drove at a frightening speed. My father and mother sat next to me in the very small seat meant for passangers. The odd taxi was filled to the brim and I was afraid we might topple over at every turn we made but the old vehicle remained sturdy.

    After what seemed to be an eternity of a hellish ride, we finally made it to our destination. The train centre. Despite the language barrier in this very foreign country, we managed to get the driver to wait for us outside.

    The train centre itself was a busy place, with people moving in and out of the building. We found the ticket boot and I prayed the man at the counter knows english.

    My father nudged at me to speak up when it was our turn. Nervously, I mumbled, “Is there a train to trivandrum, today?”

    The man at the counter gestured at me to speak louder and I felt heat rising up my face. I repeated myself, this time a little louder.

    “There’s always a train to trivandrum.” He replied, I could barely make out what he was saying over noise of the train and people. “Which one are you hoping to board?”

    Reply
  254. Madhurani

    Our relationship wasn’t going so well. He had stopped doing all the romantic things he used to do. He had stopped caring for me. Quarrels were daily affair. There were no spark left. And I was struggling to hold it together. I was trying to blow life into our dead relationship. I was trying to find what was going wrong.
    And then one day I asked him, “What will constitute best day of your life? What things you would love to do if you are omnipotent for one day? ” He got really excited and told me list of many things. It included spending extravagant amount of money. It included lots of girls. It included private jet. It included cricket. And many other things. It may sound a little selfish on my part, but his fantasy saddened me. I wasn’t part of his perfect day. He didn’t mention me even once when he talked about his fantasy. And my fantasy was simple… I wanted to go on a trip with him… to Ajanta caves… there should be no one there except us. I wanted to make love with him under the waterfall there. Under the open sky. I dared not speak it… It made me upset. We weren’t in the same place.
    And then a day came, when I was telling him about something I read over the internet. It was about how to seduce your boyfriend. They had given few tips. Send him your naughty pictures, send him some naughty texts, be his massager for a day… I told him about it, and said, “None of this will ever turn you on, am I right?” He said, “You are right. All these things matter when you love yourself. You can be romantic only when you love yourself. I don’t love me anymore. I wish to stay alone. I don’t want responsibility. I don’t want to be answerable to anyone. I want to come to an empty home. I want to be able to do the things that I like. For example, I want to be able to watch a match whenever I want to watch it. Loneliness suits me better. I can’t do things for others. Because I don’t need anyone to like me. Or I don’t want anyone to stay with me. I don’t want to stay with me. Why would anyone else would strive for it?” I felt too much out of the place. If he wanted to be alone what the hell I was doing in his life? Why were we living together? Why didn’t he tell me before?
    And that was the day I realized that my part in his life had got over. Way back… I was trying to love someone who wasn’t loving himself. May be this was the time when he needed love more than ever. May be this was the time when I should have had stayed strong and supported him. But I wasn’t. In fact being with him was making me feel lonelier and I had slowly started loathing myself for trying too hard to stay in a relationship, which was already over from his side.
    I took my decision that day and decided to move out of his apartment. It was a difficult decision. Emotional one too. When you leave something behind which was so dear to you, it certainly breaks your heart. But being in a wrong place for too long has its repercussions. I had stopped growing. I moved out. I am still struggling to find the right place for myself. But he made me realize that if you don’t love yourself, no place would be the right place for you. And I am grateful to him for this lesson.

    Reply
  255. Hikaru

    I didn’t want to open the door. Its dark wood didn’t impact me as much as the silver handle and key pad at waist height. The door was dead bolted open, something that ought to have seemed welcoming. It just made me more reluctant. Regardless, I hefted my duffel bag more securely on my shoulder and let my tired muscles spur me into action. I shifted the door open far enough to squeeze in, wincing internally as my bag knocked the frame clumsily. I ignored the bright lights in favor of searching out the room. There was nobody there. Relaxing in spite of myself, I headed straight for the bedroom door on the left. My haste kept me from checking the cleaning schedule on the fridge or how nasty the dishes in the sink were.

    I flicked on the lights of my dorm room and found it empty, just as I left it. Instantly, my shoulders relaxed. Admonishing myself for turning on the lights before I made sure Claire wasn’t here sleeping, I closed the door quietly behind me. My body felt light once I’d placed my bag on the bed. The clock read 8:02. I’d made pretty good time. That was good considering how much studying I’d put off until the night before Monday classes. I began unpacking from the weekend home without really thinking about it. Stowing jeans in their drawer and books in their own felt like a little ritual. All the pieces of my life filled the empty spaces. The final bow was tied when I placed my laptop on the clean surface of my desk. It was one of the most significant items that followed me back and forth. For study or leisure, it was constant.

    Finally feeling settled, I kept myself from wondering where Claire could have gotten to. I’d hardly exchanged more than a few words with her. She was gone so often that I would be quite surprised to see the unmade bed occupied. Yet, the drapery on the opposite wall and the family photos alway drew my eyes, a constant reminder that this space was not mine alone. Sitting down to study, I wondered distantly if I would feel more comfortable if she were always around. I was always happy for privacy, but when it could end without warning was it really privacy? I opened History of America blindly to the assigned page. Hopefully it wasn’t my turn to do dishes. Going back through that door of brittle privacy was certainly too much for the night.

    Reply
  256. Lydia

    The music was so loud, I could feel it thumping in my chest.
    A half drunken girl tripped over my leg, spilling beer on my pants. I pulled
    back my legs and sat deeper into the couch as she stumbled away. I was
    surrounded by so many people, and never had I felt more alone.

    There was trash everywhere and the place reeked of alcohol.
    I was watching drunken teenagers grind and hump each other to the music. I
    scrunched my nose in disgust – how did they think that’s attractive? Having been
    here long enough, I stood up and started scanning the room for my friend,
    Carly.

    I moved towards the kitchen and out the backdoor. I was
    flooded with blissful silence, my ears still ringing. Muffled whispering was
    coming from behind a bush. I glanced over, wondering if it was two teens
    messing around, but then I heard Carly’s shrill laughter, “No, I already went,
    you’re next!”

    Ducking between the bushes, I found Carly and a group of her
    friends. I crinkled my nose at the stench.

    “Is that pot?”

    Carly whipped towards me. “Hey, Hannah! Yeah, want to try
    some?”

    I scowled at her. “No, thank you. When did you get into
    drugs?”

    “Oh, come on Hannah, don’t be such a party pooper. It’s not
    going to hurt anything. Here, just try a little.” She held it out towards me.

    Shaking my head, I snipped, “No. I’m leaving now.”

    Carly shrugged and didn’t try to stop me as I turned away.
    Hurt stabbed at my heart, like a betrayal, and I knew I was losing my best
    friend. Carly and I have known each other since we were in diapers. We grew up
    in the same neighborhood and were inseparable for years, often times riding our
    bikes to each other’s houses for sleepovers. We even scheduled our high school
    classes together.

    It seemed Carly was turning into a party girl, and a part of
    me wondered if I would be better off without that kind of influence in my life.

    I set off down the street, soaking in the silence and fresh
    air, every step bringing me closer to a warm bath and cozy bed.

    Reply
  257. Rico Elhady

    I can’t think of anything of this topic. I tried several things on mind. But none worked. So sadly, I can’t do this one. I may come back to this topic and try again. But for now, I will reside.

    Sorry, Joe.

    Reply
  258. Rico Elhady

    OK, I got one. But this piece is fictional. Hope everyone enjoys. And, please comment down below if it is good. Worked a little more than 15 mins on it.

    ‘The car raced on and on, down the road. Faster every time. I tried to look out the window, but barely saw anything. I didn’t know what was happening, where we were going or even why daddy looked scared? I just wanted to go home.’

    ‘Every time I spoke to my dad and asked him where we were going he just grew silent. Not a word opened. So, I sat quietly, too. Daddy continued driving until he hit a red light. It was here that I was able to see where we are. It was a shabby looking spot at the end of town. Even though I have never been here, before it frightened me. The people looked old and sick. In front of my window, sat an old man. Our eyes both met. He was drinking something in a small bottle. After he took a whip of it, he looked at me again, and started laughing so loudly. I thought he might have awoken the dead.’

    Riiinnnngg! Riiiiiinnnnnggg!

    ‘The phone on the car was ringing. My father sighed, and set his head back against his seat. Choking sounds were heard from my dad. He was choking on every breath he let in and out. The phone continued to ring. After it rung for the fourth time, he picked up the phone rapidly.’

    ‘Rambling noises were silently whispered into my ear. I couldn’t make anything out. But by looking at my daddy’s eyes in the mirror. He was going to cry. The man on the other line was hurting his feelings. My father nodded several times and told the person on the phone, “Yes, Yes. I will be there… . Yes, sir she is with me. No, sir I won’t.” My father set the phone down back onto its stand.’

    ‘The car jerked forward, at a fast pace. Pulling me deep into my seat. The car kept swerving several times. And finally stopping, at a place with huge painted boxes. Daddy, got out of the car hurriedly and ran to my side of the door, to let me out. As we got down, I got a better image of where we were. It was a port.’

    ‘My father grabbed my hand and pulled me towards a small, squarish building. He knocked on the door, and we both waited silently for it to open. The door opened, slowly. A man with thick bushy eyebrows, stuck his head out. Looked at us, and opened the door, for us to enter.’

    ‘The room was thick with smoke everywhere. I couldn’t see a thing. A loud, monstrous noise in front startled me. It said, “Sit down, Mark.” ‘

    ‘My father did as instructed. There was a small window behind us, but it shined very little light allowing me to see, who talked.’

    ‘The monstrous voice then spoke again, “So, this is your daughter?” ‘

    ‘My dad answered in a small voice, “Yes.” ‘

    ‘The voice pondered at my father, “Speak louder! A mouse could barely hear you.” ‘

    ‘My father repeated his answer louder this time, as the voice wanted.’

    ‘Hearing the ghastly voice freaked me out. Every time it spoke, my heart pondered harder than a hammer. I felt the cold brushing the sweat off my body. I wanted to know why my father brought me here. What is the reason I had to see this man?’

    ‘ “How old is she,” asked the voice?’

    ‘ “Sh-she-she’s only 11,” stammered father.’

    ‘ “Has she been hit yet?” ‘

    ‘ “Hit, I-I believe so ya.” ‘

    ‘ “Ask her?” ‘

    ‘My father turned towards me. I could see the sweat dripping off him. He asked me, “Have, you, dar-darling become a women.” ‘

    ‘I asked him sweetly, “What has that go to do with anything? Daddy, why are we here?” I didn’t know that I had the courage to speak so coolly. But I did.’

    ‘My father instead of answering my questions, he ignored them and looked towards the floor.’

    ‘The monster voice came back again. But instead of talking, it laughed so loudly I felt the building about to fall on us.’

    ‘Bang! A yellow envelope appeared in front of my father. The evil voice continued to laugh. While my father just sat there. Not caring what he had just done!’

    ‘Something warm touched my hand. I turned around to see who it was. From the under the faint light. I saw a scrawny, young man. Grabing me with force, he lifted me onto his shoulders. I started screaming loudly, “Daaddddy, daddy! Help Me!” The man turned around and walked, as if I wasn’t doing anything.’

    ‘The monstrous voice broke me off and said with a laugh, “Your father doesn’t own you any more, missy. You’re mine now.” ‘

    ‘I didn’t know what he meant, by that and nor did I care. I just wanted to go home, to my mother and brothers. I continued to scream, but no one, not even my dad did anything. The man hauling me came to a door. He kicked the door loudly. And we went through. That was the last time I ever saw my family again. The only thing I remember was a weird pungent smell covering my face, and I was out.’

    ‘The next thing I know. I am in, the hospital. And apparently have been in a coma for 12 years of my life. I don’t know what happened to my family. But for some unknown reason I am being treasoned for a crime I do not know of, nor did I want to act on,’ said Melissa to the judge.

    The judge looked down at her. A warmth of sadness flooded in his eyes. He huffed sadly, and turned to the officer sitting down at the Accuser’s table. And said, “Is this true, Officer Gard”.

    The officer replied to the judge confidently,” Yes, sir. The statement she says is correct.”

    “Well, then. I don’t see why a case had to be made then…”

    Before the judge could continue he was cut off by a man, who barged into the room. The man walked quietly, as he progressed into the room. He looked up at he judge and said, ” She is a liar. And is guilty of her crime. I have enough proof to prove it…..”

    ……TO BE CONTINUED…..

    Reply
  259. Nathan T Cross

    It was as if I was enveloped in a marijuana induced paranoia with “I’m stoned, please arrest me” printed on my forehead in the middle of a police station. I’ve sat in the seats of Veterans Memorial Auditorium for many years. I participated in trade shows, business meetings, concerts, and plays. This should have been another activity where I easily blended. But I am under a magnifying glass—no a microscope. I fidget and make nervous attempts at conversation with anyone who will listen. They’re all looking at me. Staring. No one is bothering or threatening me, yet the depth of my discomfort is palpable. I can almost taste it. It’s irrational, but I cannot escape the elevated sense of scrutiny. I mean we are all flesh and blood right? They eat, just like me. They live. They die. They laugh and cry. How is it that it seems a spotlight has illumined only the space where I am seated. Why do I feel that there is something wrong with me? That’s not fair, is it? I suppose the whole thing is my fault. The theatrical production of Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner I thought I was going to see was scheduled for the following night. Tonight’s activity instead was a symposium of African American leaders in the community. I was the only white fella there. It’s hilarious to think about now but not at all at the time. You never know what path you might find yourself on while walking in another man’s shoes.

    Reply
    • Jordan

      Your description of discomfort was very relatable! Thank you!

    • Diana Coca

      Comprises a lot of feeling and morale

  260. ISHITA JAIN

    The first paragraph was little bit awkward but the next all 3 paragraph were brilliant

    Reply
  261. vinod koul

    I really appreciate your theme and you revolving around the same and finally caught and holding your breath by finishing the confused day..
    It almost happened with me in the same altitude. As I went downtown to purchase the some electric merchandise. I took the decision to ride by my self back to my residence but some flickering came in my mind to save the extra bucks So I decided to take the interstate bus services. But to my fortune that particular place was goofed by pickpockets. The sooner I board the bus somebody stole my wallet. I was informed about the same by bus conductor.. And my feelings were of that man who was penniless among the other men. As I tried to hold my breath and got down at the other stop. However I stopped my bank transactions over the phone because bank card was also in the wallet.
    The very darkness which was only visible to me had outlined my whole physical. I managed to gather courage and talked to private taxi drivers. Now they were only ready to take me to boarder as they were not allowed by state rules to cross the boarder. However I tried to convince them without cash in my hand. They roughly declined to take me to my destination. The same locality around me was looking as dark as giving me the feeling of computer hardware without the operating system.. After taking some time. and talking to another taxi without knowing him my storyline. Over the ride he came to know my details and finally I reached the state boarder where my Dad was waiting for me to handover the cash to taxi driver. Now the place was looking to me as emerging from nightmare to stable light.

    Reply
  262. vinod koul

    I really appreciate your theme and you revolving around the same and finally caught and holding your breath by finishing the confused day..
    It almost happened with me in the same altitude. As I went downtown to purchase some electric merchandise. I took the decision to hire private cab for coming back to my place but some flickering came into my mind to save the extra bucks So I decided to take the interstate bus services. But to my misfortune that particular place was surrounded by pickpockets. The moment I boarded the bus somebody stole my wallet. I was informed about the same by bus conductor.. And my feelings were of that man who was penniless among the other men. As I tried to hold my breath and got down at the other stop. However I stopped my bank transactions over the phone because bank card was also in the wallet.

    The very darkness which was only visible to me had outlined my whole persona. I managed to gather courage and talked to few private cab drivers. They were ready to take me to boarder as they were not allowed by state rules to cross the boarder. However I tried to convince them without cash in my hand. They roughly declined to take me to my destination. The same locality around me was looking dark and giving me the feeling as i am computer hardware without the operating system.. After taking some time. and talking to another cab driver without knowing him my storyline. Over the ride he came to know my details and finally I reached the state boarder where my Dad was waiting for me and paid the cab bill.. Now this place was looking to me as emerging from nightmare to stable light.

    Reply
  263. Jordan

    My response, and first attempt writing in years. (please don’t censor your feedback!) 35 minutes.

    She parked her tiny green Scion xA on a crowded street in Huntington Beach that
    looked like it would barely fit a Smart ForTwo. After climbing in to my
    sprawling Altima that was painfully new by comparison, we stopped at that
    notorious establishment that is synonymous for “coffee” the same way Kleenex
    has become synonymous for “facial tissue.”

    I made sure the light caught my $20 French tip gel nails as I waved around my shiny
    gold rewards card. I insisted on buying because I clearly had more money and
    was sooo much better off than my best friend of 23 years (92% of my life in
    case you’re wondering). We made the usual small talk about how life was going,
    everything was on the up with me, nothing was wrong.

    And still, despite the cosmetic and material displays I had made, I still felt like
    the uninteresting, uneducated, incomparable, lumbering best friend that
    probably stemmed from my habitually low self-esteem. Not that she once said a
    word to that effect – since we reconciled our friendship after a few tumultuous
    teenage years she was ever the understanding, empathetic, and serene artisan.
    The longer we sat there, the more I was compelled to take more than a superficial
    interest in her mini-crisis. I had made the 45 minute commute post-haste, and
    post-distraught phone call.

    After finishing half of our heated beverages, she asked me to accompany her forced
    attendance to a family function close by. Of course! Anything for my best
    friend given the emotional state she was in!

    I dropped her off at her Scion, still parked outside of her (now late)
    grandmother’s convalescent home, or “Assisted Living Facility” as they call
    them here on the California Coast. Ten minutes found us parking on a crowded
    street in a swanky Stepford-esque neighborhood. We traipse in to her cousin’s
    engagement party straight out of every 20-something white girl’s pre-nuptial
    Pinterest board.

    The sprawling one-story home full of Boho blondes with luminescent tans and perfect
    teeth put my half-assed Starbucks attempts to shame. Why had she never told me
    about this side of her family? Oh right, because neither of us fit in by any stretch of the imagination. The Barbie, or Mrs.-to-be, was so glad to see her younger cousin and former
    childhood friend, and how nice to meet me! Ken was somewhere off in the
    direction of her languid wave.

    We visited a paid-by-the-hour taqueria in the backyard and squeezed together on
    the leather couch in one of the living rooms (because, smallest concentration
    of people). So far I was ready to pretend I had an eating disorder rather than
    stuff my face with corn tortillas, pollo, asada, and pico de gallo. But we
    suffered our meal together while carrying a condescending conversation about
    the other attendees, punctuated occasionally by awkward introductions and looks
    of “who let them in”.

    Reply
  264. Keisha Swafford

    I walk through the door of the gym. The automatic doors close behind me loudly and I jump a little. The young girl behind the counter smiles at me, I smile back awkwardly. I haven’t been to the gym in a long time and everything seemed so bright and intimidating. I felt like a spotlight was glaring in my face and everyone was looking at my awkward body. I walked inside the locker room where I saw grown women changing. Some women were staring at me, sizing me up. Others were trying to avoid eye contact. I did my best to walk in there with confidence and let the girls know I belonged there. I changed my clothes in the bathroom because I didn’t have the courage to show anybody my body. I wasn’t sure what I was supposed to wear to a Zumba class. I had never been to one before. I just wore my usual basketball clothes: a t-shirt with some jersey shorts and some old sneakers that were slowly coming apart. I was used to being comfortable and playing basketball with the guys. I figured I looked okay.

    I walked out of the locker room of horrors and walked up the stairs to the room where I would dance. Dance in front of people! I’ve been known to trip up the stairs. I just prayed I wouldn’t trip over my feet or fall flat on my face. I walked up to the fitness room and saw a bunch of older women and a few girls my age. I was glad I wasn’t the only black girl there. Everyone was nice. One girl came up to me and said, “Hi! This is your first time at Zumba?” I said, “Yes.” I thought, “I must look like a newbie with these rags I call clothes.” They were all wearing spandex and cute t-shirts. I looked like a reject. I decided to swallow my fear. Besides, I paid enough money for this membership! I’m going to go for it!

    We had to wait for our instructor. While I was waiting, I had to endure watching this old guy stretch on a table. I thought, “Maybe this is a bad idea.” I tried to keep myself busy, watching a couple of girls lift weights. They had a good amount of weight on them! It made me think I needed to lift more weights. Finally, the instructor walked in looking bright eyed and bushy tailed. She was a short brunette with an athletic build. She seemed peppy, which made me think she might be a fun instructor. Everyone was greeting her like they had been best friends for life. I hoped I could find a friend there.

    We went inside the fitness room and everyone walked to their places. I decided to stand in the back where I had a perfect view of the instructor so I’d know how to do all the moves. I didn’t want to make a fool out of myself. Once everyone was settled in, the Latin music began to play and she immediately began to dance. NO WARM UP! I followed everyone else and the music felt amazing! It was fun and melodic! My feet, my arms, and my legs were in sync for the first time in my life! This was the most fun I had dancing! EVER! I made a few mistakes. Plenty of mistakes, but it didn’t stop me from dancing. I was getting great exercise, interacting with girls, and becoming a more confident dancer! This wasn’t so bad after all! In my mind, I was at Latin dancer in Barcelona, Spain, I was hip hop dancer on the streets of New York, a pop dancer in a Bruno Mars video. I was free, having fun, and I never wanted it to end, even when I was out of breath.

    Reply
  265. Tehreem Fatima

    My first prompt: Out of Place

    Cold wind was blowing past me making my body shiver. My feet were tired and my body was worn out but I couldn’t stop. I just wanted to run_______run away from the dreadful truth, from my horrible thoughts and most of all from my selfish self. I couldn’t believe that my egocentric decision had made everything out of place and now there was nothing I could do to damage the repair.

    As my strength broke, I fell hard on the ground. Tears covered my weary face and awful thoughts filled my mind. It was terrible.

    It had all started a week ago when cars arrived to take all 7 year old boys including me away on the orders of that cruel Lord Balten. They were going to take us forcefully to the army school away from home, where we would be trained day and night to serve in that unwanted ruler’s army. I had no wishes to lead such an undesirable life so went to hide in the snow-capped mountains till the cars were gone. But the problem was that I hadn’t once thought of the consequences of my decision that my family would have to suffer.

    When the news of my disappearance reached Lord Balten’s soldiers, they were extremely angry. As a result they burned down my only house and fields causing my family to lose all that they had. But that was not all they also took my little sister with them in place of me and banned my entry into the village if I ever returned.

    I was also suffering the aftereffects of my decision. The food and water I had brought was going to finish soon, the unbearable cold had half-killed me and I had nothing to do but to wait for my death…………………………….

    PLEASE SHARE YOUR HUMBLE COMMENTS AND SUGGESTIONS. THANK YOU

    Reply
  266. Paula

    Crowded places are scary. Even more so if you don’t know the city your’re in or the directions to your hotel. Being lost at the main station in this big city, with strams of people going in and out of the building left me confused. Everything looked the same, but didn’t. In front of the station was a big crossing, with the possibility of going five different ways and my phone was dead.

    As I tried to stop people and ask them for directions, I also tried to hold my bag and suitcase as close as I could. No one even looked at me, no one would stop. You could see the clock ticking in their minds. Meetings, appointments, airplanes they had to get. There was no time to stop and help someone, who was in need.

    At last there was one person, who wasn’t chased by time. An old homeless man, who had watched me struggling for some time, stood up from his pillar and walked towards me. The crowd was magically flowing around him, as he was a solid rock in a wild river.

    “This city has no time for you, girl. It didn’t have time for me anyway. Where do you need to go?”, he asked in a throaty voice and looked at me with his kind brown eyes.

    “I’m looking for the Regent Hotel. Is it anywhere nearby?”

    “It is. Just take this street and then the first left. You won’t miss it.”, he said, with an irritating smirk and walked back to his pillar.

    Walking down the street, I saw more and more hectic people, barging me and my luggage. When I finally got around the corner and saw the hotel, my heart dropped. The once shining Regent lettering was broken and the G laid shattered on the ground. The doors and windows were boarded up and trash piled up in front of the entrance.

    What a nice way to move to a new town.

    Reply
  267. Diana Coca

    Today I felt like I often feel these days (or these months to be fair): lack of control over my life, like watching it through the lenses of a camera or reading a story about it. Having a fight with my boyfriend, words came out of my mouth not the way I intended, not at all, because it even felt like those weren’t my words. I felt like I could never say such things. Analyzing a bit, I’d attribute this peculiar behavior to my constant metamorphosis. Some days I get the sense that I am totally entitled to myself and I could dare anything, some I just cannot recognize a thing. The only way I can regulate this process is to write about it. Talking seems like rambling to me, I cannot grasp a true meaning, only realise more how awful I can become sometimes. As I discussed with my mom (and imagined I was on Freud’s couch) I came to understand more of what is happening
    Strangely, like this process wouldn’t be enough, every choice seems to fit me or not one really does. Anxiety strikes when thinking of choosing the right path, but then, any path could be the one. Maybe I just need to converge (may be).

    Reply
  268. Diana Coca

    Today I felt like I often feel these days (or these months to be fair): lack of control over my life, like watching it through the lenses of a camera or reading a story about it. Having a fight with my boyfriend, words came out of my mouth not the way I intended, not at all, because it even felt like those weren’t my words. I felt like I could never say such things. Analyzing a bit, I’d attribute this peculiar behavior to my constant metamorphosis. Some days I get the sense that I am totally entitled to myself and I could dare anything, some I just cannot recognize a thing. The only way I can regulate this process is to write about it. Talking seems like rambling to me, I cannot grasp a true meaning, only realise more how awful I can become sometimes. Strangely, like this process wouldn’t be enough, every choice seems to fit me or not one really does. Anxiety strikes when thinking of choosing the right path, but then, any path could be the one. Maybe I just need to converge( may be).

    Reply
  269. MrBillyD

    I wrote on the back of a postcard:

    “I’m in Oaxaca (Pronounced Wah-hah-kah) Mexico, on the first Tuesday in February. I’m enjoying very warm days, very hot food and good, cold beer.
    Wish you were here.’

    Then I signed the card.

    23 year old me, was glad that I’d made my airline and hotel reservations back in October.

    The new El Cacique Premiero of the Aztecs had received his Investiture on New Years Day. He’s been going around the Country, performing sacrifices in all the major cities. He’d arrived in Oaxaca that day, just like I did. While I was there, he’d actually be immolating a devout Aztec maiden under the midday sun; presenting her as an offering to Los Teochacos (The Aztec gods). The Aztecs believe that sacrifices are necessary, to keep their gods satisfied, so they’ll continue “To sustain the World and all that is therein”.

    Local people from all over the region had been crowding into the city to witness the event; so had a very large number of us turistas. Not one hotel room in town was now available. I was glad I made my reservations back in October.

    Reply
  270. Chloe Kim

    It is pretty the recent time I felt the awkwardness. I was surrounded by my boyfriend’s friends whom are considered as ‘mentors’ by my boyfriend and they are mostly girls, very smart girls. Having a relatively low self-esteem literally has made me distant from everyone I tried to connect. Having an intelligent and charismatic leader as my boyfriend gives me a dark shadow that reflects my fear, timidity and lack of confidence. I had to attend the big event for my boyfriend’s club because he was the president of the club, pretty big organization of our college. He encouraged me to meet his mentors and make new friends. Even though he never directly expressed, he has concerned about my timid and antisocial characteristics. The mentors are mostly from the smart majors from my perspective, business and engineering. I really had to put up myself with nonexistent confidence to be in the moment and to have conversation with them but they weren’t interested in me at all. I could notice their indifference but I couldn’t disappoint my boyfriend that I endured the awkwardness and faked myself for momentarily. Overall, my boyfriend was happy not because of me, because of the successful event. However, it is still meaningful that I was able to dedicate something like my feeling and attitude for the person whom I love and care.

    Reply
  271. prem

    i returned home from work after the days hard work was well tired and just was planning to have some tea/coffee before i can think of nothing else, but when i entered the kitchen to make the cup of tea/coffee i just found myself in need of some milk which as not available. i was alone with no other option to get that required milk, i had to step outside the house to get the milk which was for a walk of about 15-20 minutes, after the hard work put in the day already, i didn’t want to give that extra minutes to get those milk, i called up the grocer who was a sort of friend to check with him if he can have it deliver at my door step. he was willing to send the milk but said the minimum bill shall be 100 rupees and lesser than that was not delivered at doorstep, so i had to think of something else also was wondering what else was required to have the minimum bill of 100 rupees, i checked my refrigerator to see if there where eggs for some omelette and since only one was there i thought couple more can be useful. called up the grocer person and asked him to get me a dozen eggs and the milk which made a bill of total 112 which was now available for door step deliver, after around 10 minutes or so the door bell rang, i went to see it was the grocer person i was expecting, indeed it was him i paid the bill and took the milk and egg shut the door, and went straight to kitchen to make the tea/coffee for all the trouble i went through.

    Reply
  272. Christine Aberdeen

    And suddenly it hit me morning drew near . I lye in bed still my eyes piercing the ceiling . Water flowing slowly down my both cheeks. Roosters crowing waking up the entire village. Mom in the kitchen dragging her rubber slippers making breakfast for us. Was I really going away I taught to myself . I didn’t want to but it was for betterments. Jumping out of bed getting myself ready . A knock came to the door
    with sudden shock my mom inquired Nary it’s time . Lord knows I wasnt ready but imma make u proud mom

    .

    Reply
  273. lea shelton

    I was surprised to get an invitation to Anna’s high school’s graduation party at her mama’s house. I hadn’t talked with her mother for well over a year. She had stopped calling me and her number had been disconnected. She had made it clear time after time in our conversations that someone just showing up at her home without calling first, was just rude. Rude wouldn’t be how I viewed it, more like unwelcome. Hell, I could be drunk, or worst, in a blackout never to be able to recall what was said or done. Hell, maybe that’s why she had cut ties with me to begin with, an unsolved mystery still to this day, nearly a year later.
    I figured the motivating reason I was invited had everything to do with gifts of money. Anna was headed out of town, on her way to college and on her own. Money is a really welcomed gift at these times. Anna never struck me as someone who would have any fears about striking out on her own, she always seem fearless and a
    bit of a snot. Very streetwise and as far I could tell she couldn’t give a care about me. My biggest apprehension was being eyeball to eyeball with her mama.
    I walked into the house and was greeted by Anna. I handed her the card with the cash and in truth she seem genuine when she thanked me with a smile stretched across her face. She was even warmer than ever I can recall.
    The house was full of her mom’s brothers, sisters, cousins, aunts, uncles, spouses, and even though I had met these people several times over the years, I couldn’t remember any of their names. Anna’s mama’s mom had even babysat me on occasion in our now long ago past. I continued towards the kitchen, saying my how do you do’s as I traveled where Cecilia, Anna’s mama was finishing up last minute horderves. In my mind I was thinking nothing like waiting till the last minute. Also I was thinking I didn’t recognize a soul as i made my path to what became my exit. Cecilia and I yelled our greetings though the roar of the hordes of party goers. My eye caught people coming in and out of the house through the backdoor, I excused myself and left by the backdoor down a fascinating and complex wooden staircase that reminded me more of a fire escape, hugging the house. Weaving my way though the chickens and people
    in the yard, I rounded the side of the house and out the front gate. I didn’t say goodbye to a soul.

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  274. Jayla

    I wrapped my arms around my waist. My bookbag was heavy on my back, dragging me down. I felt as if I was going to sink straight into the floor.

    Perhaps that wouldn’t be so bad.

    My feet dragged against the blue carpet as clamor rang in my ears, screams of excitement bouncing around me. Everyone else was hugging their friends with enthusiasm pent up over the entire summer. I resented them for not having the same sinking pit in their stomachs that I had. We were all in sixth grade.

    But for some reason I was different. Out of place.

    I craved the ability to bounce up to someone, yelling so loud that it hurt my own ears, to throw my arms around a best friend and nuzzle my cheek against their’s.

    I wanted it so bad it hurt.

    It was like every piece of extrovert I had at my old school had disappeared, leaving behind a scared little girl with the only bookbag in her whole grade that rolled on the floor, a girl that knew no one and was known by no one. She had no idea that she would make lifetime friends at this school.

    She only knew that she was scared.

    I continued to be scared until lunch, which was when I was terrified. Looking across the huge cafeteria, holding my plate, I surveyed the long tables. One table housed a very large group of people (no), one had a bunch of boys (no), and there was one at which everyone was screaming (definitely not).

    I had nearly given up on trying to find somewhere I would fit in, before my eyes landed on a girl with a kind face, laughing and talking with her friends, who seemed similarly amiable.

    I took a deep breath, anxiety swirling in my mind, roiling and tumbling like angry gods that set the skies ablaze. I wondered if this was where I would fit in. I wondered if this was where I would meet my enemy.

    And most of all, I wondered if I was ready.

    But, I supposed, it was now or never.

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  275. Maja

    Most of my life occurred in the uncomfortable, strange, and foreign. At first, it was the surroundings that were foreign but, in the end, it was me who stood out. Subtly for sure, yet always an anomaly. I can’t trace the first time the tension in the air aroused. They say we carry trauma within our bodies, clenching the limbs and teeth simultaneously while everything else seems serene, almost normal. As if normalcy is the standard of living. But it may well be.
    The sudden warmth, almost unreal, swept all the senses. I’ve never felt so much humidity combined with scorching heat before. The airport door slid open as I was hit by the hot air. I could almost taste the wetness. The smell of the humid air entered the nostrils without a warning.
    “What is this place?” I thought.
    The next stop would be our destination, perhaps an hour away by car. Everything seemed so empty, except the wide asphalt sprawling underneath the car producing more heat to the already unbearable humidity. Aside from seeing the other cars and occasional exit signs, nothingness surrounded our moving vehicle.
    “Maybe in the morning, I will see some buildings.” I reasoned with myself.
    But the morning brought more empty spaces, only filled with lookalike houses, difficult to discern from each other. Walking was not encouraged, only cars were allowed on the streets. No paved sidewalks, no designated bike lanes, only roads extended for miles upon miles surrounded by the nature. I love nature now, but back then the standard of living was measured in buildings, concrete, and bodies.
    Today, it is hot again. The world is on fire, it seems. Record heat indexes measured across the globe. The humid air is still here, only worse now. But I got used to it. It took me a long time to accept it, to welcome it, to make it a part of my body. Twenty-two years later, I finally embraced it. I made it home.

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