Thursday, September 30, 2010

Creative Writing Post #5

Question #4

Cars

Quickly weaving between the other cars,
Turn on the stereo and let the tunes fly.
Warm sunshine cascades through the sunroof.
The cars in front suddenly slam on their brakes,
Crash.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Creative Writing Post #4

Question #6 (Write a piece of creative nonfiction in the form of "My Mother in Two Photographs"....)

She's the one sitting on my lap in the high school band room. No one else would've dared to sit on the lap of the girl with the frizzy french braids and railroad tracks for teeth. She's the one with the long blonde hair who played the flute, which was only a smidge cooler than my whiny clarinet. She even dragged me on dates with her boyfriend. The three of us would giggle over heaping bowls of ice cream and stay up late watching movies.

We were involved in every aspect of each others lives. My creamy mac n cheese would never taste as good as it does if we had not had that late night craving seven years ago in her ivy wallpaper covered kitchen. But no matter what we did, the party would always move to the little upright piano in the living room where we would play and sing the songs our grandparents would have danced to.

But it's the summer of 2006, and she's leaving me. Leaving me for the ominous brick buildings and cobblestone walkways of Otterbein College. We stood in the high school gymnasium, she in her red cap and gown and me in my blue and pink strapless dress. We're both grinning ear to ear, but I was crying on the inside. She had a new future to look forward to while I only had the weekends to escape our high school in the cornfields and visit her in the booming city.

It had been a long, bumpy road. I dated her ex-boyfriend which left me without a best friend for three months, and we had taught half our high school how to knit during South Pacific rehearsals. She stayed at Otterbein. I tearfully, yet joyfully, left rural Ohio for the humid beaches of North Carolina. She traveled to New Zealand and Fiji while I walked the dusty streets Mexico and explored Scotland. Our friendship lived on through postcards and Skype calls.

Port Columbus International Airport. It's Spring Break of 2010, and she's waiting with my parents, jumping in her black heels and holding a welcome home sign. I don't have braces anymore. Not only is she now going on dates with me and my boyfriend, but she's also my Maid of Honor. Soon she will be moving back to Columbus, and so will I. Back to the little upright piano in the living room.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Creative Writing Post #3

#5-(using the list of topics we made in class) write a story/poem/memoir in short sections leaving out information.


August 1, 2000

The flash of lighting and crack of thunder beckoned me outside.
Black, fluffy ash rained in the streets,
The smell of smoke overtook the dry desert air.
The family ran to the car and peeled out of the garage.
The flames were already climbing the hill.

Spectators clogged the streets.
Helicopters dumped water from the nearby lake.
Fire retardant turned the houses orange.
News crews ran through the yards.

Family members loaded the car,
I snatched the photo albums.
Garden hoses were the only weapons.
The orange glow creeped closer.

"It's too late, it leaped the road."
One more quick trip up the stairs.
The orange glow grew smaller in the rear view mirror,
But the fear grew larger.
The night stood still until finally
The sunrise became the only orange glow.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Creative Writing Question # 9

Imitation of "Girl"


Work

Make sure you scan everyone's insurance card and paperclip the copies to the chart; check the sign-in sheet constantly; don't let that call go to voicemail; file the doctor's mail and arrange it just so; when calling next week's patients, make sure they're on the correct schedule so we don't have anymore problems; initial and date everything you touch; do you realize how lucky you are to have this job? Always ask the nurse about fitting a patient in so the doctors don't get angry; on Fridays you can wear jeans, but they need to be nice; don't file that paper until you've stamped it; don't say that to a patient on the phone; but they were yelling at me about their prescription, and I'm not a nurse; this is how you make a new patient's chart; this is how you schedule the appointment; this is how you document a copay correctly so you're not fired; this is where you put the charge sheets so the insurance department isn't searching for them again; this is what you make a patient sign if they haven't paid us recently; this is what you charge a patient who doesn't show up so they don't do it again; this is who you talk to in order to request time off; you can't take that much time off, you know; you need to be here at 8:00 every morning; this is the drawer where you put patients with bad insurance; don't put anything there until you're sure; stop filing those papers, we do it all electronically now; you need to tell me who's calling if you want me to talk to them; but what if I need a day off, I haven't seen my family in months; make sure you're here at 8 am.

Friday, September 3, 2010

Creative Writing question #2

The thick red velvet curtain couldn't hide the sound of shuffling shoes and the smell of buttery popcorn. It couldn't calm my nerves either. I constantly pulled at my tights and retied my jazz shoes in an effort to lose some nervous energy. I resorted to hopping on the old wooden floor. The floor that held memories of some of the greatest performers of all time.

Outside the theater, people were lined up and down the street grasping their tickets and chatting with friends under the flashing lights. One by one the usher led the audience members to their seats with his dimming flashlight. Jingling boxes of M&Ms and seat change requests threatened to outdo the piccolo section as they filled the air of the historic Palace Theater. After a long couple minutes, the last audience member found his seat. The house lights began to dim, casting only a faint glow on the statues lining the walls.

It was pitch black backstage. Too late to run the dressing room for another swipe of the hideously red lipstick. I could hear the low, expectant murmur of the first few rows. Like a sudden gunshot, the orchestra struck their first chord. The stage filled with light as the curtain opened. I counted my three sets of eight. And just loud enough for the few of us to hear, the director stood behind us and whispered, "It's showtime."