Monthly Archives: February 2014

how i wake up

  1. Turn off alarm that you set for 30 minutes before youre actually going to wake up
  2. Turn off alarm that you set for 15 minutes before youre actually going to wake up
  3. Finally wake up
  4. Groan
  5. Look at clock
  6. Groan more
  7. Peel your body out of bed
  8. Sit on the bed and contemplate life
  9. Look at your roommate

10. Realize his girlfriend slept over again

11. Silently resent their happiness

12. Look toward closet

13. Walk over

14. Take your pants off and slip on sandals

15. Walk down the hall towards the bathroom

16. Open the door

17. Hear the shower running

18. Pray there is a shower available

19. Get into available shower

20. Think about the homework you didn’t do for classes

21. Pay more attention to homework than shower

22. Realize you didn’t wash your conditioner out

23. Wash out conditioner

24. Turn off shower

25. Grab towel

26. Dry your body ass out in hopes someone will see that tattoo on your ass

  1. 27.  Walk into the main area

28. brush teeth

29. walk down the hall

30. stand in the doorway naked and keep resenting your roommates happiness

31. get dressed

32. realize your late

33. run to class

Assignment 3

(Most dialogue has been added to Part 1 and Part 2. I have also included Part 3, although no dialogue is contained.)

“Are you sure we’re allowed to do this?” I asked.

“Yes! I asked my dad, we’re allowed,” Tristan responded.

“He yelled at us last time,”

No, he changed his mind,” Tristan assured me.

HEY,” I heard Chuck yell from the kitchen, “I TOLD YOU, YOU ARE NOT ALLOWED TO CLIMB ON THAT TREE!” 

Why does Tristan lie all the time? When we were playing at my house he would never even say he wanted to go home when it got late.

Me and my family are going out to dinner, I have to leave now,” was Tristan’s usual excuse. I would watch him walk across the street to his blue-shuttered house, but there the family vehicle would sit. Tristan was a liar. He couldn’t help himself. And this time, he dragged me into it.

“YOU TWO IDIOTS ARE GONNA BREAK YOUR NECKS. GET OUT OF THAT TREE,”  Chuck angrily yelled at us, “Tristan, what don’t you understand when I tell you that this tree is weak and it can’t support you climbing all through it?”

Dad, we weren’t actually climbing in it, we were just standing kind of around it,”

The tree was low enough to the ground that it actually seemed plausible. It was a tree that popped out of a small mound of rocks near the back of Tristan’s backyard. It had long limbs but they all shot toward the house rather than the sky. The tree itself looked as though a large chunk of branches fell off of a much larger tree and stuck the landing in a mound of rocks. The rocks that piled around the base stacked up in such a way that we were on the rocks more than the tree before we even got a chance to scale the highest branch. But we would never get to climb and surmount the peak.

“Alright you’re done,” Chuck said, “Aaron, it’s time for you to go home.”

I went home. Why does Tristan always lie? I tried to figure it out. He knew we were going to get caught. He knew we weren’t allowed to climb the tree. Why would he blatantly make a false statement that might get us hurt or in trouble. I couldn’t figure out why Tristan would lie to me knowing that we weren’t allowed to climb the tree.

He knew, and he did it anyway.

But then again, so did I.

PART TWO:

Why did I always do something if I knew it was wrong? My earliest memory of grade school is one in which I went under each stall from toilet to toilet and locked them from the inside. I then scooted out and was on my way. A few hours later, I witnessed the result of my toils:

“Mrs. Reed, someone locked all the stalls in the bathroom,” Tanner informed my teacher.

“Are you sure no one is in there?” replied Mrs. Reed

“Yeah, I crawled under all the stalls and unlocked them,” he answered.

Mrs. Reed grimaced at the idea of someone crawling around on the bathroom floors… especially one dedicated to kindergarten boys– who, you may be shocked, are not very good at aiming. After an interrogation, none of the kindergarten boys admitted to committing this crime. I was deliriously happy. I had gotten away with it, and this excited me beyond measure.

My newfound hobby of “getting away with something” fueled many of my wrongdoings throughout my adolescence: the time I pushed Ivy Tomlinson off the monkey bars, the time I snuck out of swim team practice early, the first time I drank, the first time I viewed pornography, the first time I smoked marijuana… the list goes on and on. None of these sinful feats were fueled by a selfish desire. They were unselfish, and they were cruel. They were a way for me to get back at an authoritative figure, be it my parents, a coach, or a teacher. I ponder the implications this had on my life.

This may sound philosophical, but maybe because it is. I don’t know where my homosexuality stems from. Contrary to the modern homosexual claim, I don’t know if I was born this way. I do know that I have homosexual tendencies and feelings since as young as 5 years old. I just don’t know if they are rooted in biological or psychological factors. This is a topic that is up for debate even amongst the most scholarly researchers. Who am I to ponder where the roots of my sexuality? And I can only answer with the following: Me. I am Aaron Thomas Kreider, and I don’t know why I’m gay.

How are the ideas of my admiration for wrongdoings and my homosexuality linked? That’s what I’m here to figure out. I don’t know the first time I saw gay pornography. I don’t know the first time I saw a naked man. But I remember in both instances that this was something that was wrong. I was not to feel a sexual attraction towards the same sex, yet I kept exploring my attractions. I have found in many instances that self-loathing and disgust is part of the homosexual experience, and I was not exempt from those emotions. As a child of just 12 years of age, I would regularly force myself to watch heterosexual pornography in an attempt to coax myself in to feeling an affection for female breasts and vaginas. I would cry myself to sleep, praying to a God that I no longer believe in that I was not gay. I would indulge in self harm, although rarely, in a cry to some unknown deity that they may help me feel heterosexual. I even engaged in a 14-month long sexual relationship with a woman in order to make sure I was gay. Nothing I did changed my feelings.

But why did I feel this way? Was it possibly a perversion that I held just because I knew it was wrong? There is rarely any evidence to support that those who are heavily involved in the concept of kinky sex like it simply because it is wrong. However, I can’t help but feel maybe I am gay because I know it is a perversion. My mother used to say, fondly of me, “When the world Zigs, Aaron Zags.” And I can’t help but feel that I may be sexually attracted to men just because it is wrong, because I know that it will piss off some established authority figure. I can assure you, I did not ACTIVELY choose to be gay, but that isn’t to say that it wasn’t a choice… right?

 

PART 3:

 

I do not have a best friend. In my opinion, in order for two to be ‘best friends’ they must be the reciprocal of each other. I, on the other hand, have been designated a role coveted by sorority and material girls of the like: the gay best friend. (I like to think of this role as more of a ‘token gay friend,’ rather than any kind of actual best friend.)

I find myself missing my old role in the dynamic of my prior group of friends. It was a simpler time when I was not asked to give ‘the gay perspective,’ as if my coming out instantly gave me something new to add to the conversation. It was a simpler time when people did not ask me if I wished to be a girl, as if being gay is some type of lesser fantasy to having a vagina. It was a simpler time when I actually had a best friend, as if my newly expressed sexuality changed who I am.

Trading the nuance of a lie for the degradation of being seen as different person entirely is not something I was wholly prepared for. I mean, sure, I understood that my friends were going to have trouble with it—as my one friend gave the appropriate summation, he would “kill himself” if his best friend or brother turned out gay—but I couldn’t help but feel marginalized. I was now the ‘gay best friend.’ I was now the ‘token queer.’ I was no longer Aaron. I have had strangers tell me that I am going to hell. I have felt the cold sting of the word ‘faggot.’ But nothing hurt quite so much as being seen differently in the eyes of those whom I love most.

 

Assignment #2

1.

Dear Brock, Kyler, and Emily,

 

I know its been a long time since I’ve seen you three and I just wanted to let you know how much I love you. Sometimes I feel like people here don’t understand me quite like you guys do. There isn’t quite anyone who laughs at all my jokes, who understands what I do and don’t mean when I speak, or just knows that my facial expressions rarely reflect what I’m actually thinking. My heart longs for summer—for driving over the mountain to Raystown and laying in the nearest thing we have to a beach, for stopping at eats and treats and paying ridiculous prices for snack bar food, for smoking cigarette after cigarette in the Sheetz parking lot, but most importantly, for the drive-ins. Movies are something that have always connected us three on an even deeper level. Typical Tuesday night… nothing to do… lets go to Brock’s and watch a movie. Kyler and I will talk about which actors and actresses we like—and we will never agree. Emily will chime in occasionally on who and who is not making a ‘stupid fucking decision’ within the context of the plot. And Brock will eat Doritos. A lot of Doritos. (Also, we will most likely pause the movie 4 or 5 times so that Brock can smoke a cigarette—and then of course he’ll offer me one and how can I say no to free ciggies.) I can’t wait to soak up a little bit of America’s faded glory at the Bar-Ann drive-in. I cant wait to pile in that car and drive like our days aren’t numbered—like summers like this are quickly coming to an end. Soon, we’ll be off. We’ll earn our degrees. We’ll start our careers. We’ll get married and crank out a baby or two. Our days as the most popular kids at Central High School (haha) are only a distant memory and soon enough so will be the drive-ins.  I love you three so much. When you crank out those baby or two’s, maybe I’ll have a baby or two of my own. Maybe they can all go to Brock Junior’s house on a typical Tuesday night. Maybe they’ll smoke cigarette after cigarette in the Sheetz parking lot. Maybe they can pile in the car, and go to the Bar-Ann drive-in—blissfully unaware that their days are numbered.

 

 

 

 

 

 

2. Objective: Kyler loves to eat, Brock loves to smoke, Emily loves to gossip.

 

Subjective: I have three vices: eating, smoking, and gossiping. I also have three best friends: Kyler Smith, Brock Dodson, and Emily Reid. These three are like the best and worst things that have ever happened to me. Seriously, if it weren’t for them I don’t know where I’d be in my life. I can always count on these three to show me a good time. Regardless of whether or not they may clog my arteries, give me lung cancer, or feed me false (yet juicy) information, the social ties I have created make a knot that connects our hearts. When I was elected class president, they were my campaign managers. When I lost the election for homecoming and prom king, they were my dance partners. And when I told my family that I was gay, they were my support system. There goes an old saying: ‘friends come and go, but family is forever.’ I understand that family is forever, but these kids are also my family (literally, Emily is my 2nd cousin).  I fully expect when I grow old that their children will call me Uncle Aaron, and my adorable, mixed-raced, obviously adopted children shall reciprocate.

 

3.

Hello? Hey, its Dad. What’s up? How’s camping? It’s good. Hey I have some bad news… uhm…. What is it? Hey, well uh…. Sophie died today. What? She, uh… well we don’t know what happened exactly. We got here and she was running around, and uh… she… we couldn’t find her for a while. W-what? How? I don’t understand… W-well, she, she… we found her in the lake. We think she coulda drowned. I-I don’t know. I… Dad? Yeah? I don’t know… why can’t I be with you? I should’ve come, what am I doing here by myself? I should’ve- I should’ve come with you. It’s fine. She’s gone now. Wha-what? I can’t believe this would happen, Dad im so sorry I didn’t come. Its oka- No it’s not. Don’t pretend like its okay. Aaron, you’re okay. You’re fine. I can’t believe this. Are you gonna be alright tonight by yourself? I… I guess. Okay, I love you. I… I love you too Dad. I… I’m sorry. I didn’t even get to say goodbye, I remember when we got Sophie, I was in first grade. I know… I love you Dad. I love you too, Aaron. Bye…

Assignment 1/ Dialogue

1. Parker’s use of vocabulary, creates and inclusive tone throughout the entirety of the essay. The use of words such as ‘us’ and ‘our’ creates an authoritative tone as she is the writer of the piece. she distinguishes the direction of the essay, the conclusions of her observations.

2. the questions asked really directs the reader in what to think. When observing the pictures of children that parker has painted in your mind you cannot help but think ‘yes, i have observed that good child.’ You have seen that “Good Soul.” Even though Parker is asking questions, she uses her command of thought to help the reader to draw the same conclusions as she. She is authoritative in this sense.

 

1. The power shifts multiple times throughout this essay. In the beginning it seems as though the man has all of the power. He is yelling and frustrated by the woman’s answers, but then because she is frustrating him so it may be that she has the power in this dynamic. Next, the man starts to lose the power as the woman gets frustrated with him throughout the essay. He starts apologizing and giving weak answers to the woman’s interrogation.

2. The dialogue can be used in many ways to show the emotions of the characters. Firstly, the cussing in the opening really adds to the feel of the essay. it is obvious from the start that this is a high-strung conversation with complex emotion. The yelling and frustration throughout the essay can show that the dialogue is between two people who know each other well and are not afraid to be unbridled in their vulnerability.

3. The dialogue shows the relationship of the two quite clearly. It is obvious from the start the they have some kind of prior affiliation that the reader is unaware of. Overall, the dialogue builds the relationship quite strongly. We learn of Florence Leaming, and how she adds to the dynamic of the relationship. However, romance is built on the end of the man when the jealousy is expressed. Overall, this in its entirety adds to the relationship between the 2.