Monday, January 30, 2012

Nevermind!

So, I will not be posting the children's story. At the moment, at least. No time, terribly sorry! Lots of "studying" to do. Also, when looking back, the story could be misinterpreted as having... controversial undertones. That'll need a bit of tweaking.

So instead, here's a bit of a short children's story I'm writing, called "The Oysos and Their Birdhouse."

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1GSt3xOtHbXlr_1f1DvFIZzUlxr5am6Efvv8WLGg-nd4/edit?hl=en_US                         <------------ There it is! Click that!

At some point, if I'm feeling courageous, I'll post an excerpt of one of the novels I'm currently writing (yes, instead of doing homework...). It's quite new, but it's moved pretty quickly. In two days I've written about 40 pages, so that's exciting, because usually I have awful Writer's Block.

Oh, and here's another photo. A blog post requisite, I've been informed:


It's a man wearing a sweater.


Goodbye for today, and happy reading!

Love,
Susan D. Holmes

Happy Monday.

Oof. Exams. Not fun. My head is still reeling, and every time I think about my Calc exam tomorrow I literally hyperventilate. And I don't mean when people just say "oh my gosh I'm like hyperventilating." No, I quite literally breathe erratically when my thoughts go to math.
Not to sound like a "Benedict Arnold," but AP US History kind of makes me hate America. Ok, wait, not like that. Will I get put on some watch list for typing that? Let me elucidate my point. There are occasions, such as today's exam, for example, when I irrationally wish that I lived in a country with much simpler a history. Like Australia. Or Luxemberg. Switzerland. You get the idea. What must their AP classes be like?

Now onto something awesome.
I saw the small teaser for this commercial (I know, a commercial for a commercial, what?) on the news the other today, and the actual thing has just been released. CHECK THIS OUT.

I adore Ferris Bueller. Probably one of my favorite movies... ever. AND I adore Matthew Broderick. So boyish and quirky! This guy's done The Lion King, The Producers, How To Succeed In Business Without Really Trying... and this, of course. You don't get much better than that. And as for all the people who are angry about this being an ad for a car company and not a sequel... relax. First of all, any attempt at a John Hughes Sequel without John Hughes is a dangerous endeavor indeed. Second of all, it's just a fun ad. Honda didn't do anything wrong by making it. Wouldn't you rather see this than yet another sweeping landscape shot of a heavy-duty SUV barreling through the frozen tundra?

And finally...
WRITING!!!
Woo! So I am being quite indecisive, and, after deciding the direction of my blog only last night, I have now changed it again. I hereby declare Peculiarosity as (primarily) a WRITING BLOG! Huzzah!
So, in order to uphold this newly christened Blog theme, I shall post another piece of writing. For my first piece published on this site, please go to the Writing page and click Scramble.
This next piece, which I will post in a seperate blog post because this one is getting far too cluttered, will be a children's tale that I improvised to calm my screaming three year old cousin at 11 o'clock at night.

Now, because I have been advised by every blogging website to do so, here is a picture to keep this post fun and eye-catching!

Rest assured, this bears no relevance to my blog post. At all. This is not supposed to be some kind of fancy, witty, symbolic thing. It's just a kid and his turtle. Enjoy.

Love,
Susan D. Holmes

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Me And Her Kissed On Da Liiiiips!

It's so cute. Please just watch.
This video makes me love humanity.
Also, I'm slightly jealous of this girl. Come on, she's like eight years old! I wish I was this succesful.

-Susan D. Holmes

Hey, Look At This!

crazymeds.com is an amazing website. A friend introduced it to me a while back, and I thought I ought to share it with you all. Now, many depression-sufferers, like myself, are advised against websites such as WebMD (which I am NOT putting a link to, because I care about you. Stay away.) because we tend to freak out and go into hypochondriacal (is that a word?) episodes.

However, this website understands that and pokes fun at it. You can look up your medicine and learn it's Pros, Cons, Side Effects (separated into mini-categories ranging from "common" to "freaky rare"), and, for all us paranoid folks, Interesting Stuff Your Doctor Probably Won't Tell You!

I looked up my current antidepressant, Prozac, which is a pretty chill med (I resisted the temptation to say "chill pill"). Here's what it says:

http://www.crazymeds.us/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Meds/Prozac?from=Prozac.Prozac

Luckily, I haven't experienced the crazy weight gain it describes, and as to the loss of sex drive, I honestly wouldn't be able to tell either way. I am a chaste soul. However, some of the weird side effects such as getting randomly angry sound pretty familiar to me, although I am a teenage girl so obviously there may be other factors involved. CrazyMeds also makes me feel very fortunate. I have been blessed with Prozac luck, because as far as I can tell I have not had involuntary tongue protrusion, and anyone who has ever laid eyes on me can tell you that I definitely do not suffer from what CrazyMeds refers to as "Porno Boobs."

Look up your meds, have a laugh, freak out about possible side effects and convince yourself you have them, and Comment Below with any funny bits about your personal med worth sharing!

-Susan D. Holmes

Sing it, kids.

I have always loved the PS-22 Chorus. They're adorable kids with a dedicated director. I love the way they express themselves while singing- every single kid is moving around or emoting in some way. You couldn't get even a quarter of my high school chorus to do that. PS-22's Chorus also performs great arrangements. Below is their cover of Lady Gaga's "Edge of Glory," performed with Ithaca's A Capella group. Thanks to hellogiggles.com for posting this video for me to find!

Mass-produced facial hair?

Somebody please explain. I don't understand.

What is this? A chin warmer? A beard for those unable to grow real beards? Or just a creative piece of headgear with no purpose besides attracting odd looks? Whatever it may be, I find it very interesting. Who came up with this, and how? Did some unfortunately-beardless young soul decide to put his crochet skills to good use? I want more information. Has anyone ever seen an actual person walking around in one of these things? In public? This is something I want to behold.
If you see someone wearing one of these things, TAKE A PICTURE stealthily and POST IT AS A COMMENTS BELOW.

A Sunday Haiku...


I don't like haikus
They never feel poetic
Haikus kind of suck

-Susan D. Holmes

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Answer Me This...

...What is the meaning of life?

Just kidding.

But seriously, I do have a question. What ever happened to class?
Class is dead. Or nearly, at least. I submit that it can be revived. Shall we bring back the class?
Let's have tea parties and wear skirts past our fingertips, and say hello to people we pass by. Let's hold doors for people and make friendly conversation when we (gasp) meet people out in the real, tangible world. Let's speak with words and go to friend's concerts and plays and write each other letters. Why not?

I'm not at all suggesting the revival of corsets, snootiness, or class segregation. No! I am merely pointing out, as a matter of personal opinion, by the way, that there are many aspects of the old-fashioned society that are rather nice and ought to be brought back into modern society. Who will join me?

Tea Party it up, people!
(And I don't mean that in support of any political parties. This is a purely objective blog, polictically-speaking. I mean a social gathering that includes nice outfits, casual conversation, ample tea, and sweet treats. Is that so unheard of?)

Please, let's do this:
NOT this:

Love,
Susan D. Holmes

P.S.- I will be updating the different pages soon. Once I start posting book reccomendations, charities, etc., I will then re-post them under those pages. For now, please check out the WRITING page and the A FEW OF MY FAVORITE THINGS... page. These have been added to so far. Enjoy!


10 Ways to Procrastinate

Well it's Midterms time.
I have a confession to make.
I am a ridiculous procrastinator. It shocks my teachers, because I seem like one of those sweet little "studious" types. Until an assignment has been due for a week and I haven't turned it in yet. Oops. Anyway, hypocritical as it is, I like to do something at least somewhat productive in my procrastinated time. If you're a procrastinator like me, here are 10 Way to Procrastinate:

1. Read a book. Oh, come on, don't laugh. I'm serious. People need to read more. Find a book you're interested in, sit back, relax, and enjoy it. You'll increase your vocabulary and your imagination. And your ability to seem pretentious at scholarly parties.
2. Bake. Once again, I'm serious. Bake! And I mean it in the cooking sense, not the marijuana term. Come on, folks. Listen to music to keep you interested, and just go crazy. Make cupcakes for your family, or cookies for that girl at school who saved you from failing a test by helping you with your FRQ outline at 11pm (yes, I have baked for this reason). Find awesome recipes and try them. Learn how to make buttercream icing. Experiment! It's fun, and you get food out of it.
3. Learn an Instrument. Maybe you're one of those families with a random piano in the living room that's origins are unknown. Maybe you heard an instrument in a song and thought "Oh my goodness that's pretty." Maybe you play an instrument, but procrastinate practicing it. Whatever the case, pick up an intrument, google some tabs, and learn a cool song! I personally play violin, ukulele, and mandolin, and I play them all the time instead of doing homework.
4. Nostalgia Time. If you're a teen, you're at that point where you can say things like, "Remember when (blah blah blah)? Kids today don't even know what that is." If you're an adult, you've been doing that for years. Pull out an old video or search for an old TV show or music that you used to like. Who cares if it's stupid or childish? At one point it was a big part of your life. Pop it in your media port of choice and let the nostalgia begin. My personal picks? "The Amanda Show," "Lizzie McGuire," "Kim Possible," "Fairly Oddparents," The Backstreet Boys, and old Disney Channel Original Movies like "Zenon" and "The Even Stevens Movie." ZETUS LAPETUS!
5. Imaginary Adventure. Pop in those earbuds, close your eyes, play the music score from a particular movie/tv show, and let the adventure begin. Seriously, I do this all the time when i'm daydreaming... particularly with the music of "The Social Network" and "Doctor Who." I promise you; blast the Doctor Who score, and any mundane activity becomes an inter-galactic adventure. Plus, this boosts your imagination and who knows? You may get some ideas for a future writing endeavor.
6. Blast some music and dance around. Pretty self explanatory. If you need a reference, youtube any 90's-2000's movie. There's bound to be a dancing-with-hairbrush montage somewhere in the mix.
7. Go for a Walk. Just get up and go. See where it takes you. For me, I almost always end up at the bookstore.
8. Write. Anything. Seriously. A haiku, an angsty journal entry, a really derivative novel, it doesn't matter. Just write.
9. Play the Sims. This is a very effective procrastinator. Get a "Sims" game if you're crazy enough not to have one, make a ridiculous family, and get them into various shenanigans. Live vicariously through your virtual people.
10. Read my blog!


-Susan D. Holmes

Downton Abbey

Possibly one of the loveliest shows... ever. I am posting this on my homepage until I get more viewers, and then I will start organizing them into tabs.


Downton Abbey is a brilliant show. For those of you unfamiliar with the plot, it's essentially about a large English estate, Downton Abbey, and the people who live there. This includes the "upstairs" people, the family, who are upper-class nobility, and the "downstairs" people, who are servants. Both the downstairs and upstairs people get equal screentime, compelling stories, and plenty of drama. One of my favorite things about this show is the way it's presented. It's a Masterpiece Classic on PBS here in the US. It's a historical drama, set just before and during World War I, when class distinctions in England were fading fast. It's not the type of show you would expect teenagers to watch, what with the popularity of "Jersey Shore," "Gossip Girl," "Pretty Little Liars," and all the other shows typically assumed as the primary programs for teens to watch. When I began watching it back in the first season, I only had one other friend who knew of it, and she started watching at my insistance. Now, I hear dozens of kids at my school, from all "cliques," talking about it in the halls and classrooms. I suppose that's why I root for it. It's a classy, well-written and acted, simple drama. It's proud to be old-fashioned, and doesn't seem to care about focus groups and what elements will get the highest ratings from the target group. It is what it is. Despite all this, teens are watching it, and that gives me hope in a sort of "TV Revolution." I don't want to get ahead of myself, but I would love more of us teenagers watching Downton Abbey and less of us watching the afore-mentioned "teen-marketed" shows. Let's get some quality television in us while it's here!

-Susan D. Holmes

Here it is! (I think)

Scramble

Scramble

So sorry for the mess. I meant to post a link to this document, and it ended up posting the entire document to my blog.

I'm still getting the hang of this and don't know yet how to post in my different tabs. This post really should go under writing, but I guess I'll figure that out later.
I suffer from Depression/Anxiety Disorder. I don't like to reveal this often, but I have created the blog under a pseudonym in order to share it. I know that I find comfort in other teens with this condition, so I would like to offer the same to others.
This link is to a piece I wrote while having a "Panic Attack." For those of you unfamiliar with this, no, I did not crawl up into the fetal position and scream and rock in the dark. It just makes your brain feel weird, and sometimes it can get to the point where you think something's physically wrong. Anyway, I wanted to put into words what it was like, so here's my best attempt!

Scramble

By Susan D. Holmes


 

I am having a panic attack.

    It's very clear to me, and it's a small comfort to be able to give a label to it. It gives it a sense of predictability, even though, in its very name, it is an attack of panic. Now that I can consider myself a seasoned Depression sufferer, I can recognize the onset of a panic attack and brace myself for impact. "You are having a panic attack," I say over and over again as I'm engulfed in the chaos that should be familiar to me by now but never is, and never will be. I've had depression and anxiety since I was a child (which I suppose I still am, or never was, if you want to be cryptic about it), though I was only properly diagnosed and medicated this past September.

    This is an odd piece of writing. I had thought it would reflect my state of mind right now, but it seems quite composed. I suppose I should attempt to describe it better.

Manic.

Panic.

Crazy.

Madness.

Insanity.

Break.

Dark.

Frenzy.

Grip.

Scramble.

    Those are some of the words that come to mind. It feels like your mind is scrambled, that's the most eloquent way to put it. It's running a million billion miles per nanosecond, like one of those machine/cash register things, I can't think of exactly what it's called right now and I'm too impatient to try, that gets triggered by something and starts reeling off a mess of receipt paper that pours and tangles all around the room, unstoppable. I feel like I want to cry and laugh at the same time. I feel on the very verge of insanity, and it terrifies me more than anything in the world. I never want to lose my mind. It is perhaps my greatest fear, although I have a lot of them to rifle through before I can reach a solid verdict.

    Solid. That's another thing I feel, but I feel the opposite of it. Shaky, fragile, I don't know; I'm too impatient to similize. That's not a word, thanks for letting me know Microsoft Word. Think I could've figured that one out for myself. I thought writing this all down would help, but it seems to make me crazier. There's too much I want to write and I can't remember it all and I'm rushing to fit it all in.

    The thing that scares me most about a panic attack is wait no I can't say what I was going to say because I thought of too many other fears that contest it too closely. There are a lot of things about panic attacks that scare me, though I think that should be quite obvious. "Panic attack" is a scary word. It sounds insane itself, and it has a connotation of insanity. Even when I hear people say "panic attack," I think of a crazy person. Does that constitute me as crazy? My Psychiatrist would say no. But that's kind of what she's paid to do. Besides, how do you go about telling someone they're crazy, and why on earth would you do it? The repercussions far outweigh the benefits, if there even are any to add to the scale.

…And there's the paranoia!

    I feel shaky. I feel exhausted and energized at the same time. I don't know what to do. There is nothing to do. I feel lonely. It's 9:41 at night. These things never seem to occur in daylight. Nighttime is better suited for madness, I suppose. I'm so lonely. I almost cried repeating that line. It's true though, I am. And I have other friends with depression. Some are people I am only acquainted with, whom I know little else about; diagnosis being our uniting factor. I have my great friends and sister from camp, but they live halfway across the country or further, and even if I called them which I must shamefully admit I have before, I would feel weak and needy and I wouldn't want to give them the burden. Especially not my sister, she just got into the best theatre program in the world for college. I would never want to dampen the moment. I mean that sincerely, even though it came out sarcastic.

    It's weird how we find out about each other's Depression. That always bugs me, by the way. "Each other," I mean. It definitely should be eachother, everyone agrees and knows it instinctively, so I don't know why it isn't. We make up the words, we can change them if we feel the need to, can't we? Anyway, I've digressed. I was talking about how we find out. Well, some people go around talking about it to seek attention, but I don't know many truly depressed people who do that. It's too embarrassing, and it's too often met with "come on, you're not actually depressed…chill." A lot of times when you do share it with an empathizer, it's triggered by something simple. A fleeting remark about medicine to someone who, as it turns out, understands the remark and, in a moment of excitement at a possible connection, relates enthusiastically. Then, even if you hardly know the person, you complain about your medicine and psychiatrists and panic attacks together, because you can't with anyone else. Sometimes you find things to complain about just for the sake of complaining. It's hard to explain. Having a mutual confidant is like a luxury. With closer friends, it usually comes up in conversation, especially with girls (hope that's not too much of a generalization). That's how it happened at camp, and it's usually something that occurs in similar bonding situations, like sleepovers. You get to that conversation stage where you reveal extremely personal things about yourself simply because you long to reveal them to someone. In a sleepover this is usually late at night, in the darkness and in hushed tones. At camp, it was in our dorm room, when we were bored of gossiping. A bunch of us had congregated in one particular girl's room. I hadn't even been a part of the group, originally. Looking back it was probably pretty forward of me, and it seemed like I was eavesdropping. I was walking by to my own room and the door was open, and I heard snippets about psychiatrists. I was instantly thrilled. It's a delightful moment when you learn of someone else "normal" with a psychiatrist. In that flash of glee, a little voice in my head said "no, this is reckless and intrusive, they'll thing you're weird and rude and nosy!" I told the voice to shut up and poked my head in and said something along the lines of "sorry are we talking about therapy in here? I couldn't resist!" To my immense relief I was welcomed and everyone shared their psychiatrist horror stories, crazy stuff they did, and what meds they were on. We were all trying to one up each other, so we could allow ourselves to feel like we had it rough.

    I feel crazy and I hate it. Panic attacks are awful. It's pessimistic and I'll probably read this back later and feel stupid and embarrassed, but the thing about panic attacks is they're completely in the present moment and nowhere else. It's all about now and how you're feeling currently. You can't see on to tomorrow and you can't remember how you managed the last time. Your only comfort is the knowledge that you did at all. It doesn't feel like it will ever end. It feels like I will fall from the edge of the sanity cliff I've been teetering on so precariously. Wow, that was wordy. Panic attacks make you wordy without even requiring thought. I've never typed three pages so quickly. (Now it's five, because I've gone and added so much.)

    I'm rambling. But I don't know what else to do. There was something else I wanted to say. It was insightful and profound; at least it was in my head. I'm sure it will seem remarkably unremarkable later, but as I mentioned before, later doesn't matter much now. I think it was some sort of observation about the nature of panic attacks. Now I remember. You feel crazy during them, and you get this odd sort of over-logical, cynical way of thinking. There's no love, there's not God, there's no magic, there's nothing. Imagination is a coping mechanism. Optimism is a coping mechanism. Every fanciful, whimsical feeling is a coping mechanism. That's what makes me wonder, what is a panic attack, really? It's generally considered a period of muddled thought. What if it's the opposite, though? What if a panic attack is a very long moment of pure clarity and logic, when you see everything as it is, and that's why it's so terrifying? It's startling, and we as humans can't handle it. I sound like an atheist. Or a pessimist. One could say the two kind of go hand in hand, though that's hardly comforting.

    I'm satisfied with this, at least somewhat. I think I got all the points across that I wanted to. I'm very tired. And still panicky, but to the point where I don't even feel motivated to write much more. Yes thank you Microsoft Word, I am aware that that is not a proper application of syntax. And I do not care. See, there's another example to prove it! Or maybe not. No green underlining to tell me so. Oh, look, now there's some. I'm satisfied.

    I want to get to get to five pages, so you'll have to endure my rambling for a bit longer, dear reader. Teachers hate that. Referring to the reader as the reader. But there is a reader whether you like it or not, and I think it's rather rude not to acknowledge them. No point in ignoring the dear reader, especially when they're so kindly reading this. Not quite sure who the reader of this is yet. Maybe just future me. Or the soul of my computer when the software mutates and develops a soul and possibly takes over the world. Oh, panic thoughts. So amusing.

    Well, I'm on the fifth page now. Even though I double-spaced, so it kind of feels like cheating. I'm sad. Oh, I thought of another way to describe these panic attacks. One of the scarier bits, because it's so unexplainable, but I'll try. It's kind of like there's this veil, or you're trapped in a bubble, and everything's kind of hazy. You see things but they don't really resonate. You feel like you're slightly apart from the rest of the world or the rest of time or the rest of whatever. You want to burst through and feel there again; feel present. But you can't, and it's frustrating and scary.

It's so scary. I just want it to be over.

    The thing about depression that sucks is that it's kind of been cheapened, in a way. The diagnosis has lost its value as the term itself has. Because now, everyone says, whenever they're sad or overwhelmed, "I'm so depressed." And they're not. Or, when they actually are, everyone says "nooo, you're not depressed, you're fine. You're just being dramatic, you're just sad or stressed or whatever." And it's annoying beyond explanation. Depression is a medical disease. You take medication for it every day and suffer panic attacks that make school really hard and you have a ton of absences because you have to miss class to go to inconveniently-scheduled Psych appointments, because their offices are so crazy. Ha. Irony. And reading that back just now it sounds lame. And maybe it is. I use depression/anxiety as an excuse some times. Probably another coping mechanism. If I'm feeling sick? It's probably a reaction to the Prozac. If I haven't turned an essay in to my teacher, even though it's weeks late and I have an actual F in the class, not just an "OMG I am like failing" when it's actually an 87% or something but a real, true, F, and I will never get into college, even though people expect me to and expect me to be studious because I seem that way and I'm a nerd and I read all the time and just give off that sort of "studious" vibe? It's got to be the depression/anxiety. It's causing me to feel overwhelmed and procrastinate. It can't possibly be extreme laziness.

    Oh look at that, six pages. Well now I have to go on to seven, because six is a creepy devil-number, and seven is an amazing good-luck number, anyway, so why on earth wouldn't I? I don't know what to do. I don't. I'm stuck. Ooh, thought of another analogy. It's like running on an out-of-control treadmill. You're not going anywhere, you're stuck on that treadmill and you can't get off, but you're going super fast and you feel like you're going a million directions at once.

    Everything seems so bleak during a panic attack. Bleak. Good diction. I must confess that I'm not a very confident person in general, but during a panic attack my self-worth goes into the negatives, so that I actually repulse myself. I'm stupid and boring and absolutely nothing special. And, I'm ugly. The physical imperfections I notice everyday and push to the back of my mind burst forward with terrible force. I hate my nose. It's huge and crooked and points downward. I wish it were dainty and cute. I hate my lips. They're thin. Paired with my eyes and nose, I look sleezy when I smile. My eyes. They're too small. They're too weak. They need loads of make-up to look nice, and I don't particularly like loads of make-up, and apparently it doesn't like me much either because it never stays on for very long. My eyes need more color. People in books always have gorgeous eyes. An electric, impossible green, or deep, chocolately, warm rich brown, or striking grey, or coal-black, or bluer than the sea. People possess those kinds of eyes in real life, but it's less common than it seems to be in books and it's very noticeable when it does occur. Gorgeous eyes are the mark of a unique individual.

    Wow. Who would've thought a piece of writing about so deep a topic could be so shallow. This is the mere whinings of a teenage girl. Nothing more. Oh, well. I need to distract myself with TV or a book, and sit this thing through. I hope it's over before I go to sleep, because it's a miserable thing to go to sleep with. Worse, though is waking up with a lingering panic attack. The only comfort that gets you to sleep is the assurance that "The Sun'll Come Out Tomorrow," truly. In my experience with panic attacks, I always feel wondrously better in the morning, and very embarrassed when I think back on the things I was thinking the previous night. But, as I said before, I don't know whether that's my brain righting itself, or wronging itself because it can't handle being right.

    However, the last time I had a panic attack, I woke up feeling just as awful the next morning. It was strange. I went to school still having my panic attack, though I didn't show it. I had never known that before. Usually, the regulation and familiarity and social interactions of school bring me out of the haze, but this time I couldn't break through. I'm very worried that that may happen again. And with my grandmother's wake tomorrow, it would seem appropriate, though ill-timed, if that's not too much of an oxymoron to make sense.

    Well, I think I'm done. I know this sounds pathetic and complaining. I do. I know that there are people in far worse states of depression, contemplating suicide or resorting to physical pain to feel like they're doing something to address their condition. But Depression, or at least panic attacks, kind of inhibit your sense of perspective. And maybe that's another excuse, but like I said before, it's all about now. Ha. More irony, or something of the sort. "Like I said before, it's all about now." Get it? Oh dear. I'm certainly not helping my case. I'm sane, I promise. I hope. I hope to God. Well, sorry to be anticlimactic, but… bye.

    Oh wait. P.S. Another thing. A vent-y thing. It is so annoying when people make remarks about depression meds such as "that stuff messes you up, it's not natural, it takes over your mind," or "I think people need to be strong enough not to rely on depression meds to make them feel better." My mom always says "people don't say the same thing about people with diabetes. They're both diseases that need to be treated with medicine." Still, even though I have depression, I hear that and I think "diabetes is different." You can't help but think of depression in a similar way to alcoholism. It just seems like it's self-inflicted. I couldn't tell you why. Ok, now I'm truly done. Even though all my remarks about "what page I'm on" are probably messed up from me going back and adding things in random places. Ok, I'm done now. I mean it. See?

Hello!

Hello, Folks!
I'm Susan D. Holmes. This is my blog.

I doubt many people will read this. I'm not exactly sure what prompted me to start a blog. I suppose I just figured, hey, I write so much, and it distracts me from schoolwork anyway, so why not put it up for people to see? And here you have it. My blog.
What will this blog be composed of, you may ask? Well, I don't really have a proper answer. Yet. But, for now, I am almost positive that it will go something like this:

Writing (links to pieces I write, short stories, essays, that sort of thing)
Charities (every Wednesday (I think) I will post about a particular charity that I support or work with)
Book Reccomendations (I do love books. And I reccomend books to unwilling people all the time... so it makes sense to give my reccomendations somewhere that's optional)
Things You Should Watch (I just couldn't decide whether to make a few more links for videos, tv shows, and movies that I want to reccomend, so I just smooshed them all into one category)
A Few of My Favorite Things (raindrops on roses, whiskers on kittens... and other miscellaneous things I like and want to share).

So that's essentially it! A tad boring, I know. Hopefully as I move along with this, I will figure out how it will really work. One of the things I want to make clear, though, is that this will NEVER be a venty, gossip-y blog. I'm a student, and I don't want to rant about kids at my school or complain about my personal issues. I may post writing that has to do with me personally (as I am about to in the next post) and I may express opinions on issues from time to time, but I don't want to direct any comments at certain individuals. There's enough gossip in school itself, we don't need to carry it on via internet.
Anyway, I hope you enjoy my blog. Tell your friends, please!

Love,
Susan D. Holmes