THIS IS SO MUCH FUN I AM LAUGHING OUT LOUD. Calling all creative writers! @deirdyweirdy, @feltbuzz, @carolkean, @byn (xo), @kimberlylane, @free-reign, @hlezama, @fitinfun, @goatgirlz, @wales. I thought of you guys first, so maybe it's something you would like to do. But it's a mind-blowing gas, not hard at all. Use wordcounter.
Thanks for the support, @owasco, although, I fear that you may have downplayed the difficulty of this exercise but I won't tell anybody otherwise. ;-) haha
I know! I did! I was only three sentences in at that time! lol
I know! I did! I
Was only three sentences
In at that time! lol
- owasco
I'm a bot. I detect haiku.
El-o-el, haiku bot, is three syllables
Bwahaha!!!
What an adorable gif!
I'm totally daunted by the numbers but your provocative use of the word JAZZ might provoke me to try this time-consuming, brain-cell straining sport. "Jazz" has been declared the word of the year... gotta hunt down the link for that now...or not. (Just write, right?)
Haha! Just write, yes. - I'm sitting here thinking about. Is that not enough? What do you want from me?!?!
The word "Jazz" comes from the mouth of John T. Gatto. I loved the way he spoke about it so I borrowed it.
I really do hope I get to read your entry, either this one or one of the next ones.
One word was used to epitomize the entire 20th century: #jazz, "to describe not only music, but the sweep and swing of the quintessential American century, and the cultural flows that invigorated it." Ok, it's not the word of the year for 2019, it's the word for the whole 20th C. (Did I mention math, clocks, calendars, counting, and all that jazz, to be my weak spots?)
Now to see what Gatto said about jazz:
(Just when I thought I was done googling for a minute!)
Over in China, the revered Shanghai Conservatory of Music can’t even believe the principles of jazz are real! That with enough courage and trust in yourself, you can hear a piece of music once, and ring dazzling changes on it forever and ever. They can’t duplicate our jazz. But everything else we make doesn’t worry them a bit.
....The road to wealth comes from understanding yourself. Doing what you do best, not what other people do best.
--John Taylor Gatto,
author of Dumbing Us Down, The Exhausted School, A Different Kind of Teacher, and The Underground History of American Education. Formerly a three-time New York City Teacher of the Year and New York State Teacher of the Year, he “dropped out” of teaching in 1991 via an article in the Wall Street Journal, claiming he was no longer willing to hurt children. He has been writing and talking about non-schooling ever since. https://www.life.ca/lifelearning/0510/breaking_from_the_herd_whats_wrong_with_college_by_John_Taylor_Gatto.htm
Oh my goodness I love this guy! Here's the letter he wrote when he quit
https://www.educationrevolution.org/blog/i-quit-i-think/
Thank you for this!!! He speaks for me. And Lenore Skenazy-ish free spirits like you and @owasco and @goat-girlz and.... all of us at @freewritehouse, I suspect.
Public schooling has lobotomized us, as it was intended to do. We are know nothings who think we know everything. You've really got me going now. I sound like I do on FB. Hey! Did you ever get a friend request from me?
I responded to that friend request ages ago... let me see if it went through....
Someone else with a similar name is Wellness Advocate at doTERRA Essential Oils USA....
@owasco, @Carolkean - One of my favorite videos.
This certainly explains a lot about what we are seeing today, most of us blindly accepting what we are told as truth, even when it is completely irrational. Divide and conquer - so obvious. I am ashamed. But the video is great!
You can find me on fb as tristan j carax.
I just sent you a request.
Same profile pix
Awesome stuff. I'm glad he resonates with you.
haha! @agmoore2 also said something like that.
Loved the article. I never knew.
I loved the quote! It is perfect for this contest. Thanks for finding it.
When I had a psychological break down, while living in New York, just after Hurrican Katrina, I was invited over to my friend's house after he talked my blubbering, angry, confused self into coming over. There is where I was introduced to John T. G. So many lights were going off that tied back into things I had experienced in the schooling system and why I lacked the skills, supposed to be taught to you during your schooling career, necessary to truly strive in the world of which I was waking up to. He was a teacher I always dreamed of having. His words touched my soul.
I have for the last five years had a another seba (teacher) who stands up to those standards of mine. In this way, I'm blessed.
You've come a long way from the "angry, confused self" you describe post-Katrina! Finding a mentor and teacher is indeed a great blessing. Your experience parallels millions of children oppressed by institutionalized education -forcing children to sit still and stay quiet all day in a hard chair is not my idea of how to teach life skills and prepare our little ones for adulthood. Most kids SEEM to turn out ok with this system, but I'm haunted by photos of Native American children in matching school uniforms sent to boarding schools. Their childhoods were stolen, they were punished for speaking in their native tongue... ok, I stop now. This is too depressing to recall. Back to MEMORY LOSS... story prompt....
I always picked up on that aspect regarding the Indigenous peoples of this land and that of the Afrikans. Things just looked off.
Thanks for the heads up but I did see the challenge and it's way beyond my meagre capabilities. Did you see agmoore's entry into the last round?
Yes! I have two more sentences to write. They are proving to be diabolical. I love it though. If I can do it, you surely can. I highly recommend this!