Saturday, January 26, 2013

Letter to The Editor


Jeyleen Takakiro
xxxx Highwood Dr.
xxxxx, Utah xxxxx
xxx-xxx-xxxx

Dear Editor:
Taking the art programs away from our schools is not a very bright move. If the arts programs were to disappear there would mostly likely be more problems created than solved. When the announcement of the district minimizing the art programs at the high schools was heard, most of the students and the staff were not pleased.

If the arts were taken away, so would the positive behavior of the students. The arts help students express themselves in a creative way. Without classes or after school programs to set times for these students to do express themselves can result into juvenile behavior. The dress code will be disregarded, vandalism will arise, and not to mention the anxiety of the teachers will rise.

If you force minors to go to school, then in return offer them something fun for them to do while they are in school. The art programs are needed. 

Profile


Jeyleen Takakiro, born June 10, 1995, is a senior at Kearns high school and a dedicated writer. She has written a few poems, short stories, and a novel, none of these have yet been published. Takakiro created the writing club at her High School her sophomore year, and has been president twice her high school life. Now, Takakiro is involved in with not only the Writing Club, but also a Representative for her senior AVID class. She is Vice President of her youth group at her church as well.
Takakiro hopes to have a successful career in Creative Writing, teaching, and film directing. She hopes to go to Utah Valley University for college after she graduates in 2013.

Journal Entry

I sit and wait...waiting for something to happen, but nothing does. I sit and wait for someone to say something, but no one says anything. So I write. I write my troubles, I write my dreams, I write about all the things that come into my mind.
Some think I'm weird. They might be right. What's a writer without a little crazy? What's a writer without voices in their heads telling them that their works sucks and they must do better? A writer is an artist. A notebook is their canvas. The canvas sits and waits for a writer to paint a beautiful picture with their words, and have them travel through time and space.
Writing is a great journey. Writing takes us places that we long and dream to be. I dream to be in a mystical realm where I can have great power. Fictional writing, fictional dreaming, fictional reading! Reading is the porthole to these worlds. Without reading there is no writing, and without writing there is no reading. The two come hand in hand.
They are like siblings, brother and sister, twins maybe. Without one there isn't the other. Ying and Yang, peace and war. We must live with both or live without either.
Writing is a great passion. Writing is what I do best. Writing is my life obsession. Writing. Writing. Writing.
I just love to write.

Friday, January 25, 2013

Memo




MEET LOCAL AUTHOR
CHRISTY SIEFERT!

Where:     Media Center
When:      Feb. 6, 2013
Time:       2:30p.m. – 3:30p.m.

        Refreshments will be served.
      The following teachers will offer Extra Credit:
……

Saturday, January 5, 2013

My Life Line Essay


     

My First Life Line

Many have that moment of inspiration, whether the epiphany is from a film, a book, or even a person. My inspiration came from Cindy through an out of the blue conversation. Cindy is a short Guatemalan girl, who has beautiful black hair and big brown eyes that are hidden behind glasses; her figure is healthy and curvy.

Her personality is what people recognize though.  Her large vocabulary is the first thing that people notice. These words are what set her apart from being normal: “That’s a horrid habit.”, or “Don’t say such disgraceful things.” She is also a huge romantic who expects love to come quickly. This romantic idea of hers comes from all the books she reads; she is also an avid reader. Her reading leads to her imagination getting the best of her at times.

This is why Cindy is my best friend and my inspiration. Cindy and I met in the seventh grade. She didn’t like me at first because she isn’t one to trust people. The more we got to know each other, however, the more we discovered how many things we shared in common. Our fathers were both very protective of the family, and we both have annoying little brothers. Cindy isn’t just my best friend though; she is also my first life line.  She is the muse of my writing; she is the one who got me started. Writing is now practically my life. Creative writing is what inspires imagination and a smile to the world. It gives a great journey for a reader to experience, just through black and white words on a page. Writing creates happiness for most people, which is why I love it.

Cindy is always there when inspiration is in need. When a story needs to be told, she is the one who listens. When a story needs help with an idea, she inspires the idea. Cindy is the one who opened this opportunity for me.

My inspiration started at a long, brown, sticky lunch table. Cindy and I were eating our lunch, like any other day. The lunch food tasted bland, also like any other day, and the place reeked like sweaty kids and burnt burritos. The brick walls were covered in flyers and banners, and lining the top of the walls were country flags. I was eating a piece of pizza while watching as a girl chases a guy for her back pack around were  we sat in the cafeteria, or what we called “The Pit”.

“Hey, I was thinking.” Cindy started the conversation, taking a sip of her chocolate milk. “You know how I finished that one book I was telling you about?” she asked. Taking a bite out of my pizza, I nodded.

“Well, I was thinking.” She repeated. I raised an eyebrow curious as to why she repeated herself instead of telling me what she had been thinking. “What would our lives be like if it were written in a book?” she asked.

I nearly laughed at the very idea of our lives being in a book. When I saw the look on her face though, I knew I shouldn’t. Cindy was being completely serious. How was I supposed to reply to that?

“Wouldn’t it be marvelous?” she asked smiling at me. I just continued to look at her. “Just think of it us in a book.” She laughed. “It would be so fun to read it, but sadly, no one would ever write it.” She picked at her side salad looking a bit annoyed.

I was always one to want to keep a smile on Cindy’s face, so I did what I could to make her happy. If reading a story about our lives in story form was what she wanted, then that is what I would give her.

“I’ll write it, then.” I said. She looks up at me not sure she understood what I had said. I shrug at her, thinking writing would be simple. “How hard can it be?” she smiled at me and clapped excitedly.

“Oh, that would be wonderful! Of course you will need to include everything you and I have gone through...” She then went on about the events we had gone through, and I sat there nodding and agreeing with her.

Since then, I haven’t been able to stop writing and coming up with new story ideas. Cindy inspired the challenge of writing, and began the flow of creativity for my future writing career. Even today, Cindy still helps me out with ideas for stories, and inspires me through my writers block. Because of Cindy, I found my true passion.