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Friday, March 26, 2010

Blurbs from Song Stories

Wrinkles (Diamond Rio)

37 year old Joseph Fairbanks, husband and father of four, is a successful businessman and long time athlete. A recent development in arthritis, however, has limited his ability to participate in marathons and charity runs. At first frustrated with this new physical challenge and still grieving from the loss of his father a year before, Joe reflects on his memories. He comes to a peaceful resolve on his situation when he remembers the life lessons he learned as a child.


There Goes My Life (Kenny Chesney)

Jake Harley married his High School Sweetheart the week after graduation, with plans to travel the world, attend a prestigious college, and become a successful business man in the automobile industry. He thought he had nought to worry about but doting on his wife and easily paying the bills. When he discovers he is the soon-to-be father of a beautiful baby girl, his dreams spur quickly to a halt. Jake feels at first caged and limited as well as confused in the responsibilities of guardianship. As he measures up to responsibility, however, Jake realizes that his daughter's life is the best decision he's ever made.

Forever & Always (Taylor Swift)
Jo (Juniper) Bellant is a tomboy in her senior year of high school. She's never dated much, acting as an independent and carefree woman--until a certain young man moves into her small town. Drew Lawson is assigned a seat next to her in Physics, and as their conversation blossoms into friendship, Jo knows she has finally found a man worthy of her love. After dating a blissful few months, the gossip around the school meanders to Drew's head. He decides though he loves Jo, their differences outweigh their comparable traits, distancing himself from her. Heartbroken and confused, Jo picks up her guitar and strives to find a way through the tragedy by pouring out her emotion into song.

Concrete Angel (Martina McBride)
Lily Jewkes is a fourteen year old city girl, trapped in an emotional confine of her abusive home. Lily is struggling to find a way to overcome her insecurities about boys, growth spurts, and junior high drama while hiding the physical beatings dispatched by her father. Lily finds refuge in a tutoring center for struggling math and science students, finding mentor Judy Lunz, a senior in high school. Lily must compose the courage to escape the hand of her father and confide in both Lunz and the police.

All I Want (Steven Curtis Chapman)
A tragic car accident leaves Rick Swenson, age eight, parent-less in the states. Having moved recently from Canada and having no living family relations, he is forced to jump from foster home to foster home in Conneticut while a permanent family is found. Two years later, with no familial success, Rick decides to give one last plea for a family in a letter to Santa Claus. Skeptical of Santa's existence and afraid of consequences from his naughty behavior, Rick hides the letter in his school binder for nearly two months. Only a week before Christmas, Rick mails the note. come December 25th, Rick receives a surprise call from the foster care facility. The next months of his life are spent adjusting to a life with a new family and learning to appreciate the tender mercies God offers.



Thursday, March 18, 2010

Song Story: Wrinkles

Title: Wrinkles
Artist: Diamond Rio
Link to Song Lyrics

Plot: A grown man reflects on a memory from when he was a young boy. Frightened by the pruny appearance of his fingers from the bathwater, he worriedly relates this to his Dad, who is shaving by the sink. His dad explains that "Those are wrinkles, they ain't nothin' to be scared of!" The young boy wanders down the hall after listening to his daddy and enters his parents' room. He hears his mother complaining about her own wrinkles/age, so he decides to take his Daddy's advice and passes on the motto "Those are wrinkles, they ain't nothin' to be scared of!" He completes the story with his outlook on life now that he is grown and starting to recieve real wrinkles; contiuing to keep to the lesson his father taught him.

Characters:
Grown Man (Main character)
Young Boy (Main Character)
Daddy (Father to boy)
Mama (Mother to boy)
Audience (Main Character is talking directly to audience)

Conflict: Main Character is concerned with wrinkles and the physical problems/disabilities that accompany old age--such as wrinkles, gray hair, arthritis, etc. His parents are also concerned originally, before they express their new philosophy.

Theme: Acceptance of aging;
As long as you're living right and loving life, don't worry about 'wrinkles.' They're just a product of time and true love!

Setting: Happy family Suburban home; begins in the bathroom (specifically a hot bath, then to the hamper and sink), progresses down the hall to the master bedroom. Setting of the Character in Adult life is ambiguous.

Friday, March 12, 2010

Six Word Memoirs: My own philosophies

#10--Andes Mints on my Grandma's Table.
#9--I'm gonna worry, but not now.
#8--Lost a fight with a Goldfish.
#7--Prevent regret before you feel it.
#6--Seventeen, College Plans, time to fly.
#5--Car stopped at a forked road.
#4--Fingers raw from pressing six strings.
#3--Blue eyes, free skies, heavy sighs.
#2--One lane highway ahead, no exits.
#1--American Stars on my father's coffin.

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Grand Theft Poetry: The Choice

Two choices diverged before me.
I listed the pros and cons for each upon my notebook page.
As I did so, I asked myself for the thousandth time;
"Why must I choose between the places that most determine my future?"
I blocked out the second option with one hand so I could focus solely on the first.
Soft music tantalized my thoughts as I soaked in the pros and cons, options like a melody careening through my mind--the notes smiling at me like an old friend.
I shook my head, trying to clear the temptation, before removing my hand from the right side of the page and planting it firmly on the left. The music stopped.
I gazed at the second.
Mountains unconquered, unfamiliarity, and promise lurked dangerously in this choice. It was not what my eager eye and willing ear wanted me to opt for.
With a large sigh, I took them both again; holding them like a balance beam, my mind the weighing lever teetering back and forth.
From which scale could I glean the most potential and success?
Only if you knew! My thoughts hackled mercilessly.
I took a breath, and unsteadily, crossed the second candidate into an incomprehensible mess of pen marks.
I reviewed my final choice, the first, with satisfaction and peace.
I had done well,
Perhaps this was the path more traveled by--but the best for me.
The one to make all the difference.