Tuesday, February 10

Why? Why? Why do I bother talking to my mother? Everything I say is either wrong or I don't know enough, so all that I say has no basis to make a judgment. And when it seems I might actually have a point, she'll just back out with an "Ah, anyway, I'm too tired now; I don't feel like arguing with you." So why encourage me to talk in the first place when all I say is wrong or you don't feel like talking?

She can never admit she's wrong; even though she's obviously to so everyone else, a thousand and one factors (no matter how lame) just happened to make the mistake. Oh no, not her fault at all, how could anyone ever have thought so? after all, she's the epitome of perfect motherhood, cool, hip, relaxed and trusting my every judgment. Everything is "fine, it's up to you" or "of course I trust your judgment, it's just that..."

Why? Why can't she just be direct and say no? Why can't she admit that she's not perfect; that she might be wrong? And when I call her bluff and literally agree that it's "up to me" (I learnt over the years that it's the only way I might get something done) she gets angry. I call that hypocritical. Why say it's up to me and that you trust my judgment, when you get all angry when I do?

This seems like one awful bitch at my mom. Ah well. C'est la vie.

__________________________________

On another note, I think I should change what I read, because what I read reflects what I write. And what I write is crap. Hence, the syllogism is...? Yup. So I'll not read anymore fanfiction, because the language used in fanfic isn't the most wonderful. I guess it's okay if you read it in moderation, but for an addict like me... I'll try cold turkey for a while. *ponders* In the span of 1 months, I've deleted Kazaa and made a resolution not to read anymore fanfic. I think Sec 4 is seriously damaging to me. Ah well.

I have to read Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Everyone talks about them so much, and I'm always totally clueless. Anyone knows where to get the books? I'm also trying to find some good E. Dickinson books, but they seem to be hiding somewhere. Saw a copy at Borders, but I thought I might as well use my Kino vouchers. Oh, anyone knows where to find Gertrude Stein as well? She seems to have sunk into obscurity.



The Dark Angel seriously reminds me of Bern. Do I fit this description?

phoenix
You are a PHOENIX in your soul and your
wings make a statement. Huge and born of flame, they burn with light and power and rebirth. Ashes fall from your wingtips. You are an amazingly strong person. You survive, even flourish in adversity and hardship. A firm believer in the phrase, 'Whatever doesn't kill you only makes you stronger,' you rarely fear failure. You know that any mistake you make will teach you more about yourself and allow you to 'rise from the ashes' as a still greater being. Because of this, you rarely make the same mistake twice, and are not among the most forgiving people. You're extremely powerful and wise, and are capable of fierce pride, passion, and anger. Perhaps you're this way because you were forced to survive a rough childhood. Or maybe you just have a strong grasp on reality and know that life is tough and the world is cruel, and it takes strength and independence to survive it. And independence is your strongest point - you may care for others, and even depend on them...but when it comes right down to it, the only one you need is yourself. Thus you trust your own intuition, and rely on a mind almost as brilliant as the fire of your wings to guide you.You are eternal and because you have a strong sense of who and what you are, no one can control your heart or mind, or even really influence your thinking. A symbol of rebirth and renewal, you tend to be a very spiritual person with a serious mind - never acting immature and harboring a superior disgust of those who do. Likewise, humanity's stupidity and tendency to want others to solve their problems for them frustrates you endlessly. Though you can be stubborn, outspoken, and haughty, I admire you greatly.


*~*~*Claim Your Wings - Pics and Long Answers*~*~*
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Sunday, February 8

Right, I'm back. Actually, I'm typing this in the wee hours of the morning (1 am) of Feb 7, perched on my bed, using my dad's laptop.

I hate showering. And I hate it on different levels. It's a waste of time. What do you do when showering? Switch off your mind and go into auto pilot. Hence you are not doing anything productive, and it is a waste of time. The thing is, when my mind goes on auto pilot, ideas and inspiration always come. Unless I'm in one hoodoo of a writer's block, they invariably come when I'm in the shower. This should be wonderful, except that I have a anal retentive memory. They start to trickle in the moment I sit on the toilet bowl and can't get up. It only comes in full torrent when I'm scrubbing my hair. The consequence is that the only thing I leave the shower with is a geked-ness and wisps of ideas. Someone should invent a waterproof voice recorder than can eliminate the sound of water slamming onto the ground and can just tape our brilliant flashes. Except that if they do, it probably means that a) I'll never get out of the shower and b) if they could do that, they'll make an e-book instead, then I'd be reading, so I won't be brain dead, so ideas won't flow. Damn. See? I knew that I thought of tonnes of things when bathing. excpet that now I can't remember a sinlge thing. Logic and typing them down quashes creativity. Ironic, isn't it? Especially, as it's called "writing", when the actual process of transefering words from your brain to physical form is killing it. Never mind.




Are we suppose to be happy with who we are? Am I happy with who I am? I don't know. If we're not satisfied with who we are, doesn't that mean that we're discontent? And everyone always says to "Be happy with who you are". Then again, if you're happy with who you are, doesn't that mean you won't try to improve yourself? And then you'll be stagnant? Because no one is perfect, so there have to be some parts that you can improve on. Maybe one of those is discontentment. Then what? I've got a headache.

Actually, I'm not happy with myself. I can't write (proven), I can't do math or science (I hardly need say anything), I can't do Lit (go ask Cheah), I can't do history (ditto for Koh Suan Chu), and I can't act, dance, cook, bake, sew, paint, play any instrument, do sports, garden, or anything. Hell, I can't even speak properly. So what can I do? Nothing. Essentially, I am a carbon-and-water-based lump that just takes up people's time, money, breath and effort, while producing nothing at all. I'm a black hole.

Ah, whatever.

Nothing ever goes to plan. So just forget about making plans. Yesterday, I planned my day this way: 8 to school for Bio test and lesson until 11. Then rush home for tuition until 1, after which I'd rush to RG to watch YOUniverse with Haz, Siak and Karen till 5. Then I'd probably go home.

Instead, it was completely different. Started the day by climbing 7 flights of stairs to my classroom for the Bio test, to find a whole group of annoyed girls marching down down down to the LT (Lecture Theatre). So I walked all the way up for nothing. At least the Bio test wasn't that bad; but I think I changed some answers at the last minute from the right ones to the wrong ones. Such is my life. Then, Bio lesson was cancelled. Which was pretty good, actually, since now I could go home and have tuition earlier (my brother was suppose to go first) and make it to RG on time. Except that after tuition, in the spaces of many smses, I find out that a) Karen is going for the night show, b) YOUniverse may start at 2.30 and c) Bern was coming along. Called Bern to tell her how to get to RG from Farrer, then found out that I don't know either. If YOUniverse started at 1.30 (as Haz said), she'd be late. If it started at 2.30 (as Siak said) she'd be early. It started at 2.30.

The acting was beauiful. I think the RG drama club is one of the best around, much better than NY's. (Is it me or does everything seem better than NY?) Sarah Chan acted as Jean, and the way she delivered her soliloquy was real acting.
Okay, there's no escaping now. Blooga, I haven't blogged in some time, according to Yukki. Here goes.

Attended the Singapore Secondary School Debate Competitions yesterday. But because I a) only reached home at 5+ and b) had a bio test today, Mama ddin't let me go straight away. So I had to miss watching Bern glare at everyone else in her debator-mode. Shucks. I ALSO missed watching Vince debate. Double shucks. Called Iz up at the last minute to go as well, so we two straggled in in time to watch CHIJ TP team 1 go against *gasp* NYGH Team 2. Frankly, NYGH sucked. And they hadn't a hope in the world.

analysis: Their first speaker was Vanessa Something, a soft spoken girl who apparently was debating for the first time. Not that you could tell. Quiet, but you could tell every word she said. And if I remember correctly, not a single falter. Second speaker was Nalli Singh, who got best speaker. Incredibly commanding presence, and rebutt...er?. I'm not familiarized with debate-lingo. Third was JJ! As in Judith Jacobs from CAP. Yup yup. Need hardly say more.




Oh CRUD. I'm just pooped to write anymore. It's past midnight, i had a jampacked day, and so i'm going to BATHE and take a nice long sleep. Goo'night. Life's not fair. Deal with it. I didn't get mentorship. booyah. Must find adrian chan for councillorship. dare to dream, i say. i WILL sleep. haz is blond and his writing is beautiful; hunt for his blog. i believe in fairies, and ponces, i do. oh yes. i don't think i should read anymore fanfiction; it's bad. karen is caustic-ly brit. i can't write. i bid you a good night, mon ami. i'm delirious. ha.

Thursday, February 5

I learnt various interesting things on my Social Studies trip to Kranji War Memorial. The first thing is that Nanyang's school gate comes off very easily. All you need is a bus filled with around 50 teenage girls to bumpr into it, and wheee... off it falls. So that's all you have to do if you want to break into our school.

The second thing is this, when a bus filled with around 50 teenage girls knocks a large metal gate, the air-conditioning will malfunction.

And the third thing is, when the air-conditioning of a bus filled with around 50 teenage girls malfunctions, the bus gets very stuffy. Especially if the bus is specially designed to be floating in blissful cool air and hence has no window. I assure you, it gets hot very fast. The after effects are left to your imagination.

Apart from that, I learnt that a) if you're a fugitive from the S'pore law (it doeasn't work if Interpol's after you), Kranji War Memorial is a good place to hide. b) Kranji does not look like any other graveyard. The tombstones are all identical from the back and the grass is so neat you could putt on it.
_______________________________________

Who's up for starting a Ong Sor Fen hate group? Because I simply cannot stand her writing anymore. I have suffered in stoic silence (with many others, no doubt) for a loong time, but the torment is just too much to bear now. Imagine the fun we could have. We could dog all her writing, scrutinizing every piece and picking out all the nitty-gritty bad stuff and air it on every public forum we can lay our hand on so she won't dare to even leave her bed. WE could also spam her inbox and feed her totally weird info so her pieces will seem more interesting for once. We could also just pester her silly until she gives up journalism and moves to Timbuktu.

So who's game for the hate club? I vote Karen for prez.
_______________________________________

Pardon me, I'm gonig to start cooing now. So if you want to avoid all the mush, just skip the next segment.

You have been warned.






Oh crap. I'm seriously fatigued; I haven't finished reading all "daily blogs"; I've got a Social Studies test tomorrow and a bio one on Sat; and American Idol starts in less than an hour.

The stuff still apply to the next posts. I'm crawling off now.



HASH(0x858214c)
Reincarnation: You are nice enough to go to heaven, but Earth won't be as fun without you. So you shall come back as someone or something else. As a real optimist and lighthearted person, you always see the good in things. People probably respect you for your wonderful personality and love for life. People like you make the world a happier place


**Where will you go when you die?**(now with pics)
brought to you by Quizilla

Wednesday, February 4

There is no frigate like a book
To take us lands away,
Nor any coursers like a page
Of prancing poetry.
This traverse may the poorest take
Without oppress of toll;
How frugal is the chariot
That bears a human soul!
- Emily Dickinson

Doesn't that ring so true? The depth and... and truth in that poem is just there. I don't know how to describe it without sounding like a cold, analytical lit essay. *shrugs* I think her works are really one of a kind; deep deep pity that we can't study her stuff instead.

I can't believe I did that. I wanted to catch American Idol (dtsrting in 5 mins, 4) and in my hurry, I accidentally locked my MSN messenger. Except that I forgot the password! I am so brilliant.

As I said, I have to go catch it now, so I'll blog next time.

Up next: Neil Gaiman's superb writing, and Jeremy Sumpter mush. TTFN!




HASH(0x849d878)
You, my friend are a true individual. You most likely hate trends and are creative. By seeing things differently, people either admire you or think you are a bit strange. I'm guessing you are a lot like me. Perhaps a Good Charlotte hater? I hope so. An inspiration to us all, continue being you! (If you like GC, I'm sorry, I am just expressing an opinion)


A Deeper Look Inside Yourself (with pics)
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Tuesday, February 3

I have just done a monumental thing: I have deleted my *looks furtively around* KAZAA! Now what'm I going to do to download Enya? Yes, Andrea, ENYA. It was my only source of Enya! Discouting my precious Shepard Moon and The Celts that I just bought. I don't think I can afford anymore. Each Enya CD is at least $3 more expensive than a normal one.

I've also become a Grobanite (ie. Josh Groban fan) and hence, joins the ranks of my mother and the like *shudder* But his music really is very very good; his voice is comparable to the Tenors. Okay, Pavarotti, maybe. Unfortunately, I think the first album is much better than the latest. In the second, he's taking a more marked turn towards pop, as opposed to the more classical Italian hymn of the first. But then again, he sings better in Italian and I don't understand Italian... Ah well.

Oh, and where did I buy the CD? At my school's Popular. Yup yup, NYGH has it's own in-house Popular! Yay!! And we all instatnly get 10% discount, so my CD cost $17 as oppsed to $18.90. Woo! I sound so mercenary... WHo cares? A penny saved is a penny... I forgot the saying. ^^"



Book review: ... I just realized that the paper on which I scrawled the indiluted praise for Neil Gaiman is sitting in my room, and I don't feel like walking there and back again. So I will do it some other time.



Does everyone know that Jeremy Sumpter is extremely cute? Unberably, unbelivably so? And he entered the GAP of America. Not G Education P, but the G Arts P. At age 6. he in incredibly lucky. One day, 60 years down the road, Singapore finally see its mistakes and open up the first CAP school. By that time, all CAPers will be doddering, senile and cursing the horrendously slow Singapore Ministry of Education. If it hasn't been torn down from popular demand by then. One lives in hope, after all.



I've also found out that I cannot type without looking at the keyboard. If I don't, the entire sentence comes out at twice the time, or like this. Heive. P Cam[t type without looking at the keaobatd/ THat was "Hence, I can't type without looking at the keyboard", by the way.




GIRLY GIRL - Clever Kitty
You dont have a lot of self-esteem and people are always bringing you down for being sad. What do they know, anyway? You feel like you're too mature for your age and are frustrated by the trend-followers who refuse to accept you because youre not like them.
Your virtues: Intelligence, understanding nature, modesty.
Your flaws: Lack of social life, inferiority complex, timidity..

Saturday, January 31

Okay, I think this is a return of the uber posts; I've got loads and piles of things to blog. I'm going to need dividers for this.
________________________

Firstly, I may not be going to Cheltenham after all. Yup, after all that, I may not be going. Instead, we're contemplating me going straight to college! Whoo! Oh, and I might not be doing Law anymore. ^^ Papa made Mama see that me being as lazy as I am, maybe with all the work involved, it wouldn't be such a good idea after all. Instead, maybe I'll do a Liberal Arts course at Byrn Mawr College (my paternal grandmother studied there) then see where that takes me.

Personally, I've got this budding idea: I want to be a lecturer for Philosophy in a university. It might not earn half as much as a lawyer might, but at least I'll be doing what I like. I don't want to be in a stagnant job, wherer everything is ordered, with rigid working times, and in a nromal, boring office, like the rest of the normal boring world. Besides, a university is suppose to ba lot like a think tank, right? At least, a good one is; in a place like that, learning grows by leaps and bounds, as opposed to in the real world, where a majority of the time is spent earning money first, then appplying abstract thought. Learning isn't one way either, students can teach just as well as teachers can. I'll cut the crap now.

________________________

How do you part waters,
to see fathomles depths?
How do you clear skies,
to see suns overhead?
How do you understand,
to solve the meaning of life?
How do you eradicate hate,
to end all wars and strife?

Doesn't one feel
disheartened, after a while?
Doesn't all this work,
seem pointless toil?
Doesn't the temptation
to give in, grow?
To lay down everything,
to just let go?

To just
give
up

I wrote that when I was momentarily seriously depressed during Math. Had a re-quiz (yes, I'm that lousy), which I failed again. I haven't passed a single thing Math in... I forgot; it's just been too long. Probably around Feb last year, when... Oh, right. I failed my first test last year too. So it must have been somewhere in Sec 2. Aren't I great.

The problem is that in the past few years, I haven't really been trying. Most times during clas I'll either doodle, write or talk. (Right, I know I'm doing that now too, but it's different. Seriously.) Now I actually try to listen (if I fall asleep, it's not my fault) and do my homework. But still I get the same results. It's a bit discouraging, you know. So I wrote that.
________________________

Speaking of depressing, I went to Kwong Wai Shiu Hospital today to do CCA CIP. And there, the true meaning of depression is portrayed. The old folks looked so frail and bent, and you could still see the intelligence in some of their their eyes, just that they were too weak to do anything. What really moved me though, was this old man. He still looked pretty strong (comparatively), and I'm not sure why he was put in a wheelchair. When I was watching the lion dance (Ny NPCC), Juliana poked me and whispered,"Look at that man he's crying." So I turned to look, and indeed he was. But crying isn't quite it. He wasn't sobbing, nor were his shoulders heaving or anything like that; he just sat there tearing. I was standing across the hall, so I couldn't really see properly, and the only indication that he was tearing was that he brushed his tears away. He just sat there, looking at the lion dancers, with tears tricking down his face. The emotion was so powerful, yet so silent, that I nearly cried too. In his eyes, you could see the memories of his past, long past.

I feel like writing a poem about it, to convey the real feeling (like I could do that), but I just don't seem to have the inspiration.
________________________

Another poem, written in Math (duh)

eyes
staring eyes
sheened staring eyes
sleepy sheened staring eyes
sleepy sheened eyes
sleepy eyes
eyes

closed.



First diamante I've ever written.
________________________

You know, I think my Math teacher is so cute. Not in a woah-is-he-cute-and-i-want-him sort of way. more like an awww-he's-so-adorable in an old guy sort of way. Akk. Now I sound like a... what's the word? Someone that is attracted to old people. I know this word. Blah. Anyway, I'm not. The Muffins all agree that he's adorable too.

WHen he gets passionate about a concept, all his worrds just spurt out in a torrent, and he gets all hte wild hand movements. Hee.

________________________

Up next: the long-delayed account of my trips with Muffins and CAPers!





4


Which Fairy are you?(for anyone many out comes)
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Saturday, January 17

Squash. I've just finished Chinese tuition, and since it's so early, my tuition teacher eats breakfast here. Right. So today, we had blueberry cake, which A. Vyvyen made. Except that we were suppose to eat the remaining char siew sous. So when Mama came out and found that it wasn't eaten, she told me about it. Which is absolutely the wrong thing to do. Naturally, I yelled that I wanted one. And dear Jun gave me both.

In vain, I protested that I only wanted one, and for someone to take the godforsaken other one out of my sight, smell and tastebuds. Notice the "in vain" part. So I ate one, (which was yummylicious, I might add) and left it there right in front of me on the plate and valiantly continuined to surf blogs. Tell me something, how does a greedy person not eat something delectable that is sitting right in front of them? In the end, I succumbed, and the last char siew sou in the house was devoured. And here endeth the "diet". Until lunch.

Sad news: Rong is coming home today. My dear brother has been away at camp since Thursday, and (tragically) returns today. So goes the last of my peace. Right now, the house is calm, with the (discordant, but besides the point) sound of my sister practicing her scales. The moment he returns, incessant yells of "Korrrrr!" from my teased sister will disrput my quiet. Alas, such is the fate of older sisters of younger brothers.






P.S It seems that my uber-long posts will never see the light of day again.

Monday, January 12

Iz has just confirmed: I'm not on the mentorship. As in, actually, truly confirmed. And even though I knew that (despite the glimmer of false hope), and Vince's hazards, hearing it again really hit me. Argh. It hurts, it physically hurts. Like there's this force pushing down on my heart. And i've been bottling up, not really voicing it out, which only made it worse. Yet, unless they were also menorship "rejectees" (welcome to the club), they wouldn't really understand it.

It feels bad.






What Sort of Hat Are You? I am a Halo.I am a Halo.


I believe I am perfect. Others may not think so, but those others are wrong. What Sort of Hat Are You?

I feel stupid. I feel extremely stupid. I have just realized why, for the past week or so, nothing on my blog seems to appear. And you know why? Because in a fit of insanity, I changed the subdomain to squashymuffin, making it squashymuffin.blogspot.com. I am a regular dumbass. And I've been blaming Blogger! Sorry, the Powers that be! Don't strike my blog down!

I've skipped school today, because I am seriously sick with a fever of 42 degrees, and am bedridden *coughwheezeyeahrightsniffle* That's for the sake of any teacher who might be PRYING into matters that do not concern them. Were I to say otherwise, I would be charged with truancy and given 6 demerit points. And yet, you know, I know, they know that I'm sick *see above* but they can't do anything. Tsk.

Anyway, (I know, I know, I promised not to use that word anymore, but!) Yukks updated me on Yeo Hwee Leng's daily fashion report. A bright blue dress with flowers that are white and...inevitably - purple. Sigh. Won't she ever learn? Purple does not look good on dumplings! *looks furtively around for said teachers*

Hmm.. what else to say? Oh, of course. HAPPY BIRTHDAY BERN! Pity about the booze party; it would have been such fun watching people get drunk. (Despite the fact that we're all underage)

Gah. I have broken my resolution and not finished my homework before blogging, reading fanfiction and the usual crimes. Ohdear ohdear ohdear. What to do? Will not panic; will bring laptop along to the Immigration centre when I'm waiting for an eon to get my IC done. At long last.

Oh, I've fallen for Kenshin! KENSHIN!!! I've got a crush on a manga character; isn't that nice? Yayyy!! i am consequently just waiting for next weekend to go to comic shop and get the subsequent volumes (I've read 1 and 2). He's just so adorable! Oro? รณ.0



Did I want to be Kaoru? One never knows.
<
You are Kenshin Himura.


Rurouni Kenshin Quiz
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Hoo boy. I feel so humbled after reading the article (below). And, oh, pissed, of course. (really must find out Brit slang) Pissed? Why? Because Blogger's acting up again as usual, of course! But if you're reading this it means that Blogger isn't acting up, and therefore I have no reason to be pissed... I'm confused. but, never mind, we shall ignore this.

Oh, did I mention that I'm heartbroken as well? I didn't get the mentorship. Well, it was to be expected, considering the standard of the portfolio I handed in, but still! Ah well. Such is life. I'm not sure who did get it, though.

I have another article here on blogging from Karen's LJ, but since you need to be registered to the New York Times to be able to read it from a link, I am going to post the entire article here. Don't kill me, just read it first. I, stupidly, thought of linking it at first, so I went through the entire hassle of rigistering for NewYork times online, (like I'll ever need it) and putting myself at risk for junk mail at that. Then just when I wanted to copy the URl over, I realized, Hey, they're going to need to register too! And nobody is going to bother to do that. So I registered for nothing. Aren't I brilliant?

My So-Called Blog

January 11, 2004
By EMILY NUSSBAUM

When M. gets home from school, he immediately logs on to his computer. Then he stays there, touching base with the people he has seen all day long, floating in a kind of multitasking heaven of communication. First, he clicks on his Web log, or blog -- an online diary he keeps on a Web site called LiveJournal -- and checks for responses from his readers. Next he reads his friends' journals, contributing his distinctive brand of wry, supportive commentary to their observations. Then he returns to his own journal to compose his entries: sometimes confessional, more often dry private jokes or koanlike observations on life.


Finally, he spends a long time -- sometimes hours -- exchanging instant messages, a form of communication far more common among teenagers than phone calls. In multiple dialogue boxes on his computer screen, he'll type real-time conversations with several friends at once; if he leaves the house to hang out in the real world, he'll come back and instant-message some more, and sometimes cut and paste transcripts of these conversations into his online journal. All this upkeep can get in the way of homework, he admitted. "You keep telling yourself, 'Don't look, don't look!' And you keep on checking your e-mail." M. is an unusually Zen teenage boy -- dreamy and ruminative about his personal relationships. But his obsessive online habits are hardly exceptional; he is one of a generation of compulsive self-chroniclers, a fleet of juvenile Marcel Prousts gone wild. When he meets new friends in real life, M. offers them access to his online world. "That's how you introduce yourself," he said. "It's like, here's my cellphone number, my e-mail, my screen name, oh, and -- here's my LiveJournal. Personally, I'd go to that person's LJ before I'd call them or e-mail them or contact them on AIM" -- AOL Instant Messenger -- "because I would know them better that way."


Only five years ago, mounting an online journal or its close cousin, the blog, required at least a modicum of technical know-how. But today, using sites like LiveJournal or Blogger or Xanga, users can sign up for a free account, and with little computer knowledge design a site within minutes. According to figures released last October by Perseus Development Corporation, a company that designs software for online surveys, there are expected to be 10 million blogs by the end of 2004. In the news media, the blog explosion has been portrayed as a transformation of the industry, a thousand minipundits blooming. But the vast majority of bloggers are teens and young adults. Ninety percent of those with blogs are between 13 and 29 years old; a full 51 percent are between 13 and 19, according to Perseus. Many teen blogs are short-lived experiments. But for a significant number, they become a way of life, a daily record of a community's private thoughts -- a kind of invisible high school that floats above the daily life of teenagers.


Back in the 1980's, when I attended high school, reading someone's diary would have been the ultimate intrusion. But communication was rudimentary back then. There were no cellphones, or answering machines; there was no ''texting,'' no MP3's or JPEG's, no digital cameras or file-sharing software; there was no World Wide Web -- none of the private-ish, public-ish, superimmediate forums kids today take for granted. If this new technology has provided a million ways to stay in touch, it has also acted as both an amplifier and a distortion device for human intimacy.


The new forms of communication are madly contradictory: anonymous, but traceable; instantaneous, then saved forever (unless deleted in a snit). In such an unstable environment, it's no wonder that distinctions between healthy candor and "too much information" are in flux and that so many find themselves helplessly confessing, as if a generation were given a massive technological truth serum. A result of all this self-chronicling is that the private experience of adolescence -- a period traditionally marked by seizures of self-consciousness and personal confessions wrapped in layers and hidden in a sock drawer -- has been made public. Peer into an online journal, and you find the operatic texture of teenage life with its fits of romantic misery, quick-change moods and sardonic inside jokes. Gossip spreads like poison. Diary writers compete for attention, then fret when they get it. And everything parents fear is true. (For one thing, their children view them as stupid and insane, with terrible musical taste.) But the linked journals also form a community, an intriguing, unchecked experiment in silent group therapy -- a hive mind in which everyone commiserates about how it feels to be an outsider, in perfect choral unison.


For many in the generation that has grown up online, the solution is not to fight this technological loss of privacy, but to give in and embrace it: to stop worrying and learn to love the Web. It's a generational shift that has multiple roots, from Ricki Lake to the memoir boom to the A.A. confessional, not to mention 13 seasons of The Real World. The teenagers who post journals have (depending on your perspective) a degraded or a relaxed sense of privacy; their experiences may be personal, but there's no shame in sharing. As the reality-television stars put it, exposure may be painful at times, but it's all part of the process of "putting it out there," risking judgment and letting people in. If teen bloggers give something up by sloughing off a self-protective layer, they get something back too -- a new kind of intimacy, a sense that they are known and listened to. This is their life, for anyone to read. As long as their parents don't find out.

***

It was early September, the start of the school year in an affluent high school in Westchester County, just north of New York City, where I was focusing my teen-blogging expedition. [This would be where the author went to high school -- sdn] The halls were filled with students and the walls were covered with posters urging extracurricular activities. ("Instant popularity, minus the hazing," read one.) I had come looking for J., a boy I'd never seen, though I knew many of the details of his life. (J., like most of the teenage bloggers I interviewed, insisted he not be identified, in part because his parents didn't know about his blog.) On a Web site called Blurty, he kept an online journal, titled "Laugh at Me." In his user profile he described himself this way: "I have depression, bad skin, weight problems, low self-esteem, few friends and many more reasons why I am angry." In his online outpourings, J. inveighed hilariously against his parents, his teachers and friends who had let him down. "Hey everyone ever," he wrote in one entry. "Stop making fun of people. It really is a sucky thing to do, especially if you hate being made fun of yourself. . . . This has been a public service announcement. You may now resume your stupid hypocritical, lying lives."


I was half-expecting a pimply nightmare boy, all monosyllables and misery. Instead, J. turned out to be a cute 15-year-old with a shy smile. A little bit jittery, he sat with his knees apart, admiring his own Converse sneakers. He had chosen an unfortunately public place for this interview -- a stairwell near the cafeteria and directly across from the teacher's lounge -- although he insisted that we were in an obscure location.


J. had had his Blurty journal for about a year. He called it ''better than therapy,'' a way to get out his true feelings -- all the emotions he thought might get him in trouble if he expressed them in school or at home. Online, he could blurt out confessions of loneliness and insecurity, worrying aloud about slights from friends. Yet despite the fact that he knew that anyone who wanted to could read his journal -- and that a few friends did, leaving comments at the ends of his posts -- he also maintained the notion that what he was doing was private. He didn't write for an audience, he said; he just wrote what he was feeling.


Writing in his online journal was cathartic for him, he said, but it was hardly stress-free. A week earlier, he left a post about an unrequited crush, and an anonymous someone appended negative comments, remarks J. wouldn't detail (he deleted them), but which he described with distress as "disgusting language, vulgarities.'' J. panicked, worried that the girl he liked might learn about the vulgar comments and, by extension, his attraction to her. It was a somewhat mysterious concern. Couldn't the girl have read his original post, I asked? And anyway, didn't he secretly want her to read his journal? ''Of course,'' he moaned, leaning against the banister. ''For all I know she does. For all I know, she doesn't.''


J.'s sense of private and public was filled with these kinds of contradictions: he wanted his posts to be read,and feared that people would read them, and hoped that people would read them, and didn't care if people read them. He wanted to be included while priding himself on his outsider status. And while he sometimes wrote messages that were explicitly public -- announcing a band practice, for instance -- he also had his own stringent notions of etiquette. His crush had an online journal, but J. had never read it; that would be too intrusive, he explained.


In any case, today he was in a strikingly good mood. After a year of posting his journal on Blurty, which few of his fellow students used, he was switching to a different Web site: LiveJournal, the enclave of many kids in his school's punk set. He'd spent the last day or two transferring all his old posts, setting up a friends list and concocting a new "icon," the tiny symbol that would represent him when he posted: a blurry shot of his face in profile. Unlike Blurty, where accounts are free for anyone who signs up, LiveJournal was restricted. (That policy has since changed.) You either had to pay to join (which J. couldn't afford) or be offered a coveted membership -- a private ''code'' -- by someone who already belonged. The policy was intended to make members accountable to one another, but it also had the effect of creating an invisible clique. For J., it was a sign that he might belong at last.

***

While the sites that are hosts to online journals may attract different crowds, their formats vary only slightly:a LiveJournal is a Blurty is a Xanga is a DeadJournal is a DiaryLand. A typical page shows a dated list of entries, beginning with the most recent. Many posts are short, surrealistic one-liners: ''I just peeled a freckle off my neck. Does that mean it's not a freckle?'' Others are more like visual poems, featuring a quirky series of scanned pictures (monkeys and robots are popular), a quote from a favorite song or a link to a strange news story. Some posts consist of transcripts of instant-message conversations, posted with or without permission (a tradition I discovered when a boy copied one of our initial online conversations under the heading ''i like how older people have grammar online'').


But a significant number of writers treat their journals as actual diaries, toting up detailed accounts of their day. ''I watched the miracle of life today in bio, and it was such a huge letdown,'' read one post. ''I was expecting it to be funny and sexual but it was way too scientific for my liking, and a bit yucky too, but not as bad as people made it out to be. Although, my not being able to laugh made me feel a bit too old. Current mood: disappointed.''


Then there are the kinds of posts that fulfill a parent's worst paranoia. ''It was just a nite of lying to my dad,'' reads one entry posted last fall. ''At like 7ish we started drinking, but i didnt have THAT much. And i figured out y i drink so much. Cuz i really really don't like being sober with drunk people. . . . i have more homework to do than imaginable. And to make it better, im hungover and feel sick. Great . . . great. DRINKING IS BAD!!''


Other entries are just plain poignant. ''My father is suing my mom on no real grounds. He just wants to 'destroy her' and I am trying my best to stay 'neutral.' Things seem real foggy, but I am told that they should turn out for the best. I just don't know. Affection needed. Current mood: indescribable.''


If a journal may look at first like a simple recitation of events, the fact that readers can comment renders it deeply interactive. (On some sites, like Xanga, you can give ''eProps'' [eProps??? wtf? -- sdn] for particularly good posts -- the equivalent of gold stars.) Most comments are wisecracks or sympathetic one-liners. Occasionally people respond with hostility. The threads of comments can amount to a public miniconversation, in which a group of friends debates a subject or plans an event or offers advice. ''I need your help,'' one poster wrote. ''Yes, your help. You, the one reading this . . . what am i supposed to do when the dynamic of a once-romantic relationship sort of changes but sort of doesn't, and the next week i continually try to get in touch with the girl but she is either not there or can't talk very long, and before this change in the dynamic she was always available?'' A string of friends offered suggestions, from ''don't call her so much'' to ''confront her . . . what she's doing isn't fair to you.''


In daily life, most bloggers don't talk about what they say online. One boy engaged in vociferous debates on Mideast policy with another blogger, a senior a year ahead of him. Yet the two never spoke in school, going only so far as to make eye contact in the halls.


Silences like this can create paranoia. It may be that friends just didn't read the post. Or it may mean they thought the post was stupid. There's a temptation to take silence -- in real life or online -- as a snub. "If I get a really mean comment and I go back and I look at it again, and again, it starts to bother me," M. told me. "But then I think, If I delete it, everyone will know this bothers me. But if I respond, it'll mean I need to fight back. So it turns into a conflict, but it's fun. It's like a soap opera, kind of."


It's a drama heightened by the fact that journals are linked to one another, creating a constant juxtaposition of posts among the students. For example, on LiveJournal, you can click a "friends" link and catch up on your friends' experiences without ever speaking, with everyone's accounts posted next to one another in a kind of word collage. For many, this transforms daily life. Teen bloggers are constantly considering how they'll turn a noteworthy moment into an online post. After a party or a concert, these accounts can amount to a prismatic portrait of the evening.

***

But even this endless linking only begins to touch on the complex ways these blogs are obsessively interconnected and personalized. L. has had an online journal for two and a half years, and it has morphed along with her. At first, her interest list (part of the user profile) consisted of topics like aromatherapy, yoga and Zen -- each of which linked to people with the same interest. She deleted that list and started over. In her next phase, she was obsessed with Freudian psychology. Now she lists fashion trends and belongs to the Flapper, Saucy Dwellings and Sex Tips blog rings.


Over the course of the fall, she changed the title of her Web log more than five times. L. relishes the way subtle choices of design and phrasing lend her posts a winking mysteriousness, hinting at feelings without making them explicit. ''I don't think I reveal too much; if I'm upset, I don't say why," she told me. "In the beginning, I was just like, there shouldn't be private posts, this should all be public. But then it makes you very vulnerable." And her attitude goes double for her parents. "I don't talk to them about anything. They'll be like, 'How was school?' And I'll be like, 'Fine.' And that was it."


Many of a journal's markers of personal identity are hilariously telegraphic. There are sometimes slots for a journalizer's mood and current music. (Sample moods: "stoned," "restless," "accomplished," "confused" and "braces off Tuesday.'') Journal writers link en masse to sardonic identity questionnaires, like "How Indie Am I?" And every once in a while, someone posts a random list of questions, and everyone's journal fills up with simultaneous answers to queries like "Do you believe in an afterlife?" or "Name Four Things You Wish You Had." ("1. A flat tummy; 2. people that would miss me; 3. my copy of 'perks of being a wallflower' back; 4. talent at ANYTHING.")


It's possible to make posts private -- or "friends only" -- but many journal keepers don't bother, or do so only for selected posts. The general degree of anonymity varies: some bloggers post their full names, others give quirky, quasi-revelatory handles. No wonder everyone is up till 5 a.m. tweaking their font size and Photoshopping a new icon. At heart, an online journal is like a hyperflexible adolescent body -- but better, because in real life, it takes money and physical effort to add a piercing, or to switch from zip-jacketed mod to Abercrombie prepster. A LiveJournal or Blurty offers a creative outlet with a hundred moving parts. And unlike a real journal, with a blog, your friends are all around, invisible voyeurs -- at least until they chime in with a comment.

***

For many of the suburban students I met, online journals are associated with the "emo" crowd -- a sarcastic term for emotional, and a tag for a musical genre mingling thrash-punk with confessionalism. The emo kids tend to be the artsy loners and punks, but as I spent more time lurking in journals and talking to the kids who wrote them, I began to realize that these threads led out much farther into the high school, into pretty much every clique.


On a sunny fall day, M. and his friends were hanging out in front of a local toy store, shooting photos of one another with digital cameras, when a group of three girls sashayed by. They sported tank tops, identical hairbands and identical shiny hair. I walked over to them and asked if they have LiveJournals. "No," one said. "We have Xangas."


They were all 15, around the same age as M. and his friends. But the two groups had never read the other's posts. M.'s crowd was emo (or at least emo-ish; like "politically correct," "emo" is a word people rarely apply to themselves). These girls were part of the athletic crowd. There was little overlap, online or off. But the girls were fully familiar with the online etiquette M. described: they instant-messaged compulsively; they gossiped online.


With so much confessional drama, I began to wonder if interactions ever swung out of control. Does anyone ever post anything that seems like too much information? I asked. They all nodded intently, tossing nervous eye contact back and forth.

"Yeah," one of the girls replied finally, with a deep sigh. "This one girl, she was really upset, and she would write things that had happened to her that were really scary. Private things that didn't really need to be said on the site -- "

Her friend interrupted: "But she knew she was putting it out there. She said, 'I don't care.'"

"It was nice that she was comfortable about it," suggested the third girl.

Her friend disagreed. "It was not nice."


What kinds of things did she write about? I asked. Eating disorders? Sex? "All of it," they said in unison. "All of it."


I walked back to M. and his group. "Those girls are just, like, social girls,'' said M. dismissively. When I told him they had online journals, he seemed astonished. "Really?" he said. "Huh." He watched with amusement as they walked away.


Blogging is a replication of real life: each pool of blogs is its own ecosystem, with only occasional links to other worlds. As I surfed from site to site, it became apparent that as much as journals can break stereotypes, some patterns are crushingly predictable: the cheerleaders post screen grabs of the Fox TV show ''The O.C.''; kids who identify with ''ghetto'' culture use hip-hop slang; the geeks gush over Japanese anime. And while there are exceptions, many journal writers exhibit a surprising lack of curiosity about the journals of true strangers. They're too busy writing posts to browse.


But even diaries that seem at first predictable can have the power to startle. Take J.K., whose Xanga titled ''No Fat Chicks'' features a peculiar mix of introspection and bully-boy bombast. Some of J.K.'s entries this fall brooded on his bench-warmer status on the football team. ''Do the coaches want me to quit?'' he worried in one post. ''I know that some people have to sit out, that's just the way it works, and I accept that. But does it have to be me when we're down 36 points and the clock is winding down?''


In J.K.'s diary, revelations of insecurity alternate with chest-beating bombast, juvenile jokes and self-mocking claims of sexual prowess. From a teen poet, you expect angsty navel-gazing; it's more surprising to find it in a jock like J.K. In one post, he analyzed his history as a bully during "middle school, the time of popularity," when he did "things too heinous to even mention." In response, a reader posted a long, angry comment, doubting J.K.'s sincerity: ''I don't think you understand what hatred I used to have for you because of how you made me feel . . . you can't go back in time, but you can try to make up for what you've done in the past.''


Occasionally, a particularly scandalous site will gain a wider readership. It's a social phenomenon made possible by technology: the object of gossip using her Web site as a public stage to tell her side of the story, to everyone, all at once. As I asked around the high school, I found that many other students had heard of the girl the ''social girls'' had described to me -- a student whose confessional postings had became something of a must-read the spring before. Over the course of a monthslong breakdown, she posted graphic descriptions of cutting herself, family fights, sex. It was all documented on her Web log, complete with photos and real names. (She has since removed the material from her site.)


The blog turned her into a minor celebrity, at first among the social crowd, then among their friends and siblings as well. ''We were addicted -- we would track every minute,'' one student explained. ''We would call each other and go, 'Oh, my god, she wrote again!' '' With each post, her readers would encourage her to write more. ''Wow u should be writing a book,'' one wrote. ''Ur stories are exactly like one of those teen diary books that other teens can relate to. That might sound corny but its so true.''


The girls who read the journal were divided on the subject. Some called the Web site an unhealthy bid for attention -- not to mention revenge, since she often posted unflattering details about her ex-boyfriend and former friends. Others were more sympathetic. ''I think I empathized with her after reading it, because I'd just heard the stories,'' one girl explained. ''But then she was saying, 'I felt so sad, and I was in this really dark place, and my parents were fighting, and I was cutting myself' -- so I could understand it more. Before, it was just gossip. It made her seem more like a person than just, like, this character.''


These dynamics are invisible to most adults, whether at home or school. Students occasionally show the school psychologist their journals, pulling up posts on her computer or sharing printed transcripts of instant messages. But the psychologist rarely sought them out herself, she told me, and she was surprised to hear that boys kept them. She called the journals a boon for shy students and admired the way they encouraged kids to express themselves in writing. But she also noticed a recent rise in journal-based conflicts, mostly situations where friends attack one another after a falling out. ''They think that they're getting close by sharing,'' she said, ''but it allows them to say things they wouldn't otherwise say, to be hurtful at a distance.'' When I mentioned the material I'd read about the girl who was cutting herself, she went silent. "You know," she said, "I really should read more into these."


The scandalous journal is an extreme variation, but teen bloggers often joke about the pressure to post with angst; controversy gets more commentary, after all. (Entries often apologize for not having anything exciting to say.) But if there's something troubling about the kind of online scandal that breeds a high-school Sylvia Plath -- an angstier-than-thou exhibitionism -- there's also something almost utopian at the endeavor's heart. So much high-school pain comes from the sense of being alone with one's stupid, self-destructive impulses. With so many teenagers baring their vulnerabilities, there is the potential for breaking down isolation. A kind of online Breakfast Club, perhaps, in which a little surfing turns up the insecurity that lurks in all of us.

***

For some journal keepers, the connections made online can be life-altering. In late November, I checked in on J., the author of "Laugh at Me." All fall, his LiveJournal had been hopping, documenting milestones (a learner's permit!), philosophical insights, complaints about parental dorkiness and plans for something called Operation Backfire, in which he mocks another kid he hates -- a kid who has filled his own journal on Xanga with right-wing rants. "I felt happy/victorious," wrote J. about taunting his enemy. "And rightly so."


In the new context of LiveJournal, J.'s posts had become increasingly interactive, with frequent remarks about parties and weekend plans; they seemed less purely rantlike, and he was posting comments on other people's journals. When I contacted him via instant message, he told me that he was feeling less friendless than he was when the semester started.


"I feel more included and such," he typed just after Thanksgiving, describing the effect of having switched to LiveJournal from his more isolated Blurty. ''All community-ish.'' He was planning to attend a concert of World/Inferno Friendship Society, a band with a LiveJournal following. And he'd become closer friends in real life with some fellow LJ'ers, including L., who had given J. an emo makeover. He'd begun wearing tight, dark jeans and had ''forcibly retired'' his old sneakers.


Once J. decided to switch to LiveJournal, LiveJournal began changing him in turn. Perhaps he was adjusting himself to reflect the way he is online: assertive and openly emotional, more than a bit bratty. He'd become more comfortable talking to girls. And if he seemed to have forgotten his invocation not to make fun of anyone, at least he was standing up for himself.


J. had also signed up for a new online journal: a Xanga. He got it, he said, to branch out. He wanted to be able to comment on the journals of other students he knows are out there, including that of bully-boy J.K., where I was surprised to find one of J.'s comments in early November. "I made a xanga for myself because i keep hearing that that's whats 'cool' now," he wrote on his LJ with a distinctive mixture of rue and satisfaction, the very flavor of adolescent change. "And yet i always try to pride myself on not following status quo. I'm a hypocrite. O yes i am. Current mood: Hypocritical. Current music: Mogwai."
_________

Wow. Just... wow. I mean, i know it's a commonly known fact, but I just never grasped the... oh, never mind; you get it, you get it, you don't, too bad.


Erk.
freshmint
You are Fresh Mint.
You are caring and friendly. You have a nurturing
personality and always help out a friend in
need. You are fairly outgoing, and always show
a friendly face. You truly care for other
people, and you show it. However, you may
neglect your own responsibilites or become over
involved in your friends' personal affairs.
Most Compatible With: Orange


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