Creative self expression is, above all things, an art; it allows a person to translate intangible feelings and emotions – the essence of their being-to something the world can see and, at best, understand. For me, expressing my creativity is executed in an array of behaviors, including singing and the arts, but most predominately, through writing. My greatest love will always be the manipulation of the written word. As a 9-year old-child, I would often sit wide-eyed in the hallway with my girlfriend Leila during those precious increments of “free time”, penning elaborate short stories of Barbies, witches, and laughable relatives, our curious minds filled to the brim with elan and youthful enthusiasm.
Writing was an outlet, a release – some otherworldly place that I was welcomed into; a place far transcending the mediocrity and unevenness of a seemingly prosaic life. As a young teenager, I discovered the unbelievable relief that came with writing poetry. When my boyfriend, Alex, relentlessly broke my heart, I turned not to my parents, or deviant behavior, or even to tears, but rather, to the comfort and solace of my Ticonderoga #2 and crisp white sheets of fluttery heaven. It indeed was quite a prolific period, and looking back on it now, the ordeal itself seemed so inconsequential. But I know intrinsically that without the hours of scrawling raw, overly sentimental lyrics, my broken heart may never have mended.
Freshman English was an artistic category unto itself. On countless occasions we were to write poems, stories, essays, responses. The most memorable of assignments were the adaptation of the George Ella Lyon “I am from” poem and the essay on the Aen iad, where we had to assume the role of one of the characters. Both works were the recipients of meritorious praise, but more importantly, personal growth. The way I could shed my skin and become Queen Dido, embody the sheer quintessence of the heartbroken deity, showed me how much writing could mean.
The Term Paper on Types of Writing 3
... hears, tastes, smells and feels. 3. Persuasive Writing: Persuasive writing, unlike ‘Expository Writing’, contains the opinions, biasness and justification ... their names and details: 1. Expository Writing: Expository writing is a subject-oriented writing style, in which the main ... logical order and sequence 2. Descriptive writing: Descriptive writing is a style of writing which focuses on describing a ...
During my junior year, my affection for creative writing was augmented even further, due to the inspiration and energy of my English teacher, Ms. Kara sek. Throughout the year we were given coursework where our literary techniques were displayed in diverse formats. Incontrovertibly my favorite assignment consisted of writing a short story containing elements of Romanticism. I chose to illustrate the dismal and depressing life of a teenage girl who wished to commit suicide a la Edgar Allen Poe. Although my story far exceeded the two-page minimum, (in fact it was upwards of 14, 000 words), the excitement and pure unadulterated high that it yielded made every hour worthwhile.
Even as I sit typing this essay, it is not a burden or a chore. It is not some horrible obligation that has been looming in the back of my mind for weeks and haunting me with its ubiquitous and pressing existence. In fact, it is somewhat therapeutic, for it grants me the opportunity to recapitulate just how much creative expression through writing has enhanced my life.