Posts Tagged ‘curiousity’

Just Grins Page


21 Jul

A Day In The Life

Memoirs of a Stylist

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There are a lot of moments in my life where I have those jaw dropping “oh my gosh I can’t believe they just [insert said, did, or any similar verb] that!” realizations. In my line of work, they really do happen more often than not. I’m going to do a series on all of these jaw dropping moments that I (as well as my family, but I’ll get to that) experience on a daily basis. I’m sure you will wonder how I have kept my sanity through it all, but don’t worry, I have nerves of steel and a poker face to die for. I think that to begin with, so that the stories will make sense, I’ll give you a bit of background information.

I have been a hair dresser for the past three years, and not only do I have my license to do hair, I have also acquired the hours necessary to have my instructor’s license. You may be thinking to yourself, that three years isn’t very long, but that is only three years with a license. Three years is nothing compared to the twenty years that I have been next to, under, around, and pretty much smack in the middle of the business that is cosmetology.

It all began with my grandmother, and the business of cosmetology has so far been successful in collecting the women in my family. My grandmother was so adamant about cosmetology that she defied all the odds (i.e. her parents wishes and a forced semester in college, which I’m sure was fun) and became the first cosmetologist in the family. After that, Ma-maw’s three daughters followed suit.

For as long as I can remember, Ma-maw owned a cosmetology school, and up until recently she still did. Even when she decided to hang up her chalkboard ( I don’t think that works does it? Oh well, you know what I mean) she could not fully retire from what she so obviously loved, so she bought her own salon.

She went from a school run by her and her daughters, to a salon run by her and her daughters. When I was in cosmetology school, my Aunt’s were my teachers, and my mom was the director of financial aid. as you can imagine twenty plus years in the business has given my family ample time to experience quite a few mishaps and misunderstandings. Now, it’s my job to write them down and share them with the world. Well, here we go.

To follow updates on this series, just click on the Just Grins page at the top of the site.

“Life is a pure flame, And we live by an invisible sun within us.”- Sir Thomas Browne


11 Jul
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Writing a book is hard work. A task designed for a person with focus of steel. Focus that my poor, slightly frazzled brain has trouble with. Right now, I’m in the process of “writing” my first novel. Mostly, I don’t get a great deal of writing done, however, I do find myself doing an immense amount of staring at a blank page. I’ll have an idea, write a sentence or two that I will automatically label as “crap,” or “ewww,” or sometimes I even get a “wow, that is horrible” from myself. As I hastily punch the back button on my computer’s keyboard, I wonder how I will ever be able to create a world of words, a work that is ready to take readers to an alternate reality in which they can always find a refuge.

 

This is what a book is to me: a refuge. A home away from home. I’ve fought demons, witnessed the demise of a great and powerful being. I’ve visited with elves, ridden a dragon, gone to a school of magic, and traveled the world. The world of the page often feels more like home than my home could ever be. From the time I was a young child I have always loved to read. I’ve spent many a night laying in bed, caught up in the moments of my current favorite reads. It all began when I was younger.

 

In middle school, I spent more time trying to please others and be popular ( I know, how popular can you really be in middle school?) because that is what everyone else expected me to do. I went to a small private Christian school from Kindergarten until the day that I graduated from high school. Being with the same people, having the same teachers watch you grow up is nice, but it also limits you. I was always the over achiever and I was always expected to be the over achiever. When I was in the seventh grade my life took a slight turn and I went into a rebellious stage that I’m still not quite out of. For me, this is when writing really began to stick with me, when it really became important to me.

 

I started out writing teen angst poetry that was more a rant about how my life was so sucky (even though looking back, my life was anything but sucky, try blessed). Most of my friends had a little bit of trouble with the new me; more quiet and pensive, still driven, but definitely different. By the time I was in high school, I was ski pping the classes I didn’t like and sneaking out onto the balcony in the gym to write. I wrote everything, even though at that time I thought I was definitely a poet. I experimented and read different genres. I read books like Harry Potter even though they weren’t allowed. (I was a true rebel, huh?)

 

As I got closer to graduating, I knew that literature and writing were my passions, and that is one thing that has not, and probably never will change about me. I have writer’s block, but I’m working through it, just like any normal (are there normal writers?) writer would do. I have a daily battle with myself because so many different things tempt and distract me. I’m fighting though. Every day the battle is becoming more and more one sided. I am finding my voice. I am searching for the key to unlock all the creativity that I have inside of me. And guess what? I’m getting closer every day.

 

This is the goal I have for what I write, and because my expectations are so high, I realize how difficult it will be for me to actually write something I will approve of in the beginning. I’m praying that eventually I will be moved by some god of focus so that I may be able to get somewhere with novel number 1.

Working Through the Crazy


09 Jul

My life is a crazy hectic mess of class, internship, work, homework, and a serious deprivation of sleep. Every time I have a brilliant idea for a story or a blog, I’m in the middle of one of those previously mentioned obligations (and considering the amount of times that I have one of those brilliant moments, I really should own a pause world remote so I can write this down).What I’m learning, more and more every day, is that what I write about doesn’t really matter. When a story comes to me, I’ll have something then, but until that point, what is most important to me is to write.

Even though my life is at its craziest right now, I realize that writing is my escape. Immersing myself in a world of my own creation is like living a dream every day. I may not be published, and I may never be, but the one thing that can never be taken away from me is the sense of peace that I get from simply starting a sentence, and watching that sentence become a paragraph, become a page, become a world.

I recently found one of my old stories that I left unfinished and decided to work on it some more. It will be a children’s book, geared probably for the tweens. This story is about a ten year old girl named Jess. I started this story a few years ago and slightly modeled the character after a few of my family members. When I recently opened up what little I had gotten around to writing, I realized that it definitely was not up to my current standards, but I had a direction, I had an idea, and I now have a purpose. I’m doing a bit of outlining now, and hopefully said outlining will lead to an awesome story of a girl’s curiosity. (No, it won’t end for Jess like it ended for the poor cat.)

CC Riley

"A ship is safe in harbor, but that’s not what ships are for." –William Shedd