Sunday, September 9, 2012

Absorbed by the Bush


The Perry’s had 3 children, all daughters; Alexandra, Eliza and Paige. Alexandra was the girly girl of the group, Paige the studious book worm who excelled in academics at school. But Eliza was the most adventurous of them all. Eliza would go exploring every chance she got, on family outings, holidays, at new places she visited, even at school! Although this sometimes annoyed her family, she did it anyway. The only one who joined in her enjoyment was her dad. Eliza’s parents believed in bonding time and so that’s usual what Eliza and her father’s ‘father daughter bonding time’ entailed.
For a combined 18th birthday and graduation of high school present, Eliza’s parents paid for her to go on a two week adventure holiday to Glenrock Lagoon in Newcastle. Eliza had also taken two of her friends along, Jonathan and Samantha, or Sam for short. One day Eliza wanted to go for a bushwalk while her two friends opted for a trip to the beach instead.
So Eliza set out for the famous Glenrock Lagoon Bushwalk on her own. The 1.5km bushwalk was said to talk around two hours but it took Eliza a lot longer, for she stopped to linger and look at the beauty of nature and the natural sights that surrounded her. It took her about 2 hours there and another 2 hours back, almost doubling the original estimated completion time. Eliza didn’t care though.
On her way back, Eliza got lost, having veered off the outlined route as she often did to explore. She'd been absorbed by the beauty of the bush. It had taken her a while to discover she'd actually veered off the path at all. Having forgotten to take her mobile phone with her, Eliza was lost. Sam and Jonathan didn’t know there was trouble. She’d never told them how long she’d be, she hadn’t known herself.

Finally, after what must have been two hours but felt like a lot longer to Eliza, a kindly stranger found her, luckily he was a local and led her back to the proper path. “There you go love.” He’d said before going on his way again.

That day, Eliza learnt a valuable lesson. Always take a means of contact with you and always give someone a rough estimate of how long you should be.

Shades


Sienna Blythe seemed to be just as normal as everyone else. She had four limbs, two eyes, two ears, one nose and one mouth just like everyone else. Underneath the surface however, lay something more. Sienna in fact had aspergers, a genetic condition that meant she had a little more trouble socially then others normally would.

Thankfully, Sienna had been diagnosed at a young age and her parents were therfore able to start teaching her the things she wouldn't learn on her own from a young age. That meant now, at age 15, Sienna seemed no different to any other person her age.

Aspergers was called a 'disability'. It was labelled as such. It wasn't really a disability though. More a different way of thinking. A different way of looking at the world and in some cases, a different way of doing things. You could say it was like everyone was one shade of a colour, lets say blue, and Sienna was a slightly different shade, so slight that you could hardly tell that Sienna's shade was even different at all.

Although Aspergers had disadvantages, it also had plenty of advantages. For instance, people who had aspergers were often very smart, often in a select few fields with which they were obsessesed and they also often went on to become rather sucesful in their chosen careers and in life.

Sienna wanted to become a phsycologist after finishing high school in the hopes that she could help other people just like her and not that she liked to admit it, but she was well on her way to getting there.

New vs. Old


As Jarna had grown up, her life had been a mix of pen and paper and the computer. Now however, technology was advancing and almost everything was starting to be taken over by it. Although Jarna was young, she quite prefered the old fashioned ways of pen to paper and face to face interaction as apposed to the ways of communication modern technology offered. Jarna thought it was a lot better to see someone or write to them rather than use technology. Because, it seemed, technological communication was much easier to misinterpret.

One day, Jarna decided to see what others thought. For quite a time now, she'd had a youtube under a nickname that friends had called her with one deliberate spelling mistake so that her name had a certain ring to it- Kreative Kitten. She'd also added 2302 onto it to make it a little special. That was her birthday, the 23rd of February. This made her username KreativeKitten2302.

Jarna uploaded a video explaining what she'd been thinking about and at the end, asking the question that had been on her mind for days, even weeks now. Her video got an overwhelming response from viewers and had an overflow of opinions. After looking at each one, Jarna discovered that the answers she'd received were in fact 50/50, half of them supported paper and pen and the other half were supportive of technology. Yet, Jarna couldn't decide which she liked best. She liked them both equally. Both methods had their pros and their cons.

So, the question still remains, which method of communication is best? Jarna decided that they were both equal, but she still liked hearing the public's opinion. What do you think? Which is better? Old or new?