10/19/2018
Today's nerd fun: words that sound like animals.
GRE Vocab Wednesday: Animal Words - Magoosh GRE Blog
Some GRE words remind me of an animal, have a substring of letters that form a name of an animal, or are actually inspired by that animal. Pugnacious I’m always reminded of a pug dog when I see this word. If you don’t know what a pug dog is, it’s the one with the …
04/16/2018
A couple pieces I wrote in honor of my city—the first, a poem, written a year after the marathon bombing, when my siblings ran 26 miles in 35-degree rain, similar to today’s nasty conditions; the second, about the human thirst for justice and universal need for grace, written after Dzhokhar Tsarnaev’s sentencing.
“Boston Strong”
They looked like death camp survivors
as they crossed over.
Hundreds of identical, haggard faces
which seemed to be waning
before my eyes.
We looked in vain for a recognizable pair of un-shriveled lips, a familiar un-shrunken nose
un-shrouded by the metallic Mylar cloak
meant to hold out the rain
but not the cold
which broke like bullets
on taut, now shaking, skin.
Hundreds of legs
warping like branches
about to snap
after that last-straw
winter's storm.
Hundreds of antiquated bones
grinding their way mechanically forward.
This victory march
while loved ones wait
behind aluminum barricades
is what some humans do
voluntarily
at the finish
of the Boston Marathon.
02/27/2018
Best at-home editing practice? Print out your piece and read it aloud to yourself with a pen in hand. You’ll catch many of your own grammatical mistakes and redundancies!
02/26/2018
They're, their, there: most people know the difference but mix it up while texting. Use the Apostrophe when 'they're' Acting (they're going to the beach; they're away on vacation); use 'their' with an I when it's not MINE (I wish I had their cuddly cat! Mine is standoffish); use regular old 'there' with two Es for anything referring to an EnvironmEnt (let's meet over there).
02/07/2018
What's the fastest way to make your writing boring? Be vague. What's the single most important thing you can do to make your writing interesting? Make your point through real-life, sensory details. Example:
Vague: "It's difficult to be an artist when society does not encourage it and when you have other problems like personal issues."
Specific: "How am I supposed to survive as an artist when I can't afford Massachusetts' 400-dollar inspection and renewal fees on my '97 wagon, the only mode of transport I've got to get me and my drum kit from my basement studio in Malden to gigs in downtown Boston? And don't even get me started on the winter blues—the grey-skied, unmusical kind. Despite my morning ritual of downing ten Vitamin D tablets and soaking in the rays of my 10,000-lux sunlamp for an hour, I still can't seem to shake this February mental haze."
Vagueness is easy to come by. Describing details is mental exercise. Fight your winter depression and tell me what your day really feels, looks and sounds like!
02/06/2018
My 2018 New Year's Resolution? Start posting writing tips more regularly! Tip #1: How do I remember the difference between EFFECT and AFFECT?
Affect is an Action
Effect is the rEsult of an action
So: "Your attitude AFFECTS me negatively. The EFFECT of your attitude is that I don't want to spend time with you!"
01/12/2017
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