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Reality Check
What if I wanted to break away from society?
A culture
Where war replaces peace
Where money replaces love
Where emotions run dry
Where coping with it doesn't apply
Is this the kind of community we want to live in?
Would you stop me from leaving?-- Can you blame me for cheating?
Cheating
My way out
Of life.
Out of School. Out of Love. Out of Pain.
Out of this
Repulsive palce
I live in
Where being a terrorist is as easy as
Having brown skin
Is this what we want to live in?
A corrupt place where rules are
Pushed aside
Where solving problems are resolved
With homocide..
So
Don't blame me for breaking away
Where there is a place hatred won't go anyway
Where
Love has meaning and is not
Replaced
By something green
Where peace reins
Over war
Where emotions rise
Above more than just words that are said
Now put these ideas inside your head
Tell me what you think now
Because if you don't think differently somehow
Then there is no hope for the future and the now!
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JOIN THE DISCUSSION
This article has 141 comments.
I am not her friend. I have never met her. Some call her Vicky, others Victoria. That's all I know about her. Yet, I side with her. I have read the poem over and over again. I have thought about it long and hard.
Her message comes from her crying heart. She is not truly saying that she is going to cheat her way out of society. You would think the people on this site would read more in between the lines! Even though it says "cheat" very cleary, she doesn't mean that. She's saying: "Don't blame me for what's happening to OUR corrupt planet, I'm on the other side. I'm trying to fix it. I'm actually READY for change." That's what I thought when I first read it. And immediatly, I agreed 100%.
Our world has gone to the dumps. I'm not complaining. In fact, I am trying to change it just as much as Vicky here is. I want this mess to end. That is my obligation as a writer. We have influence, more so than even the president-elect Obama in all his speach-giving glory. What is our purpose but to try to change what we can change? We can't change the weather, we can't change terrian. We live with it. We can, however, change society.
This is our future! I mean, here you guys are sitting and complaining about one girl's view with her poem, while you can be out there, starting the great reformation out planet will need to go through!
What angered me most is the boy who went to his mother about her brown-skinned comment. Basically, she was refering to the judgmental path society *hint hint, our country* has taken. And all of you who go against her, you're proving her comment. I thought you were trying to fight her, not help her!
Please, a poem is not words on a page. A poem is something so much more powerful. A poem has the deepest meaning one can ever get. Try to understand that.
Victoria, you're changing the world. One person is better than none. You're a light in the darkness. It's nice to know we're not all fighting alone. May our future be better than our past! Let us change the world! See you at the top. ;D
Dang: Starting out with a "what if", the then following is all just hypothetical, innit? (A way of making the image seem more actual is not to use conditional forms all the way through, only telling this is all hepothetical in the very beginning...)
I really love the theme and ideas behind your poem. Actually, that is what I am writing about.
A certain line particularly inspired me, and I was wondering if I could have permission to use it in an upcoming piece? That line is "Don't blame me for breaking away".
I feel inspired to write a poem that goes hand in hand with yours, in a way, and I'm pretty sure that I would like to use that line as a foundation.
Let me know what you think, and keep speaking out!
-Chad
TeenInk.com/raw/Poetry/article/66118/Fearless-Again/
When I read it, my first reaction was that it and your intentions were good.
That you realize what the problems that bring down our society are and you don't want to be a part of it. What with all the violence and hatred it makes you wonder if there's a place out there where people can truly be treated equal and just act in a decent civilized manner. I thought when you used the word cheating, it was more to symbolize your difference from others with a different mind set and your pulling away from them and turning your back to them.
After I read all the comments and feedback people have been posting I noticed that there is really many ways you could 'take' this poem.
Its a really good poem, but maybe could use a little more clarity. You could add something about what your idea of withdrawing from this society is or how it is your 'cheating' it.
=]keep writing!
There are problems in this world. We all know it. Writing "literature" like this seems to have an automatically virtuous nuance nowadays. Sorry, it's the truth.
What amusing in the back and forth exchange between the author and her critics or cronies are: first, critics pick on how much the poem does not inspire them - the list of faults in this world is shoved in their faces, and how the author seems to handle the faults is faulty at best, and frankly does not seem sympathetic. "I have a dream" speech of MLK seems like a waste of dream, at least this is how the country is portrayed here - racism and terrorism in one sentence. To what degree it happens, it depends on your experience in life, and certainly the author can't insist that her feeling is shared by every one else. "Trying to make teenagers see the world as it is" can be as difficult as changing their perception on the world. It is like forcing the same lenses, through which they all see the world, to be used in different eyes.
Second, author's friends back her up fiercely. I wonder not. But development comes from constructive criticism and the ability to listen and adjust to that criticism. This will then come to the third point, namely, how defensive the author is up to this point.
We are all entitled to our opinions, no need to point that once more. Everybody agrees that the world is a messy place ("repulsive" is a very very strong word to be used here), but it is how you are perceived to want to deal with it that makes the difference. That is the difference in how you can change the world. If you can inspire, inflict pain and then touch someone's soul, then you'd probably be done with that poem. The problem is, some people question even the message contained in it. Work with it carefully, phrase it carefully, be more sympathetic, do not be hasty, and listen to suggestions. You will probably have something strong there.
I know it has different meanings to everybody, some like while others dislike it or disagree with it. You are all entitled to your opinions.
My apologies if it is not all that clear. I should have made a couple of edits before posting it.
Utopias can't exist, I am not saying that I want the world to be that. I feel as if the world has become somewhat of a Dystopia.
Brown skin is beautiful. Some poeple see it differently though.
If I really wanted to abandon this world, I wouldn't have written this poem and I wouldn't be here typing this comment right now. I am going to make a change in a the world.
Also, there are some typos. Fixing them would benefit the poem tremendously.
This poem has an undertone like: My teacher is bad so can you blame with for cheating?, or my parents are never home, so can you blame for trashing the house or getting drunk at home? Along that line, if you know what I mean.
The poem pointed to a well-known fact, that the world is a mess (so can you blame her for cheating her way out?). If the author's argument is to open teenagers' eyes, let me ask her, who does not already know that the world is full of misery? And does the author also try to persuade teenagers that it is okay to cheat their way out because the world is a mess? Is she merely informing the world she is opting out? But her line, "Tell me what you think now/ Because if you don't think differently somehow/ Then there is no hope for the future and the now!" indicates she needs happy pills.
I guess the problem I have if the moral undertone of the poem. We have obligations to the world. Yes, our teachers can't sometimes explain things clearly nor handle the classroom well, but my moral prevents me from cheating. Yes, the world is sad sometimes, so quit complaining and contribute something positive to it. It is not okay to add bad things, like cheating or complaining to the already messed-up world. See?
Got a boo-boo? Get a band-aid.
And so the author's friends are behind her. If they are good friends, they probably should help her develop. And oh, people, stop asking me to vote!
Victoria, when you find the nirvana-like world, which you might as well never, take us all with you there. Just NO CHEATING...
Or better yet, let's better our existing world by saving it, not abandoning it.
I was just wondering, where is this utopian place where everything is upsy daisy? Heaven? Other planet? Where? I acknowledge that the world can be ugly, but there is no other place that can satisfy her utopian wishes. She just said she wants to break away to that place. This is exactly why I think she gives up and becomes a pessimist much.
Change your world or at least how you see your world, that is more like it.
I think this is very good rhetorics.
I don't understand this at all as a statement of surrender / capitulation, but as a quite clear appeal to *not* do so - We shall take in our hands all the courage we can provide with our minds, and make the world, this world, our world "what we want to live in".
Again: One doesn't have to be of the same opinion as the author, and there is probably one way to express this for every single writer. This is not the way I'd have put it, and still I can say (and honestly say): Great work, you absolutely hit the core.
5 / 5 from Maxie.