Sunday, October 7, 2012

The Struggles of a ballet dancer


The struggles of a ballet dancer
By Maxine Tewsley 6th grade

In the book Bunheads by Sophie Flack it describes 19 year old Hannah and her struggles while training to be a professional ballet dancer.  If your dream is to become a professional ballet dancer, you have to work extra hard. Not one low key ballet class a week, but hard core practices nearly every day.  Barre work, French terminology, center floor work and technique. You have to work every muscle in your body. From your head to your toe.  Concentration is huge.


One way it shows how being is a professional ballet dancer is hard is when she takes all of her ballet training on top of hard core work out classes. In the world of dance, sweat is a good thing.  Hannah is very aware about her shape and size. She learns that she needs to have the perfect body of a ballet dancer and starts to work extra hard. And practice is everything to her.

Another way is when it talks about how having a social life is very hard. No collage no friends outside of the academy. There is hardly any contact between you and your parents if you have to move away. And there is hardly any time for a new companion, Jacob. Having a normal life is very awkward.

So now you know how the life of a professional ballet dancer is probably very different than yours. I would recommend this book to those who love dance or consider dance as a career, especially ballet. I think readers will love the book. From the first line to the last. It’s an amazing tale of struggle, stress, ballet and just the right amount of French.

Friday, September 21, 2012

Remembering the Romanovs - Poetry

I Am
I am hungry and cold
I am poor
I am lonely
And you tell me I can have no bread
I am dying
But you can not kill me
We'll march onto the street with our high held heads
Protesting for the lack of food and bread
Treacherous thoughts run through my head
But you can not kill me
And soon you will be dead
Now I am free
No longer your serf
I was a serf
 

Diamantes
 
Tsar
Proud, confident
Ruling, helping, shouting
Work can be tough
Archiving, shouting, working
Strong, loyal
Ruler




Rasputin
Holy, religious
Helping, practicing, healing
He's helping Alexei heal
Working, protecting, believing
Untrusted, righteous
Healer


 
 
Trust Your Dear Mother

Hemophilia
Son, Rasputin will help you
Trust your dear mother

Dear, you must trust him
I promise he will help you
Trust your dear mother

You shall not be sick.
You must make me proud
Trust you dear mother

I have taught you things
Please trust your dearest mother
Son, trust Rasputin 



Before the Shooting


Before the shooting
They were flooded in darkness
Loud gun shots rang out
The end of the world
Is exactly what they saw,
for them anyway

Before the shooting
Horrible thoughts in their minds
And they all came true
Shot in a cellar
Their dreams all came to an end
Buried in the earth


Tuesday, June 5, 2012

The Romanov Family

Check out my website on the Romanov Family.  It contains all of the work I did for my fifth grade multi-genre project on the Romanovs.



http://rememberingtheromanovs.weebly.com/
















Friday, March 2, 2012

My family’s Having Some Hard Times But We Have Ways to Get Through it: My Essay

Bad luck stinks. And my family's been experiencing a lot of it. My grandma calls it the Tewsley luck. (I'll give you a hint 2 certain people in this class know how crazy my grandma can be but she's not kidding here.) Now let me give you a brief story. First my great grandma Beatrice dies. Then bye-bye grandpa. Then we say good-bye to a close friend of the family, a great aunt, 2 cousins, another friend or two, and so on. It all happened in the past 8 years and that's just the deaths. But, 2011and 2012 have been especially hard. This summer Borders Book Store where my parents met closed. My mom had no longer worked there, but for my dad he has held a position for almost 18 years! It was devastating. In November my grandma was diagnosed with throat cancer. It's something called life. It just goes that way. I guess what I'm trying to say is that my family's having some hard times but we have ways to get through it. Letting it go, making a joke and laughing, and wiping our slate clean.

One way we get trough it is by letting it go. When Borders closed all I had to do was to let it go and it helped.

When my grandpa died an organization called Hospice helped me let it go by coming to my house. They gave me lessons on letting it go and it made me feel a lot better.

One time they came in carrying a large bag filled with arts and crafts and plopped it down on the living room floor.

“How about we make something that reminds you of your grandpa.” said the Hospice worker.

I rummaged through the bag and pulled out a brown shoebox, tape, paper, scissors and markers. I drew a door and windows and asked if someone could cut them out. I began to work and after about 20 minutes I had a mini model of my grandparents apartment. Proud of myself, I admired the crayola marker drawing of him, my grandma, me and something I think now is their dog. To this day I have a who-knows-how-long-its-been-around shoebox up in my closet. It really helped me let it go.

We let it go when my grandpa died, we let it go when Borders closed, we let it go when my grandma was diagnosed with throat cancer. We let a lot of things go, but not completely.

Another way we get through it is by making a joke and/or laughing.

One time my grandma, mom and I were at Big Boys. My grandma and I were on one side of the table and my mom sat straight across from her. Here's a tip for the part of the story I'm about to tell and it is my grandma has a hard time swallowing because of her cancer and if she doesn’t think about it her food ends up all over the place. Okay, so the waitress comes with our food I got a grilled cheese my mom got a sandwich and my grandma got soup. We thank the waitress and as soon as she leaves my grandma picks up her spoon dips it in the soup, pulls it out and halfway up to her mouth she stops. Mid air, right there. She puts it back in her bowl and says quietly to my mom. 'Lovely daughter-in-law I hate to say this but I have to think about swallowing you know that right?” My mom nods “Yeah your siting right in the firing zone." My mom lurched over to the other side of the booth and began to laugh. Not long after my grandma's first slow bite of soup she turns to me. And told me “You know I might turn around.” I took me a while to realize what she meant but I said “Oh so no ones safe?” She nodded.

We love to laugh!

We laughed when I broke my leg going down the slide. We laughed when we saw my grandma's mask for her radiation. We laughed when my uncle's car was backed into. It makes hard times easier.

The last way we get through it is by wiping our slate clean. My dad's going for a job (because he's jobless) that is something he would like to do but not the exact same job as a history book buyer for Borders. Whether behind the counter ringing people up, stocking and re-stocking shelfs or in his cubical typing away on a computer.

One time this year, the day I found out my grandma cancer, I was so upset. After the talk, I went up to my room and didn't care to open the door which led down the hall and to the steps going downstairs. I'd like to be in the attic right now. I thought and then I had an idea. I ran into my closet pulled out my small dry erase board and an Expo marker. I sat on the floor and wrote all the basic bad things that had happened to my family and I experienced. Sticking to the basic I filled up the board and with one quick move of the had it was gone. Well that made me feel good. I thought smiling. Proud of myself I ventured downstairs and I had literally wiped my slate clean.

One time when we wiped our slate clean was when we picked up pieces of my dad's car that had been smashed into, planted flowers at my grandpa's grave and when I literally wiped my slate clean.

I realize that when people say, "I'm sorry your grandma has cancer" or "Sorry life’s hard," I still feel pinches of sadness even with that, ways that make it better it doesn't work completely, so don't go home and try it and you’re still sad and the next day you come to me and say “You promised it would work!” because it doesn’t work completely! Oh well. Tough luck. Everybody has it once in a while. But in my family right along with Borders in our blood the Tewsley luck has joined the party. So pretty much what I’m trying to say is that my family and me I are having some hard times but we have ways to get through it.

1. Let it go

2. Tell a joke and laugh

3. wiping our slate clean.

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

My Grandma Calls it the "Tewsley Luck"

10 Pieces of Advice and Facts

  1. Our family has been experiencing an unluckily long chain of what my grandma calls the "Tewsley Luck." Its really hard but there are many ways to deal with it.
  2. I feel really sorry for my family sometimes because of "The Tewsley Luck." but we aren't the only ones.
  3. When people get upset because they didn't get what they wanted for Christmas, they should think about the people who don't even have a Christmas tree to put the presents (that don't exist) under.
  4. People should know it's not just them.
  5. Sometimes when you have such bad luck, you have to laugh. Make a joke about it. Try to have a little fun.
  6. You need to think that because of the economy jobs are hard to get. Don't blame it on yourself. You did nothing. It's the economy that could be hurting your family.
  7. You need to just let it go. When Borders closed it was really hard on me and my family. It took me about a week to realize it was really over. Done for. I needed to let it go.
  8. When life feels like you're being pelted with dodge balls you need to back out and walk away. If you can't all you need to do it try to make it better. Say, "stop!" Close your eyes and think. Do what you have to do.
  9. Maybe life doesn't always go the way you planned - either good or bad. You can work through it.
  10. Take life to the cleaners. If you can put in the washing machine, do it. Start all new.

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Lincoln the 16th President

You know Washington and Jefferson, Roosevelt and Adams, Bush and Eisenhower, Regan and Nixon...but do you recall the most famous president of all?

Lincoln the 16th president had a very long beard, and if you ever saw him you would be 151 years old.

All of the Southerners used to call him names. They never let poor Lincoln free their precious slaves.

Then one foggy night, he went to a play and a snobby actor snuck up on him and shot him in the back of the head.

Then how the Southerners celebrated, as they shouted out with glee. "we did it!" Lincoln the 16th president you'll go down in history.

Like Rudolph!

Thursday, December 22, 2011

My story

I have a story and i was wondering if you like post comments please.

11 year old Julia Roberts thinks shes living a normal life. But her parents are always working leaving her older sister Macy in charge. Her grandma falls ill and her aunt comes to visit from New York. When news of a catagory 5 hurricane called Katrina spreads her family is forced into the superdome. But her grandma who is now forced to stay in the hospital wants Julias mother to stay with her. So she does. After the horrid hurricane ends her mother goes missing she has only the help of a mysterious spirit named jack.

thanks for reading don't forget to post!

Merry Christmas and happy new year.