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One Year On.
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by Alainna in Other Fiction
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This thread was created on July 23, 2008
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How to Dance Freely In Your Underwear (2)

How to Dance Freely in Your Underwear (1)

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Clo   View This User's Portfolio
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PostPosted: Thu Jul 24, 2008 1:41 am    Post subject: How to Dance Freely in Your Underwear (1) Reply with quote

(one/how to be overly critical of yourself before your day has even started)

With as much grace as possible, Suzan Mackintosh stripped out of her polka dot pajama bottoms, then leant forward and wriggled from the matching top. The waist of her bottoms caught on her foot and she hopped over toward the five-foot mirror on the back of her bedroom doorway, losing all attempted grace in the process.

It was seven in the morning on a school day, and she felt all the groggy misery that went with that fact. Her alarm was still blasting a morning talk show on her bedside table, but she was too lost in the fatigue of just waking up to walk over and turn it off. She wouldn’t be required at the breakfast table for another few minutes, so the allotted time was now for a school day preparatory self-examination.

She squinted at her reflection, standing there in her pink and blue undergarments with discarded laundry at her feet. Her dark brown hair was a tumultuous storm falling over her shoulders, and her face was still blotched with shadows from slumber. Letting out a heavy sigh, she tried to straighten up, glaring back at her image as she did.

Suzan had two dreams that she had retained for the majority of her seventeen years; she figured she was being unrealistic with the both of them.

The number one life dream seemed the more attainable one: to take her laughable little hobby of doodling and turn it into a lucrative career by becoming a master comic artist. She reminded herself of this in all of the small clips of art she had taped up on her bedroom doorway all around the mirror. She had been wielding a Bic pen against unsuspecting sketch books since she was a toddler and she hoped perhaps a lifetime hobby would turn out to be time well spent in the end. Underneath all of her passion for it, she tried to be realistic, but realism could be a painful thing to work with. It was much easier to be passionate and idealistic.

So then, there was her number two life dream, which seemed a bit more difficult: become comfortable with her body and stop thinking about it from there on out. She was mentally exhausted from years of wanting to lose the baby fat, but she had reached a point in her life where she had to accept that this was more than just baby chub haunting her from her more youthful years. This was the shape genetics had decided was best for her; she wanted to take her DNA and strangle it, showing it the correct shape a person should be.

She eyed the love handles hanging from the bottom half of her hourglass shape, giving much too much of an S shape to her contour. And then a little lower from there, her two tanned legs sprouted from the rest of her body, thick as trunks, her upper thighs enjoying a rhythmic, wobbling dance whenever she walked around in shorts. But that wasn’t the worst of it.

She let her hands trail up toward her shoulders, her fingers splayed out, gesturing to the literal biggest problem of all. Her brassiere was barely able to contain them; double D’s, like two white pillows of insulation under her clothes, overflowing over the rim of the cups that were supposed to hold them at bay. She knew breasts and their size was an object of attraction, but she could tell when a situation was ridiculous.

This well-endowed state she had acquired from her mother, who prided herself in being a busty housewife with an impeccable lawn and furniture arrangement. Suzan couldn’t locate any pride for herself, and beat her forehead on the kitchen table whenever her mom tried to remind her of the family “gift”.

This so-called “gift” came with big everything – hips, thighs, upper arms. She wasn’t happy to accept it, and wanted nothing more, except for comic artist glory, than to shed the weight and be a more socially acceptable size. She liked to think she had a non-conformist mindset, but with some things she felt she just needed to be reasonable and believe that certain goals were possible.

Because not everyone in the family was given this sizeable genetic present. Her little sister was nine years old and sported a wiry frame that would probably never be acquainted with stomach fat or jiggling arms. Rozie Mackintosh was a little wiggling minnow, dressing up in tights for her ballet classes and being smaller than Suzan felt she ever had been.

Envy was such an unattractive thing to sport around, but she felt she could see it all over her face that morning as she glowered at the mirror: it was the shadow under her eyes and that furrow in her brow.

Suzan took out the frustration in her comics, where justice was served on the unjustifiable dealings of the world, on people and their overall ridiculous state of being.

She bent down and picked up a relatively clean pair of jeans. It was epic battle time, where pants were donned and buttons were fastened. It was worth it to be skinny if it meant not fighting with articles of clothing.

Trumpets sounded in her head as she yanked up the zipper and buttoned the jeans, the shape of her legs formed into an acceptable lean look. She felt like dancing and fluttered her hands around in her triumph when a warning sounded from the kitchen.

Suzan, you’re gonna miss your ride and mom said get your big butt down here and eat your waffles right now!” Her little sister Rozie, despite her stick torso and skinny neck, had ironclad vocal chords. Her voice tore through any peace the morning could give.

“I’ll be right down!” Suzan hollered back, annoyed and sliding a shirt over her head.

Right now! You’re gonna be laaate!” Rozie screeched up the stairwell.

Suzan kicked her door open and tied up her unruly hair. She wanted to pulverize her little snot of a sister; she threw a pair of dirty pants down the stairs at her face. The tiny fetch of a human being wailed and ran toward the kitchen.

“I’ll be right there!” Suzan screeched back, slamming her bedroom door shut and feeling ill prepared to tackle another school day.

(two/how to disagree with your mother)

The kitchen table was a map of waffles and juice containers. Suzan slouched down in a chair and eyed the breakfast contemplatively for a moment before giving herself two waffles on a plate. It was the most important meal, after all.

“Jesus, Suz!” Rozie sneered from the other side of the table, her stick legs folded in front of her. She had two waffles on her plate as well; Suzan knew what her little sister was implying with her statement. Infuriated, she took a plastic fork from the container in the middle of the table and bent it back. When she let go of the top, the pronged missile went flying and struck her sister in the shoulder.

“Ouch! Mom!”

Their mom had just entered the kitchen as the fork rocket had gone off, but she ignored their bickering and set to work on dirty plates in the sink. She was round and rosy in her duster, her frizzy dark hair pulled into a pouf on top of her head. She turned on the faucet full blast and droplets of water flew everywhere.

Rozie tried again. “Dad! Dad!”

“Daddy’s at work,” their mom spoke up without turning around. Rozie sulked in her chair, and Suzan stuck her tongue out at her little brat sibling. An immature gesture, but she was beyond frustrated with how inferior her sister made her feel. She knew a nine-year-old shouldn’t hold sway over a seventeen-year-old’s self-esteem, but Rozie was a viper. She knew how to get to all the soft spots.

And it didn’t help that she was adorable with a gap in her front teeth, able to bend herself into a pretzel in pink tights and ballet slippers. All while being a snake. Suzan seethed.

“When are you two going to be home today?” their mom asked, a question that was repeated every morning. She angled herself toward them, her hands covered in soapsuds.

“I have dance,” Rozie sang, shoving a whole waffle into her mouth. Their mom smiled at her, shaking her head. The following silence meant for Suzan to speak.

“Mm.” She felt uncomfortable, knowing what the ensuing conversation would be like. “I’ll be home later; I don’t know when.”

“Where are you going?” Her mom’s voice rang with surprise and she turned from the sink, putting one hand on her hip. Suzan felt the corner’s of her mouth turn down and she tried to cover her face to hide her distaste for what was coming.

“Natasha and I are going to the mall,” she mumbled.

“The mall, on a school night?”

“I told you,” she said, raising her voice a little. She specifically remembered telling her mother the entire scenario before, and she was rue to go through this again. “Today’s the deadline for that young adult comic contest. I need to drop off my submission at Castle County Comics. You know where that is.”

“Oh.” Her mom frowned immediately. “Aren’t you too old for that contest? I thought we talked about this.”

“No, mom! There’s an age range, and if anything, I’ll be on the younger side for contestants.”

“So you’re too young? What kind of comics are these?”

“No. I’m… I already talked to you about this, mom.” Suzan sighed, shooting her grinning sister a silencing look. “Not all comics are Garfield and Batman. I’ve worked really hard on my submission, and I have to go today. Natasha’s driving me anyway.”

“Suzie-doozy, I can’t wait until you get out of this whole cartoon phase,” her mom sighed back; Suzan cringed inside. “You have to think about something more serious, because college is just around the corner. What are you going to go for? You can’t go for cartooning. You need to find something to do.”

“Actually, you can go for fine arts.” Suzan murmured into her hand. She didn’t understand why her mom was so dense when it came to art. Everybody else knew about at least a few of the legendary, award-winning comic series, like Maus, Persepolis, or Sandman. She could be one of the elite if she tried hard enough.

“I don’t watch cartoons.” Rozie said proudly. Suzan flicked a piece of waffle at her.

“You still watch the Disney channel. Just because it’s not always cartoons doesn’t mean you’re being a big kid,” she shot back. Their mother was oblivious to their banter, staring off at nothing, lost in thoughts. Suzan could just imagine what they were. When is my daughter going to grow up and decide what to do with her life? When is she going to pick a major? All of it, a waste of time thought process.

“Suzie-doozy, I don’t know what I’m going to do with you,” her mom finally said with a morose tone, turning back to the dishes. Suzan stabbed her fork into her waffle and grounded it to mush.

In that moment, a car horn sounded from the street.

Natasha, finally.

“’Bye.” Suzan leapt out of her chair and snatched up her backpack. She was out of the house before her mom could turn from the sink or her sister could tell her to get out.


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Last edited by Clo on Tue Jul 29, 2008 4:30 am; edited 2 times in total
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GryphonFledgling   View This User's Portfolio
It's elementary...
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PostPosted: Thu Jul 24, 2008 3:02 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

This was amazing. Seriously. I loved the characterization and the interaction and the description and... Geez. This was just amazing.

I loved how you described the MC's goals and dreams and personal plagues and all that. Seriously, I was sucked in.

Quote:
“The mall, on a school night?”


The only critique I had: I'd divide that up into two sentence fragments. It's okay in dialogue because people actually do speak in fragments, all the time.

"The mall? On a school night?"

But other than that, this was utterly fantastic. I can't really pick out just what it was that drew me in, but it was there. And so I leave you with this nearly worthless review. But hey, praise is always good, right?

However, in your title, you have "(one)", but you have two chapters posted in here. I'd divide it up into two posts (one per chapter).

Very, very good. I want more. Please PM when you post more!

*thumbs up* Keep on truckin'!

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PostPosted: Thu Jul 24, 2008 3:52 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Clograbby,

I'm not very familiar in the ways of the teenage girl, even though I have a thirteen year old sis, but I liked it very much.

One question though, where was the dancing in the underwear? I was really looking forward to that *is a bit perverted* but who's not, eh?

Her mother sounds like a wench to me, thank God my mother could care less if I went to a shopping mall on a school night. And her sisters! *Shudders*.

No grammer mistakes, excpet that one Gryphon pointed out, but you could keep it the way you have it, just depends on what you like.

I look forward to more of this, if there is anymore? PM me when you post some more, if you do?

-Sadie
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PostPosted: Thu Jul 24, 2008 8:28 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Wowza.

SexySadie - Thank you mucho. Well, I kind of slapped on a title, though that is in the story, so, stay-tuned I guess! For once, I actually have more stuff written and so this isn't just a fly-by first chapter. ;p *proud of self*

Gryphon - You're right about the speech thing. And thank you! I just put a one up there because it's the first segment, and, yknow, I'ma confused human being. Smile

Thank y'all.

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PostPosted: Fri Jul 25, 2008 8:02 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Nit-Picks

Quote:
So then,

I'd ditch this comma.

Quote:
“I’ll be right there!” Suzan screeched

You just used this and it's way too annoying to use twice. Try 'called,' or 'called out,' but with the latter you'd need to ditch 'back.' (I like the latter better.)

Quote:
(two/how to disagree with your mother)

I'm really in love with your titles.

Quote:
Suzan knew what her little sister was implying with her statement.

I don't…

Quote:
She was round and rosy in her duster,

What's a duster? Something to dust with? Then how is she in it…?

Quote:
And it didn’t help that she was adorable with a gap in her front teeth, able to bend herself into a pretzel in pink tights and ballet slippers, with silky blonde hair.

Don't use my example (it stinks), but try to add something there like I did?

Quote:
“No, momMom!

Quote:
“No. I’m… I already talked to you about this, momMom.”


Quote:
All of it,

I'd ditch this comma.

Quote:
Bye.”

Since you don't always have to say 'good bye,' the ' isn't necessary. However, in things like 'bout, it is necessary.

Quote:
her sister could tell her to get out.

Get out…? She is…

Overall Comments

Finally! I can actually be helpful here. I just read another piece where I didn't even get 50 points 'cause it was so short and had so few mistakes! And while you didn't need many nit-picks (you let me read through smoothly, had a nice flow, were realistic, etc; good job!), you do need an overall.

TMI (Too Much Information

I'll tell you a secret, okay?

Shhh…

Click here to see the hidden message (It might contain spoilers)


So. Go through and take out all that boring old information. Show us her pinch her love handles and groan. Let us hear her mom talk about their 'big features.' Show us the conversation of the cartoons, and let us see them on her wall.

You do show, but then you tell to reinforce it. This, my friend, is baaaaad. XD

Atmosphere

Walk anywhere new (a room, a forest, etc.) and see what you notice first. Lighting, room colors (warm or cool), indoors/outdoors, occupants, noise level, space, etc. You need to use that! Then let us fill in the little details.

Last Notes

I did really like this, and I'm looking forward to reading part two. I know I don't give many compliments, but I did like this. You just had two big mistakes, but that can be fixed easily.

*Rolls eyes* How come I keep getting pieces that don't need many comments?

PM me for anything at all, 'kay?

~JFW1415

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PostPosted: Fri Jul 25, 2008 8:45 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

OMG, I hate myself, I wrote you this HUUUGE review and then my computer completely froze! (arg! )

On subject Crying or Very sad , I love this story! Very Happy And one thing I love is how easily you made it easy to hate that little twig of a sister Laughing .

Suzan is VERY easy to relate too, which facinates readers to go on to find out if maybe they have alot in common with your MC, and maybe enjoy the differences that are so interesting you would want to know more about.

The fact is, Suzan is a really lovable character, and also character development is going to be a blast and your readers will be thrilled XD I just know it. Of course, no grammer mistakes as I can see. Its all in there (duh lol).

One part I fell in love with>

Quote:
The kitchen table was a map of waffles and juice containers. Suzan slouched down in a chair and eyed the breakfast contemplatively for a moment before giving herself two waffles on a plate. It was the most important meal, after all.
“Jesus, Suz!” Rozie sneered from the other side of the table, her stick legs folded in front of her. She had two waffles on her plate as well; Suzan knew what her little sister was implying with her statement. Infuriated, she took a plastic fork from the container in the middle of the table and bent it back. When she let go of the top, the pronged missile went flying and struck her sister in the shoulder.


The reason I love this is because you never make things obvious, which is a awesome thing when it comes to writing.

Like for example, instead of saying that the sister was obviously calling her fat, or overeating and such etc, you played along with the words and made it so the reader figured it out themself, makin them like.

"Ohh! I get it! Thats funny, what will she do now?"

Thats exactly how you want your readers to think and you pulled it off perfectly! Because lets face it, a story without clueing in or making the reader do any thinking is just a snore.

I love it!! One of my most favorites! I will be definetly getting to the next chapter VERY VERY soon. *hugs*-Curly

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PostPosted: Fri Jul 25, 2008 10:08 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

This was impressive. I want to read more! Keep writing.

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PostPosted: Sun Jul 27, 2008 11:41 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hey, told you I'd get round to reviewing this! ^_^
I didn't notice any grammar/continuity errors, the only problem I saw was when you said "Suzan knew what her little sister was implying with her statement." I wasn't really sure what it was...maybe that she was eating too much? Just explain that =]

I also actually agree somewhat with JFW that you probably don't need to describe things as much as you do, it can slow the reading down a little bit. I know that's not really a stylistic problem you have though, because I've read your other stuff. Just a bit of messing around with it probably will fix any problems.

I love the titles you use =D original and funny.

I love your characters, they're great. Really vivid. I love a story the most when I can relate easily to a character, and I can relate to Suzane a lot - I think most people can. Just the frustration of genes over society. I know a lot of girls with a big chest who'd just like it to go away! I like how you got across how she checks herself out in the mirror every morning as a sort of ritual - it just seemed very true to me. Her sister too, there's always some kid like that -_- truly horrible.

I'll be going to read the next part now. =D

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PostPosted: Tue Jul 29, 2008 4:18 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

You are such a talented writer, I hope you know that. You have a very good sense of your characters and you bring them to life. I feel as if these people are real people!! Good job. Most everything has already been covered so I won't be redundant on the critique side.

However there was one thing I noticed that no else seemed to catch. *Smiles big, I'm so proud of myself*

Quote:
“Suzan, you’re gonna miss the bus and mom said get your big butt down here and eat your waffles right now!”


And then at the end of the story you wrote

Quote:
In that moment, a car horn sounded from the street.

Natasha, finally.


So you went from almost missing the bus to having arranged a ride to school from a friend...Hmm mysterious. LOL, besides that tiny slip up this piece was just FANTASTIC to read. I always do enjoy reading your work. Keep it coming!
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PostPosted: Sun Aug 10, 2008 12:33 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

hmmm.. amazing..!

i hate to sound discriminatory, but I've known people overweight who just complain and complain and never do anything. that just gets on my nerves. if you have a problem with yourself, do something, complaining doesn't do anything.

but you made your character believably non-whiny and that was a refreshing change that helped me accept and believe that your character is a realistic human being without being annoying. kudos.

dialogue is excellent and very realistic. no objections there.

when the mother is talking though, I don't think that a mom would slam their child down so directly. Indirectly through body language, yes. but this direct dialogue served its purpose marvelously anyways.
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PostPosted: Sun Aug 10, 2008 3:07 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I love Suzan! She's very likeable, and even better, incredibly real.

Quote:

Their mother was oblivious to their banter, staring off at nothing, lost in thoughts. Suzan could just imagine what they were. When is my daughter going to grow up and decide what to do with her life? When is she going to pick a major? All of it, a waste of time thought process.


This was a little confusing... I think that maybe if you italicized the assumed thoughts, it would be clearer. And maybe you could clarify on the last bit? "All of it, a waste of time thought process". Perhaps you could just do "All of it, a waste of thought". That might make it easier to understand.

On the whole, that was very enjoyable, and I'd like to subscribe. Buzz me when you get more out!
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PostPosted: Mon Aug 11, 2008 10:38 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Love it!

The only constructive things I accumulated to say have already been said...Hmm.. I guess all I'd say is

Quote:
It was worth it to be skinny if it meant not fighting with articles of clothing.

a) too many it's
b) there wasn't any evidence to suggest that she thought losing weight wasn't worth it. You presented this as her reasoning or trying to convince herself, whereas from the rest of your story the reader gathers that she wants to loose weight already. Maybe something like "Oh, to be skinny. The thought of not having to battle daily with her jeans would be bliss" not just like that, but something along those lines.

I absolutely love how you describe her body, it's not too whiny (as mentioned already, but there's no such thing as too much positive reinforcement!). You make her wishes for her body appear realistic, She doesn't wish to be supermodel thin, just small enough to not feel bad/small enough to fit her clothes.

I really enjoyed it! I usually read the first line of longer stories and find that I just can't be bothered, but right from the start I found myself drawn in. Utterly amazing writing, give yourself a high-five!

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PostPosted: Fri Nov 21, 2008 1:27 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

OKay so you've probably shelved this for bigger and better but i liked it, and the title was too enticing to turn away Rolling Eyes


First issue: Too much showing. You're telling me everything and it's rather boring, though it's all very raw and i can relate to nearly everything. But too much 'show' not enough tell.

Dialogue is rather weak. You could do so much better with it. You aren't allowing the reader to get inside the head of the main character and that is a flaw you won't like in the future when you read it back.

But you really don't have much wrong. Fix up dialogue and less showing.

What is with the Z's all the time? Suzan and Rozie? When i last checked they had S, and i don't recall American changing those S's to Z's.
But maybe you want them with a Z i'm just a little confused.


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