I’m a student at Purdue University majoring in Communications & Creative writing, with a minor in LGTBQ+ Studies
Thunder clapped. The room danced with the waves and took Cyrus as an unwilling partner, flinging her side to side on the hammock fastened to creaking wooden beams like a wild bull trying to buck her off. Damn it all, she thought to herself, retching silently. The room around her shuddered against the wind.…
Where,did you go that night?Dancing under the streetlamps?Frolicking in the city?Lying in your own filth,is what mother would have told me.Ere,I remember you as a cautionary tale,one our father repeated nightlyto never be like you,nor be like him.Scared,that maybe one day,I’ll walk into this town,that’s grey and hard and,cold like an iron rod in Winter;And…
The following is an poem I submitted at Purdue University for ENGL 205 Introduction to Creative Writing I imagine myself in aa quiet country home, a wooden hut surrounded by trees,there’s a pond nearby where multitude of fish scurry aboutunder the cool embrace of the water.I see a myriad of chubby little rabbits hopping andSkipping…
The following is an poem I submitted at Purdue University for ENGL 205 Introduction to Creative Writing. Barefoot on uneven concrete, bathed in first rays of sunlight. A deep breath, a long, shaky exhale. In for four, out for eight. I close my eyes, secure and safe, knowing you’ll be there when I open them…
The following is an essay I submitted at Purdue University for ENGL 223: Literature and Technology. Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? is a novel that follows Rick Deckard, a bounty hunter who hunts down rogue androids. It has plenty of themes which create a caricature of our modern world in terms of a reliance…
The following is an essay I submitted at Purdue University for ENGL 223: Literature and Technology. Question: Consider the question of the human vs. the nonhuman in M. Shelley’s Frankenstein, P. Dick’s Do Android Dream of Electric Sheep?, and A. Clarke’s 2001: A Space Odyssey. Is the superior capacity for thinking sufficient to differentiate between the human…