There's this place here in Seattle called the Salon of Shame where, if
you’re brave, you can go and participate in an open-mic night. But not just any open-mic night. The courage required isn’t the usual sort,
the ordinary kind you MUST have if you’re going to read your work in public, but the Salon of Shame demands bravery only found in those made of sterner stuff. On this night, artists bring some of their
earliest creations to share - you know, the pages that have been buried in a shoebox in your closet
since the eighth grade - so that attendees can "exploit our younger selves for your entertainment."
Time to 'fess up, everyone. We all did it. Writers especially have tattered notebooks
brimming with brooding poetry, short stories that remarkably resemble our
favorite novel at the time, and the beginnings of novels which we once secretly
thought quite good.
Every five years or so I like to paw through whatever papers
I’ve kept, sifting over old letters and journals and the odd high school essay
that made the cut. They say that
laughter is the best medicine, and this exercise always gives me a good dose of
it. The absurdity of some of what I’ve
written dampens any clouds of nostalgia and leaves me with a lingering fondness
for that girl, the one scribbling away in notebooks in the back of
classrooms.

And, in good faith, that SOMEONE else will post SOMETHING,
I’ll share from my first “book”, a screed written during chemistry class (I’m
sorry, Ms. Greene!) with my prized fountain pen (yes, I was that girl).
From the opening page:
Good weather was almost a celebration day for most common
folk in Gwyrn, whereas the upperclass merely regarded them with disdain. The children scampered about with uplifted
faces to the sun. One in particular
stood out from the rest, but not by her own doing. Her long auburn hair was plaited and adorned
with gold baubles; her skirts swished and sparkled in the sun, and her shoes –
the envy of all the other children, but this was unbeknownst to the girl –
laced up and around the thin ankles with cured leather thongs. The other children were common enough with
simple garments although most were barefoot.
Skipping gaily they cried out to each other with youthful voices. Out of the shadows stepped a tall, arrogant
looking fellow dressed in brightly colored silks looking as if he didn’t want
to dirty his soft, white hands with the peasant children, he grabbed the
aforesaid girl and whipped her around.