Wednesday, November 20, 2013

My Object of Beauty


Laura Haas

Mr. Brindle

English 12

November 14, 2013

                                                         My Object of Beauty

                I sit on my mother’s queen size bed, basking in the magnificent pleasure I receive when I play you.  Your slim, sleek, white body standing tall as you rest at your rightful place on the third shelf of the t.v. stand, wired and wireless controllers lay scattered around you.  I pause, taking a minute to thoroughly examine you, and fully appreciate you.  To some, you are simply a material object to be used and discarded by greedy, money hungry gaming corporations to obtain maximum profit, but to me, you are beautiful.     

You possess beauty unparallel to every other console in existence.  When I return home from a very stressful day at school, I plop down on my mother’s queen size bed, and breathe a sigh of relief as I watch a bright green circle encompass the button located toward the bottom of the console, signaling that it is turning on.  When I am with you, nothing else matters, time itself seems to stand still, all my problems withering away and dying like an evil serpent that lost its head.  I am granted blessed relief for a fleeting moment.  You make me forget, like an enormous weight has been lifted from my shoulders.  I forget about the stress of writing long tedious papers on subjects I do not care about.  I forget about having to study for pointless tests that cannot possibly prepare me for the future ahead.  I forget about having to please teachers.  I forget about having to wake up at six thirty every morning.  I forget about everything, because nothing else matters.

You provoke an extremely strong emotion inside me, so strong it almost physically pulls me back so I can remain with you.  I awake the next morning, the bright yellow sun shines brightly through the windows, illuminating the whole room.  I reluctantly get dressed and ready for another dull, mind-numbing day at school where I do not learn much of anything.  I step down the old, concrete steps in order to get into my silver 2001 Grand Am Se, but I pause, feeling a strong desire rush through me.  I long to return to you, to feel the adrenaline pumping through my veins like water through a floodgate.  I long to feel the sweat soaked controller in the palms of my hands as I race against my fellow street racers in a fake virtual realm.  I ride inside of a fully customized Camaro that rides low to the ground, and was completely black except for the dark blood red stripe in the center that ran the length of the car.  At school I feel distracted; when I should be concentrating on how to use synthetic division to solve a problem, my mind wanders elsewhere.  I think of the most recent game I have played, and feel anxious to return home and continue where I left off.  When Mrs. McDermott stands in the front of the small classroom and gives a lecture on how to properly conjugate Spanish verbs, I stare off at the wall in a trance.  I think about the excitement I feel as I wander aimlessly around a map slaughtering mindless flood with a shotgun, or a pistol.  I think about the rage I feel when some random flood slashes me with its large claws and I die as a result.  Instead of focusing on the school lecture, my mind keeps wandering back to you.  No matter how hard I try, I will never be able to fully separate from you.  I love my Xbox 360.


 

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