"I don't think that being a strong person is about ignoring your emotions and fighting your feelings. Putting on a brave face doesn't mean you're a brave person. That's why everybody in my life knows everything that I'm going through. I can't hide anything from them. People need to realise that being open isn't the same as being weak."

- Taylor Swift

Thursday, November 08, 2012

Rude.

Now Playing: This Kiss (Cover) by Alex Day ft. Carrie Hope Fletcher (Cinderella said to Snow White 'how did love get so off course?' All I wanted was a white knight with a good heart, soft touch, fast horse)

It is interesting how people respond to advice.

The English WACE exam was yesterday and, considering people bug me incessantly for advice and I like to think I know what I'm talking about when it comes to English, I spent a good amount of time on Facebook giving advice, asking questions, relaying things my teacher has said to me throughout the year. It's what all the top students for all the other subjects were doing and I've been picking at other people's brains greedily.

Most people were thankful. Lots of people messaged me asking questions and for my opinion. I helped out a lot of people. But some, just some, were very...hostile.

People confuse modesty with insecurity - it's why I've been made into the insecure little freak that I am now, because people can't bear things like pride and self-esteem. But the fact of the matter is, I am top in English. I do know what I'm talking about. Other people do benefit from my advice. You would too, if you got off your high horse. I ask lots of much smarter people for advice for other things. There's nothing wrong with that. But because of this, they also confuse pride with lack of humility. So really, the problem's not with me, it's with you. If you're offended by an open offer of advice that you can take or leave then logic and reason must really kill you. But I guess that's all part of being a little teenage shit.

The thing is, asking questions like 'who made you self-appointed expert?' reaffirms why I'm top of English. I mean, if you're going to dream up insults then at least dream up insults that are coherent. What is the point of asking who made someone a self-appointed' expert? Amateurs. And I am not a self-appointed expert. I can't give myself A grades - if I could, then why did you give yourself bare passes?

If I was bitter and hostile towards everyone who was better at me in anything I'd spend my life like you - endlessly sour, disappointed and hellbent on pushing everyone down in a misguided attempt to pull yourself up. I worked damn hard to get to where I am now, and the night before exams I let people pick at my brain. If you can't show me some respect at least show yourself some respect and don't make an arse of yourself on the cybersphere.


1 comment:

Adelaide Dupont said...

No, no, no. Modesty and insecurity are two different things, last I checked.

I looked around and there was lots of advice on the visual side of the English exam. (This was for the tutors and such, for 2013 summer sessions).

Hope the mutual brain-picking helped. That's the key. It has to be mutual. You're all adding to each other's knowledge and skills.

The hostility! Letting out vulnerability and needing help can be scary for lots of people.

Logic and reason...

"Why did you give yourself bare passes?" If the answer was something like "I was insecure"...

And who you're bitter and hostile against (or if your bitterness and hostility has any aim) tells a lot about you, it is true.

Love the white knight. They need soft touch (tact and perception); a white horse (speed and strength) and a good heart (chivalry and caring and persistence). Instead Cinderella got a prince and Snow White got seven dwarves, who could share each quality I name here.

Sounds like a good formula to pass an English exam or any such challenge...