If you are superman and you enter a classroom, you are now transformed into a commoner; the thing you are most dreading of. And surprise, surprise, you cranky Jan Di (in the case of people like me who don't watch Boys Over Flowers, she's the girl protagonist) look a like teacher has now all your powers and is using it's extent to your sullen, unfortunate classmates. Bwahaha, she's laughing at the person nearest to her desk.
She has these glowing eyes. No, glowing hair because that's the first thing you only see. The next thing is that your attention moves from her hair to her very droopy eyes. That one stare from those pair of eyes, you, enough about her face, lets go to the wondrous way she teaches us.
She power trips, yes.
At one time (in a random instance) most of my female classmates were outside the room, some in the restroom, others doing errands of sorts, few were absent. Then she comes to the room and asks where they are, answering the truth that they went somewhere and shall return soon, she said, "That's not an excuse."
She marked them late and absent.
She did it because she had power. Power tripping. And when my classmates returned, she never said a thing about it. Talk about being unfair. The students should be able to explain fully well did they if she had asked yet she did not. She just power tripped. If ever she did mention what she has done to my classmates to the oppressed, they have the right to fully explain themselves and justify what should be done to them.
But it never happened, she just used her authority in a very, very, very (too much very is for emphasis) wrong manner./KP
She has these glowing eyes. No, glowing hair because that's the first thing you only see. The next thing is that your attention moves from her hair to her very droopy eyes. That one stare from those pair of eyes, you, enough about her face, lets go to the wondrous way she teaches us.
She power trips, yes.
At one time (in a random instance) most of my female classmates were outside the room, some in the restroom, others doing errands of sorts, few were absent. Then she comes to the room and asks where they are, answering the truth that they went somewhere and shall return soon, she said, "That's not an excuse."
She marked them late and absent.
She did it because she had power. Power tripping. And when my classmates returned, she never said a thing about it. Talk about being unfair. The students should be able to explain fully well did they if she had asked yet she did not. She just power tripped. If ever she did mention what she has done to my classmates to the oppressed, they have the right to fully explain themselves and justify what should be done to them.
But it never happened, she just used her authority in a very, very, very (too much very is for emphasis) wrong manner./KP
No comments:
Post a Comment