Grasshoppers are nasty; they have weird antennae that flow in the breeze, eyes disproportional to their small body, and scare me when armies of them bound from uncut grass, declaring war on my legs and feet. Riding the bus earlier this year, one of these terrifying creatures decided to tag along for the ride. Being a senior, I should have known better than to cower at the thought of an insect leaping onto me. However, my knight in shining armor came to save the day; a seven year old boy named Nate took off his sandal and smashed the bug against the seat. He grinned from ear to ear when he saw relief flood my face. Who would have thought that a second grader would save a senior from a doom so silly as a grasshopper? As I was petrified from …show more content…
In school work, I strive to stay on top by completing assignments on time, if not early, and checking my work to make that it is correct. My planner is precisely accurate with an outstanding color-coded system to organize future tasks. However, at home, frustration flies through the air like a comic-book villain with the intention of spoiling my plans of immediate studying and work. When everything must be in a particular manner, the tasks at hand seem to pile up, overshadowing clearer thought process required to complete them on a timely basis. Even though I understood what was at hand and needed to be completed, my brain could not organize efficiently, thus inducing anxiety and stress issues. By way of the popular and addicting website, Pinterest, I attempted multiple exercises to reduce my confusion: yoga, controlled breathing, and certain foods. Finding no comfort in my efforts, I admitted defeat to my parents, embarrassed that, as a senior, I could not solve a silly problem that was, essentially, “all in my head.” Because of their vast experience, they taught the most valuable life lesson I have ever received: worrying about what has already happened is as useless as a child playing with double-sided tape; it will only cause more frustration and