Shrewsbury International School blogging network

Archives for May, 2015

On Sunday July 5th and Sunday July 12th Bangkok Dolphins will be hosting four swim clinics at NIST. Each session (3.5 hours) is 2000thb, sessions have been designed to suit junior swimmers (morning sessions) and senior swimmers (afternoon sessions).

Entry Criteria:

Swimmers must be able to complete the following entry times

100 IM                        100 Free

 

8 and unders                        2:10                                  1:50

9-10’s                                    1:50                                   1:30

11-12s                                    1:40                                   1:20

13-14s                                    1:35                                   1:15

15 and overs                        1:30                                    1:10

 

To book or for further information please contact Khun Pook at Bangkok Dolphins on 02 712 9297 / info@bangkokdolphins.com

Swim Clinic Information Poster

 

WINNER

By the Veiling of the Sun

You asked me once if I was truly happy.

My dear child.

There are many things I want you to comprehend.

Life is short.

A cliché sentence that has been is widely used on accounts that are inappropriate and thus, has been reduced to merely, YOLO. In many ways the usage of ‘you only live once’ nowadays, does not convey the message. ‘Life is short’ is a sentence that evokes thoughts that enable us to transcend into a more philosophical view of life. It is a risk that we are taking, using phrases for granted, neglecting its true meaning, do you understand?

 

Can I expect you to understand?

You are still young.

But your life is used and, I hope not wasted.

 

This is why such risks in this world should not be attempted, or so they say. Such risks could result in disastrous outcomes, and not to mention the impact of the aftermath. Which means a portion of life sacrificed to endure a punishment in exchange for a period of enjoyment. We now turn our attentions to whether that lapse of time is worth the risk.

 

My child, the happiness we receive during a span of time, you will find, that it is not easily shaken once bestowed. It is a risk to indulge,  the simplest of risks but one without a doubt. These moments we keep above all interruptions as memories. No matter what happens, happiness when granted is forever secured and we do not think less of it in the time to come. Within any moment in life, we do as we are told, know that. We do as we imagine right however the delights that greet us we cannot foresee. Some occurrences may fade away from us out of memory and time but do we remember the smiles? I am certain that I remember yours. To our feelings during any significant time at all, it is extended, never-ending like sand in an hourglass that flows into a bottomless chasm.

 

An eternity to what we are doing.

It is only when we glance back upon the time spent will we realise that the activity we just engaged in was just a part of a long strand of history that travels back to an inevitable beginning. It also draws ahead into the days that have not yet come. How precious are the memoirs of the hours handled but how small as well. Everything we do is a risk, I hope you realise that.

 

Live in the moment, child.

No.

Live in the moment and store it in the safest recesses of your mind.

You see a glint of sun shimmering of the grass and you followed it because you were intrigued by the way the rays are casted upon specially selected patches of grass. Do you know that this is the product of the tree loomed over you? No. You are carefree, never seeking explanations. Idly you pick yourself up. I can tell that you will allow the alluring of nature to overcome you.

 

“No wandering into the wild alone,” I had obstructed you one day…so you are choosing to defy me?

 

It seems as if you have made your choice. You notice how the showers of sun alters the shade of green in the leaves. Not minding the shards of the sun that would otherwise pierce your eyes, you welcomed it into your world.

 

Just as I did once.

 

Starting at a little pat of the feet you jump to touch a branch. You are not able to now but you will very soon my dear, very soon.  The cold wind of early autumn caress your face while it mingled with your laughter, along with it your legs moved faster into rhythm. The same rhythm as the swooping birds. All the colours in your world slides into one another with ease in your vision. Greens into blues, reds into browns , who knows what other pigments you saw. With it you run like blown dandelions, drifting to no specific destination. Why do you run so? Gusts of air play in your tresses whipping then upwards. In your ears I am sure the wind howled but only if you had the heart to stop would you know that the wind never howls. I was captivated with this image.

 

I think I now finally grasp the fruit of my risk. I risked bringing you into this world. What if I could not raise you up the proper way? Despite how agitated I felt, you arrived safely but more importantly you laughed. In that instant I changed from a woman facing emptiness to being filled with purpose and my wistfulness diminished.

 

I want you to be happy but I wonder if, in your small eyes you saw that your happiness is stemmed from a risk? You ask me if I am happy. For you I am happy. I was happy ever since that fateful day I saw you run into the veiling of the sun.

By Pornvarath Komolrochanaporn (Frang)

 

RUNNER UP

 

Taking Risks

 

 It’s snowing here. It always snows on my birthday. I’m turning 9 tomorrow. I’ve always wanted a dog .Every year when I ask my dad for a dog he says, “In your dreams’’.

I’ve dreamt about dogs forever, about dogs sleeping on my feet, a pack of dogs sleeping on me as a blanket.

“You can’t have a dog because, you know they leave paw prints all over the floor, the beds, the tables!’’

“You still can’t have a dog because it’s going to eat all of our money. A dog? In your dreams!’’. He always refuses. Never a yes.

It’s 6 a.m., I look out the window and the garden is like a flat, white piece of paper. “Time for school!’’ my dad barks and growls. I look out the window again and see a pack of little holes in the snow, heading from the gate to the half open door of the shed – my dad’s shed. They look too big for bird prints, not squirrel and not the neighbor’s cat because it’s too lazy and too fat to climb over the fence. As quick as a road runner, I get dressed and woosh downstairs. I’m not rushing so that I can go to school on time, I’m rushing so that I can go out and see what is in the shed.

I take my first step on to the flat white piece of paper and my foot crackles down into the snow. The wind starts to whine around the house. I wish I had the dog pack blanket wrapped around me just like the one in my dream. I’m about to go back inside the house to get my scarf, but curiosity is driving me out and into the snow. I follow the line of dalmatian spot prints into the shed.

    

“Hello? Is anyone in here?” , no answer. “Excuse me, if there is anyone in here? You’re taking a risk because my dad is going to be angry.’’ I hear tapping from the dark corner, like a metronome beating fast. I start creeping towards the sound. I’m scared that it might be a ghost or the monster from under my bed. I find the source of the sound. It’s a box. I move it with my foot and I see a furry, brown neck tie wagging around. Next I see a black muzzle and the pointy ears of a German Shepard pup. I’m staring at it as if it was a ghost. It doesn’t have a collar or a lead. It jumps and licks me like I’m a giant lollypop.

I should keep it. Can I keep it? What do I do? But dad will say no. But I can’t just leave it in the shed, it will die in the cold. But dad will just dump it out of the house. But I can’t leave it here; I’ll take a risk.

  

“Here boy!”  “come on!”, it follows to the door and suddenly stops. It’s afraid of the snow. It yips and yelps when it pokes the cold ground with it’s nose. I’ll pick him up. He feels as heavy as a birthday cake, but I still have to carry him to my room. Ew! He smells like a rotten sponge!

Slowly and quietly I tip toe inside with the dog, feeling like I’m falling off a 500m cliff. Careful as a surgeon I walk up the stairs, trying not to collapse backwards. This reminds me of climbing the high ropes on my last school trip. I feel I’m climbing to a rocky summit, and then I reach the very top of the stairs. The dog jumps from my arms and blasts into my room. Trouble! Did dad hear that? I gust into the room and close the door quietly. I’m waiting for his shout but I don’t hear anything except the sound of the dog tearing my bedsheets. “My dad is going to kill me!”.

  

“Hey, get out of my house!”, thunders my dad! Oh no, he knows my secret! The dog starts to bark ad growl like an arctic wolf. “Shush!” I hiss. It won’t stop barking! “Get out of here! Get out of here! Help! ” Wait, but he can’t know it’s here, there’s something wrong! I rip open the door to see what is going on with my dad, but the dog rushes out of my room and down the stairs. I take off after the black muzzled beast which disappears into the living room. I follow.

 

My dad is still shouting, but he isn’t  shouting at the dog. I’m standing as still as a slug while he is struggling with a man wearing a black balaclava. The dog rushes like lighting and claws the man’s arm. It bites his leg. The mystery man screams furiously and my dad kicks him as he is struggling to get his leg out of the dog’s mouth. He trips and falls towards the door. He clumsily crashes out and falls faces down in the snow. He then gets up and runs away.

  

“ Dad, Dad are you ok? What’s going on?”He doesn’t answer. He is looking at the dog and the dog is staring back. “Where did this dog come from?” Dad looks confused.

“I found him in the shed. Can we keep him?”

“No, we can’t keep it”

“But it just saved your life”

The dog proudly comes and puts its paw up to shake hands.

“Can we keep him?”

“But I’ve always said…”

“But dad he saved your life!”

Dad looks confused, and his face starts to melt into kindness. “What’s his name?”

“His name is Risk”

“Well, ok then, maybe we should take a risk. Happy Birthday!”

by Katrina Cobain Y7SB

 

RUNNER UP

Adventures in Africa

So THIS is one of Earth’s seven natural wonders – the mighty Victoria Falls, on the Zambezi River which borders Zambia and Zimbabwe.

There I stood gaping in wonder on the Zambian side of the Falls. The roar of the water filled my ears.  There was no need for any conversation.

I was anxious to see the Devil’s Armchair, a natural infinity pool that sits on the lip of the Victoria Falls over 100m high, but the only way to get there would be to cross the border illegally into Zimbabwe then find someone local to guide me.

For hours, I tracked through streams, shallow rapids and waded against strong currents.  In the end, I would have no alternative but to leap off a cliff straight into the pool. Exhausted, excited yet fearful of getting caught, I closed my eyes, held my breath and jumped!

It seemed as though time stopped and I was suspended midair. Moments later, I sat contemplating the risks I took to get here, just inches away from torrents of cascading water.  It was exhilarating! I never felt more alive and I would do it all again.

I was certain nothing else could ever exceed this experience, but I was wrong.

As the glow of sunset enveloped the campsite, I sat under a Baobab tree eagerly waiting for darkness to approach. It seemed to take forever.

When the last hue of yellow disappeared behind the horizon, I stomped out the campfire, hastily gathered my belongings and made tracks for Nunu – my trusty 4 X 4.  It was time.

Time for a 2 hour drive through the African bush in Botswana to the famed Makgadikgadi salt pan.

I read that the pan is all that remains from the enormous Lake Makgadikgadi which once covered an area larger than Switzerland, but dried up many thousands of years ago.

I knew that navigating the bush and visiting the salt pan without a guide was dangerous and illegal.  Night visits were strictly prohibited. There were no roads.  Only the sounds of the wilderness, the smell of the jungle and a thick cocoon of darkness that sent my pulses racing.

Nunu bashed through the treacherous terrain. Headlights struggling against the dark, she seemed to groan as she crunched her way through the dry, bumpy under growth, stopping abruptly to avoid the odd mud hut, wild dog, leopard or other creatures of the night.

“Please God, don’t let Nunu fail me now or no one will know to come to my rescue”.

That’s when I spotted the bull elephant with legs the size of tree trunks.  I knew that elephants foraged more than 14 hours a day eating as much as 300 kg of food and drinking over 150 liters of water. I stopped so as not to disturb it.  I was cautious yet fascinated being this close to the world’s largest land mammal.   When I thought it had finished eating, I tried to ease Nunu away from a safe distance.  I was so focused on the bull elephant I accidentally startled the mother and her calf elephant hidden in the bush. The bull elephant started charging, its tusks aimed directly at Nunu, the ground shaking from its heavy pursuit.  I hit the accelerator so hard Nunu surged forward like a rocket. I never stopped to look back.

Thankfully, it wasn’t long after that I felt the ground beneath me change as I charged past the scattered bush and onto the hard, dry, barren salt pan.  All sight and sound of the wilderness ceased. The only sounds left were the roar of Nunu’s engine and that of my heart still pounding from a mixture of fear and excitement.

I needed to catch my breath so I finally brought Nunu to a halt in the middle of nowhere.  The silence was deafening as I observed the vastness of the salt pan. When my feet touched the ground, I suddenly felt small and insignificant.  The view took my breath away. I was no longer of this earth but could reach out and touch the Milky Way.  I felt like I was living among the countless millions of stars – above me, around me and reflected beneath me. Space was tangible.

I stood awestruck and momentarily forgot the cold.  As I turned to admire the view from every direction, my skin tingled and I could see the warm vapour of my breath. Senses heightened, I started to shiver from the cold and possibly from the fear of getting caught by the police.  If I was found, I knew I would be fined a great deal of money, or worse, sent to an African prison.

I knelt beside Nunu and lit a small fire for warmth. I would sleep among the stars tonight, be at one with the universe and dream of the constellations.

Then suddenly, from just above the horizon, I spotted a tiny red dot that appeared among the stars. It seemed to be approaching, slowly but steadily.

My first thought was

“Police, they’ve found me! Quick, get in the car. Leave. Now!”

I looked again at the unfamiliar red dot and it seemed to be growing in size.

“Whatever could it be?”

I scampered onto the top of Nunu to get a better view, my eyes transfixed by the blood red dot.  The dot continued to grow larger and larger.   I watched it creep above the horizon and muscle its way through the blanket of stars.  Soon, it became obvious what it was.  The dot, now a perfect sphere, shed its blood red coat and took its throne high in the sky.  It was the Moon, illuminating the night sky in all its glory. I fell back onto the ground speechless.

For such surreal once in a lifetime experiences in Africa, it was definitely worth TAKING RISKS!

Lauren Storah 7AT

 

Looking forward to a big turnout and big fundraising effort at tomorrow’s snack sale.

Thanks to all our volunteers and snack contributions. See event details for further information.

hdtv snack sale