Subject: Letters, part Deux!
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Posted on: 2008-09-06 00:50:00 UTC

From my previous post...

(forgive any spelling errors), who is the Speaker of the House. On the other hand, Dick Cheney is the President of the Senate. In the House wing we also saw the spot where John Quincy Adams died while serving as a representative. He died during a House meeting, and the cause was a cardiac arrest. Did you know that he slept through some, if not many of those meetings? I once slept during class in sixth grade when we were studying the ancient Greeks. Thank God the teacher wasn’t lecturing at the time.
When we left the building, problems arose. Tony and Ashley had, by the looks of it, fast metabolisms, and therefore were hungry. Sarah accused Frank of wanting to starve us. He wanted to get us to Union Station for lunch, and when Sarah told him that it would probably be too far, he lost his temper. They had a little screaming match, and then Frank leaves us to go back to the hotel. Bad move—Sarah then assumed that he was deserting us and hammered another nail into his coffin. We ended up spending the afternoon without him. So our little troop headed back to the art museum to see if they had a restaurant. They did, but it was closed. We then browsed around in the gift shop and there I bought a little black guidebook to go with my journal (these letters) and the photos I took. I think that would be a nice present, wouldn’t you agree?
—Jenny
Dear Mrs. Fallace,
We spent the rest of the afternoon enclosed in soap-operatic drama. Eating lunch at the National Museum of the American Indian (where we went after the art galleries) is strongly not recommended because the chicken soup is spicy, and the buffalo burger, according to Tony, was flavorless. The only interesting thing about lunch was that it was Native American fare. Afterward we only had half an hour to go through a bit of the museum before it closed. I wasn’t all too interested in the Native Americans, so I nearly bolted out of the exhibit at the fifteen-minute-before-this-museum-closes warning. Aunt Sarah wasn’t too pleased with that because she had wanted to come here.
When we got back to the hotel, the real drama began. Aunt Sarah screamed at Uncle Frank for about an hour straight. They’ve got plenty of parallels with Ron and Hermione in the Harry Potter books all right. Sarah accused Frank of ignoring her achievements, and instead focusing on her failures, “putting her down” as we say. She was in such a sour mood that she nearly left for Pennsylvania a day early! (We were going to visit Pennsylvania to go to the Longwood Gardens and see an old friend of my aunt’s.) In the end, we kids had to make Uncle Frank swear to God that he wouldn’t lose his temper and yell at any family member anymore. So far he has kept his oath, but I’m not going to trust that.
We’re going to Pennsylvania tomorrow and it’s going to be a long car drive. Aunt Sarah has rented a car now, but we walked around DC and wore our feet to their metatarsals. What a lovely trip.
—Jenny

Day Seven: April 11, 2008
Dear Mrs. Fallace,
Wow, the Longwood Gardens are so lovely! I took so many pictures of it. It is simply splendid. What is not splendid, however, is the long drive that we endured just to get here. Uncle Frank nearly broke his vow. But they haven’t sued for divorce yet, and that is a good thing.
There simply aren’t enough adjectives in this language to describe the beauty and majesty of these gardens, so I’ll fast forward to my aunt’s friend’s house and family. She has a son named Anderson and a daughter named Alina. Alina is eleven, and she’s in fifth grade. Apparently their fifth grade is like our seventh grade because they’ve already learned what we’ll be learning in May. Alina also acts like a seventh grader with her manner of dressing (she always buys at Aeropostale, and would never touch Abercrombie or Hollister, the “preppy” stores, with a ten foot long pole) and her lifestyle (she gossips, stereotypes, surfs the internet, and obsesses over My Chemical Romance, especially Ray Toro’s afro and Gerard Way’s looks.) Her teachers only assign about 2 minutes’ worth of homework every night, so she has plenty of time to do what she wants. (and no, I don’t want to go to her school. I like it here at Venado.) We slept over at their house.
Tomorrow we’re flying home. I can’t wait to see you again.
—Jenny

Last Day: April 12, 2008
Dear Mrs. Fallace,
I’m heading back to good old Irvine now. I can’t wait for Monday. I want to see Brittany and Christina’s faces when I give them their little presents. I want to give Mr. Angel the document replicas to display in his classroom. But most of all, I want to see you again, and learn everything you can teach me about Biology before June. Can you believe how quickly time has gone by? Soon I’ll be an eighth grader and I won’t be little Jenny, the teacher’s pet anymore. That’s probably a hard thing to go through—letting your students go; especially those that did well in your class and who you wish you could teach again. (I bet you won’t be so misty-eyed seeing the “bad kids” off, though) But maybe I’m wrong and maybe I’m right. All I know now is that now I’m sitting in an airplane seat, feeling my ears pop and watching the plane’s progress on a map, watching it slowly take me back home.
—Jenny

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