  impervious i'm on a six or seven composition marathon for ngak howe's class. woohoo. should i write the one about describing the scene in a restaurant first or the one about "joy" first? i also have two books: one, a collection of short stories by urlLink wong meng voon , another is one of catherine lim's slightly fast paced, slightly feminised books.
uncharacteristic for a novella but perfect for boys with short attention spans. i have actually written a very very long composition about "joy", but it's far too austere and every sentence i write conflicts with the next, so i have decided to re-write. here is the rubbish i am going to discard: ... the wealth of joy is always compounded by the onset of puberty; at an age like ours, puberty is more likely a self-imposed set of prejudices targeted towards emulating the idea of adulthood. when naivete seemingly trudges off and carries its custom elsewhere, its persistent & wraithlike phantom incarnation remains... the life of a young man at the peak of adolescence is merely marked by wraithlike illusions of a world of freedom.
a world of freedom, like one might characterise a region in the world untouched by the long arms of human destruction, is also a world where... and so much for a composition. this one i'm writing completely sucks, so i am going to tear this paper i have just typed from. farewell, my good friends. 
