For my English Comp II course, I have written a series of blog posts, most of which were based on past and recent experiences through the course of my lifetime. To be brutally honest, I see the Narrative Project as a bit of a challenge given that it is more complex that the other blog post assignments I've done since the beginning of the semester. Additionally, there are a few topics that I think that I might be interested in for my Narrative Project that include but do not limit the following: my fascination with reincarnation, my desire to get into a career of filmmaking, the time when I was (almost) trapped in a deserted doctor's clinic; my love for the extended night and fall season, and a few more that I will not list here. Interestingly I did not write about being almost stuck in the doctor's clinic per se, but being or feeling "trapped" was the theme for a recent blog post that I did titled "Composing a Past Scene." My first blog post, however, was the Proust Questionaire, which even though some people find it rather intrusive, was my favorite one so far because it was an eye-opening activity that i saw as an outlet to express my feelings as I am an emotionally-oriented person.
Interestingly, when i find myself into my emotions, the one thing I like to do is write. I describe myself as a writer and have been writing short fiction stories since a very young age, hence why I found one of my assignments, the "Composing Action Into Scenes" blogs rather enjoyable yet a bit challenging. But this of course is a craft I'd like to perfect as we practice this while completing each assignment in this semester. I've done three drafts of my Narrative Project. The third and final draft is a revision from the previous two drafts.
Toward the end of our semester, I've revised and refined my Narrative based on writing a counterfactual, in a generic, past-tense type of way. A counterfactual, which is what my ninth blog post was based on is writing a different version of what actually happened and with a different outcome, and I've experimented with this in Drafts 2 and 3 shown below.