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Marissa M.'s Twitter Updates

I'm listening to "Unopened Flower" by 2002 (http://bit.ly/6zDqG) #pandora #music 5 days ago
I'm done with my #NaNoWriMo story. I feel so empty. Le sigh. 5 days ago
@szyd I only RT my own stuff when I want ppl on this acct to see it. Not all of my followers here follow @kassiella. it won't happen often. 5 days ago
Interesting. RT @MonicaTweeter: @ChelseaJans @seriouseats conservatives&liberals differ when it comes to food: http://budurl.com/8wda 5 days ago
@dylanwarner I'm afraid people are going to abuse that button. Most people were too lazy to copy and paste before. :P 5 days ago
 

The principal at my elementa...

Posted Sep 13 2008 3:05pm

The principal at my elementary school ruled against me skipping a grade ahead and so I remained stuck in first grade with second grade reading skills. (It should be noted here that second graders didn’t like me either — I was the annoying kid who knew all the answers and raised her hand all the time. No one likes that kid. Ever.) As I got older, school, naturally, became harder. In third grade, a girl named Danielle, who was smarter and prettier than me, became my first intellectual competitor. (Side note: This was a futile effort as she’s been valedictorian twice in her life and graduated from college with a degree in biophysics or biochemistry.) Constantly failing to be the best annoyed me enough at this point. Instead of my father assuring me that my best was enough, I got, “What happened to 100?” I never grew up thinking or knowing that if I got a “90,” it was an “A” and if that’s the best I could’ve done under the circumstances, then it was okay. If I got a 98, I always heard, “What happened to the other 2 points?” It was always A+ or 100never “at least you tried your best.” I began hiding tests that weren’t perfect from my parents — setting me up for a livelihood of perfectionism.

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