Dear Junior,
I am sorry to inform you that I have no interest in you whatsoever, if you could read this to that voice inside your head though, then that would be wonderful.
Now then Dear... Voice,
I have recently arrived at some questions that I could sincerely use your help with solving. As many of my peers have likely guessed by now, I too hear a voice inside my head (don't tell anyone or I will be joining Chief Bromden in the loony bin). Now then, in the novel you claimed "Everything matters" (292). The voice does help me a lot, but it likes to trick me too, and recently it has been rising some odd questions about my AP English 11 class last year. It has been claiming that the only reason why I have been having trouble is because I have become rusty on what I learned last year. So my question is this, how do I know what matters most. Last year in discussions I let my morals not to interrupt others control me and I kept quiet, but now every time I let that happen I lose points. So tell me which matters more, my grade or my morals? Also you claim that sacrificing yourself for others benefit "is the very definition of heroic" (191). So does my sacrifice of my own grade to allow others to save their own make mer a hero, or just a fool? I certainly do not feel like a hero, and more like a fool, yet when I do interrupt others to speak I always feel bad. Now I know what you are thinking, why don't you just ask the voice in your head but sadly it only knows math (now you know why I do so well in that one class). Oh and don't try to pull that "we in fact only know one thing for certain" excuse, remember theres a voice in my head too and it says you are lying, you know everything (8).
Looking forward to hearing back from you,
Chase
P.S. Gerald says hi
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