The Language That Found Me

What was your favorite subject in school?

“Where words once felt like lessons, they became a way of life.”

There’s a certain smell that lingers in memoryβ€”the chalk dust, the ink stains on fingertips, and the soft rustle of notebooks filled with scribbles of dreams. When I think back to school, I don’t remember the equations or the diagrams as much as I remember words. They had a way of finding me, even before I realized I was searching for them.

My favorite subject? English Literature.

It began quietlyβ€”just another class in a day full of bells and uniforms. But something changed the day my teacher read a poem aloud. Her voice dipped and rose like music, and the room, usually filled with restless whispers, fell still. For the first time, I felt words not just as lessons but as life itself.

Each story became a window into another world. Shakespeare wasn’t just old text; he was rhythm, rebellion, and raw emotion. Wordsworth taught me that even silence had meaning. And when I wrote my first essay that didn’t just describe a story but felt itβ€”I realized this subject wasn’t about grades or grammar. It was about understanding what it means to be human.

English class became my refuge. While math tested logic, and science tested memory, literature tested my heart. It asked me to look inwardβ€”to explore, to question, to dream.

And even now, when life feels like a maze of deadlines and noise, I find myself returning to those pages, that voice, that moment when a poem stopped being just homework and became home.


One response to “The Language That Found Me”

  1. Heather Mirassou avatar

    Ah, I must agree!

    Liked by 1 person

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