QUESTION IMAGE
Question
again, steps to ponder are:
- pick a perspective
- place it in relation to other places
- what are the people like?
- what activities occur there?
- how does the place change?
including just a few of these steps will make a fair description.
directions: take some time to think of a place that means a lot to you. jot down some thoughts and feelings about it on a separate piece of paper. take notes according to some of the steps for a few minutes. then write about the place below.
I chose my family's summer cabin, following the provided steps to craft a personal, detailed description. I focused on its location, the people there, activities, and how it has changed over time.
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My most cherished place is my family’s small wooden cabin nestled in the northern Michigan woods, about 20 minutes down a dirt road from the nearest tiny town and a 10-minute hike from a quiet, glassy lake.
The only people who spend time there are my immediate family and a handful of lifelong family friends—all warm, laid-back folks who trade work stress for flannel shirts and campfire stories. We spend our days swimming in the lake, fishing for bass off the old wooden dock, and foraging for wild blueberries in the nearby fields. Evenings are for cooking over the outdoor fire pit, roasting marshmallows, and pointing out constellations we can barely see in the city.
The cabin hasn’t changed much on the outside, but the inside has shifted with our family: when I was little, the back room had a stack of bunk beds for us kids; now, it has a small desk where I bring my laptop to write, and the bunk beds are stored away for when my younger cousins visit. The dock, which used to feel wobbly and huge under my small feet, now feels sturdy and familiar, with new boards replacing the rotting ones we fixed last summer. It’s still the same place that smells like pine and wood smoke, but it grows with us, holding every memory like a well-loved book.