A Surprising Start
At the time when I made my entrance into the world of letters, a garranyic warned me about the discomfort of rubbing the chalk against the blackboard. From that moment on, I realized that my existence would be marked by shapes and definitions.
The Struggle for Identity
It wasn’t long before the tags started flowing. One participant emphatically stated that it was a pronoun, while another, with disturbing certainty, insisted that it belonged to the category of adjectives. Two voices, two possibilities, with a meaning that seemed as diverse as their pronunciations.
The Influence of the Seven-Sciences
Near me, an individual who seemed to dominate the scene hinted that my ranking depended on context. This comment made me reflect: in a world I had just explored, I was already subject to the authoritarianism of labels.
Silence and Confusion
At a key moment, the science seven asked if my essence was an ‘a’ or an ‘e’. The silence that followed was telling; it was the first time I understood the weight of silence in a room full of voices.
The Unexpected Voice
Suddenly, an energetic voice cut through the atmosphere, correcting the seven-science and expanding the speech. This intervention opened a new path in the debate on inclusion and diversity in language, a topic that deserved deeper attention.
The Linguistic Debate
With a conciliatory tone, the seven-sciences evoked the words of the linguist Carme Junyent, suggesting that language variations were not the solution to social problems. It was a reminder that despite our grammatical differences, our shared humanity is what really counts.
A New Perception
Finally, the seven-science class asked me to locate my position in a dictionary. By reading the definition of ‘your’, I understood that regardless of the labels that might be imposed on me, my essence was somehow united with all of them.
Final Reflections
The word ‘your’ resonated with warmth; it was a statement of inclusion and love. In this space of debate and confusion, I found my place, a place that did not need to be defined by convention, but by connection with others.