User:Misscharmant/sandbox

Aubélleine Maylène Jewel Kéira Belle-Isle Aubélleine-Maylène-Jewel-Kéira Belle-Isle (commonly known as Aubélleine-Maylène, Aubélle, and occasionally referred to or credited as Tiffany-Maylène) born in 18 August is a singer-songwriter, actress, medical researcher, and freestyle figure skater and dancer. She is often referred to as l'inspiré (French for the inspired), being consistently inspired as a young girl who loved poetry, creative writing, music, and performing arts. As a young girl, she was ambitious, daring, rebellious, and resolute - which allowed her to become talented in various areas. Aubélleine began dance and figure skating at the early age of four. She took ballet and tap class at the studio nearby while going to figure skating class that was located in a region of a 45-minute drive. Despite having taken dance class early Aubélleine found passion in figure skating instead. At age 5, when the family visited a Venetian hotel, Aubélleine spotted a huge empty stage vacant after a band had performed and stepped up to start tap dancing all alone. Soon a bunch of younger kids had began tap-dancing on the stage with her. The entire time little Aubélleine had had the penguins from Happy Feet in mind. Her success had earned her her first dollar from a random stranger. As a kindergartener Aubélleine was a talented author and illustrator. At 5 she had become the first of her class to fill pages with neat handwriting and colourful illustrations as a picture book. Her kindergarten teacher was impressed and often showed the class her creations. Soon kids in class began to follow Aubélleine's example, supporting her title of 'l'inspiré' for the first time. At the same time the young Aubélleine had been offered to try a number of various activities including: gymnastics, tennis, swim, soccer, and basketball. Among all the activities, Aubélleine stubbornly chose figure skating. But as she grew older, she was forced to quit figure skating due to the fact that the ice rink was located too far from her home and there was not enough time to make daily trips for competition. Aubélleine was devastated and subsequently quit ballet and tap. In fourth grade, Aubélleine had created her first complete novel with 86 pages and some pictures to go along, titled Raspberry. The story consisted of a character named Alicia Delacei, along with her best friend Sienna, who had fallen into her nightmare that came alive and searched for ways to get out. In the end the girls go through a magical cave where a conch shell saves them and Alicia gets a pet piglet named Raspberry. Subsequently in the first year of middle school, Aubélleine had created a series with two books titled Perfect (book 1) and Spotlight (book 2) in which both novels depicted the lives of two teenager twins battling through the harshness of middle school life, much based on Aubélleine's real struggle to gain popularity and renown in her middle school. In fifth grade, Aubélleine had decided she would want to become a fashion designer. Many girls in her class had teased her and laughed at her for that decision, even though they were the ones who were the expensive brand clothing and she herself wore cheap clothing for five dollars apiece. She drew up multiple designs each day. By eighth grade, there were entire rows in her bookshelf full of the thousands of designs she had created. Her designs were unique and original, unlike the "trends" that most girls her age strived to follow. She settled upon the name of "Belle Couture," which meant "beautiful fashion design" in French as her couture house title, later adding multiple more 'sub-house' brands and titles. Upon entering middle school, Aubélleine also discovered her persistent passion for singing and performing arts. Previously she had acted in school plays but disregarded the tiny amounts of experience. Aubélleine began taking voice lessons and played Dorothy from the Wizard of Oz in a theatre workshop subsequently. At the same time she also discovered her strong hatred of modern "American pop songs" she grew up with and preferred classical French music, much to the contrary of her fellow "typical teenager" contemporaries. She did not have a cell phone either even as an eighth grader, which was deemed very 'uncool' and 'unpopular' at the time as everyone in middle school had to have a cell phone, specifically an Apple iPhone of the newest generation, therefore further proving her defiance, boldness, and originality. At one point a classmate had commented that she was living in the 16th century, but Aubélleine was not hurt at all; she did not care what others thought of her anymore and decided to go her own way. All she cared about was to be what she had always wanted: a happy, successful girl who was able to do what she truly loved. She wanted to be singer, actress, and medical researcher. Near the end of her eighth grade year, Aubélleine began preparing for high school and her future. She laid out intricate plans of what she would do to get into her dream college of Stanford. She contacted the high school teachers ahead of time to schedule meetings in preparation for the life-turning years to come. She wanted to attend a conservatory in Paris or Versailles or Lyon after attending primary college and become a medical researcher to support her income and double as a singer and actress. At the same time, she began to perform at the local senior centre with her friends as community service, playing classical piano repertoire pieces. Aubélleine believed in originality, inspiration, and perseverance throughout her adolescent years, which 'kept her glued together' in her own words and helped her survive the harshness of being a teenager who wanted to be herself rather than someone else and someone who did not fit in. In response to the earlier comment of 'living in the 16th century,' Aubélleine had defiantly stated that living in the 16th century as a happy, carefree girl who lived up to her dreams was much better than the typical "American teen girl" of drama, more drama, makeup, cell phones, and Victoria's Secret. Once she had said, "People judged me every day from every angle. They like me for the most part, as they said I was nice and pretty, but I could sense the difference and tension between me and the rest of my classmates. I don't believe anyone is born stupid; everyone else had the same potential as I to become successful. But the others of my class decided to worry about the wrong things. While I studied and did everything I truly loved, they [teenage girls] wasted their lives shopping, more shopping, desperately begging every guy in school to date them, their makeup, popularity and middle school status, their cell phones and Instagram, and such. And I, I concentrated on my schoolwork, my singing, piano, swim, acting, dance, poetry-writing the entire time. That was what made the difference. That was where I stood out when they sank right back into the shadows." Aubélleine understood her schoolwork was the number one priority in her teenager years as a student and therefore strived to maintain all A's each semester. At the same time she tended her piano training, swim, singing, acting, dance, poetry-writing, and when she had time, as well as her figure skating, tree-climbing, and archery. She filled her life with as much as possible, becoming so busy that she rarely had time with friends on a weekday. But in her mind hanging out with friends was much less important than her bright future. She did not care what others thought, whether she had a lot of friends or not, or if she had the best cell phone or brand clothing. Aubélleine saw her goal and knew where she expected herself to be in five and ten years while all her fellow classmates were still busying trying to figure out basics of algebra and their social status at school. As a teenager Aubélleine was determined to prove to her parents that she was able to handle everything she took on. Having had piano lessons for four years and already passed the Certificate of Merit Advanced Level (Level 10) test by her fourth year of piano, her parents urged her to compete and not give up in that area. They also hoped for her to join swim team, as numerous coaches had deemed her as talented with a potential for a career in swim. Aubélleine, however, was devastated singing, acting, and dance were not on the list of priorities for herself as she had not had enough years of experience in any of those.