These shots of London from above at night are ridiculous, and they make all my photos look like crap, and I hate them, and I love them.
Monthly Archive for August, 2008
This post describes exactly how I feel about the death* of personal weblogs.
*Deathbed, anyway. I’m still HERE, right?
For no reason at all, here are the top 35 most-played songs on my iTunes at work. I wish I were still the kind of person who uploaded mp3 files of all these songs for you, but I’m not. You should really look into Helvetia, though.
Broken Social Scene - Hotel
Cary Brothers – Canada
Helvetia - Beezlebub
Helvetia - Gladness (Is In the Heart)
Helvetia – Summer
Interpol - PDA
Liz Phair – Shane
Magnetic Fields – Two Characters in Search of a Country Song
The National - Fake Empire
The National - Mistaken for Strangers
The New Pornographers - Myriad Harbour
The Pixies – Bone Machine
The Pixies - Holiday Song
Rogue Wave - Harmonium
Rogue Wave - Like I Needed
Rogue Wave - Chicago x 12
Rogue Wave - Lake Michigan
Rogue Wave - Ghost
Rogue Wave - Sewn Up
The Sea and Cake - Up on Crutches
The Sea and Cake - Too Strong
The Sea and Cake - Crossing Line
The Sea and Cake - Middlenight
The Sea and Cake - Coconut
The Sea and Cake - Exact to Me
The Sea and Cake – Lightning
Shout out Louds – Blue Headlights
Shout out Louds - Normandie
Stars - My Favourite Book
Stars - The Ghost of Genova Heights
Sun Kil Moon - Lily and Parrots
Sun Kil Moon - Carry Me Ohio
Tegan and Sara - Back in Your Head
Wolf Parade - Grounds for Divorce
Wolf Parade - Shine a Light
Yesterday the underside of the cap on my bottle of SweetLeaf iced tea said, “If you didn’t know your age, how old would you be?” I am both 23 and 64. How old are you?
Thanks to Dusty for helping me back up my WordPress database and install the new version of WP. He helped me upgrade at his new coworking space, Conjunctured, which is very pretty and has nice people and allows chihuahuas.







i guess that makes me an old (blogging) woman
Back in the day, I used to write a lot of really personal things on this site. I would talk about how I felt about everything–my job, my friends, my relationships–and for the most part I felt safe doing that without fear that anything bad would happen as a result. As I’m sure you can tell, that’s changed quite a bit. I’m older now, and my interest in things like job security and my friends’ privacy and my own privacy has trumped my desire to write freely and publicly online.
But.
While I’m satisfied with my decision to hold more things back on bluishorange, my desire to write freely online (even if it can’t be public) hasn’t changed. To that end, I set up a friends-only LiveJournal page, where I can talk about work and relationships and all the things I can’t talk about here, and only the people I want to read it can read it.
I’ve had my friends-only LiveJournal for less than a week, and I’ve already posted on it five times. Five times! That’s more than I post on bluishorange in a month! The knowledge that what I write won’t be publicly available has opened a writing floodgate, and everything I wish I could still write here has come pouring out over there. I love it.
In that way, my private LiveJournal feels like bluishorange used to feel–it’s a place where I can write about whatever I want, and my friends will read it and leave comments about it. And that’s the other thing that’s happened: the LiveJournal comments feel like old-school bluishorange, too. My friends leave comments, and I respond, and then someone else responds, and a discussion evolves.
Matt Haughey posted about how the comments on current blogs don’t have a living-room feel like they used to, and I know exactly what he’s talking about. I hadn’t realized how much I’d missed all my old comments until my private LiveJournal came along.
Wednesday night I had dinner with my sister, and then she came over for a bit. After she left, I went straight to my LiveJournal and wrote this:
My friend Peter left a comment that said:
He’s totally right. What’s happening here is this: I feel really comfortable writing on my LiveJournal, so it’s making me want to write more, and so I do; I write about whatever I feel like saying whether it needs to be kept private or not. And then the LiveJournal becomes less about privacy and more about audience, or general effort-making, or the value of non-editing, or something. I’ll have to think more about this.
Update: It’s probably about the value of not trying too hard.