New Week, New Plans

I like to start each week with a goal.

Okay, that’s a complete lie. But I’d really like to be the kind of person who does actually start each week with goals and intentions in mind. So this is an attempt to force that function.

The goal this week is to add a page to this site. Just one. If I end up doing more than one, I’ll give myself a pat on the back for being a good little overachiever. Of course, I’d likely need to stretch first, just to be sure I don’t pull something reaching past my head. But that could count towards my goal of starting to exercise again, so that’d be a win, too.

I don’t think I’m at risk of either of those things happening.

But I do want to add a page to the site. It might be an “about” page. Or maybe a blogroll. Not sure yet, but something. And hopefully something fun. I plan on continuing to adhere as closely as possible to the IndieWeb standards as I do this.

So that’ll be the goal this week. As always, feel free to send any thoughts/suggestions/dire warnings. I’m reading them all and am grateful for the feedback.

Which reminds me, I need to actually flesh out the contact section here. Looks like I might have my first page addition already picked out for me!

Week 09: 26FEB-03MAR2024

So I do this thing for myself. At the start of each week, I create a fresh note in Drafts to serve as my weekly planner. It basically serves to keep me on task and to plan around family social calendars and remind me of things that need doing. At the end of each week, I sit down and review what has been done and what may need to be pushed to the following week. Then repeat.

I’ve been thinking for a bit now that this would make a great format for a weekly newsletter of sorts. So here’s a first stab at it. I’m sure this may change/evolve over time (most applicable slug line of this site, right there!), but no time like the present to get it rolling. I expect this will be the usually Sunday output you can expect from me until I end up doing something different. Enjoy!

Weekly Goals:

  • [x] Start a blog already
  • [ ] Start exercising again

Doing:

  • Finally started this blog on Thursday. Been posting daily so far. Not sure how the pace will settle out, but this has been manageable so far.

Posts Made This Week:

Listening to This Week:

  • Between podcasts right now. Looking currently for something fun to dig into.

Currently Watching:

  • Started Constellation on AppleTV+. Interesting start. Curious to see where it goes.
  • Started the third season of Resident Alien. Alan Tudyk continues to make me smile.
  • Watched Blockbuster on Netflix. Made me miss working in a bookstore. A fun show, and a shame that it only had a single season run. I could never get past the irony, though, of Netflix making a show about the business it was responsible for ending, only to cancel the show.
  • Watched The Kitchen on Netflix. Just…wow. One captivating display of how bad things can get while trying to just be aline in the world on your own terms, not someone else’s. Strongly recommend.

Currently Reading:

  • Halfway through Cory Doctorow’s _The Bezzle_. Excellent so far, and hard to put down. I very much enjoyed _Red Team Blues_, which came before this, and would recommend to anyone looking for a good quick read. (Of note for Doctorow fans, Humble Bumble is currently running a book bundle for 18 Cory Doctorow novels. Donations go to the EFF. The sale ends in 20 days, and can be found here.)

And that’s that for this week. Again, I’m sure this format will change/evolve over time. But this is a start.

Hope you all are having an excellent weekend. Until next time!

On Picking Your Cave

I’ve always had a mixed relationship with social media. Mixed in that I’ve had accounts on most of the big ones going back to my old IRC days, but rarely contributed to the spaces. I’m a lurker.

(Side Note: Joanne McNeil’s 2020 book, _Lurking: How a Person Became a User_, is an excellent read, and her first novel, _Wrong Way_, is sitting in my to-read pile currently.)

In the early days, it never felt right to jump into the conversations. I felt like I’d be intruding on something to which I was not explicitly invited. So I just lurked, doing my best to learn from information shared by others.

That all changed with Facebook. I was in college when Facebook launched. But not at an Ivy League school, so it was a bit more full-formed when it came to my campus. But I joined in the days when it was still locked to colleges. And honestly, it was fun. Here was a community that I already knew. These weren’t strangers, they were people I knew, people I’d seen walking around in their pajamas.

But we all know where this went. Today’s Facebook is a far cry from what it was back then. And I haven’t touched it in years as a result.

Then came Twitter. As an early adoptee, I got to see a different thing than what exists today (or even a different thing from what existed pre-X). It was small. It was jokey. And it was fun. And we were all kind of new there, so we all just chatted.

(I have a point here. I promise. We’re almost there.)

And now of course there is the Fediverse. I’ve been on Mastodon for a while now, again mostly as a lurker. And the feeling has always been, for me, a bit of a mix between my experiences with IRC and Twitter. I’ve learned so much watching conversations unfold and following links that others so helpfully shared. But I’ve been hesitant to jump in.

In many ways, social media has always felt like shouting into a cave. You say your piece loudly, and listen to see if anything comes back beyond your own echo. And it all comes down to which cave you decide to shout into.

For the first time in quite a while, I’ve found a cave I like.

Yesterday, I did something I haven’t done in a very long time. I engaged with strangers on social media. And it was wonderful. I posted links to these blog posts on Mastodon, and people I’d never spoken with before started saying hi. Some were even people who have been inspiring me with their own writing. I cannot overstate how awesome and inspiring that experience was. I had a smile on my face for the rest of the day.

So here’s my point. Pick your cave. Shout into all of them if you have to, just to hear what comes back. But when you find something better than the echo of your own voice, you’ll know you’ve found something special.