Showing posts with label 2Blowhards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2Blowhards. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Three Beautiful Things 07/25/07: Blowhard Blogging-Positivity, Lost Nephew, More Introverted Happiness

1. I check in at 2Blowhards every day to see what those middle-aged, graying amateurs are thinking about and today I was featured in a very positive way at the top of Michael Blowhard's first of what will be a series of "blogging-positivity". Here's what Michael said to kick off the series:
Enough with the negativity and mockery. The Communicatrix, Chelsea Girl, and Raymond Pert have shown me the way: Blog about something positive from time to time, damn it. Good for the mental health, and probably a ray of sunshine for visitors too. . . . Besides, it takes more guts to open up about what moves you than it does to scorn things.
Every once in a while, word comes back to me that my daily Three Beautiful Things has an impact. I'm very happy that M. Blowhard recognizes the guts it takes to open up about what moves me.

2. I found the myspace page and blog of a fella who was my nephew from 1979, when he was born, until 1981, when my first marriage dissolved. I learned a lot about how he is doing and about his father, my former brother-in-law, and their family. It was a bit of serendipity in this funny blog world that led me to his stuff. I really enjoyed finding out how he's doing.

3. The Deke has been hanging out at Mom's for the last five days and has done what we introverts love most: secluding herself in the basement or upstairs in the TV room and watching television. She loves Law and Order and The Closer and other crime dramas. I went to Mom's for dinner tonight and marveled at how relaxed and rested the Deke looks. She confirmed she feels rested and relaxed. She had a perfect vacation here in Kellogg. She hardly did a thing. She and I had some good time visiting and eating with my mom. Otherwise, she took time to herself to recharge and get herself ready to travel on Monday to West Point to see her daughter Adrienne and her husband Nathan. I'm very happy we live this way.




Saturday, April 14, 2007

Thinking Blogger Awards

Over at The Thinking Blog (home page here), ilker yoldas started a new blog meme called 5 Blogs That Make Me Think. I've been tagged twice, to my knowledge, by InlandEmpireGirl at Gathering Around the Table and by Katrina at Notes on a Napkin. By clicking on the names of their blogs, you can see who else they nominated. Click on their names, and start reading two of my very favorite blogs, for their beauty of thought and their aesthetic beauty.

Of special note to me is InlandEmpireGirl's nomination of our sister, Silver Valley Girl and her blog Silver Valley Stories, a sharp looking blog full of family stories, history of the Silver Valley, and other observations. Each day she takes a picture of the same tree in her backyard. It's fascinating.

My five nominees, in no particular order, are:

In Search of Walden by Student of Life. Back in October, I was playing around with the "Next Blog" feature of blogger, and up popped this blog. I was hooked. Student of Life is a former television news producer who now stays at home raising her son "Little Sunshine". Student of Life is a seeker. She's a direct, vibrant, intelligent story teller. She works vigorously and often humorously to sort out what life means spiritually, socially, and intellectually. I go to her blog every day and she never fails to stimulate my imagination and thought and often gives me a really good laugh.

2Blowhards " In which a group of graying eternal amateurs discuss their passions, interests and obsessions, among them: movies, art, politics, evolutionary biology, taxes, writing, computers, these kids these days, and lousy educations." This 2blowhards self-description underplays these men's variety of subject matter on this blog. They are articulate, very thoughtful, and free-wheeling. A smart bunch of commenters post savvy responses and the site is a gold mine for other superb blogs. Michael Blowhard, in particular, is sort of obsesssed with immigration and loves pop stuff: thrillers, B-movies, YouTube, jazz, older pop music, and pictures NSFW. He's my favorite non-elitist bon vivant.

Dubya's Personal Blog I wish I had a dollar for every time these ingenious nuggets of satire made my sides hurt from laughing out loud. Poor old Dubya: he's a stand up guy who never quite gets it right and is genuinely perplexed to find himself commander-in-chief and leader of the free world.

Red Shoe Ramblings: 365 Days of Art "
No talk, just photos of my Daily Art Thangs" Deb Richardson takes a new photograph every day. I love her work. She posts a wide variety of photographic art, all of it immediately accessible, much of it rural, and charged with imagination, beauty, and soul.

Three Beautiful Things
"Every day I want to record three things that have given me pleasure. This 3BT site is the original Three Beautiful Things." Claire started it. I was inspired by her. She's a beautiful writer with a keen sense of observation and a deep love of life. 3BT has become a habit for quite a few bloggers who must, like me, find it fun to spread around some enjoyment and pleasure from each day.

I should add here that I daily read Huckleberries Online and am stimulated by more posters from that bunch than I could nominate within the five nominee limit. I decided to make my nominees "non-HBOers", but one day I'll write a post that brings them all to light. Maybe I'll just decide to do a second or a third "Thinking Bloggers" post!

Lastly, here's a request from The Thinking Blog:

Should you choose to participate, please make sure you pass this list of rules to the blogs you are tagging. I thought it would be appropriate to include them with the meme.

The participation rules are simple:

1. If, and only if, you get tagged, write a post with links to 5 blogs that make you think,
2. Link to this post so that people can easily find the exact origin of the meme,
3. Optional: Proudly display the 'Thinking Blogger Award' with a link to the post that you wrote (here is an alternative silver version if gold doesn't fit your blog).



Friday, December 22, 2006

Driving to Kellogg

Are you sure that was the right exit?


Driving here today: The sky was slate or foggy. Low. No glare. A shaft of light broke through and illuminated a dinghy on the Columbia River. The roads were wet, dirty, safe. The lumpy hills in Washington across the Columbia River were not purple, but lime green, covered with young vegetation. As the mountains flattened into the rolling hills of the Palouse, lightly covered by snow, layered by fog, my heart began to race. I love the lay of this land. I left Eugene at 6 a.m. I arrived at 4:30 p.m. I'm ready to sleep. The blog world is quiet. It's almost a silent night at Huckleberries and 2Blowhards. Learning the Argenitine Tango might be done until 2007. Student of Life has been quiet. So has her husband, Rapid Eye Reality. No email today. I'm hoping to write more after some restorative sleep. More about Kellogg.

And being here.

Thursday, December 14, 2006

Three Beautiful Things 12/13/06: Canon, Prone, E-World

1. Finding out more and more what the limits and what the possibilities are with my Canon PowerShot A530 digital camera.



2. For reasons I do not quite understand, I love to lie in bed and write. I did so much of the afternoon today. Blogging and emails. Snug lay on the bed with me. (For the record, I'm seated at my desk as I write this!)

3. While lying on my back, I made wonderful discoveries in the world of e-books and and other digital content and book publishing on demand (HT: Michael Blowhard).

Saturday, November 4, 2006

Cell Phone Reformation

A cell phone will chirp Vivaldi's Four Seasons or Johnny Cash's Ring of Fire at such an inappropriate, seemingly satanically timed moment during a class session, that you'd have to be George Will not to laugh. Laughing at cell phone interruptions in class is a recent development for me. For several years, I detested cell phones. I hectored my students at the beginning of each term about turning them off before class started and not using them in the classroom at all; even before or after class, I insisted they talk on their cell phones outside the classroom. I don't do that any more.

I used to be like Michael Blowhard. He has opined grouchily about cell phones for quite a while. So did I. I would hear a man in the pasta aisle exasperatedly ask the person on the other phone if he should buy the American Beauty or the Mission
brand Rotini, only to say, "Safeway brand? It's on sale? Oh yeah, yeah. Here it is" and my guts would burn and I'd mutter under my breath about courtesy and wish medieval forms of capital punishment for these cell phone abusers.

But that's changed. Any more, when I see someone at one of the campus smoking stations wildly gesturing with one arm and hand while yelling into his palm, I chuckle. I realize that cell phones have made much of what was hidden in people's lives more public. Sit in a coffee shop in Eugene, Oregon and you can hear a mother talk a youngster at home through the steps necessary to make Jello; you can hear the recap of a tragic romantic break-up from the night before; you can learn what fellow teachers are assigning as one student catches up an absent student on what she missed in class that day; you can find out where to party this weekend; you can hear dope being bought and sold; hear a contractor brief a foreman as to what next needs to happen with the dry wall at the site on Laurel Hill; you can hear dog grooming appointments being made, dental appointments being broken, and negotiations being brokered to break loose a hiring committee logjam. It is as if we have rolled back time to the open market place, to a time before telephones and long-distance communication, back to a time when most human business was transacted out in the open, not from sealed off offices out of the sight of the public.

I've quit bitching and started listening. I've decided that if people want to post everything on the World Wide Web from a cat obsessively flushing a toilet to a baby laughing without ceasing to acts of intimacy on a public dance floor, that I may as well stop bucking the march of social history and join in, and enjoy YouTube, blogs, public journals, and other ways of making the once private more public. Likewise, if a cell phone talker is going to make alibis to his parole officer a matter of public conversation, then I'm going to listen. I'm not going to politely turn the other way or act like I can't hear what's being said.

I no longer bristle when I'm helping a student with an essay and his cell phone buzzes. I just say, "Go ahead and get it." The student smiles, quickly deflects the call, and we go on with our work, morale and mutual trust secured. When a student is absent from class and text messages a student in the class about what lie to tell me about why she isn't in class, I laugh and make light of the whole transaction. I can even have the student receiving the text message send the other person a message on my behalf. I have grown weary of trying to impose the etiquette of a land line world onto the cell phone world. I have decided to enjoy the freedom of speech, the enhanced flexibility, the shrinking of privacy, and the expanded boundaries of how many people a person can be talking to at once. I've decided if this is the wave of change, I'm going to surf it, let it carry me, even as I negotiate my way up and down its curl.

I've been reformed. I wouldn't call myself a cell phone apologist. I've just loosened up a bit, and, like a new pair of shoes or a stiff baseball glove being broken in, I've softened my attitude toward cell phones in public and am enjoying myself out in the public a lot more.

But, please, theater-goers: turn them off before Act I. Those of you with cell phones going off during a movie: I'm becoming more and more accepting. It seems more normal to me and not nearly so annoying.

I'm being reformed. I'm getting more flexible. Maybe it's the medicine I'm taking. Or maybe it's wanting to be a part of the world I live in rather than its constant opponent.

Sunday, October 29, 2006

Nuggets #3

Here's a little tour of what I've been enjoying in the vast empire of the World Wide Web lately. Maybe you'd like to take some time and click around with me:

*The plot thickens as Learning the Argentine Tango prepares for her trip to Argentina. I read her blog daily. It's become like a novel for me.

*Likewise, I daily read this blogging husband and wife. None of us outsiders know what's troubling Student of Life and Rapid Eye Reality. But as they sort things out, Student reflects upon her life and Rapid Eye takes us inside LEAF (Lake Eden Arts Festival) here and here in North Carolina and, in a wonderful video (scroll down), plays lovely guitar accompaniment to his little boy at the pumpkin patch. Rapid Eye loves poker. Read all about it!

*If you read my piece on Bar Fights, it's a minor league account in comparison to this fight recorded in Making Flippy Floppy.

*I'm always trying to sort out my Libertarian leanings as a Democrat. Bill Kauffman helps me and he is interviewed in a five-part 2blowhards feature: Part One, Part Two, Part Three, Part Four, Part Five.

I highly recommend checking out 2blowhards daily. They write about and view everything from Tom Jones to remapping the USA, and a whole lot inbetween.

*George W. is trying to figure out a good war slogan at The Dubya Blog.

*Robotic Young Republicans bother Daniel McCarthy at American Conservative.

*It might require more effort than you want, but jbelle shares her no longer secret recipe for meatloaf, the king of comfort foods.

* Do you hear/read words like "woot" or "meh" that you don't know what they mean? Urbandictionary.com will help you keep current.

* I go to Rocketboom's vlog every day to see what Joanne Colan is up to, what she's wearing, what her hair looks like, and, well, whether she's wearing make-up (I always hope she's not). I wouldn't call it a crush. I simply find her lovely and fetching and very interesting.

*Every day, Clare lists and describes Three Beautiful Things from her day. It's an intelligent, insightful approach to blogging. And hopeful....and worth a try.

*Lastly, if you've been wondering, as I always do, what's going on in North Idaho and Eastern Washington, visit Huckleberries Online. You can discuss stuff, too, in this blog's always lively comments feature.