How Did You Find Me?
There’s a website called How Did You Find Me?, and it’s collecting the stories of how people ended up on the site. I found it because someone I know posted the link, and I clicked over to see it. But then there is the story of how I found that person. You can see how this can get interesting.
How did you find yourself here? If you clicked on a Facebook link, what prompted you to click? If it was shared by a friend, how did you meet that friend? If you were searching Google, what were hoping to find? Why did you decide to check your email at the moment that you did?
I didn’t expect to like reading the path people took to reach the site as much as I did. I think it would be even more meaningful to hear how someone ended up on a certain blog in a community; e.g., how did you find A Little Pregnant and what got you to click over in the first place. I think A Little Pregnant may have been the first ALI blog I found. Unless my first was Getupgrrl’s. I can’t remember what came first by this point.
November 10, 2024 No Comments
1011th Friday Blog Roundup
Still processing election feelings and don’t have a lot to say.
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Stop procrastinating. Go make your backups. Don’t have regrets.
Seriously. Stop what you’re doing for a moment. It will take you fifteen minutes, tops. But you will have peace of mind for days and days. It’s the gift to yourself that keeps on giving.
As always, add any new thoughts to the Friday Backup post and peruse new comments to find out about methods, plug-ins, and devices that help you quickly back up your data and accounts.
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And now the blogs…
But first, second, helpings of the posts that appeared in the open comment thread last week. To read the description before clicking over, please return to the open thread:
- None… sniff.
Okay, now my choices this week.
The Barreness captures the quiet before the results. We now know how things turned out, and while her statement worked during election day, it’s working in the aftermath, too: “I feel too many feels, thinking too many thoughts.”
The Next 15000 Days received a compliment, which she recounts after a thoughtless comment from another person, and it sums up a life well-lived: “I would like to be like Klara. She doesn’t wait for anyone – she just does things and knows how to actively enjoy her free time.”
Lastly, Finding a Different Path celebrated her Halloween anniversary, and I love their tradition of filling their yard with fake tombstones — a new one every year. And we get to enjoy pictures from some of their other traditions. Seeing this post was a sweet moment in a hard week.
The roundup to the Roundup: Post-election quiet. Your weekly backup nudge. And lots of great posts to read. So what did you find this week? Please use a permalink to the blog post (written between November 1 – 8) and not the blog’s main URL. Not understanding why I’m asking you what you found this week. Read the original open thread post here.
November 8, 2024 1 Comment
Processing
Like many people, I went to bed upset and woke up numb. This was not unexpected — the world has been moving toward this as a whole — but it doesn’t make it any less worrisome.
I’ve used two articles to keep things in perspective. The first is an article from Pew Research pointing out that our memories are fuzzy — consolidation of power (holding the White House, Senate, and House) happens almost every single election and is often gone by the midterms. I found the visual timeline helpful as a reminder that this too shall pass, hopefully without too much lasting damage. (Positive thinking.)
The other is an article about emotional circuit breakers. If you’re numb today, there is a reason. You will not always be numb. If the task ahead looks too large, that’s because it is. Instead of feeling you must hold the whole world in your hands, focus your efforts on one small area. Care deeply about one small area. Lend support to the other areas (as others will lend support to you), but keep your focus tight so you don’t burn out.
Today looks bleak. Hopefully, the future will not look as bleak. That’s where I need to be not to fall apart this morning.
November 6, 2024 3 Comments
Addiction to Prediction
The title of this piece spoke to me a few weeks ago: Addiction to Prediction.
That is how it feels these last few weeks have felt, trying to predict how this election will turn out. The reality is that if I just wait until the results are in, I will not need prediction at all.
Prediction is about knowing something ahead of time. Sometimes, we don’t know when we will learn something. But other times, we clearly know when the results will be in (beta results, college admissions, election tallies) or around the time the answer will be revealed, and we work hard, expending a lot of mental energy to know one day or a few hours earlier than expected.
Except we sort of only want to know good news early. Bad news, that can wait.
I recently read Liane Moriarty’s new book, Here One Moment, about a group of people who all receive the year and how they’ll die. On the one hand, if you know you’re going to drown, you can take steps to try not to drown for those 365 days, but most of the ways people were going to die weren’t avoidable. For people who heard they were going to die deep into their 90s, they felt a sense of peace. For those who heard they were going to die young, it weighed on them and impacted the present as they waited for the date.
But that’s the thing about prediction: If you’re working to find out something ahead of time, you’ll hear whether it’s good news or bad news, and you’ll have to live with that imperfect information longer.
Sigh.
I’m not sure we will watch the returns at all tonight. I may cave at the moment, though I’m saying that I won’t watch because it will only make me anxious. We’ll see what happens during the actual moment.
November 5, 2024 2 Comments
#Microblog Monday 510: Please Vote
Not sure what #MicroblogMondays is? Read the inaugural post which explains the idea and how you can participate too.
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Tomorrow is election day in the US, but we voted weeks ago when early voting started. We usually wait until election day and go to our local polling place, but this year, we went to early voting when it opened. My Tuesdays are full of meetings, and I didn’t want to try to time it between two and get stuck in line. But I’m also fairly nervous, and voting early meant I could try to give myself the day to not think about what was happening at the polls.
If you’ve voted early, thank you.
If you haven’t voted yet, please go tomorrow. A lot of domestic policy rides on this election, and every vote counts.
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Are you also doing #MicroblogMondays? Add your link below. The list will be open until Tuesday morning. Link to the post itself, not your blog URL. (Don’t know what that means? Please read the three rules on this post to understand the difference between a permalink to a post and a blog’s main URL.) Only personal blogs can be added to the list. I will remove any posts connected to businesses or sponsored posts.
November 4, 2024 3 Comments