Category — Secret Ode Day
Secret Ode Day (Ode 2)
Welcome back to the second string of odes to kick off the Secret Ode Day project (see the post below if you’re just tuning in for the first time). From this point on, Secret Ode Day will pop up unexpectedly. We may have another ode day three days from now, or we may not have another for a couple of weeks. Whenever I have a critical mass, I will post a set of odes.
Want to join in the love fest? Write a paragraph (or two or three) about your favourite blog (or blogs!) and send it to thetowncriers@gmail.com. The archives are now up and running via the Festivities icon on the side bar. I have also posted a brief description of the project as well as the answers to these frequently asked questions:
- Anyone can submit one.
- You can write one about someone who has already had a paragraph written about their blog (there is no limit to how many odes can be written about a person).
- All paragraphs are posted anonymously.
- You can write about more than one blog (giving each a separate paragraph). If you’re in a particularly loving mood, feel free to write ten of them!
- You do not need to have a blog to submit one.
- Whenever I have a critical mass, I will post a new Secret Ode Day entry. All entries are archived on this post (see below).
- The beauty of Secret Ode Day is that just because your blog doesn’t show up in the current post doesn’t mean that there won’t be a paragraph about it during the next post. And just because you appear in one post doesn’t mean that you won’t be mentioned in the next post too. It’s just always a surprise–sort of like waking up in the morning and finding the trees decorated with lollipops.
- If you have a submission, send it to thetowncriers@gmail.com. Be sure to include the url as well as the blogger’s name if possible.
- If you want to write one about me, create a fake email account to send it. All entries are kept anonymous from the blogger. So the only way to keep it anonymous from me is to make up a fake name and email account!
The Odes of the Day:
Megan at Exile in Kidville
Megan amazes me. Her gentle heart shows through in all her posts. I like her sweet sense of humour. She has only been blogging for a few months, but has already gone a complete round on the roller coaster of hope and loss. Nevertheless, even when her loss was still only days old and raw and fresh, she came round to comment kindly and thoughtfully on other people’s blogs. She is a genuine good person and I find myself caring deeply about her future story.
The Painting Chef at The Painting Chef
The Painting Chef makes me laugh so hard I’ve trained myself to put my tea DOWN before I read her posts for the sake of the keyboard. She is wry, cynical and her ferocious rants leave me with a vicarious glow of satisfaction. And she has that rare and very cool ability to be kick-ass funny and yet occasionally, at the very same time, vulnerable and sweet. Just occasionally, mind you.
Tina at My Many Blessings
My Many Blessings was the first blog I came across that wrote about miscarriage. In addition to stories about her son, she shares stories about her three lost babies. It was comforting to read about positive things in her life despite such heartache shortly after my own loss. It appears that she has many readers, but she takes the time to respond to comments despite her hectic life. I really appreciate the help she has given to me during my grieving process.
Chris at Love, Hope, and Faith
Chris was the first regular reader to my blog that I am aware of. She always posts positive comments and is very encouraging despite her own recent loss. She tries to support others even through her grief.
Spanglish/Teresa at Welcome to the Cysterhood
Teresa inspired me from the moment I first found her (first) blog. She writes so openly about her students, her marriage, her struggles with faith and life in general. She has made decisions that I’m simply not strong enough to make. Her support has been unending, even when mine faded. She is simply an amazing and extraordinary woman whose life I feel honored to gaze into when I read her blog.
Lindsey at This Side of Pregnant
Lindsey’s writing gives me chills. It is so beautiful and so heartfelt. It has brought me to tears many times. Her quest for peace in life and in her current pregnancy are nothing short of admirable. I look forward to reading each of her posts–she paints pictures and feelings with her words.
Another ode to Lindsey at This Side of Pregnant
I’ve read blogs for years, and I find many of them touching, but this one takes top honors for me. I found “This Side of Pregnant” from a Friday Blog Round-Up, and I was hooked right away. The way that Lindsey writes is so well thought-out, so from the heart, and so down to earth. Very often I find myself tearing up from happiness or sadness or whatever emotion Lindsey is choosing to express. Even though I don’t know her personally, I feel that I have so much in common with her. That feeling of connectedness is what I think we are all looking for. Lindsey does such a wonderful job at expressing herself and connecting to her readers and I look forward to many, many more posts from her in the years to come.
Michelle at Infertility Loss…and Life
Michelle has endured more than any woman ever should. And somehow she keeps getting up in the morning and she keeps working towards this goal of starting her family. I’m humbled by her strength. I truly hope the end of her agonizing road is near.
Larisa at The Waiting Womb
I am always wowed by Larisa’s writing. Her posts are touching, heartfelt, and downright poetic. It was after reading her ability to articulate a mixture of emotion and information that I realized I might be able to set up my own blog. She often writes like I think, but does it in a much more eloquent way. She had a series of posts from April 10th – April 19th that still stick with me.
My Name is Larisa, and… (April 10th)
Waiting (April 15th)
Happiness (April 17th)
Today, I feel (April 19th)
I distinctly remember how I felt when I read these posts, they took my breath away. She spoke from her soul, but it was as if she was speaking directly from MY soul too. I have never met her, and given our disparate geographic locations, probably never will, so it’s surprising how much I seem to care about her. I am absolutely thrilled that she’s pregnant, and include her in my prayers every night so that this baby will continue to grow and bring her and Jason many, many years of joy.
JJ at Reproductive Jeans
I love the way that JJ writes, and her enthusiasm is positively infectious. I remember laughing out loud at her recent post about The TP Tango. It was like she had been in the bathroom with me, but without the embarrassment of her actually being there. After reading her blog for a few months, I knew that she was someone I genuinely liked. This feeling was solidified after I joined The Braces Bunch. Being a part of this group has been a wonderful experience, and it wouldn’t have come about without the initial idea and subsequent effort of JJ. She’s selfless, funny, and just a downright good person. I heart her.
Becky (Teamwinks) at Are We There Yet?
I have had the pleasure of conversing with Becky outside of her blog, and she is every bit as warm, wonderful and genuine as you suspect. Her posts make me smile. I have always particularly liked You Might be an Infertile If. If you read that and don’t laugh aloud at least 5 times, then you are from another planet. Her ability to hit on topics and emotions that we can all relate to is uncanny. Also, the grace and wonder that she has displayed since welcoming Lucky into their family is simply beautiful to watch. I look forward to reading each new post that she writes and feel fortunate to know her.
Dino D at Frozen…Not Fossilized
When dealing with recurrent pregnancy loss you have a couple of options–you can let the diagnosis throw you to the ground and pummel you or you can carry on. This woman welcomed me with open arms in spite of my age and hope addiction and knew exactly what to say whenever I was faced with yet another dismal beta. She was one of the first people to send some hope my way when I emailed with the news of the current pregnancy and throughout it all she has been a friend. Now here’s hoping that she finally gets her little girl.
DD at TKO…More or Less
She’s strong and honest and so generous even when it hurts her to be. She has given me some of the best emails to help me through the hard times. She has encouraged me when I needed to be encouraged and has not said “thanks” for the idiotic advice when I’ve emailed “helpful” thoughts. This most recent loss has made her open a new site for all of us with losses to remember them. So they are not forgotten. She’s contemplating the next step and has a birthday coming up as well.
Jill at Knocked Up…Knocked Down
When I first started I felt a kinship. Her feelings were so similar to what I was feeling. She became a great email friend and offered info in the hopes of beating this awful diagnosis. She is quiet for now because she is healing from another loss as well as the loss of her father. Yet she still carries on.
Jenderbender at Land of the Infertile
This blogger has been through so much heartbreak and through some of the worst things I could ever imagine (and not want to imagine), yet she’s still hanging in there. I go to her site regularly wanting to check in on her, to give her support, and to have a little hope that maybe one day she’ll have some good news that lasts. She’s got so much going on and the fact that she’s willing to share that is really incredible.
Serenity at Serenity Now!
Serenity: Sensitive, smart, sincere, supportive, sage. Sometimes snarky, but seldom snappish or snobby. Sweetheart of the Sisterhood!
Another ode to Serenity at Serenity Now!
Serenity is my favorite blogger and not because we’ve become close. It’s because even when things are tough she doesn’t get quiet (like me) she works it out in her writing. She shows us community when we might not even feel like being a part of one and she makes me really think. I mean really think about life and the IF journey. Many days I wish for her pregnancy as much as I wish it for me. Her candor is the best thing about her–she doesn’t mystify things, she just lets you have it and brings me, with each post, to a different point in my mind, heart, marriage etc. She is an amazing woman.
Watson at My Dear Watson
Well what is there to say? You can just point to the tears of joy and laughter that every single one of her posts conjures up for you. She is bright and lively, she is real and honest, she is open and funny. You feel like you’re her best friend even when you only know each other online. She makes IF something to write through. Of course the best part of her blog for me is the HOPE, the place where you can see that no matter where the journey takes you there are good things ahead. Funny things, impossible to imagine things, but good things.
SoCo at Southern Comfortable
I like SoCo’s blog a lot, mostly because I too am Catholic and whenever I need a little reference point she always gives it to me. Plus she doesn’t judge and she writes intelligently with wit and with heart. Her IF journey took her a different way than mine did for me, but in many ways, when I read her words, I feel a kindred spirit and a woman of substance that stands by her beliefs.
Bea at Infertile Fantasies
Here is the blog I wish I wrote; the woman I wish I could be. Jealous doesn’t even come close to how I feel when I read her posts. I feel everything with her. I am inspired to be a be
tter person because of her. I am asked to think deeply when she writes and I do. She is a painter with words and each picture is really more beautiful than the last.
Katd at They Grow In Your Heart
What courage, what strength, what heart this woman has. Adoption is done by thousands of people every year. Yet in reading her this year, I found a new respect for the feelings of not only the person adopting and the adoptee but the woman who is creating an adoption plan for her child. Her warmth and dedication to make sure that Lily has all parts of the people who love her is an enviable pursuit for any of us. It takes an amazing person to love their child enough to share her.
Flutter at Flutter of Hope
I am drawn to her as a friend and a fellow Catholic. When she writes I feel so many things. I think she has a way of just making me feel comfortable in her space, like sitting with a good friend in some comfy chairs. I think that when she writes about conflicting feelings that it really hits home with me and when we talk religion she brings me back to faith; to hope. Her words make it okay to feel healed in many ways.
Erin at PCOS Baby
Erin’s blog is probably the first that I started reading about PCOS. Other than the fact that we have the same cause of infertility, I was drawn to Erin because she writes with such honesty. I love the way she writes about her little boy, so much so that reading about her secondary IF made my heart break. It is so obvious that she is a wonderful mom and that she deserved more than her secondary IF was dealing her. When she and J decided to adopt from Ethiopia, I was so over the moon for them (And so this blog became the first that I read about adoption.). The tone of Erin’s blog changed–she seemed so happy again. Her strength, courage, determination and love are so inspiring to me.
Shlomit at You’re Still Young!
I’ve read Shlomit’s blog from the start and have always admired the frank way that she writes. She let’s us know everything–the good, the bad, the ugly. Through her words, she allows us into her life and lets us see how difficult this journey has been for her. My heart broke when I read about her canceled IVF (I sat here and cried and cried), and thought for days about how on Earth she was going to move forward (especially after the teenagers on the bus). She has shown me what true strength is, for each day is a new one, and may hold a smile or a little hope. She is simply amazing.
Keep them coming. Whenever I have a critical mass, I’ll post them. If you’ve been moved to write about your favourite blogger (or bloggers) or want to pay it forward with an ode of your own, email me a paragraph at thetowncriers@gmail.com.
June 22, 2007 Comments Off on Secret Ode Day (Ode 2)
Secret Ode Day (Ode 1)
Growing up, neighbours down the street had a tradition where their family had a floating holiday. It popped up unexpectedly on the calendar (at least for their kids) and only the parents knew when it was going to fall. Every morning, all the kids in the neighbourhood woke up and went to the window to check the tree outside their house because they kicked off this floating holiday by decorating this huge tree with lollipops some time in the middle of the night and all the kids in the neighbourhood were invited to come harvest the lollipops. Every morning had the possibility of being the morning, and even though it was just a simple lollipop–the same candy we had in our own kitchen drawers–it just tasted sweeter because it came up so unexpectedly.
That’s sort of the point of Secret Ode Days.
You know that people read your blog because you have a sitemeter or they leave comments. But sometimes we just need something that is like the sweetness of a lollipop too by receiving kind words about our writing or personality. With the exception of this first string of Secret Ode Days, they will pop up on my blog unexpectedly. If you miss one, you can always find it again via the Festivities icon on the sidebar where I will keep an archive of each Secret Ode Day post.
This project–which I intended to be a one-day love fest–has now been converted to something ongoing. Therefore, if you read these paragraphs below and are moved to write about your own favourite blogger (or bloggers–sometimes people submitted two or three paragraphs on different people), please send you submission to thetowncriers@gmail.com. All paragraphs are posted anonymously. Whenever I have a critical mass, I will post them.
Amy at Inconceivable
Amy is one of the strongest women I pretend to know. She has been through four miscarriages with courage and tenacity. She is currently pregnant and due in September. She gives me more hope than I could ever express. I love to read about each appointment and how well she and the baby are doing. Her journey on her blog will carry you through so many emotions. You will laugh and cry with her. Her kindness of spirit is so evident with each post. You will be blessed by sharing in her journey.
Sara S-P at The Island
I was first drawn to Sara S-P’s blog because of her hilarious stories. She has a family full of amazing characters. They do some crazy things but you grow so fond of them because of the way she writes. We all have crazy family members and I love that she just puts it all out there. Sara is a pleasure to read because of her wit. She is super smart and her writing pulls you in. I’ve been able to fall in love with a city I have never seen. I can’t wait to visit!
Akeeyu at herveryown
The person that writes this blog is a total riot. She is going through some struggles right now and has been for over a year, but the humor that she puts in her writing keeps me going. Whenever I am having a crappy day – I click on this blog and hope to G-d she has a new post because I know I am going to be laughing. I feel for the pain that she is going through, but I want to thank her for making it so light-hearted. She’s a comic genius even though she’s probably not trying to be. So good luck, Akeeyu, in this upcoming cycle and thanks for the laughs…
Miss E at Miss E’s Musings
I read Miss E’s blog religiously because she gives me perspective. She reminds me that I am not defined by my infertility; that yes IF is a part of me, but not all of me. She shows me that having a family is, at some level, a choice, which gives me the hope that, if my worst case scenario comes true and we’re never able to have a family, we WILL be ok. I love how she shows us that yes, there’s pain in living child-free, but it’s a bittersweet kind of pain. She gives me more hope than any other blogger I’ve read.
Another ode to Miss E at Miss E’s Musings
It’s hard to know your limits and face them gracefully, but Miss E manages to inspire us all. If you’re wondering if it’s possible to make some breathing space, say no to the next step in treatments, or find peace in slowing down to tackle each decision in the fullness of time, your answer is here, and it’s “yes”.
Bea at Infertile Fantasies
There are some bloggers whose personal story just sucks you in. Bea is one of them. Since I started reading her, I have been consistently amazed at her resilience and her strength. That she is giving back to the universe despite getting the shit end of the stick for so long. I find myself wanting her to be pregnant sometimes more than I want it for myself.
Watson at My Dear Watson
I LOVE Watson. I love how she puts everything out there. I love her perspective on life. She makes me laugh, and laugh, and laugh. And when it comes to infertility, sometimes you just HAVE to laugh. Because really, at the end of the day, ART is pretty damn ridiculous. I love her honesty, and her willingness to put herself out there, and her ability to make me wet my pants almost every time I read her blog.
Another ode to Watson at My Dear Watson
Watson is perhaps the only blogger that approaches everything with humor. When you read her, you get the feeling that her cycle could have failed, a hurricane could have wiped her house out, and an inventive pyramid scheme could have taken all her money and she’d still have a sense of laughter about things. She had only one cycle but did so much to try to help other women get an understanding of the process that I felt embarrassed I hadn’t tried to do more to help others. She’s an inspiration, a laugh, and a seriously bright spot on the IF blog scene.
Karen at My Perky Ovaries
Karen is pregnant with triplets and she’s incredibly down-to-earth about it. Everywhere you read on the IF hemisphere you find bloggers who are over the moon about multiples, it’s very hearts and flowers and wonderful, but Karen is one of the few bloggers that shows that there is a lot of fear, debate, worry, happiness, love, and concern when you have more than one
. Her complete blatant honesty about her fears, her religion, her health, her debates, and her love for her not-yet-born babies is amazing. Her honesty should be rewarded 100 times over, as should her realistic approaches. I owe her a lot for being there for me more than once, and she’s got 4 kids she’s thinking about.
Rachel at Henry Street
Rachel has been blogging for about a year longer than I have been blogging, but from reading her archives, I know we both began blogging for the same reasons. “I was told I should create blog,” she begins in April 2006 and she has used her blog to “talk about all the complex feelings that go along with finding out you are infertile.” Rachel’s husband has a balanced translocation and as a result she has had three miscarriages and two failed IVF cycles. Her story has a lot of heartbreak, and she frequently explores how infertility has affected her relationships with friends and her attitude at work, and how at the same time she is trying to keep her sanity through craftwork and gardening. Her honesty and openness drew me in from the moment I started reading her.
Ann at The Unlucky 20 Percent
Ann is a relative newcomer to the blogosphere and finds herself here as a result of PCOS. She has rapidly entered the world of the infertile and writes eloquently about her thoughts related to PCOS, infertility, and G-d, all with a light touch of humor. While I am not a religious person, I enjoy reading Ann’s thoughts and struggles with her faith. She has a wonderful way with words and I am eager to follow her story.
Leah at Tales from My Dusty Ovaries
She’s a newbie on the block, but in getting to know her in the past month through emails and then the Braces Bunch, I have been able to see a glimpse of an incredibly strong and determined woman. She has already been so giving of her time and support to all those she has come in contact with in the “blog world.” I am humbled by what she has already been through and her willingness to share that pain in order to help all of us out there not feel so alone. She’s one who really “gets it” and I thank her for her continued support and kindness. She has touched me, and many others, and I thank her today for being who she is and for letting us in her life…
Millie at Out, Damned Egg! Out I Say!
I just wanted to say a few words about a fantastic blogger whose humor and sarcasm has really helped to get me through some truly horrid times. Millie’s blog, Out, Damned Egg, has been such a great read. I love her tell-it-like-it-is mentality and I have found myself silently rooting for her time and time again. Only recently did I start to post a comment or two, but my thoughts have been in her cheering section for a long time. She has insight, snarky sarcasm and a true sense of the “audience”. Without having ever met, she knows what I’m thinking and verbalizes the hideous disappointments time and again. Thanks Millie! You’ve got a talent for writing. I hope that translates into a talent for pregnancy real soon! I want her to know that while she has a solid fan base, she’s got even more of us lurking out there who count of her to pull us through the tough days.
JJ at Reproductive Jeans
JJ for all her brilliant ideas that make this journey feel all the less lonely. Everything she writes inspires warmth, love and friendship. She’d make a great mum, and I pray she gets her wish very soon.
Baby Blues at I Will Be a Mom
Baby Blues frequently finds a reason to hope. She balances infertility treatments with her faith and a tough and rewarding career. One way or another, you feel sure she’ll succeed. If you need to get yourself infected with an uplifting attitude, go here.
Nica at Life as a Sandwich
What doesn’t she do? She works, she mothers her mother-in-law, she deals with infertility, and occasionally she loses her wallet. Oh, and she’s funny. Truly, Nica goes above and beyond.
Vee at The Sweet Life
One word: photo Monday. Alright, two then. But in case photography isn’t enough to keep you interested, Vee also manages to pick herself up and keep going through azoospermia, IVF, miscarriage, and family illness–and that’s a feat in itself. Plus she and Max do a mean IIFF entry.
DI Dad at Life as Dad to Donor Insemination Kids
He bills himself as a father of children conceived through donor insemination, but DI Dad is also a father of the DI and MF community. You can go to him for support or news about his pet topics. Either way, you’ll be glad he’s around.
My Reality at Disenchanted With the Reality That Is My Life
My Reality is always so completely honest and open about their infertility journey. Between her surgery and the ectopic-pregnancy-that-wouldn’t-end, it’s been a really tough year for her. She’s been such a good friend to Krista, who had a brain tumor and gave birth to her son early by c-section. It’s obvious that she’s a loving and caring person. I’ve also very much appreciated how she talks about being an adoptee and how that can affect infertility. She really makes you think about so much. And her descriptions of food make your mouth water!
Ms. C at It Could Take Three Months
Ms. C is so funny about her descriptions about her non-speaking RE and Mr. C’s “contributions” to the whole process. At the same time, it’s obvious how difficult infertility is on her. She recently wrote about how seeing her MIL with another baby just made her cry because she wants that so much. She seems to look on the bright side even when it’s hard, and I find that really admirable (and can’t figure out how she does it!). I’ve enjoyed reading her blog from the beginning.
Adrienne at Max’s Mommy
Adrienne has been one of the many bloggers who have inspired me in so many ways. We are kindred spirits of sorts – IF, recurrent m/c, TTC a younger sibling for our sons, similar “background” medical issues. Although her blog is “younger” than mine, I find her sense of humor, self, and ability to write emotions and thoughts so well that the word
s linger on refreshing – I want more! For example, her recent DIY series is quite hysterical – as close as you can come to seeing her on HGTV with her own portable IVF lab. However, as funny as parts of the DIY series are, it also brought about the raw emotion of being DONE with things like the “Bataan Death March Sex,” “ass-propping and Waiving My Legs In the Air Like I Just Don’t Care,” “hyper-vigilance over every twinge and ache during the Two Weeks From Hell Wait,” “crushing despair when my temperature drops, and my belly cramps and the blood flows.” We have all been there – watching every possible sign and symptom; using every technique and tip found on every website and in every book; hoping, praying, pleading with God to see that BFP…and hope, pray, plead and beg that the PG is a “sticky one.” Adrienne is currently trying to find a new perspective right now…and I hope she finds it very soon. I miss her posts – but would never ask her to post more when she is not ready to write.
Frustrated because someone said something about you that is making you bawl in your office at work right now? If a person chooses to let you know privately that she was the author—great. That’s just like getting a few Snickers bars thrown in with your lollipop stash. But unless that happens, in the words of my grandma, “you don’t even know and I won’t even tell you.”
Stay tuned tomorrow for another batch of new odes (there were waaaaay too many to put in one post). The nicest part about this project is that just because you weren’t discussed today doesn’t mean that you won’t be covered tomorrow. And just because you were discussed today doesn’t mean that you won’t be covered again tomorrow. So keep spreading the love! Inspired by what you’ve read? Send me an email at thetowncriers@gmail.com with a paragraph about your favourite blogger (or take an evening to write up ten!). Even if they have already had a paragraph written about them, they haven’t heard the love in your words. Therefore, write a new paragraph letting them know how much their blog means to you.
June 21, 2007 Comments Off on Secret Ode Day (Ode 1)