Archive - 2008

June 16th

Bloomsday morning with EntreCard

My copy of Ulysses next to my computer, I set out on my EntreCard guided cyberwanderings. It is 7:41 and I already have had seventy-two people drop cards on me. Twenty-eight are from people that visited via the fifteen different ads that I have running.

I shift around some ads, and find that I am the most popular ‘Lifestyle’ site and 83rd overall. I have about 300 credits I plan on using first thing this morning so I go to search the most popular inexpensive sites. I turn on Pandora to provide a musical backdrop, and Nanci Griffith’s “Simple Life” comes on.

The first blog to catch my attention is The Quiverfull Family Blog. It is described as Musings on Christian family living, Christian book reviews, homeschooling, homesteading, recipes, home business and more!.

“Quiver Mamma” reviews The Captive Princess - A Story Based on the Life of Young Pocahontas (Daughters of the Faith Series) by Wendy Lawton. As a blog providing Christian book reviews, it is not surprising to find Quiver Mamma talking about Pocahontas’ faith journey.

I stop to think about my own faith journey, as well as my journey today. I wonder if Quiver Mamma will stop by and read my blog. What will she think of my political commentary? She seems like a perfect example of the people I wish political bloggers would engage more with.

While I read Quiverfull, the price of an advertisement has increased. Someone else has discovered this site and placed an ad. Even at the increased price, it is worth it and I place an advertisement. Yet in the confusion, I end up not following the advertisements from Quiverfull’s blog.

Entrecard is running slowly this morning, so between my writing and EntreCard’s slowness, it may take me a while to get through all the drops I want. The next site that I visit is the Ali Star Fan Club Website. I have no idea who Ali Star is, glance at a few pictures and move on.

Advertising on the fan site is My Big World of Crap It talks about makeover time for the website, anger management, and ‘Wank’ In just a few clicks I’ve taken a long trip from Quiverfull.

Reap Money Online brings me to my first “Serena” post. Serena is a little girl with neuroblastoma. Many of the blogs are writing about Serena and my mind wanders to another child that battled neuroblastoma, Alex. I think I first heard about Alex’s Lemonade Stand, on a kids show on PBS. I love it when people use blogs to work for a better world, whether it be Quiver Mamma talking about children’s books that talk about the importance of faith, this blog, talking about uniting to fight cancer, or the blogs of my political friends. They are all much closer related than they may think.

Though helping raise money to fight neuroblastoma isn’t the what you would normally expect from a site like Reap Money Online. Normally, there are posts about website colors and layouts; useful hints, but very different.

RMO leads me to Wedding Cake Hints, pictures of pink wedding cakes with chocolate bows, snapshots in the family album. This leads me to Musuan. There is an option to read content, a list of top EntreCard droppers and an EntreCard ad. There are lots of sites like this out there. They seem to be more about gaining credits instead of gaining readers, so I oblige, drop my card, and move on.

Musuan leads to Cromely’s World Cromely asks how negative we are, talks about limits of the Presidency and fails to capture my interest. Next comes Rambling On; camping, finals week, going shopping. Splinters talks about music. The Daily Bits talks about jetpacks and blogging and Monkey Fables and Tales, a popular site which advertises extensively on EntreCard proclaims that they are a doofus. Unconventional Marketing Blog announces the winners of their latest contest and that tornados suck. Amy Lilley Designs has some old pictures of cats and flowers.

This chain of sites fails to hold my interest, so I go back to my list of sites for potential sites to advertise on. Hit-or-Miss has the EntreCard ad buried and doesn’t really capture my attention. The Prague ConnectionAlyCat’s WeightWatchers Blog talks about motherhood and losing weight, another part of the palimpsest.

I glance at Nordic Walking US and decide it is time to post my first entry of EntreCard Bloomsday. I’ve only dropped around 20 cards in the first half hour and placed a few ads. It has drastically slowed down my EntreCard dropping, which is perhaps a good thing, but I do need to get on with other things

How does all of this affect my writing style? I look at recent blog posts. The better blogs incorporate real life, births, schooling, graduation, wedding, fighting diseases and trying to stay healthy, with what we can do as people, work together to spread our faith, fight cancer and get politicians elected that will work for us to address these issues. I try to do some of this and find that recently, my posts have moved even further from pure niches of politics, news, technology, and related subjects.

June 15th

EntreCard’s Ulysses: A prologue

It is often said that enough monkeys typing for a sufficient period of time will produce the works of William Shakespeare. I sometimes wonder if they would produce the work of James Joyce first.

People have then gone on to compare these monkeys to bloggers and noted that the work of the blogosphere is nothing like to work of Shakespeare. However, if you look closely enough, you might be able to find hints of Joyce.

It has been over twenty years since I lived on a sailboat in the Hudson River next to New York City and read James Joyce’s Ulysses. I don’t remember the details all that well, but one part has stayed with me. It was Judge Woolsey’s ruling on lifting the ban on Ulysses. There was this wonderful section that goes:

Joyce has attempted -- it seems to me, with astonishing success -- to show how the screen of consciousness with its ever-shifting kaleidoscopic impressions carries, as it were on a plastic palimpsest, not only what is in the focus of each man’s observation of the actual things about him, but also in a penumbral zone residua of past impressions.

Ever since reading that, I have pondered the plastic palimpsest. These days, I’ve wondered about it in online writing, in the political blogs, and in the blogs that I find on a typical day wandering around, not Dublin, but the Blogosphere.

My cyberwanderings have shifted over the years. For a while, I primarily used BlogExplosion and related sites as a means of strolling from one blog to the next. Then, there was a period when I followed the recent readers as enumerated by sites like MyBlogLog and Blogcatalog. Now, when an interesting tweet shows up on Twitter, I follow the link. I still use these sites from time to time, but currently my wanderings are directed most substantially by EntreCard.

I look at sites of people who have dropped cards on me. I look at the most popular sites; those that are most popular overall, and those that are most popular in categories that interest me. I look the sites of the most prolific droppers; those who have dropped many cards on me, as well as those that have dropped many cards on others who list their top droppers. I look at sites where I am running, or have recently run advertisements, paying particular attention to those sites where my advertisements have been most successful. I look at sites that have chosen to run ads on my blog. From all of these sites, I follow the advertisements to other sites and before I know it, I have visited my daily allotment of three hundred sites.

All of this forms a plastic palimpsest which I would love to capture. June 16th is Bloomsday, the day that Leopold Bloom wandered the city of Dublin. Can I capture any of my fleeting impressions and weave them into an interesting story? Perhaps not of Odyssean or Joycean stature, but interesting nonetheless?

It is already Bloomsday in Ireland as well as much of the EntreCard world. For me, Bloomsday doesn’t technically start for an hour, and then there are the long hours of the night, so I shall sleep and see what I can write in the morning.

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My Dad and I ...



My Dad and I ..., originally uploaded by Aldon.

It's Father's Day, so I'm mostly taking the day off.

Instead, I'm putting up this picture that Fiona made for me as part of a Father's Day present, a book entitled 'My Dad and I...'

Happy Father's Day everyone.

June 14th

Flags, Witches, Islands and Other Stuff in the Family Tree

Flag Day, 1977. It was a strange day in a strange year for me. A few weeks before my eighteenth birthday, my last grandparent died.

Being seventeen was a challenge. My parents were getting a divorce. Life around home was rough. By the end or my junior year of high school, I had already racked up enough credits to graduate, so I skipped my senior year and went off to college early. The way my high school handled it, I needed to complete my freshman year of college and then return to graduate with the people who had been my classmates for so many years.

My younger sister hated me for leaving. It was pretty rough on her as well. I told her that if you are sitting on a block of ice and managing to melt the ice, then maybe it is worth it to stick around, but if all your doing is freezing your ass off, then it is probably time to leave. I felt I was freezing my ass off, and not really doing anyone any good.

During my freshman year at college, I received a letter from my mother. A girl that I had been interested in, in my unsophisticated geeky sort of way had disappeared. This was in the days before instant communications of email, and our family had always only used the telephone for emergencies. It never occurred to my mother that this might be an emergency to me. I had kept my romantic interests to myself and I don’t think my mother knew how attached I was to the missing girl, or what such a disappearance would do to the addled brain of a bright, messed up teenager.

A month later, I received another letter from my mother. They had found Rocky’s body in a ravine a few towns away from where I had grown up. My mother included newspaper clippings of the funeral. College was a ten hour drive away, so there was no way that I could have made it to the funeral anyway, but I was hurt that I didn’t get a chance to say my final goodbyes with my classmates.

Then, at the end of the school year, I did receive a phone call from my mother. Her father, who had been fighting Parkinson’s disease for many years finally died at the end of May. The school year was over, so I scrounged around to find a ride to his funeral. I think it was first time being a pallbearer.

Somewhere during this time period, I attended my high school graduation, which was a very awkward affair. I had been gone for all of my senior year. I didn’t really know all my classmates that well any more, and I had begun the changes that college brings.

So, Flag Day, 1977. My mother was at my aunt’s house. She was helping them deal with the aftermath of my grandfather’s death and care for my grandmother who had been quite ill for a long time as well.

The phone rang. I don’t remember exactly who answered the phone, I think it was me, or who said it, I think it was my eldest brother, but we were all there and we all knew what the phone call was. As I mentioned earlier, I grew up in a family that only used the phone for emergencies. We knew my grandmother was very sick, so someone said, “Grandma died”, before the phone was answered.

Sure enough, it was my grief stricken mother, letting us know that Grammy had died. On top of all the other losses in my mother’s life, she was now an orphan. She hadn’t been able to talk over her problems with her parents much during their final years, but now, it was final and she wouldn’t be able to go them for comfort ever again, the way she had when she was younger.

My father’s parents died before I was born, and being next to the youngest child of the youngest child of my grandparents, being from a family that didn’t travel much and rarely got together with my grandparents, this loss of connection with a previous generation was much more detached than what it was like for my wife when the last of her grandparents died. Kim’s grandparents lived in the next town over, and she regularly went to their house to swim, to eat, or just to hang out with her extended family.

And so it is Flag Day 2008. For some reason, my grandmother came to mind last night. Over the years, I’ve been interested in genealogy and have built up a good database about my ancestors, including the dates of their births, deaths, and marriages. Being the fact checking blogger that I am, I wanted to check the details, make sure that I remembered things right. Yes, the database confirmed that Grammy died on June 14, 1977.

My ancestors were early settlers of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. This means that there is a lot of genealogical data about them, and many of them have been traced back to their first arrival in America in the early 1600s. My grandmother was of the Eastman line, a line traced back nicely to Roger Eastman, and early settler about how much work has been done. He arrived in America on “Confidence” in 1638. Roger is my 8th Great Grandfather. His grandson, Captain Ebenezer Eastman married Sarah Peaslee. Sarah’s brother John married Mary Martin. Mary Martin was the granddaughter of Susannah (North) Martin, who was executed in Salem Massachusetts in 1692 on the charge of witchcraft. Somewhere else in the Eastman family tree is Daniel Webster.

Sarah Peaslee’s mother was Ruth Barnard whose great grandfather was Thomas Barnard. Thomas was one of the original purchasers of Nantucket in 1659, although apparently Thomas never visited the island.

So, I have spent the hours before Flag Day 2008 learning a little more about my family history, and through it the history of our country. There are witches and islands in our family tree, and many other great stories as well, yet most importantly, all the stories from today, from thirty-one years ago and from three hundred and fifty years ago make up the fabric of our lives, a rich tapestry with various rips and stains.

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Recent ma.noglia bookmarks

Here are pages I've recently bookmarked with ma.gnolia:

Second Life Herald: Metaverse SHOCKER!!! -- Free SL Accounts Locked Out?

Second Life Herald: Metaverse SHOCKER!!! -- Free SL Accounts Locked Out?

Worth investigating and commenting on

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