Personal

Personal reflections, comments about things I've been doing, etc.

Why are you reading this blog entry?

Yes, I’m serious. Why are you reading this blog entry? Here on the blogs, we regularly get into discussions about why people blog. Yet we don’t often seem to talk about why we read other people’s blogs. Let’s take a little time to explore this.

Some of us spend time pouring over our access logs to try and figure out how people found the website. I’ve done a little checking into around half a million access records for my site. 97.5% of them don’t have any referrer records. So, a lot of the ways people find the site just aren’t showing up. Of the records that do show up, about 1% are from Google. And about half of a percent come from BlogExplosion. MyBlogLog comes in third as a source of readily identifiable sources.

Yet this leaves all kinds of questions. Within Google, it is easy to find the search terms that bring people to the site. “Smoking Jacket” and “Drupal Themes” are the two most popular search terms bringing people to my site. Why are these so popular? I suspect some of it is because there aren’t a lot of other things written about smoking jackets and drupal themes.

BlogExplosion is a pretty straight forward click exchange. They send people to Orient Lodge based on the number of sites that I visit through BlogExplosion. Most users just come to Orient Lodge randomly according to BlogExpolsion’s selection criteria.

MyBlogLog, BlogCatalog, and BumpZEE are more interesting. If you came here through one of them, how did you get here? Did you click on my link on a widget on someone else’s blog? Did you start off at their front page? Did you follow links from your community or friends? Did you arrive at my MyBlogLog page some other way? If you did click on my link on a widget, what made you click on my link instead of someone else’s link?

Wordless Wednesday



MyBlogLog Social Graph, originally uploaded by Aldon.

News of the Day

Slowly, surely, I’ve been making my way through the emails that have piled up. I’m currently at around 1450 unread emails. Some, I can delete quickly, others require responses or mention things that I’d like to talk about here on the blog. Currently, there are several topics that I’d like to explore in detail, but probably won’t get a chance to write about, so here are a few summaries.

A Birthday Wish

Let me start off by thanking everyone who has sent me birthday greetings. It is greatly appreciated. Birthdays can be a great time of reflection, especially if there are other big events going on, such as moving and trying to find a new job. It can be amplified if the birthday is a milestone or rapidly approaching one. For me, fifty is coming soon. That is well past halfway through the three score years and ten that poets of yesteryear wrote about, so please indulge a little mid life crisis reflections.

After dinner, I will blow out the candles on my birthday cake and make a birthday wish. What shall I wish for? Most practically, I’m wishing for a good job, but I’ve been wishing for that for a while. I’ve had various leads that looked promising, but never panned out.

How would I define a good job? Well, I realize that potential employers may come by and read my blog. I hope my description of my dream job doesn’t put off any of them if their opportunity isn’t precisely what I’m dreaming for. I sometimes feel as if that has happened in the past, and that perhaps I’m too much of a dreamer.

People who know me, and particularly my thoughts about writing know that I like to focus on the larger narrative. Yet I usually don’t think a lot about that narrative when I write my blog posts here. Instead, I’m finding a bit of it in retrospect.

Let me start off going way back. When I was young, I had a speech defect. I’m not sure how much I was ostracized for my funny way of speaking and how much I just felt that way, but I remember kids making fun of the way I spoke, even through high school. In college, I took some courses in speech pathology. I’ve always been searching for my own voice and been interested in helping others find their voices.

I had some poems published when I was in high school and college. I moved to New York City to become a writer. In the meantime, I supported myself working with computers. Now, nearly thirty years later, I still write and support myself by working with computers. Blogs have been a wonderful joining of the two.

When I was working as BlogMaster for John DeStefano’s campaign, I read a lot of local blogs and hyperlocal journalism sites. At the http://www.newhavenindependent.org/ >New Haven Independent, I came across posts by http://www.newhavenindependent.org/archives/gina_coggio/ >Gina Coggio. Gina was teaching English in a school in New Haven. She wrote wonderful accounts of her interaction with students in the school. I visited her class and encouraged them to take up blogging. Many of them had important stories to tell.

Back in September, 2005, I wrote in The New Orleans Metaphor,

It is my dream that just as Freedom Riders hopped on buses over forty years ago to help bring equality to blacks in the south we will see a new generation of people head to the Gulf Coast to help rebuild and help fight poverty.

In my mind, I thought of “Let Us Now Praise Famous Men”, redone for a new generation and a new media. I thought of bloggers and videobloggers writing about the Gulf Coast of today. I thought of people helping people along the Gulf Coast find their voice to describe their post-Katrina struggles, sort of like http://www.bloggercorps.org/ >BloggerCorps which never really got off the ground.

A month later, Sen. Edwards came to Yale as part of his Opportunity Rocks tour. I spoke about this idea with friends there. In Freedom Riders of the New WPA, I described the event:

If Senator Edwards does the standard leftover politics, I will be disappointed, but not surprised. I sure hope, however, that he will really talk about a new generation of Freedom Riders…

So, when Senator Edwards invoked the image of Robert Kennedy in Appalachia, my friend excitedly said, “That is exactly what you were talking about.” I wondered if this is what I’ve been hoping for.

Later, I was approached by the Edwards campaign about possibly working for them. I had dreams of being able to bring about a little bit of this vision. Perhaps my dreams were too big, perhaps they were looking for something else. Whatever it was, it never worked out for me to work with the Edwards campaign.

This year, on New Years, I wrote some similar thoughts in to help people find their voice. I spoke about it in terms of media reform. I’ve followed various leads for jobs with different non-profit organizations where I hoped I could bring about some of this vision. I spoke with Jay Rosen about trying to find ways to get this vision incorporated into some of his work with NewAssignment.Net.

Now, Sen. Edwards has announced his “Road to One America” Tour. It will start in New Orleans and end up in Prestonsburg, KY, where Robert Kennedy ended his trip in 1968. I hope the campaign has great local people blogging about the trip. More importantly, I hope that they spend some time helping people in New Orleans, and Prestonsburg and the towns and cities in between find their voices online. I hope these voices find their way into hyperlocal journalism, into Off the Bus, and find a persistence in our national dialog that enables politicians and non-profits to address the problem of poverty in our country.

And I do hope that I can find a job where I can help people find their voice.

Random Stuff

Shortly, we will be heading off to Cape Cod for a few days. I don’t expect to be online during that time, so the blog won’t be updated, and most emails will probably go unanswered.

I dealing with the inspection for selling our house, I ended up climbing through some poison ivy, and I’m pretty miserable right now. Itching everywhere, unable to sleep. This, of course, means that Kim could sleep well either. It will be a difficult trip, but hopefully a little salt water will help out.

With the NOI campaigns, only the Burns campaign responded to my inquiries. Most, but not all of the campaigns list an email address somewhere to contact the campaign, and it appears as if most of those don’t bother to check their email. It seems to be a standard problem of many campaigns. The flood of emails can be overwhelming and many of them are spam or people wearing tin foil hats, but over the years, I’ve found some great volunteers and made some good friends as a result of responding to campaign emails. It gets to the idea of campaigns and emails really being a two-way conversation, and not just another broadcast medium.

On the graphing front, I have another graph of MyBlogLog interactions up on Flickr. It was during Wordless Wednesday and you can see the clear community grouping of Wordless Wednesday. It was also done early in the day and ends up showing a grouping of Malaysian bloggers.

Enough for now. I hope everyone has a wonderful weekend.

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