Category: News

Nov 07

Thanksgiving Thoughts

Melody Pearson

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On Facebook, many people are participating in a 30 days of saying Thanks.  Each morning you post an update to your status with a different thing that you are grateful for.  Some are extremely personal, others have a generalized lifetime gratitude kind of attitude.  Some are uplifting, others amusing, but the overall theme is lets think positively about our lives and appreciate the things we have instead of complaining about what’s missing.

Although celebrating a day of Thanksgiving on the third Thursday of November is an American tradition, this exercise can be international.  Everyone, wherever they are in the world, can look at their lives and think, “What can I find to say Thank you about today?” Then share it with the world. ( Read more )

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Jul 18

Building the Foundation

I’m on vacation. According to Merriam-Webster that means:

1. a respite or a time of respite from something : intermission
2. a : a scheduled period during which activity (as of a court or school) is suspended b : a period of exemption from work granted to an employee
3. : a period spent away from home or business in travel or recreation

For many of us today, it seems to mean working as usual in a different location without the comfort and convenience of our usual workspaces. So, I’m typing this on a laptop balanced on my crossed legs instead of my usual desktop with two 23-inch monitors and and a wireless keyboard. While the couch I’m sitting on may be more comfortable than my office chair, it also exposes me to more distractions. Overall, I still need to get my work done and the environment makes it more difficult.

Still, I only need to work a few hours a day and the remainder of my time is spent in a new location with family members I rarely get to see. So, I pay for my vacation time with the slightly less comfortable worktime. Trade offs are the order of our society. For every prize we must give up something, be it time, money or our comfort zone. To be safe, we must sacrifice a level of freedom. To have “stuff” we must pay with cash or with effort. To have friends, we must be a friend. Everything in life has a price of some sort.

To take a vacation, we must have the ability to pay for food, shelter, etc. for a period of time without actually earning money during that time. That means working at a job that will give us vacation pay, saving money to pay for our time off, finding a generous third party to pay for our travels, or having a way to earn money even on vacation.

Over the years, I’ve tried several methods but, currently, I am combining saving money with working while on vacation. As a writer, I can do my “job” where ever I happen to be. Of course, I’m not getting paid much for doing it, but every dollar counts.

Most of my writing, at present, is geared toward building a platform…a reputation, so to speak…to create a portfolio of articles or posts that can be used to demonstrate my writing ability. This is practice time. A period of honing my skills before submitting proposals to publishers. I expect to spend a year or so practicing my writing every day both publicly and privately before attempting to sell anything.

This will mean posting to each of our four blogs each week, engaging in guest posting, participating in flash fiction exercises (the public part) and working on the various aspects of two novels for at least an hour each day (the private part). When most people, myself included until lately, think of writing a book, they envision simply sitting at the computer and typing for hours on end, day after day, for a year or more. There is much more to it than that. To write convincingly about anything, you must experience it yourself or do lots of research to find out the details. To keep from doing months of major revisions, you need to have a basic plan and keep going back to it as you write.

I am currently working on the research and planning part. The writing is happening, but only in sections. So far, it has no coherence. I know the overall goal and sort of how it begins, but the middle part (the most important part) is still in flux. As I work on the plan, some of it will be tried out on my writing blog. Come on over and sample the results.

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Mar 27

Learning to Love Kindle

Another piece of new technology I am experimenting with this year is the Kindle keyboard edition that my middle daughter bought me for Christmas.  I don’t remember mentioning it to her, but somehow she came up with the very item I had been debating with myself about for nearly a year.

Understand me when I say, I prefer paper books.  I’m not a snob about it, they don’t have to be hard backs.  In fact, in some cases, I prefer paperbacks.  But, in spite of the fact that I am a techie, I don’t like reading extensively on a computer screen and I really hate trying to read anything longer than a text message on a phone screen.  I figured the e Readers would be more or less the same.

Still, I had been tempted by the idea of being able to store several large books in a small light weight device ever since dragging a loaded backpack all over Murray’s campus.  When I first began to think along those lines, while lugging The Complete Works of Shakespeare to and from class three days a week, the Kindle was selling for about $300.  But, I’d already bought the ten pound hardback and I just couldn’t justify that much money at the time, so I kind of forgot about it for the next few years. ( Read more )

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Mar 20

New Challenges

One of the goals I’ve set for myself this year is to learn more about photography.  I own a Nikon D60 SLR camera that I mostly use like a point and shoot.  For several years now I have also owned a phone with a camera.  Camera phones these days can be as good as regular point and shoot type equipment.  I was used to my Blackberry and pretty much satisfied with it when I needed to take a quick snap.  However, the quality my brother, Jim,  gets with his iPhone is generally good enough to publish in the newspaper.

cherryblossoms

My cherry tree is in full bloom

If you know Jim, you know that he is over the top enthusiastic about iPhones.  When I was shopping for a smart phone, he tried his best to persuade me to get one.  I resisted because I prefer a physical keyboard.  However, touch screens have come a long way and physical keyboards are becoming a rarity.  The past month or so I have been looking at phones again because my contract is coming up for renewal soon and I haven’t found very many that don’t rely on a touch screen.   I have resigned myself to the idea that I will have to stay with my old phone until it dies or get used to not having a real keyboard.

dogwood

The Dogwood is just beginning to come out.

Recently, Jim got the new iPhone 4s and he suggested that I use his old one for a while, just to see if I could adjust.  Every time I have to learn to use a new piece of equipment or some kind of radically revised software, I remind myself it’s good for my brain, all the experts say so.  However, I am afraid maybe the wear and tear on my stress level cancels out the brain exercise.  Anyhow, after more than a week of struggling, I have the iPhone mostly set up to suit me.  It’s not perfect, but it’s usable.

redtulips

The Daffodils have been replaced by Tulips

Now it’s time to play with the camera.  Jim has at least a dozen camera apps.  He can take photos in HDR, as black & white, or as Polaroids.  Once they are taken, he can edit them with almost as many feature choices as on his desktop computer.  I have what came with the camera and one free Photoshop app called PS Express.  Until today, I hadn’t really used the camera function very much.  After watching Jim this past weekend, using his iPhone as much as his high end SLR or video camera, I decided it was time to start working toward, at least, a minimum of efficiency.   This afternoon, I took the phone out to the front yard and to see what I could develop.  The flower photos in this post are my results.  I’m still not as sold as Jim is, but maybe I can learn to be happy with it eventually.

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Mar 06

and it’s March….

So, here I am at March and once again, I find that I haven’t followed through on my “resolutions.” Calling them something else doesn’t seem to have been much help. My excuse being that I’ve been very busy and haven’t been finding much time for any kind of writing. Unfortunately, the things I’ve been “busy” at, aren’t really very beneficial.

It is time to seek the path once more. I’ve spent the past few days re-vamping my schedule, adding more detail, to provide myself with a more structured framework. Instead of vague suggestions, my calendar is now filled with exact time-frames for each task each day. I am fully aware that it won’t work like that, but having the nagging reminders pop up on both my phone and my computer should help me, at least, stay on the map.

It seems that I used to get a lot more done in a day than I have been lately. I kind of slipped into a Facebook maze, getting lost in the twists and turns of games, videos, fascinating side trails, and political ranting. Part of my commitment is to depart from Facebook by 9am and not go back until after 9pm. I know I will miss many things this way, but I expect to gain many more important things.

One goal that I’ve totally ignored since January was to post to my blogs more often. Besides this one, I have 3 others and I gone totally off the follow-up trail on all of them. As part of my “new and improved” scheduling effort, I intend to post to each one weekly on different days. This one on Tuesday, my writing blog on Wednesday, our company site on Thursday, and our Roadtrip site on Saturday.  All follows and comments will be duly appreciated since knowing someone is reading what I write helps me to keep focused.

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