Recently I have been thinking more about Blogging. Well actually I went to this show this past week, An Evening with Amanda Palmer & Neil Gaiman, and they are both such bloggery people that I couldn’t help but be driven to check their blogs and that got me thinking about blogging. How was the show? Well, I have a hard time organizing my thoughts even when I have very little to say, and in this case I have a lot upon a lot to say, and so I doubt I will ever really have a proper post on it, but maybe. For now we’ll say it was good. Very, very good. Amazing. Inspiring. I spent more money than I should have on a
beautiful print of the married couple and made somewhat of a fool of myself in front of people I admire (as I am apt to do). Anyway, thoughts on blogging.
I think maybe perhaps I should start to blog. Life so far has taught me that the best way to get better at something is to do it. Really practice it. Not just a little bit. All the time. It’s something you’re told often, but it doesn’t really sink in until you figure it out for yourself. Blogging is a way to practice decoding the shit I feel about life. And writing. I guess there is some writing involved. I remember reading in an issue of Cosmo while I was in the bathroom at my friend’s house (she stacks them all up on the back of her toilet and Cosmo has done this clever little thing where they print about a 1/4 inch slice of a photo of a shirtless man model on the spine of their magazine--if I was into oiled shaved pec’d chests I would be really very excited about it) and the Cosmo magazine* had a feature on Emma Watson where she said that sometimes it helped her to write everything that was stressing her out down on a piece of paper because it made it seem smaller and more manageable. So maybe blogging will be like that.
Additionally, there is this odd sort of business around blogging and social media these days. People market themselves and make their living through blogging. I’m thinking of a professional photographer and fashion designer/seamstress that I doubt would be nearly as successful without the mass amounts of blogging each does. It builds up an online friend base; one checks in with a blogger girl who dresses neat or takes good photos or writes exceedingly well about her life, and then the girl launches a business and you can’t help but follow that too. Perhaps even support it with your yummy yummy dollar bills. Maybe recommend it to others. I know because I’ve been the person following and buying in the past. And advertising, which I don’t understand and am not going to get into. Who knows is all I’m saying.
So forgive me if this kind of mind-vomit starts showing up in this place. Eventually I hope to organize it all pretty-like so you, impatient consumer of the digital age, can click somewhere and have all the photographic posts all sorted out from the rest of the garbage, or all the sewing-related posts, or all the rambly words posts. You get the idea. In the meantime, I’m linking to a written thing by Neil Gaiman that he read at the show in this way that transported you to somewhere nice and cosy and exceedingly pleasant, which is to say that he read it in a Neil-y way (I don’t like audio books and yet I still want to own all the ones he’s ever recorded--something about his voice and verbal style...). Reading it will not be as cute as listening to it (and will have a much more bitter attitude, because you won’t have Neil’s peaceful, everything-is-alright voice to calmly deliver the jokes and to add the proper amount of nonchalant humor) but still, it is here:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2010/mar/25/neil-gaiman-oscars-coraline.
*I’ve actually just remembered that the feature was not in Cosmo but in a different magazine. Elle, I think. But my little story about the Cosmos stacked on the toilet is just too good to leave out.