JulieLeung.com: a life told in tidepools

pictures and stories from the water’s edge

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How are stats helpful for bloggers?

July 21st, 2005 · 10 Comments

For example, here’s an aspect of blogging Susan Mernit and I have discussed while planning for our upcoming Blogging 101session: statistics. Are they helpful or not helpful for beginners? Do they discourage or encourage? Should you ignore your blogging statistics? How do your statistics influence the ways you post and think about your blog?

Earlier this week I came across this post titled Numbers and Blogging, written by David Bayly, a blogger (and pastor) who was involved with Terri Schiavo and therefore received a lot of traffic at one point in time.

Not only are numbers important to bloggers, the more you blog the more you want other bloggers to link to your blog. The result is a self-referential series of quid pro quos wherein we mention other bloggers positively and link to them so that they will in turn mention and link to us.

More often than not, this circularity is accompanied by rather obsequious expressions of praise from smaller blogs to more prominent blogs in the apparent hope that the more prominent blog will link back to the lesser-known blog–a form of vassal-lord relationship in which the vassal renders fealty and honor and the lord in turn grants a place in the penbumbra of his blogging glory. In the end, the outcome is a self-reinforcing system of mutual admiration.

Because pride is a constant temptation to bloggers who pay attention to links and stats I’ve made certain decisions about my approach to this blog. First, I’m no longer checking our stats. If I don’t know how few people view this blog each day, I’m not disappointed and my pride isn’t bruised if we decline (and bruised pride is still sinful pride). Conversely, if I never see how many are reading the blog, I won’t be as likely to derive pride from increased numbers.

[Bonus link: Joe Carter describes his traffic, experience and statistics, to prove that being mentioned in the paper may not help one’s blogging: I spent a year attempting to rise to the level of Mortal Human in the TTLB Ecosystem. Traversing the stages from Insignificant Microbes to Flippery Fish to Large Mammal, I checked the page daily and longed for the glorious age when I would reach the upper echelons. ]

[Thanks to Ilona at Truegrit for her excellent collection of helpful links titled The Blogs We Want, and Why We Want Them.]

Perhaps you don’t agree with David Bayly’s beliefs. But do you feel the disappointment? The bruises when the numbers aren’t what you hoped? Does it become obsessive? What would you recommend to a beginning blogger? Which numbers and sites would you check – and which ones would you ignore?

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Fasten seat belts…Blogher ahead!

July 21st, 2005 · 2 Comments

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As I said to Ted tonight, excusing myself to take this picture, it’s always helpful to have a Fasten Seat Belts sign in one’s photo library. And this picture seems appropriate for writing about Blogher! Fasten seat belts – it’s gonna be an exciting ride!

Although the conference is sold out, Elisa is keeping a waiting list. The last 40 spots seemed to disappear overnight- hot! Blogher promises to be intense and fun.

I have about 343 reasons I’m glad I’m going to Blogher. 167 of them are here: the bloggers who will be at the conference, in person or virtually. [I tried to add them to my blogroll on this page but couldn’t.] Please take a peek – in the past week or two I’ve discovered treasures for my own aggregator such as HadashiWorld [how can I resist topics such as marriage, the German language and interracial relationships?!] Lassa [quote: If you made it this far, you’re my new best friend. ] Contentious [Let’s Put Press Releases Out of Their Misery], HERStory [ quote: I think it’s just because I’m an unrepentant South Asian. ] and Mandajuice [quote: I can imagine a time in the future when my baby is no longer nursing and he doesn’t ask me for it eleventy billion times a day. And I’m not sure if I’ll be happy or sad about it. ] I’ve also enjoyed what Lisa Williams and others have published as dailyblogher tagged posts: thanks!

Another reason is this discussion, sure to be a hot debate: Play by today’s rules – or change the game? My opinion? Still in process, but I’m not sure we need to do either. How about both? What can we discover as creative options, between all of us in the room that morning?! I’m excited to see! Caterina Fake’s closing session should be a don’t-miss-this too. Add to create conversationsasons the hundreds of attendees to meet and share stories in large and small ways. Plus, the Blogging 101 session Susan Mernit and I are leading [more on this later] – sure to be helpful and fun for all!

The best part about conferences is that you can anticipate some of the fun – and the Blogher organizers have done an excellent job providing details, thinking of ideas and making plans – and yet much of it remains mystery, to be determined, discovered and enjoyed for the wild ride it is!

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What would you want to know if you were beginning to blog?

July 21st, 2005 · 2 Comments

As Susan said: What tips would you want to know if you were just beginning to blog? What lessons did you learn the hard way? Or as Elisa phrased it on the Blogher blog, remember when you were new to blogging, feeling both excited and overwhelmed: what would have been the best advice to receive back then? Susan and I are hoping to create a blogging 101 session at Blogher that is both precise and concise, one that outlines and pinpoints the must-knows with just-the-right helpful resources and ideas. Experienced bloggers please share your stories! Please comment on this post, at either of the other two links or send me email [harrowme AT yahoo.com]. Thanks!

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Ever seen someone play the conch shell?

July 20th, 2005 · No Comments

Clave Con Jazz provided island (as in Caribbean, not Bainbridge) salsa music – and dance lessons! – tonight at the third Waterfront Park Concert of 2005. The lead singer warned us that the band would make the last piece a memorable one. The finale’s secret? Conch shell! I don’t think I’d ever seen someone play the conch shell. If you’d like to take a look and listen yourself, please see this short video clip I posted (testing out vimeo this time [found via Michael Hansom]) Apologies for the bumpy view – I was trying to dance too! Below is a still picture – notice the player’s hand moving inside the shell to change the tones while he blows through the conch! Thanks to Clave Con Jazz (here’s the best link I could find for them: scroll down the page) for a fun concert tonight!

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I am mortal.

July 19th, 2005 · 9 Comments

Last night I was in the ER. A sharp pain had started in my abdomen around lunch time and when it didn’t disappear by dinner, despite extra-strength Tylenol, I decided to call my doctor. The nurse on the phone told me I should go to the emergency room since I could have appendicitis. I packed a bag of tolietries, grabbed a backpack of books for the girls and headed to the van with my family.

I had never had to go to the emergency room or seek urgent medical care, except for one incident of early labor with my second pregnancy. The possibility of appendicitis frightened me. Given the location and sensation of the pain, I could have a number of problems. Sure, I let my mind run away with me, but what if I was seriously ill? What if I needed surgery? What if something was really wrong with me?

After the girls went into the van, Ted cautioned me to be calm in front of the kids and not mention the possibility of surgery. I was trying, but he was right. They were already frightened and panicking at the mention of an operation for Mommy. I felt sorry and selfish.

As we headed down the highway to the hospital, I tried to be calm. What if these were the last moments I had with my family? Yes, I was quite possibly overreacting.

But as I watched the trees pass by the window, the lines of yellow and white on black, the signs marking miles on the highway, I realized for the first time, as I never had before, my own mortality. Someone I love was in an accident this weekend and this has also been on my mind the past few days. As we were driving, I remembered Tom Guarriello’s post on the fragility and uncertainty of human life and the sad situations he had seen. I felt surrounded by the truth of our brevity as human beings. Someday my number would be up. Someday it will be my turn to die. Someday I will say goodbye to my family, whether or not I actually get to say the words.

How do I want to spend the rest of my life? No matter how long or short it is, it is still mine to spend, until the end.

I started praying, asking God for forgiveness, asking Jesus for mercy. Ways I had failed to love God and others, mistakes made in my spiritual life, wasted time, I confessed with regrets, hoping, begging for more chances to grow.

The pain ached, as if I were in early labor. But I turned around from my seat and smiled at my girls. Sometimes smiles are superficial. But I wasn’t pretending. I was grateful for them. As a mother I had to be brave for my girls. My first duty was to my daughters. If these were my last moments as their mother, how did I want them to remember this? I needed to help them.

Our two-year old was young enough to be oblivious. She was enjoying the tape of children’s music playing in the van. I remember her big happy smile. “I like this song!” The other two seemed more affected, but I tried to talk with them, explaining that I might need an x-ray, attempting to show them by my own example that everything was all right with the world. My own faith is fragile and weak, and my emotions were a mess last night, however I know that God is in the center and at the core of all of life. Everything is all right. Always. Some way. Somehow.

I’ll fast forward the rest of the story. Ted and the girls waited for me for three hours while I sat in the exam room, staring at the gray curtain pulled around me from the ceiling. Blood and urine were tested, my body was poked and examined to eliminate various possibilities (dooce’s post yesterday was an appropriate one for me). Although the nurse on the phone had mentioned an x-ray and so did the ER nurse practitioner at first, it seemed that imaging wasn’t necessary after all. I had an IV for the first time and medicine was delivered through the tube in my arm. When the pain went away, that seemed to eliminate the serious possibilities. I was sent home with a note stating my diagnosis of Abdominal Pain of Unknown Cause.

I’m grateful! I’m thankful for my patient husband, Ted, and our daughters who waited for me. I’m glad my nurse practitioner was so helpful, explaining everything. I’m thankful nothing major was wrong. And I’m thankful for Dooce and her sense of humor again in her timely post yesterday that gave me a smile in the midst of the ER: As I lay there, feet perched in horse stirrups stamped with ZOLOFT ZOLOFT ZOLOFT, I thought to myself, please. Take your time. This, this is just so lovely.

The tests and monitoring though revealed a couple concerns that I need to pursue with my primary care physician next week. I feel frustrated. I guess I still think of myself as young. I think of myself as healthy. I eat well, for the most part. I exercise. How can I have problems?

I’ve lost a brother and others I’ve loved in life. I spent much of my childhood seeing my brother sick, watching him in the hospital, knowing he could die. Yet it was something else to meet the possibility of my own mortality for the first time face to face.

I cried last night. I was tired. I was exhausted after days of busyness and dehydration, summer weather finally arriving in Seattle. I cry easily and it is a way I react to stressful situations, my response, my release of feelings. I didn’t want to go to the ER. That evening, we had planned to take our other car to the shop. We’ve been planning to service the other car for months and we had finally made the appointment. I wanted to get that task done. However, I knew I didn’t feel well enough to drive an hour to the shop. I felt guilty that Ted and the girls had to wait for me hours and hours. I kept wondering how they were doing. I worried how much this trip to the ER would cost, and what effect it would have on our future applications for health insurance. Alone in my exam room I finally had a chance to rest and let down after intense days spent running to activities against a ticking clock.

Sure I was scared. But I think I may have also been mourning my youth. Yes, some people are sick from birth, like my brother. However, I guess I assumed I would be healthy until I was older.

Ronni at Time Goes By posted a refreshing essay last week (possibly written by Anne LaMott) that’s stayed in my mind, especially this paragraph.

And I know the truth that l am not going to live forever, and this has set me free. Eleven years ago, when my friend Pammy was dying at the age of 37 we went shopping at Macy’s. She was in a wheelchair, with a wig and three weeks to live. I tried on a short dress and came out to model it for Pammy. I asked if she thought it made me look big in the thighs, and she said, so kindly, “Annie? You just don’t have that kind of time.” I live by this story.

Recently I also discovered Rhymes with Drowning, a blog written by a man who lost the love of his life to an unusual cancer last year. She was 35. His words leave me without words and remind me of truth, perhaps especially because his family is young, like ours.

I’m not going to live forever. This morning may be my last. Or I could have another ten thousand sunrises to see. Either way, I now know I need to take better care of myself. My first duty is to my daughters. But that also means taking care of their mommy, not ignoring her needs for theirs. I don’t want my days to be overloaded with what shouldn’t be important or merit even a moment of consideration. There’s both an urgency and a peace in me. What do I want to see painted on the canvas or sung in the song that is my existence here? Who will know I loved them? What will last from my life? I’d been planning to examine myself and yesterday’s emergency room trip only intensified my desire to simplify and focus. How am I spending the hours I’ve been given? What is it I want to do before I die? What am I wasting with worry about silly things? The clock is ticking. I just don’t have that kind of time.

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