Change the record!

Sometimes I don’t know how I am feeling until something happens to shift my mood. Like this morning. I had Radio Four on in the background, as I often do, when I muted it to listen to the song linked to today’s Daily Create.

It’s such a happy song, and as I listened I felt my mood shift. Suddenly rather than crying from the stresses and troubles of the world, I felt like crying from relief. As the lyrics say “I’ve looked at life from both sides now”.

So now I have switched off the radio, with its depressing reporting, and switched on my happy music.

Well, I might not be on top of the world, but the sun is shining and it’s Friday!

Note to self – ignore Radio 4 and tune into DS106 radio

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Twisting the Kaleidoscope

Today’s Daily Create asks us to

Imagine you find a kaleidoscope. You put it up to your eye, and point it to the sky. You twist it into the light.

What do you see?

Use either story or poem or words or image or art to bring us into the colorful world of your tumbling tube.

I knew I wanted to use a flower to create an image, so I found this one of an iris I took some years ago

sybil


sybil flickr photo by NomadWarMachine shared under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-SA) license

Cropped it to a square and then uploaded it to a Kaleidoscope maker to create this image.

Kaleidoscope iris

Kaleidoscope iris flickr photo by NomadWarMachine shared under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-SA) license

Then I saw Kevin’s create, and nipped over to Lunapic to see what my image would look like as a gif. Here’s two – the first from the kaleidoscope image and the second from the original.

Posted in DailyCreate, DS106, Flowers, Photos | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Silent Sunday

53/365 Cherry Blossom


53/365 Cherry Blossom flickr photo by NomadWarMachine shared under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-SA) license

Posted in Flowers, Garden, Photos, Scotland, Silent Sunday | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Blogging Questions Challenge

Nobody’s asked me, but that’s never stopped me from having an opinion, so here goes.

Why did you start blogging in the first place?

I feel that I should say something deep or profound, but actually I can’t remember. I really started blogging regularly during #rhizo14 though, as that gave me a community to blog with and motivation to blog. So blame Dave.

What platform are you using to manage your blog and why do you use it?

WordPress. I know how to use it and I don’t know of anything better.

Have you blogged on other platforms before?

No, this is my first and only personal blog (though I am self-hosted thanks to Niall). All the institutional blogs I admin and have used are or have been WordPress. I did use Wikispaces a lot at one time though. I always much preferred wikis to blogs.

How do you write your posts?

It depends. Short posts are bashed out straight into the editing interface. I choose my Silent Sunday post every Saturday afternoon, and enjoy sifting through my week’s photos to find one to capture the spirit of that week. Longer posts are usually composed longhand, in dribs and drabs, with a fountain pen (I have many!) and lovely shimmery ink. I sometimes scrawl ideas on post-it notes and in the margins of other things I am writing. Sometimes I am in a meeting, watching TV, or reading a book when I get an idea I need to jot down to write around later. On sunny weekend afternoons I will pack a bag of pens and paper and sit in the back garden doodling and drafting something. And then, once I’ve written them, there’s the question of whether I should bother publishing them at all.

When do you feel most inspired to write?

Whenever I have the space to think. Sunny days (see above), boring Zoom meetings when I can get away with turning off my camera, when I am working with inspiring and interesting people who wake up my creative processes. Just before tea on a day Niall is cooking it. Whenever I am allowed to type or write (having two cats can be a barrier to these!). When I am on a long train journey or waiting for a plane. When I am amused, inspired or annoyed. When I want to know what I think. When I want to understand. When I am part of a community who are talking and blogging. After rhizo14/15, it was the CLMooc collaborative that inspired me, and of course the Daily Create/DS106 people. When I am walking, cleaning or knitting.

Do you normally publish immediately after writing, or do you let it simmer a bit?

I usually press publish as soon as it’s all in WordPress, then immediately spot typos and edit it. But it might be months simmering in my head and scrawled on bits of paper before it gets into a form that I can type up (see how I write, above and my post about being good enough).

What’s your favorite post on your blog?

I like my post about ticky-tacky feedback quite a lot, partly because I enjoy writing about things that give me ear worms and Little Boxes is a great track (and oh my, I love that uke!). I also enjoyed writing the one about Cargo Cults – I learnt a lot as I wrote that. I also learnt loads by writing my post about vicarious learning.

Any future plans for the blog?

Just to keep on blogging, and to return to more written posts. Heck, I miss writing long posts. And to add a blog roll. I am sure I had one once, but it’s not there now.

Who will participate next?

I waited a while to write this post because my husband, Niall Barr, was moving his blog to a new home. So over to him. I’d also love to see my CLMOOC pal Sheri join us.

Because Niall asked: I’ve been tracing this challenge back, and as far as I can see it starts here: https://blog.avas.space/bear-blog-challenge/

Posted in DS106, Writing | Tagged , , , , | 6 Comments

My Safe Haven

Today’s Daily Create asks us to make a collage of my safe havens. Most of mine are in the West of Scotland, either on or within spitting distance of the Isle of Mull. I grabbed a few from my albums to make a collage, I could have chosen hundreds.

I was brought up in the Peak District, which is stunningly beautiful. With a Cornish father I spend yearly holidays in Cornwall, which is God’s own county. I moved to the Isle of Wight as a teenager – and though I didn’t appreciate it at the time, now I see how lucky I was. But Scotland has my heart. Glasgow is my home and the Scottish scenery wins hands down for me.

Here’s some pics from Mull, with Strontian bay in the middle.

Mull and Strontian

Mull and Strontian flickr photo by NomadWarMachine shared under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-SA) license

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Silent Sunday


45/365 Sir Walter Pigeon

45/365 Sir Walter Pigeon flickr photo by NomadWarMachine shared under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-SA) license

Posted in Photos, Scotland, Silent Sunday | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

Silent Sunday

38/365 Dusk at the Three Craws
38/365 Dusk at the Three Craws flickr photo by NomadWarMachine shared under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-SA) license

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Anti Spam Poem

Today’s Daily Create asks us to visit Kevin’s blog and make a poem out of the anti-spam words that you need to enter in order to post a comment.

Amusingly, Kevin has moved his blog to a new home over the last few days, and the new blog doesn’t ask for these words. So I stayed with the old one and refreshed the page a few times to get this:

Felt chop?
Pleats do.
Bidder ha?
Shrews mew

Well, that’s better than some of my own attempts to rhyme!

Posted in DailyCreate, DS106, Poetry | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Silent Sunday

Winter sun


Winter sun flickr photo by NomadWarMachine shared under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-SA) license

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Easy Writing

Nearly there


Nearly there flickr photo by NomadWarMachine shared under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-SA) license

People often tell me that they wished they found it as easy to write as I do – because, they think, it’s obvious that writing comes naturally to me. And, actually, they’re right – I do find writing easy. Whether I’m typing at a computer or (more often) writing with one of my many fountain pens, I don’t have a problem getting words onto paper.

What is much more difficult is letting go of those words. Often, once I’ve written a blog post I don’t think it’s worth publishing – because I write in order to understand what I am thinking, and once I know I don’t need it any more, and I don’t think anyone else will find it interesting. Other times the words I have written don’t feel like the right words to publish – probably because I was ranting to myself as I was writing (which is good, as it helps me to write the frustration and anger out of my head).

So, yeah – writing’s easy. But writing the right words – that’s harder.

Posted in Learning, Writing | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments