I revived my blog as of late!
But, that’s sort of self-evident, no? You’re reading about me
reviving my blog on my revived blog, so you already knew it was revived, right?
Anyway – the revived blog. I love blogging!
I’m treating this Blogger blog as I did my old LiveJournal
back in the day. Man, oh man, I miss that sweet-ass LiveJournal (LJ). I wish the
Russians didn’t get their vodka-soaked mitts on it. Things have changed since my
LJ days, circa 2009, but pre-vodka-soaked mitts, LiveJournal was my ambrosia. LJ
- and blogging - satisfied a desire I never knew I had: writing, with the possibility
of somebody reading it.
I’ve always written. Prior to LJ, however, I never felt that
anyone needed to or should read my
shit. I write for only myself and had been content doing just that.
That all changed, though, when a friend wheedled me into
creating an LJ account. I resisted, I really did! I was on my high-horse about
blogging – a horse that was standing on a pedestal that was balanced on high-wire
that was strung across two really tall skyscrapers. But, like many a-time that
I’ve been on my high damned horse, I fell off spectacularly - down, down, down
in the most ungraceful and comical manner. I eventually loved LJ, eventually
became addicted. I embraced blogging and writing for public consumption and
encouraged others to do so too.
It was fantastic! Back in those halcyon LJ days, we “bloggers”
wrote. LJ was simply a text focused blog - a published word document, sans even
Microsoft Word’s measly bells and whistles. LJ seemed to be full of if not
writers, then creative types who enjoyed words at least. My kind of people, you
know. Most posts scattered over LJ were long, journal-esque, autobiographical
incident essays. I delighted in the reading of the mundane and the
extraordinary of strangers’ lives. Sure, there was the occasional photo or
picture that accompanied a post to illustrate or support an element, but LJ was
first and foremost a writer’s
community.
But then, I am ashamed to admit, I abandoned LJ. Once those
aforementioned Russian mitts came along, the new LJ Overlord made site changes
I didn’t like. Coupled with the alluring, meteoric rise of Facebook, LJ lost
its shine for me and I stopped writing lengthy LJ posts. I incrementally migrated
on over to Facebook — along with most of the world— and butchered my journal-esque
writing down to status-length updates.
It was a dismal period in my life; a hole had formed in my
spirit, and a tear had rent my heart. I was clueless and didn’t immediately attribute
my discomfort to the lack of blogging. Now that I’m wiser, I realize that not
blogging was wearing me down. Writing is cathartic for me. Writing provides a
venue that offers one of the few times I ever feel heard… even if nobody reads my words. I get my thoughts out,
uninterrupted and in an organized manner - a hard feat to accomplish with a
human listener. The computer screen is a good listener – better than 90 percent
of the people I know and talk to in real life. Blogging on LJ afforded me all
this solace, but, like a turncoat, I abandoned my old friend for something
fast, cheap and easy. (I do that sometimes. Don’t we all?)
Anyway, the blogging itch recently and thankfully resurfaced, and I weaseled my way back into the world of blogging by way of Blogger, as
many LJ emigrants have. And so, I’ve recently drafted a few posts and
experienced that glorious rush of pressing that “publish” button!
Blogger feels like home, but, I want more. I want to not
only write and press “publish,” I want to recreate that wonderful fertile and
inspiring LJ writer’s community I was a part of in the past. In hopes of recreating
such a community, I searched for blogs to follow. As I started to poke around
Blogger, however, I realized that bloggers don’t do what I do anymore; they
don’t do what LJ-ers in the past have done. I realized that my way of blogging
has become a dinosaur.
How is my writing Paleolithic? Well, I still write (demonstrably)
long, (Footnote 4) autobiographical incident essays. (Footnote 1) My posts are essentially dramatized
diary entries, and I simply adore this form of writing. Firstly, this type of blogging
creates a record of my life – something to leave behind for others and to jog
my memory when I get older. (Footnote 3) Such posts offer me the glorious a chance to
turn my lil’ ole life into something cinematic or dare I say literary. I also hope,
of course, that essay entries are entertaining to readers.
However, as I’m exploring this new LJ-free blogosphere and trying
to find like-minded essayists, I’ve discovered you can’t go back home. Blogs
today!? I shake my fist in your general direction! My biggest gripes are: 1) That a majority of today’s blog posts are pictorial
posts 2) The proliferation of infernal “themes” and 3) Shameless content
regurgitation. So much has changed in the modern blogosphere that I can only detect the faintest specter of my beloved LJ.
First of all, it seems the writing aspect of blogging is gone, lost, disappeared, dead. Blogging
has, heartbreakingly enough, morphed from writing into photo sharing. If I
wanted to look at an online photo set of an obviously staged morning starring
you and your spawn making and eating waffles, I’d do just that. But I really don’t want to do that. If you must stage
a waffle-eating tableaux with your spawn, I’d rather read about your morning instead. I’d like to experience it through
the magic of your words and discover what was going on in that pneumatic
head of yours. I’d delight in a post explaining how you got irritated because Little
Andrew is simply trash at timing those waffles. His waffles are burnt and
misshapen; they came out like shit, and you have to force a blog-worthy smile
as you shove these shards of burnt dough ino your pie-hole. To add to the crap
morning, friggen Tommy then spilled the entire bottle of real Vermont Maple syrup all over the cat. Poor Willow spent the
day licking off the sticky goo from her fur and directing the dirtiest look a kitten
can muster at asshole Andrew. See - that there’s golden fodder for an
essay! But, instead, all I see are endless, staged, over-wrought close-up
pictures of Andrew holding miraculously non-burnt (ie: your) waffles, perfectly
posed in your overpriced kitchen. Le sigh.
I must add that I, of course, appreciate photography, and
especially creative and evocative photographs captured through a photographer’s
keen eye. I even appreciate when a blog features one or two photos to supplement
a written blog post. However, a post composed merely of interminable pictures of the
same crap is not worth my time. Blogs are stuffed with endless pictures of
crafts or food or your kids blowing bubbles or freaking fashion selfies. Modern
bloggers can’t even post a recipe without photographing the damned eggs and
bottle of vanilla they used to make their damned cookies. Isn’t that type of photo-vomit
what Instagram, Tumblr and Facebook exists for? As a venue to post your
endless, crappily edited and curated (Footnote 2) photos?
In conclusion, Blogging used to be a writer’s medium - for
sharing thoughts, words and stories. And I loved
it. But, the essence of Blogging has changed since the early to mid-aughts, and
I mourn the death of what once was. When cruising the disappointing Blogger, I long to be
enveloped by words. MOAR WORDS. Essays! Life. Words.
Apparently my thoughts
on this matter are, um, prolific. I’m going to break up this post into two,
maybe three, parts because, hot damn, do I still have a lot more to say. Stay tuned
for Part II shortly.
Footnotes:
(1) Screw writing fiction, you know? That shit’s hard. How
the hell does one make dialogue sound convincing and not corny? Impossible! I’ll
stick to IRL-based writing, thanks.
(2) Please people
- be kind to your audience. Curate your muther-trucking photos!! Don’t post
every snapshot you took of Tommy wearing your mom’s brazier. Repetition
diminishes effectiveness.
(3) Sweet Baby Louise, have you seen Iris starring Judi Dench? It’s a beautiful film about the cutest
old writer couple, who may have existed in real life. Dench plays Iris. Iris is
worldly and vivacious and creative and intelligent and has had the most
beautiful, long, yet complicated, relationship with her devoted husband. They
live in a writer’s house and live the writer’s life. And then Iris develops Alzheimer’s
and I can’t. Iris can’t remember
words or the novels she’s written or where she lives or her husband. It’s gut-wrenching – probably the saddest move I’ve
ever seen in my entire life. And of course, Iris
gave me a phobia, and I’m now petrified about losing my memories whether it be
through Alzheimer’s, or a car accident, or whatever. If you don’t have your memories, you don’t
have your life. Poof – it’s gone. You’re
gone. You have nothing and you cease to exist. So, Iris is the reason I must document everything and may or may not
attach ridiculous sentiments and meaning to physical objects, ticket stubs,
programs, brochures, wrappers, photos, gifts, etc.
(4) Hey guess what, I know my posts are wayyy to long, and I. Do. Not. Care. I don't! This venue allows me to get out every thought, every angle of every thought, I've ever had about a topic and I revel in that opportunity. Like I said, I feel heard here, and I don't care if my writing isn't commercial; it's too damn long-winded, but I accept that. If I were writing commercially, you can be damned sure I'd never write such lengthy posts, but this ain't no media company - thank heavens.