Posts under ‘Writing’

I’m a blogger lover, you’re a blogger lover

We should love each other’s bloggers? Each other’s blogs?

I recently read the Tonic post, “Five Ways to Help Your Favorite Bloggers,” and it’s right on.

Here’s the gist: Blogging is hard sometimes.

It’s solitary. It involves looking at a computer screen. It may or may not be hot, because your favorite blogger is too cheap to turn on the shoddy air conditioner in her NYC home office.

I’m a blogger lover, you’re a blogger lover

Write round, baby, write round

You know something good has happened when someone other than your mom is reaching out to see if you’re dead, survived only by one neglected blog.

Here’s an email from Kazzy in Australia, whom I’m imagining is like a more Crocodile Dundee version of The Fonz:

Six days and no blog, just wondering if you are on holidays or something big is happening for you? I’m not a Tweeter, so don’t keep up with you there. I await a post.

My response:

Write round, baby, write round

Is being a writer a realistic job choice?

Someone asked me the question in the title on Formspring in the middle of the I Am A Super Woman head blogger search. I didn’t answer it until last night.

I have mixed feelings sometimes about my career of choice. I say career of choice, because I know I can do a lot of things. In the nearly five years since I graduated college, I’ve held a few jobs in different sectors and industries.

I hate the idea of choosing a college major or dream merely because it’s realistic. It’s like always wearing a helmet or waiting until you have something in writing - it disrupts the rhythm of just doing. Sometimes when you have too much to fall back on, you fall back too easily.

Is being a writer a realistic job choice?

My tomato plants speak wit a Brooklyn accent

My blogging gig with Burpee Home Gardens is still on, because I’ve managed not to kill all my plants.

Herbs, yes. But who needs herbs?

This guy is not just happy to see you.

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He’s bursting with vitality, yo.

My tomato plants speak wit a Brooklyn accent

Life Lessons or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Blog

As far as I know, today is the last day of the I Am A Super Woman blogger search. I may not have to write again unless I get the job, a thought that makes me feel funny. I’ve been on the site for six weeks - I wanna stay there!

My latest post is about what I’ve learned from the experience. You’ll notice I left out “Keep the price tags on your fancy ball gown so you can return that thing and buy a new iPhone.”

Here’s an excerpt:

All I ever needed to know, I learned or reaffirmed through the IAAS blogger search.

If you want to get fancy, you could say blogging is a metaphor for life. And in the blog of life, we all just want to write with the best words and clip art. We want to be read and commented on without screwing up the HTML too badly.

I’ve blogged at IAAS for six weeks and two days now. Here are six things (one for each week) that the experience has taught me:

1) The journey of a thousand miles blog posts begins with a single step post.

It’s all about juggling high hopes/effort and realistic expectations. Don’t focus so much on the big picture that you miss the close-up pieces. Every day is an opportunity to grow and reflect. You need to take in the top 60 experience before you’re ready to handle being in the top three.

Read the rest at I Am A Super Woman. Give it five stars, leave a comment, listen to Lenny Kravitz!

And you still have a chance to tell the selection committee why I deserve the job. Just say I’m awesome. I’ll love you forever.

Life Lessons or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Blog

Vacations that give back

Today’s post on I Am A Super Woman is about forgoing the typical vacation in favor of voluntourism, a vacation where you go to another part of the world and volunteer.

I spent two of my college spring breaks volunteering in NYC, and it changed my life.

Would you be a voluntourist? Please read the post, rate, and comment.

Vacations that give back

R to the ead to the my to the posts

superwoman

It’s not too late to support me in my quest to be the head blogger at I Am A Super Woman.

Mosey on over there to check out/rate/and comment on my latest entries:

A profile of everyday Super Women, including April, a friend who works at one of the few clinics in Texas that provides abortions and full reproductive health services. (You’ve probably deduced by now that I’m pro-woman and pro-choice. I’m so proud of April. I think she’s doing an important thing, and I know everyone at her workplace deals with a lot of unnecessary craziness).

In honor of Father’s Day, I asked random men in NYC what advice they’d give their daughters. Awww!

R to the ead to the my to the posts

Gretchen Rubin on making happiness work

Awhile back, I read The Happiness Project Or, Why I Spent a Year Trying to Sing in the Morning, Clean My Closets, Fight Right, Read Aristotle, and Generally Have More Fun by Gretchen Rubin.

Long title, I know. Focus on the first words - The Happiness Project. Rubin went through books of scientific research, tips, and theories and tested them out. It changed her life.

It’s hard to schedule interviews, but I had to give it a shot for I Am A Super Woman. I was elated when Rubin emailed me back right away and said, “Call me at five.” She was so smart and approachable. One of the best interviews ever!

Here’s an excerpt:

IAAS: The thing I’ve been thinking about most since reading your blog and book is the concept of drift. Some people call it angst or a quarter- or mid-life crisis, but it’s not always so dramatic. Drift is when you have some expectation of what you’re supposed to do with your life. Maybe you accomplish these goals, but when you get there, you realize you’re not happy.

Gretchen Rubin: I got a huge response when I wrote about drift. Even emails from people saying, “I’m finishing my Ph.D, and I’m in drift.” The idea that drift is an easy solution isn’t true. People are accomplishing really difficult things they could be proud of, but finding that they’re in drift. They’re not happy.

I think people go into drift, because they haven’t asked “What do I want? What am I good at?” For a lot of people, it’s difficult and painful to acknowledge what it is they really want to do. One of the reasons people do things like go to law school is that it postpones that kind of confrontation and soul searching. They think they’ll pursue school, have more options and figure it out later. It doesn’t work like that.

Gretchen Rubin on making happiness work

Everyday Super Women: Krupali and Any

At I Am A Super Woman, we believe that every woman is a Super Woman.

Every woman.

Whether she knows it or not.

Whether you recognize her name and face or not.

Whether she knows all the words to “Lady in Red” or not.

Everyday Super Women: Krupali and Any

More blogging where that came from

You know what to do: Rate. Comment. Conquer.

Please?

My latest batch of blog posts:

Free skincare products — the good stuff! Cheap birth control, music, and magazines. These are a few of my favorite deals. Tell me about yours.

Would you wear washable, recyclable pads and menstrual cups in the name of being green? Or is that too extreme icky treehugger for you?

I interviewed the inspiring Tammy Tibbetts of She’s the First, an media campaign that supports girls’ education in developing countries. A wonderful cause with such smart women behind it!

More blogging where that came from