Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts

2023 in Review: Blogging and a Bit More

I wrote so much more in 2023 compared with 2022. Setting up some recurring themes and columns gave me structure that I stuck with, and my morning poetry reading practice gave me fodder for a variety of collections. I wrote only three posts in 2021, not at all in 2020.

We live with the presence of COVID with few precautions now, and I still haven't had it. Thank you, scientists who developed the vaccine and boosters! I still mask on airplanes where I'm sitting in close proximity to strangers for hours, or when I'm around someone else who is masking, figuring they're immunocompromised or live with someone who is and I can provide that additional level of protection. I write this because I don't want to forget in future years that it was still present, still killing people, still affecting our lives. 

I'm still teleworking nearly 100% of the time, with a few more in-person meetings with my work team as it grows. That growth doesn't show up in my blogging since this is all personal, but it's been amazing and wonderful to recruit so much talent this year, with a few more positions to fill in the new year. 

This is all thanks to the passage a couple of years back of the Climate Commitment Act, which has made it possible for the Washington state legislature to invest far more in clean, green active transportation along with transit, rail, ferries, and alternative fuels. I'm motivated in my work every day by the knowledge that the planet is genuinely on fire and we have to take action if we are ever to bend that deadly curve, and also by my knowledge that the number of people dying on our roads in crashes is also going up and we need to bend that deadly curve too. The work I lead offers solutions to both of these enormous challenges, along with giving more people access to the joy and freedom of bicycling and the community connections of walking or rolling. I feel so lucky to be always doing work I believe in.

January: I kicked off the year with a preview of the bike events and challenges for the year, Reasons to Ride in 2023: A Forecast of Biking to Come. I was still doing physical therapy for the wrist I broke in September 2022 but was finally able to get on my bike. Living in Olympia means my winter riding has more to do with rain than with snow, but either way Riding Always Makes Me Happy. Yes, Always. The end of January brought another of our now-routine weekend walks to the farmers' market and a happy discovery: Walking in January: Of Gloves and Poetry

February: Over on my bike blog I decided to start re-upping some of the older posts that still resonate for me and that aren't too dated. Hence Riding Down Memory Lane: February, which launched a monthly series that highlights that month's bike events and my old posts from that month. I retooled some of a keynote speech I made last fall into a column, How Am I Going to Get There? Why We Need Each Other. In one of those cross-fertilizations the world wide web makes possible, a prompt from an online community led to sharing a photo of my grandma's old rocker in a different online space, which came together in The Rocker. I've written so much about bicycling over the years that I decided my January post on my walks should become the first in a series to celebrate the experiences of moving more slowly. Knowing I'd be writing about my walks led me to greater mindfulness and attention to small details that showed up in Walking in February: Of Woods and Water. This one commemorates a great weekend trip with friends to Lake Quinault, and I'll be going back. So, so beautiful.

March: Continuing the events/blog post review series on Bike Style, I published Riding Down Memory Lane: March. Harking back to the bikespedition posts I used to produce when I lived in Spokane, I produced what I hope is the first of many pieces about places to ride in Olympia, Olympia Bikespedition: Poetry and Art, Eastside EditionWalking in March: Of Woods and Work had me in a different forest than my February walk, still appreciating the beauties large and small all around me in the park near our home. I'd been collecting links to poems I encountered in my morning reading and saving up until I had enough for “Safe passage through countless intersections”: A Baker’s Dozen of Transportation Poems

April: You guessed it—Riding Down Memory Lane: April kicked off the month. A trip to DC for a conference resulted in Walking in April: Of Multimodal Miles and Museums. Later that month, some proof that social media may be dying but isn't dead, since some folks on both the dying bird site (Twitter) and Mastodon made contributions to Hashtag Bikes, a round-up of (some of) the many, many hashtags bikey folks use when talking about our favorite invention online. I had the fun of being a co-leader with friend Stefanie of my neighborhood's ride to join the Earth Day Market Ride. The ride is organized by Duncan Green, long-time staff at Intercity Transit whom I first met back when I worked at Washington Bikes. I commemorated this fun little ride with Biking in Olympia: Earth Day Market Ride.

May: Riding Down Memory Lane: May had to happen since May is National Bike Month. Maybe I should have published a round-up of bike poems to celebrate; instead it was “Do Not Drive Through, This Poem’s In The Way”: Transportation Poems Keep Rolling In. A conference in Seattle (yes, my job involves going to lots and lots of conferences) led to Walking in May: Of Downtowns and Dancing.

June: More bike events and older posts in Riding Down Memory Lane: June. This was a prolific month for writing, or at least I published more posts than usual. Some posts take longer to develop because they involve more research so I may start in one month and publish in a later month, as with South Sound Short & Sweet Bike Tour. I haven't gone on this tour; I was laying out the options and inviting comments from people who've lived and ridden in this part of the state longer than I and who might have advice I need to make it better (or ditch the idea). The poetry collections on this site carry more of my personal thoughts than the ones on Bike Style. Making Soup: A Pot Full of Poems is another post that had been growing over time.  I had fun with Choose Your Own Adventure: Creating your Version of an Athlon and learned a few new Greek words along the way. A bike ride on Sweetie, my road bike that has been fairly neglected since I got Zelda the e-bike, led to Riding Thoughts: Privilege Is a Tailwind, which I actually recorded as a draft on my phone while I rode so I wouldn't lose the idea. (I have a bone induction headset that comes in very handy at a time like this.) I really can't stop with the poetry collections, hence Yes, Even More Transportation Poems. I wrapped the month with Walking in June: Of Habits and Herons

July: Riding Down Memory Lane: July kicked off another month that wasn't only posts in the series I'd started. Writing about my walking every month led to Why I Walk. Going through my bookcases and looking at all the books I've collected over the years resulted in Bike Books I Recommend: Policy Edition, along with some drafts of posts on other themes I found in going through a good-sized collection. We kept walking, of course, so of course I wrote Walking in July: Of Findings and Feathers. I kept reading poetry and found More Poems on the Bike Rack to share.

August: This was a delightful month! Riding Down Memory Lane: August kicked it off. Not sure it was a great idea to start doing the same kind of look-back at older posts on this blog that was I doing on Bike Style, but I did: Reruns: August Posts Worth Revisiting. I highlighted a ride I was planning to do later in the month hoping to get more folks to register: Wheeling Sea to Sound. Since my Bike Style blog is evolving to include some pieces on transportation generally I reposted Why I Walk there. So much is (always) going on in the world that I had yet another poetry round-up, We Are the Ones We've Been Waiting For: Poems for Activists and Advocates. I celebrated the freedom bicycling gives me in Setting My Own Pace. At work we were in the early phase of research for a new program and getting a lot of questions about it so we shared what little we could in Hold onto your handlebars, we’ll soon charge ahead with e-bike programs, co-written with our great summer intern Brooke Nelson. And then it was time for that wonderful bike ride! I headed to Port Angeles for Wheeling Sea to Sound, Day OneWheeling Sea to Sound, Day Two, and Wheeling Sea to Sound, Day Three. Ride organizer Ian Mackay and crew put together an amazing experience! I wrapped up the month with Walking in August: Of Sparkles and Shorelines

September: I guess June, July and August wore me out. This was a light month with Riding Down Memory Lane: September on Bike Style, Reruns: September Posts Worth Revisiting here, and Walking in September: Of Berries and Bunnies

October: I got my blogging mojo back thanks to one of my favorite bike "challenges". Before that, though, Riding Down Memory Lane: October and Reruns: October Posts Worth Revisiting. And then, drum roll please....#Coffeeneuring Is Rolling! I did the very first coffeeneuring and have kept trying over the years, as I tallied up in Coffeeneuring 2011-2022: My Track Record for Bike Rides to Coffee Just Because. Another conference, this one in Kansas City, Missouri, and a research project I signed up for that involves (surprise!) taking regular breaks for short walks produced Walking in October: Of Travel and Timers. So okay, if I'm walking a lot and writing about it, no surprise that I published Walking Poems. All that walking should help me stay healthy, right? But the clock keeps ticking and the calendar pages keep flipping by, so as I headed toward my November birthday I ended this month with It Beats the Alternative: Poems on Growing Older. This was also the month I moved into a temporary AirBnB set-up so our home remodeling could take place without my boss and alpha cat Mr. Stripey Pants "helping" by growling at the carpenters, and so I could work in peace while my sweetie stayed on site to address any questions. (Tiggs is my boss because cats don't have owners, they have staff.) My walks are taking off from a different place these days, still close to the beautiful Squaxin Park.

November: There really are bike events every single month of the year so I kept going with my bike even/old post boosting in Riding Down Memory Lane, along with Reruns: November Posts Worth Revisiting. The coffeeneuring challenge extends over two months so it wasn't until this month that I could write #Coffeeneuring 2023: Success! I often find myself singing (sometimes an earworm, sometimes a song I really like) as I ride, which led to Bike Song Playlist: Tunes to Get You Rolling. Yet another conference (and I haven't even mentioned them all here) shows up in Walking in November: Of Perspectives and Pavement. Unfortunately this particular conference gave me a souvenir I didn't want: a horrendous case of the flu that had me really sick for over 10 days and still hacking and coughing another week and a half as I slowly recovered.

December: And so, to the end of the calendar year, starting with Riding Down Memory Lane: December. Another poetry collection, The Quotidian: Poems Celebrating the Everyday, the Ordinary, because the "everyday" world is genuinely amazing and worthy of sonnets. Another round-up here, Reruns: December Posts Worth Revisiting, and another peek at my bookshelves with Bike Books I Recommend: Art, Cartoons, Deep Thoughts, Miscellany. A question in the grateful.org online community made me ponder What I Stand For. As with last year, I approached the winter solstice in search of ways of reflecting on "the dusk of the year" with Winter Solstice Readings and More. I'm still in that AirBnB while our home is transformed and it's going to be wonderful! In the meantime I'm appreciating the easy park access for my walks: Walking in December: Of Mosses and Memories

That brings us to this final post of the year, taking a look back and reflecting on what kind of writing I want to do in the new year on both blogs. I'll let the reruns run their course and I can promise you more poetry collections for sure. In between, who knows? Once we're back in the house with a beautiful new kitchen I have a feeling I may produce some recipes and thoughts on cooking. I can tell you there will be another post about Grandma's rocker.

On the other hand, at the end of my 2019 blogging in review post I was looking forward to a shiny new 2020 that was going to be full of wonderfulness. Maybe it's better not to lay too many long-range plans.

Reruns: September Posts Worth Revisiting

For me, September is the start of the new year. Even after many, many years past those school days, something about leaves changing color and the slant of the light heading into autumn makes me want new notebooks and pens, makes me want to write down a list of things I need for starting a new venture. 

Going back in time to reread posts I wrote five or ten years ago, on the other hand, reminds me of the path I've walked that makes me who I am today. It's a walk down memory lane rather than a gearing up for new vistas, and a chance to reflect on what's changed and what remains. Although come to think of it, going back to school each fall was also a chance to think about what I remembered and what I'd forgotten from the previous school year. I'm much better at geometry now that I work in transportation than I ever was in high school.

As with my rerun list from August, some links take you elsewhere in this blog, some to my bike/transportation writing at Bike Style Life, and some to Washington Bikes since I did a fair amount of blogging as the executive director. September is such a beautiful time of year to ride so my fall posts tend to be bike-oriented. 

Rereading these reminds me that some truths are timeless, like the fact that biking to a place makes other people talk to you about their biking and why they didn't bike to this particular meeting in hopes of being granted absolution.

Reruns: August Posts Worth Revisiting

Every so often I ride back down memory lane and revisit older posts. Some feel very fixed to a point in time, about a specific event or issue. Others hold up and seem worth revisiting even if some of the facts of my life have changed since I wrote them. The list also reveals that I don't write a post in every month of every year, which is just the way it is. 

Consider this an invitation to bring a few old items out into the light, dust them off, and hold them up for examination. If the older posts draw some comments that may be my cue to revisit a particular topic.

2022 in Review: Blogging and a Bit More

2022 was a pretty quiet year in my blogging life until the last few weeks. I lost my writing mojo in 2020 when the world went dark, other than the writing I needed to do for work, and only this fall and winter did I start making an effort to write again. 

We still have a global pandemic and people still die from COVID-19 and its Greek-numbered variants. I've been vaxxed, vaxxed again, boosted, boosted, variant-boosted, and I still mask in crowds, stores, and mass-transit settings. The number of people doing the same has dwindled; sometimes I'm the only person wearing a mask. 

I'm fortunate to have a job that lets me telework 100%. I do travel a bit, eat occasionally in restaurants, shop in stores (masked), and occasionally have a social life with people I know are vaccinated and maintaining precautions. We kept up the grocery online order/pick-up habit because dang, that's lower stress than going into a store full of lots of people coughing, especially this time of year with the "tripledemic" in the news (COVID-19, flu, respiratory syncytial virus, with that last one usually only producing mild cold-like symptoms but breaking out much more seriously this year, especially in children). 

I haven't had COVID-19 yet that I know of. (I do have my suspicions about a few days of feeling under the weather during which I kept testing negative after attending a big conference and receiving a lot of texts and emails from people I'd talked with saying they had tested positive.) Nor have I had the flu, a cold, or any other contagious respiratory illness. Masks are awesome.

You would think that with all this non-social time on my hands I would have done more writing. It's been more like "what do we binge next?" at our house, to be honest, plus a lot of books read. At any rate, here's 2022's short list:

In May I tried to plan ahead for a special round-number birthday celebration: Counting up the Years. This was a lot of fun, coming up with things I could do that don't all cost money; instead they cost the far more rare and precious elements of time and attention. 

As part of my job, I get to coordinate with the office of Washington Gov. Jay Inslee on the proclamation for Bike Month. I wrote Bike Everywhere Month Rolls in May for the WSDOT Blog to share that—especially happy to do that in the year in which the Washington state legislature passed the historic Move Ahead Washington package with record-breaking levels of investment in active transportation and public transportation and dedicated future funding from a new carbon tax. That same package included a directive to WSDOT, where I work, to apply Complete Streets principles on all our projects, which is game-changing in a way that adds to the value of those new investments.

Both my long list of fun ideas and my bike riding took a turn for the worse September 1 when this happened: Broken Wrist, Dang It! No Riding for a While.

Revisiting my bike blog revealed I had a problem numbering in the tens of thousands that required drastic action in subscriber management: So long, spammers (with apologies to real people). [Honestly, this one isn't worth reading; noting it only in the spirit of full disclosure of lessons learned.]

I was delighted to write State Active Transportation Plan receives multiple awards for the WSDOT Blog. The plan my team worked on starting in late 2018 got slowed by the pandemic, and became final toward the end of December 2021. Over the course of 2022 the plan won state, regional, and national awards. And for an extra dose of woohoo, the new Move Ahead Washington transportation investment package wrote the plan into state law as a resource for identifying gaps in walk/bike/roll networks to prioritize for investment.

In November when things got weird with Twitter, its potential demise looming, I grabbed the archive of the many faces of Tiggs in The Kitten Chronicles, Year OneThe Kitten Chronicles, Year Two, and The Kitten Chronicles, Year Three. I share a picture or funny story every so often, adding to a thread I started the day we brought him home. He can be a real poophead sometimes—ask me about the holes he's eaten into a lot of good merino wool clothing—but he's also brought joy.

Now I was on a roll and Twitter was still there to inspire a bike blog post: What’s in a Name? Acoustic or Analog, Regular or Traditional Bicycle*. (But just in case, I started up a Mastodon account, @BarbChamberlain@toot.community.)

I rolled right into wanting to do something to reflect on the National Day of Mourning (labeled Thanksgiving on the federal holiday calendar) and Native American Heritage Day and compiled a post I've had in the back of my mind for a couple of years now: “We Are Still Here”: Indigenous-focused Bicycle Programs.

I treat that long four-day weekend (since I get those days off) as a chance to do cooking that takes time, although I don't try to get an entire fancy meal on the table in one fell swoop. Thus I dove into Vegan Cranberry Caramelized Red Onion Orange Chutney Recipe Experimentation.

My morning routine includes reading poetry. Along the way I've encountered more than one poem that somehow involves bicycles. Hence, “I think/therefore/I ride.” A Bike Rack of Bicycle Poems. Like the Kitten Chronicles, that started as a Twitter thread. I invited suggestions, which yielded some of the poems in my post, and I'm continuing the thread so I expect another post in the future. I started a second thread of transportation poems and that's likely to result in a post as well.

Watching TV with my sweetie, a reference to the Internet of Things sparked some wordplay. We agreed that An Alphabet of Things seemed possible, and a while later I put it together with some of our thoughts and only one bit of research (to find the X word).

As the year drew to a close, I marked the winter solstice during my morning poetry-reading time, which led to Winter Solstice Readings.

My relationship with resolutions has varied over the years. This year I'm making it both fun and easy by thinking in terms of "joy snacks" in Commitment, Bite-Sized and Tasty. To help people get rolling by bike (or some other climate-friendly mode) whether or not they're "resolution types", I rounded up my blog posts over the years that discuss forming new habits, tracking/not tracking your riding, and the nature of commitment in New Year, New Mode(s).

The last day of the year held so many simple pleasures—joy snacks:

  • went for a long walk with my sweetheart on what proved to be a sunny, beautiful day after a week of rain, to downtown Olympia for a coffee date and a stop at Peacock Vintage; 
  • rode Zelda the e-bike on my first bike ride since breaking my wrist, woohoo!; 
  • baked a delicious vegan dish, a tofu/caramelized onion/mushroom filling in a pie dish lined with thin slices of yam; 
  • sewed trim onto the hem of a coat that Tiggs had chewed a hole in, hiding the mended spot and making the coat wearable;
  • did yoga, making today one of my "triathlons" (walk 5,000 steps or more, ride my bike, and do yoga all in a day); 
  • finished this blog post; and
  • enjoyed red wine and delicious chocolate at the end of the day while relaxing on the sofa.
A very satisfying way to close out 2022 indeed.




2019 Blogging in Review

January: I got the year rolling with a post listing various bike challenges, not all of which I intended to try to complete. Speaking of challenges, compiling a list of everything I read in 2018 was a self-imposed challenge in an effort to give a shout-out to authors who enrich my life with their talents.

February: I decided to make it a lot easier to spotlight authors by compiling my list of books read in smaller chunks, hence the list of books I read in January.

March: I wrote quite a bit more in March. What I read in February, some musings on how differently we would interact on our streets and roads if we all moved the way we do in grocery stores, a round-up of some of my transportation reading (meaning articles, not books), a piece on why someone who owns a bike would use bikeshare, an introduction to my new e-bike Zelda!, and on the last day of the month the list of what I read in March.

April: My blogging energy continued into the cruelest month, sparked by the biking energy that goes with tackling the #30DaysOfBiking challenge. For a while there I thought I might actually do another run of 30 Days of Blogging to go with the biking, so I pushed out a lot of posts:


I even dropped in another round-up of transportation articles along the way.

May: Then life returned to normal and my blogging pace dropped. I posted the list of my April reading.

June: Another quiet month with only my list of May books.

July: You guessed it -- June reading list

August: I should have blogged every single day of my wonderful trip to Copenhagen and London. I didn't. Too busy living the actual life to record it, and that's not an apology.

September: Caught up on the reading list with a July-August round-up, then posted on the innumerable thankless chores of digital housework.

October: Another "too busy to write" month.


December: Something about the end of the year gets me writing again. I had a really wonderful experience with a great version of #BikeSchool, a Twitter chat I lead every so often, this time with guest hosts and the added tags #MoveEquity #WheelsMoveMe to invite in new participants. I belatedly reported on successful completion of the 2019 #coffeeneuring challenge as a series of bike dates with my sweetheart, discussed how my approach to holidays has evolved (and gotten much simpler and easier), and reviewed my year of bike challenge participation. I wrapped it up with a confession about nonfiction books I've started and haven't yet finished to create a bit of public accountability.

And that brings us to 2020. Such a nice, symmetrical number, that. Here's hoping that I round out this new year with enough reading, riding and writing to make me happy. I need high doses of each of these.

Recent Thoughts in Other Spaces

Periodically I update the archives you'll find under each tab in the navigation above. (Go ahead, take a look--I'll wait.) Then I typically put a note on Facebook or tweet out something along the lines of "Just about everything I've ever blogged, in case you're interested."

What I don't do is use the most obvious real estate of all--the actual post space on this blog--to tell you that I do blog prolifically. It just doesn't appear here all that often.

This blog houses my most personal stuff, which also means it's the most diverse in topics. If you found me because I've written a lot about biking, you really should look at the Bikes/Transportation tab above and spend more time on my Bike Style blog for my personal take on biking and the Bicycle Alliance of Washington blog for bike policy, events, and other news on everything to do with bicycling in Washington state. If you're interested in just about any other topics, it's bound to come around again but I can't guarantee when.

In the meantime, here's a round-up of some of my favorite recent posts from those other spaces. They're all about biking. Surprise!




BEWARE the Facebook Comment Plug-in!

If you haven't heard the news, Facebook has made changes to its comment plug-in. Whether or not you have anything to do with managing an official Facebook page, if you have a Facebook profile and comment on blogs you need to study up.
I read about the changes yesterday in a post on Mashable, watched this video interview with a Facebook VP, and read a post on Facebook expert Mari Smith's site.
They all love it. I don't.
If you have tabs open where you logged into any site using Facebook for their comments, go log out and log back the old-fashioned way--using an email address. Then come back. (Although you don't need to worry here because I haven't installed the code I'm talking about.)
Here's why I think you need to do that. What I understand the changes to mean is that the following sequence can occur:
1) You are on an external site that is using the new FB comments plug-in. (If the site has not upgraded its code, you don't have to worry about steps 3-5.)
2) You opt to give that site access to your FB account, which you will be prompted to do. If you allow that link to be established, and then....
3) You comment on that external site.
4) Your comment made "out there" (via the FB comment plug-in) shows up on your FB profile. 
As an aside, for me this sounds spammy for my FB friends. I make lots of comments on blog posts having to do with social media, health care, higher ed and other work-related things that I would never bother to share on FB, which is far more personal for me.
5) This is the step that worries me--what I heard their VP say on the video was that then, if your friend on Facebook comments on your comment that has just appeared in your newsfeed, that person's comment gets pushed back out to the comment section on that external website! 
Your friend did NOT go to the site and create the link between comments made in FB and the outside world. You did.
Mari Smith shows a screen capture which seems to suggest that they have to give permission for this external posting step but it isn’t spoken to directly.
Not everyone will necessarily understand the significance, and from the screen shot I can't tell whether people have the option to keep their discussion solely inside Facebook and still be able to comment on my comment where they want to comment—inside Facebook.
There is no way I'm using the FB comment plug-in if by doing so I expose the private comments of my friends to the world without their explicit and fully informed permission. I have friends on Facebook who don't necessarily keep up with every nuance of these issues and who count on me to keep them informed about changes so I know this may create problems for them.
If Facebook would let me choose which element(s) of my publicly available profile to show on external blog comments I would have no problem with it whatsoever. 
But forcing me to change behavior inside Facebook so they can do something outside Facebook is just yet another example of Facebook reducing user privacy and then making us clean up after their changes. Notice that none of these ever give us advance warning and leave the setting at opt-out until we opt in actively?
Second reason: Linking employer to personal opinions--are you KIDDING me?
From the Mashable post, described as a “feature”:
Social Commenting & Context: When users are logged into Facebook, they are able to comment on a site with the Comments plugin immediately. Users are able to get more context about a person by looking at the text next to a commenter’s name, which displays any mutual friends, the person’s work title, the person’s age, or the place that a person currently lives – information pulled from the user’s Facebook profile. The information, of course, will be based on a user’s privacy settings.”
I don’t know about you, but I do (or I should say, "I did") list my employer on Facebook page—because my friends see it and because I make it quite clear, via the bio there, that opinions expressed on Facebook are my own and having nothing to do with my employer. I provide context that is lacking on external blog comments.
But this change means my employer is now going to show up affiliated with my comments all over the Web if I use the FB comment plug-in?!
Worse and worse! I am a public employee and have private political opinions I may choose to express on blogs.
 I do so knowing full well that someone who wants to can spend a little Google time and figure out where I work, but I have not commented in a way that deliberately ties my personal opinion to my place of employment.
 If Facebook makes that connection that for me--and they do; I tested it--they just created a huge problem for every government employee and for plenty of people in the private sector who don't want their employer's site listed right next to their personal opinions. 
If you want to see what it looks like, go to that Mashable post and scroll through the comments. You will see one from me with my employer listed next to my name, and a second from me without the employer name because I have now changed my FB account settings to make that information completely private. 
It looks to me as if I am speaking on behalf of my employer when their name appears next to mine.
Further unknowns: Do the Facebook profile details that get pulled in alongside your comment become part of Google results? Do you really want whoever is looking at Google search results for your company name to see every opinion you've expressed online in a private capacity?
The value of Facebook for me is expressly that I choose who sees my words. If they take that away they just lost the walled garden effect that provided the original appeal.
If I want everyone to read what I say, I'll just post it on a site the way I'm doing here.
If you’re following this development, do you have an explanation to reassure me? Or should I just follow my instinct and avoid the FB logo anywhere close to something on which I’d otherwise like to comment? If this plug-in spreads I may just have to quit commenting on blogs completely.
And yes--I'm going to post a link to this post on my Facebook profile.

Why on Earth Do I Write a Blog?

Look closely. Illustration by Roy Blumenthal
used under Creative Commons license.

Today I opened Google Reader, my preferred method for managing most blog subscriptions. At the new year I pruned my subscriptions severely because I had such a backlog I knew I had oversubscribed. In theory, then, I have a more “manageable” subscription list.

In the Spokane folder alone I see 88 unread posts. In the Biking folder it was something like 76 (started reading those first and don’t remember the number). Transportation has 93. Food has 57. And so on, and so on.

I will—yet again—make liberal use of the “mark all as read” button so I can move on. Certainly I’m missing out on some wonderful content, new ideas, fresh inspiration, great recipes and what-have-you. But life is short and there will always be more.

I imagine you, Dear Reader, in your fleece long johns and robe with your cup of hot coffee at a cluttered dining room table with unfinished taxes looming to your right (OK, I’m projecting a little here—just because that’s where I am at 10:30 a.m. on a Saturday morning it doesn’t mean that’s what you look like right now).

Why would you read this blog, from among all the others you subscribe to or stumble across on the web?

When I started this blog 2-1/2 years ago it initially served as an experiment. I wanted to see what kind of time and effort it took to produce a blog so I would know what I was getting into if I launched one at work (which is why we still haven’t launched one at work—I now know the beast must be fed!).

I kept it up—no idea why since I’m pretty sure even my daughters weren’t reading it, and Mom doesn’t have a computer and couldn’t use it if she did—and over time started seeing comments and getting clickthroughs on links I shared via Twitter and Facebook.

My stats are teensy but you are out there. I’m just thinking out loud here about what value I add in your life and why I should keep it up if you’re just clicking “mark all as read” and moving on. It’s a discouraging thought.

I’d better go read some of those blog posts.

Tell me, please: Why do you read this blog?

What Do Women Bike Bloggers Have to Say? The Search Engine

I've been compiling a list of bike blogs written by women similar to the Spokane blogs list I put together a while back.

I'm setting up feeds to post links from these blogs to the Twitter account @womenbikeblogs and to the Facebook page (which you can give a big ol' thumbs-up right here).

I thought a custom search engine would provide a cool tool. Et voila, thanks to Google Custom Search here it is. I'll replicate this over on my bike blog, Bike Style, with a bigger set of blogs--this one doesn't search everything I've found but I didn't want to take the page down.

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2010 Blogging Year in Review

A round-up of my 2010 blogging year just for the heck of it:

Wordle: BiketoWork Barb
What I wrote about in 2010
(click for larger image)
Top post traffic:
  • The Spokane Blogs list. Not surprising this one has over twice the views of anything else on the site since I keep pimping it out promoting it via Twitter, Facebook, LaunchPadINW and the signature block in my personal account to find more blogs via crowd-sourcing. I started with 105; the list is up to 237 as of Jan. 1, 2011.
  • Help Bike Shop Girl Ride Again. I'm really glad to see this one getting lots of page views as a gesture of support for a bike-riding woman I've never met who was hit by a driver and needs encouragement to get back on the street.
  • How Bikes Can Save the World. A transcript of my 5-minute speed talk at Ignite Spokane in September that reveals some of the (ahem) less worthy reasons I ride.
Top post comments: A tie between said trying-to-be-comprehensive list of Spokane blogs and I'm Part Dutch, You Know: What Do YOU Wear to Bike? which was almost my shortest post ever (hey, maybe brevity is the soul of wit).

Runners-up in the comment race:
Posts I thought would get more comments:
Posts I'm especially proud or fond of ("of which I am especially proud/fond," grammar police officers Eldest Daughter and Second Daughter would say):
Number of posts in 2010: 54--nearly twice what I did in each of the two previous years. But when I launched in August 2008 I was putting out an average of five posts per month and my all-time high month was January 2009 with nine posts.

If I kept up with my initial pace or that burst of creativity last January, I'd be posting 60-108 posts per year. So I'm doing more but am somehow still a slacker, which doesn't seem fair.

Top traffic sources in order:
  • Facebook
  • Google
  • Twitter
  • LaunchPad (that blog list link)
  • LinkedIn
  • DeathbyCar (where I commented and posted a link to my "ownership" post linked above)
  • My own blog (seems weird this is in the stats, but I do crosslink relevant posts)
  • BikeShopGirl (related to that post that's in my top three views for the year)
  • StumbleUpon (here are my favorites on StumbleUpon, which I don't remember to use very often)
Blogging resolutions for 2011
  • Get on a more consistent posting schedule, which will be tricky since I plan to launch a second blog sometime in mid-January
  • Keep tweeting, Facebooking and using social media in general
  • Remember to StumbleUpon other people's posts I like, since that does generate traffic for them
Your turn

Did you comment on this blog sometime this year? What makes you think a post is worth commenting on or sharing with someone else?

Spokane Blogs: Help Build the List

Once upon a time I went on a hunt for Spokane blogs, assuming someone would have compiled a comprehensive list. Couldn't find one so I started a spreadsheet. When I first posted it as an editable Google Doc sometime in 2010 it had 105 blogs.

As of January 19, 2013, the list was at 270 and growing. At that point I had been living in Seattle for six months and stopped maintaining the list. I leave it live for whatever utility it may have.

If you're on Twitter, follow @SpokaneBlogs for an RSS feed of posts.

I've created a Facebook page with feeds from the active blogs so you can get Spokane blog updates in your news stream there, if you like. 

Who did I miss? Use the form below to provide information on blogs you don't see on the list, or send an email to spokaneblogsATgmail.com with the information requested in the form. I don't monitor the email account very often and it is not a way to reach me for a conversation. 

Blog Title
Twitter Account
107down
20MilesNorth
VHWeddings
mwproductions
spikelola
desautelhege
AccelerationPT1
alisasgarden
applebride
avistautilities
terrybain
willowsprings
bdelaney
BHW1ads
biggreenape
bigshowmobile
BikeStyleLife
BarbChamberlain
justsmyluck
TineReese; bloomspokane
Booksflutterby
BrownesAddition
CadChica
sarahkbain
dancingcrwmedia
mystillpoint
designspike
nostartnoend
Christian, Mary & Molly
drjoshcochran
nectarwine
dte_spokane
dubshack
pinkcomics
KariJoys
erickdoxey
EricRacesBikes
ErrikaEats
StanShapiro
FarmgirlGourmet
flickeringtorch
werle3
fridgeworthy
frostyjunction
genolewan
GreaterSpokane
gifcunningham
rgschoenberg
camillsap
shadownlite
ImNotURavgmom
1ntheDepths
inwbusiness
Troy Nelson
jeik42
jeffsebring
capebretoner
hmmmsunshine
jdemke
KlundtHosmer
LaotianMama
janfletcher
lilaccitymomma
LusList
Ms_Oblivious
CrazyHmSchlMama
andreimylroie
moosicornranch
mtspokane
alwayslaura
tedm2
SpokaneNeighbor
blushresponse
terresamonroe
RitaAtNCLife
NorthwestButter
noseyparkerinw
dankolbet
thequestess
oneweespark
outtheremonthly


perketing
latahbistro
terrybain
AllyShoshana
recoverytoday
jamiemorgancda
RiverCityRed
theroasthouse
savethemoon
MattQsack
shepherdsgrain
sipofspokane
dawnshrum
someprtips
piahallenberg
spinachskittles
spoCOOL
dutchgirl73
spokanebooks
spokanebride
SpoCOOL
VisitSpokane
SpokaneKids
spokanenights
spokaneFAVS
spokenspokane
ryanstemkoski
stepupandgo
sunpeoplegoods
sweetandstout
TammileeTips
spokanelibrary
barrettrossie
MattQsack
thecococafe
thefbcspokane
bartmihailovich / SpokaneRiverKpr
mmullin
ToriLynnJohnson
Mickeylonchar
ClangeDesign and designsourceinc
brian_burrow
spokanehomeguy
ErikaPrins
thespovangelist
sproutspokane
pinkcomics
laurasuki
acarollospok
camillsap
landprof
JynxOTeaLeaves
pillowfarmer
SpokaneBusiness
Wed4LessNW
willfuljoyful
writeoneleaf
craiggoodwin
kxly4news
kxly4news
kxly4news
zagaholic

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