Tag: february

  • The Best of It: Mid-February Edition

    1. Running around Taste of Soulard with my favorite people
    2. Walking with Maybelle in the Pet Parade
    3. Attending my first Superbowl Party in over a decade
    4. The occasional good hair day when growing out a pixie cut
    5. Getting a table for the Stew’s Valentine’s Day dinner
  • The Best of It: End of February Edition

    The Best of It: End of February Edition

    1. Attending the special Valentine’s Day dinner at Stew’s
    2. The incredible offerings at this year’s Taste of Soulard
    3. Maybelle had a great time at the Pet Parade
    4. Hosting Mardi Gras breakfast on parade day
    5. I had the chance to eat at House of Wong one more time before they closed
  • Some Recent Publications

    Some Recent Publications

    I spent the better part of 2024 trying and failing to get in the habit of sharing my published work more often. On top of that, there’s the ongoing concern about how anything posted to a Meta site (Facebook, Instagram, Threads) is being used to train their AI. (I’m not even considering the dumpster fire that is Xitter up for discussion.) Of course, these days putting anything on the internet runs the risk of it being scraped to train AI without our consent, but there’s only so much anyone can do at this point. I’m about to go on a further tangent about how our riches tech bros are actively enabling fascism, but that’s not the point of this post.

    Anyway, since my greatest source of creative control is through my own website that I pay for, I’m going to focus on posting my creative accomplishments here more regularly. So without further ado, here are some recent publication credits for 2025. I hope to make this a regular series (and come up with a witter title for it).

    I was featured on Haiku Poet Word Search.

    I have work in To Live Here: Haiku for the Victims of Hurricane Helene. All proceeds go to support hurricane disaster relief efforts.

    I have two haiku in the Winter 2024/2025 edition of Wales Haiku Journal

    I’m also pretty sure I’ve submitted more work in the first six weeks of the year than I did in all of 2024, so from a poetic standpoint, 2025 is off to a good start!

    I created a pamphlet called 100 St. Louis Season Words, a combination of classical and region-specific haiku to support local haiku practice. It’s also available as a printable PDF on my Buy Me a Coffee page. If you don’t own a printer (my 15-year-old laser printer just gave up the ghost) and want a copy, send me an email and I’ll get one in the mail for you!

  • The Best of It: February 2024 Edition

    The Best of It: February 2024 Edition

    1. I managed to complete the Run for Your Beads 5k in roller skates!
    2. The pot stickers and crab rangoon at Stew’s Place.
    3. Hosting a pre-parade Mardi Gras breakfast taco party for my neighbors.
    4. Getting to meet up with my friend Heather for dinner.
    5. Finally nailing my French Onion Soup recipe
  • The Best of It: More Good Things About Moving Edition

    1. Having a dishwasher for the first time in seven years.
    2. For the first time in my life, having a space where I don’t have to take into account anyone else’s needs.
    3. My neighborhood Buy Nothing group.
    4. Much better lighting in the new place.
    5. Being in walking distance of Monkey Nest Coffee
  • The Best of It: Some Good Things About Moving Edition

    1. Being in walking distance of BookWoman
    2. Being in walking distance of Nervous Charlie’s
    3. Being in the delivery radius of Ichiban
    4. Being a short drive from La Cocina de Consuelo
    5. Being closer to Emma Long Metropolitan Park

  • Weekly Writing Prompt: Love Letter

    Write a love letter to someone unappreciated, disliked, or even hated: your dentist, the bill collector, the teacher who failed you in high school, the person at the office who stole your lunch.

  • Weekly Writing Prompt: Black Sheep

    When we think of the family members who taught us the most, wise grandparents or a loving mom and dad comes to mind. But we can also learn important lessons from those who were different. Most families have some sort of black sheep. Think about the person in your family who didn’t quite fit in with the rest of your clan. What did you learn from them? What could they teach you that everyone else couldn’t?

  • Why I left Facebook

    Over at Drew Myron’s blog, I mentioned that I had recently nuked my Facebook account, and, six weeks later, did not regret a thing. She was curious as to my experiences with it, and I decided that rather than write a lengthy comment, I’d put up a blog post, especially in light of the fact that several other people asked why I deleted my account.

    I was an early adopter of Facebook – I set up my account in the fall of 2004, back when it was still only available to college students, was ad- and app-free, and all you could do was poke people and write on walls. In fact, I had a Facebook account before I had a cell phone (although this is because until I was about 20 I had some strange Luddite attitude toward portable technology; I preferred that both my computer and phone stay confined to my room).

    Back then, Facebook was fun. It was a nice little diversion from studying, and nothing more. You couldn’t use it to send event invitations or instant messages. The reason it was fun was because it was so simple, so bare-bones. You didn’t have to waste time trying to reconfigure the privacy settings it had changed without your permission. You didn’t have to search around to figure out how to make the ticker disappear. You pretty much just left silly messages now and again, and that was that.

    In the seven years (seven years! I feel old!) that I had a Facebook account, so many things changed. It became open to high school students, and then to the general public. Apps came out, and those apps spawned games, none of which I actually wanted to play. You could send messages, instant messages, and event invites. You could post photographs and notes and links. Ads showed up. Most of the time, I either accepted or embraced these changes.

    But then, about a year ago, Facebook became more trouble than it was worth, at least for me. It seemed like every three months, my privacy settings changed without my knowledge or consent, and I had to put them back. That timeline ticker showed up, and even though I made it go away, my settings got usurped by some upgrade or another, and it came back. At that point, I lost interest in trying, and consigned myself to an ugly layout. Worst of all, Facebook kept deciding which of my friends’ updates I wanted to see when. Even when I adjusted my settings to make sure I was getting everyone’s updates, I would eventually realize that people had somehow gotten excluded again. Facebook stopped being fun in part because it become more trouble than it was worth to keep my settings the way I wanted them.

    Eventually, I became concerned that I wasn’t really connecting with friends at all. I was getting brief updates, and while they were sometimes substantial, most of the time, they were not. This wasn’t friendship. It was just bits of information crossing my consciousness without contributing to my life. Of course, deep down, I always knew that. But when Facebook was just a fun diversion, that lacked clutter and frustration, it didn’t matter so much. When it began to feel like work, the lack of meaningful connections happening on the site became all the more apparent.

    For a while, I still resisted quitting. For one thing, Facebook is my primary place to find photos, especially from dance competitions. And I also worried that, without Facebook, nobody would ever bother inviting me to anything ever again. In fact, mere hours after I deleted my account, a friend admonished me that by quitting, I ran the risk of not getting invited to parties.

    And then I thought of this line from Infinite Jest (and yes, I know I didn’t actually like the book very much, but it’s the one line from the novel that really sticks with me):

    He . . . realized intellectually that the feeling of deprived panic over missing something made no sense.

    As I was doing yoga on Christmas Eve morning, I realized I’d had enough. I didn’t care what social events I’d be missing. I didn’t care that I’d have to work a little harder to find photographs of dance events. I was just done with the whole mess. Facebook wasn’t fun, and I was done with it. So I decided to keep my account for the rest of the year, and deleted it moments before leaving for a New Year’s Eve party. I started 2012 free of Facebook.

    Six weeks later, I don’t regret a thing. Yes, I know I’ve missed a few social events that I discovered after the fact, but it’s not  as though I spent those nights holed up in my apartment, pining for something to do. But I have no interest in bringing my account back. I don’t miss it in the slightest. I still have Google Plus. I still text my friends. I still blog. That’s all I really need, and I don’t think my life is lacking from the avoidance of one little social network.