}

Monday, February 17, 2025

A deliberate absence

I haven’t been blogging much so far this year—I know that will come as a huge surprise. There are many reasons for that, but this has been a mostly intended time away. This post is about why that’s been the case.

The story begins, really, last year. I said that was a challenging year for me, and it definitely was, for all the reasons I blogged about. However, there was also the death of a friend I never talked about here, for a lot of reasons, but partly because my friend’s death happened shortly before what would have been Nigel’s 60th birthday, and about a month before the fifth anniversary of his death. I was already dealing with a lot.

At the same time, I was dreading the outcome of the US election because I had a feeling it would be a disaster. Then, like so many people, I was profoundly—and badly—affected when the USA’s election disaster actually happened. All that year, I felt like I was watching the land of my birth committing slow-motion suicide, even as I fervently hoped voters would come to their fucking senses. I managed to hold back my dread of the disaster as well as I could, but that denial couldn’t last forever.

All of that was followed by this year starting out badly with technological problems I wrote about on January 2. That, combined with the USA’s upcoming coronation of the convicted felon, should’ve warned me that this year could be bad, too, but there was more.

Late last year, certainly by Christmas, I was aware that my sister-in-law, Carolyn, was beginning what would be her final battle, leading ultimately to her death. At first, just as with the US elections, I tried to ignore what I I knew was going to happen, but reality again conquered my attempt at optimism.

I didn’t talk about the US elections in part because I couldn’t pretend that my fears were unjustified. However, it wasn’t my place to talk about my sister-in-law’s health battle while she was still waging it, and then I didn’t post anything about her death until after her immediate family did. After that, it was normal blogging issues: I wanted to include a photo of her with my post, and didn’t find the one I used until late Saturday when I was looking through my photos.

What all of these stories have in common is that I found them personally challenging for a lot of reasons. The tech problems were challenging mostly because they’re still not actually solved, just a little bit better. The disaster caused by the US election results is ongoing, and getting worse, of course, and I’m still working my way through all that. The death of my friend was hard, but it also happened at time when I just didn’t have the emotional space to talk about it. That, and especially the death of my sister-in-law, were also difficult for me because they brought up the trauma of Nigel’s death and my emotions around that. I tried as best as I could to keep everything in perspective, to compartmentalise when necessary, and I often succeeded. Still, it was nevertheless six months of waves of emotion washing over me.

All that said, it was absolutely NOT unrelentingly bad: I had fun during those six months, even if sometimes it was despite everything, and I achieved some things that made me feel happy, accomplished, proud, etc. It was, in other words, a period of time with good as well as bad—pretty much like every other time in one’s life.

Nevertheless, for a lot of that time I simply didn’t have the mental or physical energy to blog or podcast, nor the ability to say why that was. Because of all that turmoil, I missed out on blogging about things that I very much wanted to talk about, completely non-political things, of course, things that were personally important to me (like anniversaries). I may talk about most of those things in one one post (kind of like my old “Internet wading” posts). I also have other topics leftover from last year that I still want to talk about, including some that have reached their own first anniversary in the past couple months (whether I mentioned them at the time last year or not). On top of that are some very good things I’ve been up to starting back in December, and that topic, too, deserves my full attention.

The thing is, though, that because I don’t know when things will get better, I also don’t know when I may have a shot at being even slightly more productive—in everything/anything, actually. I guess we’ll find out together.

Sunday, February 16, 2025

Weekend Diversion: 1985, Part 2

Seven weeks into 1985 a new pop song reached Number One on the USA’s Billboard “Hot 100”. It was only the third song to do so in that timeframe, and it, too, had a multi-week run. On February 16, 1985, “Careless Whisper” (video up top) hit Number One. The song was credited in some countries to “Wham! Featuring George Michael”, and in the UK, Ireland, and other European countries to George Michael. The song was also the second single from the second Wham! album, Make It Big (the first single was “Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go”, which was the subject of “Weekend Diversion: 1984, Part 17” back on November 17 of last year). Like the previous single, “Careless Whisper” would stay at Number One for three weeks.

Michael originally wrote the song when he was 18 and on his way to his job as a DJ at a hotel. He said that as he paid the bus driver, he came up with the famous sax riff, and then wrote the rest of the song on his commute. His bandmate, Andrew Ridgeley, was a co-writer.

I very clearly remember this song and its video, which was directed by Duncan Gibbins, who also directed the video for their previous single, "Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go". At the time this song was a hit, we still didn’t (officially…) know about George Michael’s sexuality, though there was certainly speculation. That doesn’t matter for the song itself, which isn’t gender specific, but it’s a key part of of the music video. Music videos tell a very specific story, and in the case of “Careless Whisper”, while the song itself and the video are about the same thing (cheating on a partner), the video leaves no doubt it’s about a man cheating on a woman, something one could ignore in the song. That didn’t matter to me, but I did prefer the song to the video for that very reason.

I’ve talked before about “filling in the blanks” in pop music to make them a song a better fit for me as a young gay man, to make it something I could personally identify with. I assumed that sort of thing never crossed the minds of young heterosexuals, and it’s probably something that only mattered, to the extent it did at all, to an LGBTQ+ person—or who intensely disliked those who were LGBTQ+. Times have changed, and nowadays there are songs and music videos with positive LGBTQ+ storylines, something I couldn’t have even imagined way back in 1985.

Personally, I mainly just liked the sound of the song, that sax riff, and the words, especially the first two lines of the chorus: “I'm never gonna dance again / Guilty feet have got no rhythm”, which to me was a very evocative phrasing. This wasn’t unusual for me: I’ve often had my attention captured by a couple lines of a song—even the choice of one specific word—which is probably because my own creativity, such as it is, centres on the written word (I know nothing about music composition). I suppose this just reinforces the fact that songs are a very personal thing in many different ways.

“Careless Whisper” reached Number One in Australia (2X Platinum) and Canada (5X Platinum), Number 3 in New Zealand (3X Platinum), and Number One in the UK (2x Platinum). It was also Number One on the USA’s Billboard “Hot 100” and on their “Adult Contemporary” charts. The song was also 7X Platinum in the USA.

The album Make It Big reached Number One in Australia (Platinum), Canada (6x Platinum), New Zealand (Platinum), in the UK (4x Platinum), and on the USA’s “Billboard 200”. It was Certified 6x Platinum in the USA.

This series will return March 9 with the next Number One from 1985.

Previously in the “Weekend Diversion – 1985” series:

Weekend Diversion: 1985, Part 1 – February 2, 2025

Sunday, February 09, 2025

Another loss for the family

This past week, on Waitangi Day, we lost Nigel’s sister Carolyn after a battle with cancer. She was an immensely kind and loving person, always ready to help folks in the family—and she gave the BEST hugs! Nigel felt a special bond with Carolyn, and she sometimes turned to him for advice, so really they were there for each other. Naturally, she was also always there for me after Nigel died. Of course.

I drove over to visit her the week before she died, and that was a really good day: She was in good spirits, relatively comfortable, though she’d lost a lot of weight and was clearly weakened by her health battle. It was a lovely afternoon with her. We just chatted about nothing and everything, joked, laughed—all the things we’d always done. When I left that evening, I knew I might not see her again, though I didn’t think we’d lose her only a week later. I’m so very glad that I went to see her and that our last time together was so awesome.

The photo of us above is from January 2010, and we’re sitting on the deck of the bach (holiday home) they had at the time. I went there with one of my other sisters-in-law and my mother-in-law to stay with Carolyn for a few days (I don’t remember why Nigel didn’t go, though he might’ve had a work function or something). I had a great time! Her family asked for photos of Carolyn, and when I went through mine I was struck by how in so many of them she and the family were laughing or engaged in some sort of hijinx—that, and karaoke singing. This photo, though, is the only one I found of just us two, which makes it special to me.

As I’ve said many times, I am so lucky to have married into this large loving family, and everyone will help each other through this loss. I have a long-standing policy of not referring to people, especially family members, by name on social media. So, I’ll just say my heart goes out to her husband, my brother-in-law, because I know what this loss feels like. I also send my love to their son and daughter, their own spouses, and their children. I hope they all feel the warmth of this large loving family, even when we’re not in the same room, because that will help them all a lot. I know what that feels like, too.

Sunday, February 02, 2025

Weekend Diversion: 1985, Part 1

Well, well, well: Here we are in a new year and today we begin a new series about pop songs that reached Number One on the USA’s Billboard “Hot 100” 40 years ago this week. It turns out that 1985 had quite a lot of Number One songs that I liked, and this week’s is one of them.

On February 2, 1985, ”I Want to Know What Love Is” (video up top) by British-American rock band Foreigner became the first new Number One song of 1985. It followed ”Like a Virgin” by American singer Madonna, which was Number One from December 22, 1984 until February 2, 1985—a pretty good run, that.

Originally released in November 1984, “I Want to Know What Love Is” was Foreigner’s first Number One in the USA, though before that—dating back to1977—they’d had ten Top 20 hits, including five in the Top Ten. The song was the lead single from their fifth studio album, Agent Provocateur.

Like a lot of folks I grew up with, I knew and liked Foreigner from the beginning, and I bought their first four albums, though I never bought Agent Provocateur—or any later album, either. While I really liked their songs dating back to 1977, by the 1980s—mid-1980s in particular—my tastes had changed, and I was more into electronic pop music, European in particular.

I was aware of this particular song, though, and I liked it. A guy I quite fancied at the time listed the song on a list of his favourite songs, and that probably made me like it a bit more. I lost contact with him many decades ago, but I still like the song and I still remember him.

My music tastes in the early 1970s had been mostly “Easy Listening” and “Adult Contemporary", but by my high school years (1973-77), I started liking more rock. After 1977, I began to like “alternative music”, New Wave, and their descendants. Today, I like all of that and more—plus some contemporary pop songs. Put another way, my tastes didn’t change as much as they evolved to include all sorts of music. And that’s both my connection to this week’s song, and it’s place in my personal pop music universe.

“I Want to Know What Love Is” reached Number One in Australia, 9 in Canada, Number One in New Zealand and in the UK (2x Platinum). It was also Number One on the USA’s Billboard “Hot 100” and on the Billboard “Mainstream Rock” charts, as well as Number One on the Cash Box “Top 100”. The song was also Platinum in the USA.

The album Agent Provocateur reached Number 2 in Australia, 3 in Canada, 4 in New Zealand (Gold), Number One in the UK (Platinum), and 4 on the USA’s “Billboard 200” chart (3x Platinum).

This series will return February 16 with another new Number One from 1985.

Tuesday, January 21, 2025

The annual increasing number: 66

So! Yet another birthday, huh? For me, 66 is one of the “non-significant” birthdays, mainly because I tend to focus more on those ending in zero or five, but this year was unusually fraught. For one thing, I realised that because birthdays are annual events, I’m now closer to 70 than I am to 60 (and yes, I’m aware that was technically true the day after my 65th birthday, but now it’s officially official). Still, my day turned out fine, which is probably the main thing.

I was dreading this birthday because when I celebrate it, January 21 New Zealand time, is January 20 in the USA. Every four years that corresponds to the swearing in of the US president, and there was absolutely no way I was going to watch the coronation of The Orange One: Worst.Birthday.Present.EVER! However, because my side of the political divide values truth and facts: The swearing-in part takes place at 6am NZDT, and I’m never up at that time unless the loo beckons. Nigel and I got up and watched in 2009, mainly to make sure Bush was gone, and I also got up and watched in 2021, mainly for Nigel, to make sure the Orange Stain was gone. So staying in bed at that ghastly hour was true-to-form for me.

Even so, I was planning on avoiding Facebook this morning, but since many of my friends were taking part in the “Blackout” (avoiding all Meta products for this week) I figured it would be safe to venture on it, because there’s be very few posts about the circus in Washington, DC. I was right, but wrong about a different aspect: I assumed that the Blackout would mean I’d get very few birthday greetings on Facebook, but I actually got a lot (and I was grateful for every one, even if I was a little surprised).

As for how my day went, this is what I wrote on Facebook:
My birthday so far: This morning, I made poached eggs on toast with sliced Edam cheese because I felt like it and it’s my birthday. They also have freshly ground salt & pepper and some dried parsley from my garden. I seldom make poached eggs on a weekday—no idea why not.

This afternoon I went to Kmart and bought myself some boxer-type shorts for sleeping (I need to get rid of some that are worn out or that aren’t comfortable) and a couple shirts. It was probably the first time I’ve bought anything in that particular Kmart in 10 or 12 years, the last time I was there with Nigel. Since moving to Hamilton, I’ve always walked out with nothing. Gotta say, the shop’s much better than it was not very long ago!

I went to Kmart at all because I was going to Woolies (this week was that supermarket’s turn), and it’s next door to that Kmart. Oddly, I didn’t but any special treats for myself at the supermarket.
My poached eggs this morning.
Yesterday, I went out for lunch with some of the family because one of my sisters-in-law and her daughter (my niece) were in town, so she organised lunch with several of us as a kind of early birthday celebration for me. It was a really nice outing! All the more so because I was planning a quiet day today.

However, for some reason I woke up VERY sleepy yesterday, probably because I went to bed a couple hours earlier than usual (my body probably thought, “WTF are you doing to me?!”). That meant I was a bit subdued yesterday. I went to be last night at a slightly later time, and got up a little bit later than yesterday, but with no less sleep. I was considerably less sleepy today, though still felt very tired and at least a little sleepy. That alone made this birthday unusual.

I said on Facebook yesterday that because I wasn’t planning anything special for today, “I might make a ‘special’ dinner tomorrow night (meaning something I wouldn’t normally make on a weeknight), or maybe I’ll order pizza. Not sure yet.” In the end, I ordered pizza—but that mention that I don’t make poached eggs every day? That was actually a subtle reference back to something I wouldn’t normally make on a weeknight”. I doubt anyone caught that, but I often like to put little easter eggs in things I post on Facebook. And, for the record, the pizza I ordered today was from a local place not very far from my house, and it was very meh. Sadly, I have no good options for pizza delivery.

And that was my day. A couple wines while I watch TV will finish out my evening before I head bed and return to normal normal life tomorrow.

So, my annual increasing number happened again. This year was just an ordinary number, and there are three more (assuming I have any…) until my next "significant birthday". One thing I know for certain is that it’ll be here before I know it and yet, there's one more thing: My birthday is probably the day I miss Nigel the most, because he loved to make a big deal out of my birthday, even though he hated anyone making a fuss about his birthday. He always made me feel so very special on my birthday, even on the ordinary number birthdays. I miss that feeling almost as much as I miss him.

The "Illinois US 66" sign up top is a recreation I created using a similar public domain one for a different US Route in Illinois that I found on Wikipedia. The regular US Route 66 sign is a public domain graphic available from Wikimedia Commons. US Route 66 in Illinois had its original 1926 terminus at Jackson Boulevard and Michigan Avenue in Chicago, a spot I was at or near many times in my years living in Chicago. However, over the years there were many changes in the Chicago and Illinois parts of the road, and especially the approach to Chicago and within it. Nothing stays the same forever, of course. That’s true for me, too, oddly enough.

My Previous Birthday posts:

2024: The annual increasing number: 64
2023: The annual increasing number: 64
2022: The annual increasing number: 63
2021: The annual increasing number: 62
2020: The annual number increase happened
2019: Another 'Big Birthday'
2018: The annual increasing number: 59
2017: The annual increasing number: 58
2016: The annual increasing number: 57
2015: The annual increasing number: 56
2014: The annual increasing number: 55
2013: The annual increasing number: 54
2012: The annual increasing number
2011: The annual increasing number
2010: The annual increasing number
2009: Happy Birthday to Me…
2008: Another Birthday

Thursday, January 02, 2025

New year, old problems

This year has barely begun, and already old problems are repeating. Fortunately, none of them are my fault, but that fact doesn’t make them any less annoying. Worse, there’s very little I can do about the problems, and what I can do isn’t a good option. Complicated stuff, and barely into the year.

Yesterday, I posted my first blog post of the year, one that talked, in part, about the “Y2K Bug”. That caused a big problem for me, one that requires a bit of a back story.

There’s a Google-supplied sharing bar at the bottom at the bottom of all my blog posts, making it easy to share a post by email, to “re-blog” it to Blogger, or to share it on Twitter, Facebook, or Pinterest. I’ve used this for a very long time to share my blog posts to Facebook, but they made some changes at some point, adding a “Send Message” button to whatever post I share, and that goes to what appears to be an AI chatbot, for some unknown reason. Even worse, the ENTIRE Facebook post is a link to that Messenger chat thing (sample at right). In other words, it makes sharing posts this way utterly pointless.

I was first alerted to the problem by a subscriber to the AmeriNZ Facebook Page. When I clicked on the link, it worked fine, but it turns out that’s because I was using the page as AmeriNZ, not as myself. I started including a direct link to my blog post in the comments, and that seemed to work well—until last night when the new problem appeared.

Last night I shared my blog post as usual, and then I left the direct link in the comments on Facebook, as usual. Later, I opened Facebook and there was a Notification from Facebook telling me they’d removed my comment because, it said, “This goes against our Community Standards on Spam.” WTF?! As always, my comment had a direct link to the same thing I was sharing to the page.

Naturally, I read what they were referring to:
We don't allow people to use misleading links or content to trick people to visit, or stay on, a website.

Examples of things that we don't allow

• Telling people that they must like a Page to access content on another site
• Using irrelevant pop-ups on websites to prevent people from leaving easily
• Disguising a link as something on our platform, such as a poll or video, to get clicks
Obviously none of that was remotely relevant to me sharing a link to my blog post in a comment. So, I clicked on “read the full policy”, and it was just as irrelevant to this situation:
We do not allow content that is designed to deceive, mislead or overwhelm users in order to artificially increase viewership. This content detracts from people's ability to engage authentically on our platforms and can threaten the security, stability and usability of our services. We also seek to prevent abusive tactics, such as spreading deceptive links to draw unsuspecting users in through misleading functionality or code, or impersonating a trusted domain.
Most (I suspect all…) comment moderation on Facebook is done by bots and algorithms, so I had a hunch I was just another victim of technology, and I was right. I clicked on “How we made this decision” and read: “Our technology found that your content doesn't follow our Community Standards,” it said. “As a result, our technology took action.” Their “technology” means no human had anything to do with it, which was obvious, of course.

As usual, there was no way to appeal their decision, and there are no actual humans to contact (apparently if I pay to become “verified”, which would give me a blue checkmark, it might be possible to reach a human). So, there was absolutely nothing I could do about it.

My next step was to try to remove the message option from posts, but that doesn’t seem to be possible. After the better part of an hour clicking various settings, including on the Meta for Business part that provides no way to go back to ordinary page administration (I had to close the tab, open a new one and launch the Facebook Page again), I found nothing. Facebook is notorious for putting controls for various settings in weird and illogical places, but it could just be that they don’t permit that.

So, the only option I have is to stop using the share button and copy and paste the link directly in a post on the Facebook Page (that’s also my only option for sharing podcast episodes). I have no idea whether Facebook’s “technology” will allow me to do that, but if it doesn’t the AmeriNZ Facebook Page will be useless to me, and I may as well delete it.

Meanwhile, another problem has resurfaced with my podcast: Folks clicking links are blocked by their web browser due to a supposedly missing or expired “security certificate”. I set that up only a few weeks ago when Roger Green alerted me to the problem. In fact, I was getting it on Chrome, too, but could click a few times to get the part where I could tell Chrome to let me do what I want on the Internet. However, Safari on my iPad wouldn’t let me override it, and it prevented me from accessing the site or use any direct link to a post. When I added the security certificate, all of that stopped—for me, anyway.

The podcast site is currently hosted by Go Daddy, and I’m sick of the constant problems and how difficult it is to navigate their systems to fix them—although, if I used it a lot, like if I was a web developer or something, it might be easier; I need to do something on it maybe once or twice a year. This is an open project at the moment.

Finally, a problem that took me awhile to identify: I wasn’t able to do certain things because I have a VPN (Virtual Private Network). I originally got it last January, just before my trip to Fiji with the family, because I knew Internet access was through wifi, and there’s no way of knowing how secure such things are. The VPN I chose, like most others, allow me to include all my devices, and while I mainly wanted it for my phone and iPad, I realised it could useful for things like watching news videos that are geoblocked. It worked great in Fiji, but then we came home.

I would try to access some websites and be refused access, something that sometimes happened before the VPN, but I assumed it was just a glitch. On a whim, really, I switched off the VPN and I could access the sites. Similarly, I use an FTP program to upload my podcasts to my site, and the one I use is called Cyberduck, something I've used for years, including for work. Earlier this year, I started having trouble connecting to the server to upload my podcast files: It would be very slow to login, then to access the folders on my site so I could upload my file, and then the upload would often fail, sometimes many times. I wasn’t suspicious because there were somewhat similar problems sometimes in the past, so it didn’t surprise me that there were glitches using it—ones that Nigel fixed for me, of course. I eventually started logging in through Go Daddy’s website, because even though it was much slower using a web browser, at least it worked.

When I resumed podcasting in early December, I and ran into the same problem using Cyberduck. Then, on a hunch more than a whim, I paused my VPN, and Cyberduck worked perfectly—fast login, fast access to the folder I needed, and VERY fast upload—all exactly as it should be, and how it was before I installed the VPN.

What all of these problems have in common is that at first I didn’t realise what was wrong, for different reasons. Once I worked out what was going on, I tried solutions for Facebook and for people to access to my podcast site, only to discover find out the solutions weren’t as simple as they seemed. Of all of those, only the problem using Cyberduck was easy to fix, and it’s remained fixed.

In a year in which I had very little room in my head to try and figure out complicated technical things, especially on top of everything else that was going on, it’s not a surprise that the problems took as long to work out as they did, and also why some of them didn’t work. Still this is new year, with, I hope, some new perspectives that can lead to new solutions.

Still, this certainly is not what I wanted to wrestle with on the New Year’s Public Holidays—or any other day, actually. This is one of those times where, “it is what it is.” Onward! I hope…

Wednesday, January 01, 2025

AmeriNZ Podcast episode 417 is now available

AmeriNZ Podcast episode 417, “Happy New Year”, is now available from the podcast website. There, you can listen, download or subscribe to the podcast episode, along with any other episode.

The five most recent episodes of the podcast are listed on the sidebar on the right side of this blog.

Welcoming 2025 and my own past

2025 has arrived—another year that sounds all future-y. Maybe that’s just me, but, then, I’ve accumulated a bit of experience in this life thing, so I may have a bit of perspective on such things. Or maybe it’s delusions? Either way, I have thoughts about it all.

It seems crazy to think that a mere 25 years ago today we’d just found out that the “Y2K Bug” had really been squashed. In the run up to December 31, 1999 there was so much panicking going on—and without the benefit of social media, or even general Internet as much as there is now. These days, such the panic would probably do what the “bug” couldn’t do—bring the world to a halt, if only briefly.

On “Millennium Night”, Nigel was the Call Centre Manager for what was then Auckland City Council. They’d arranged a special night those who had to work that (the call centre was pretty much 24-hour, especially when there was a big event, like that year’s New Year’s Eve). Nigel was allowed to invite family to join him.

That evening my cousin-in-law picked me up and we went to my sister-in-law’s house for dinner, then the three of us, plus my niece drove into the central Auckland at around 10pm to join Nigel at his work. My journal from January 1, 2000 picks up the story (edited):
We got to Nigel’s work and I rang up for him, because he had to come down and let us in. We checked in with the security guard, and went upstairs.…

There was a big buffet on the seventh floor, and we waited there watching TV3’s coverage on a big screen TV as we waited for midnight. We watched the Chathams celebrate midnight, about a half-hour before us, then made our way up the 18th floor.

Midnight came, the lights stayed on, and I’m sure everyone sighed with relief. Unfortunately, the bad weather almost ruined the fireworks. We couldn’t even see the top of Skytower, which was hidden in a cloud. Still, what we could see looked good, and we could imagine how nice it would have been if the weather had been better. We had some more champagne, then went back down to the seventh floor for more food. We rang Nigel’s folks to wish them a Happy New Year, then by around 1:30, my sister-in-law, niece, and cousin-in-law] left. I decided to stay because, in part, I could help keep Nigel awake on the drive home.

I sent an e-mail to my brother and sister at 1.30 to let them know everything was OK.

About 2:15, the Mayor, Christine Fletcher, stopped by to see the people working, carrying an entourage behind her (including one aide who was very cute). We were all sitting around watching TV, she came back in the room from the loo, I presume, and she sneezed. I said "gesundheit”, as is my custom. She said, "That's my first sneeze of the new millennium!" and I said, "and I gave you your first blessing of the new millennium." They left a little while later, and a half-hour or so later, so did we.

Things went so smoothly with Y2K issues that the Emergency Operations Communications (what they used to call the civil defence communications bunker) centre closed at about 2.30.

We got home around three-thirty, spent some time with Saibh, then went to bed around ten to four, and that was our day.
I quote that at length because it felt like such a cool thing to be part of, and was very unusual. At the same time, though, I’d forgotten some of the details, and I’m so glad I wrote that down in those pre-blogging days, especially because I probably wouldn’t have blogged about all that, anyway.

Today I discovered something else I wasn’t really aware of before, and it was thanks to this blog. I knew that there were several different times over the years that I’ve mentioned that I don’t make New Year’s Resolutions, but I didn’t remember that the first time I did so was on December 31, 2006, in my last post of that year, my very first with this blog (which began September 13 that year). Specifically, I said:
I don’t make New Year’s Resolutions. I think it just sets people up to fail, and we all have plenty of failures in our lives without adding more of our own creation.

Instead, I make some general goals for the year, things that are, perhaps, only “would be nice” rather than “must do”. I also set goals and targets low enough that they can be reasonably achieved, freeing me to make newer goals.
It’s always been that way for me, and I don’t see that changing. So, no resolutions for me, though I’ve already started what some people make resolutions about: I started gentle walking workouts, as I mentioned on Sunday (which, because of my recent blogging frenzy, seems like a month ago…). My goal is to get fitter to see if that will help me mind the mowing less, and so that I can use the cross trainer I have in the garage (I’m definitely not fit enough at the moment). We‘;’ll see—it’s just a general goal, after all.

And that’s been my New Year’s Day: Relaxing after a quiet New Year’s Eve with Leo (my usual tradition)< then today was about remembering and rediscovering my own past even as we all launch into a new year. That last part seems especially perfect for someone with a blog.

Happy New Year!

I saw the image up top on the Internet many times, and in many places. I have no idea who originally uploaded it, nor where I found it.