Tag Archive: liveblogging

Liveblogging my life.

Today, I’ve decided to live-blog my day. Because I’m out of ideas for blog posts right now, and I haven’t posted for a week, and my poor bloggy blog feels neglected, and I feel like I need to write something, or I’ll just scream. No, I don’t expect you to read this. It’s mega-long.

6:00am: Alarm rings.

Wait, back up. Let’s be honest here.

5:15am: Geeklet wakes up. I stick the binky back in her mouth, cover her with her blanket and say a little prayer that she goes back to sleep. I may, or may not, have said “Just go to sleep for another 45 minutes, kid.”

6:ooam: Alarm rings. I turn it off, fall back asleep almost immediately after pausing to ensure the baby didn’t wake up, and have a strange dream about the alarm sounding like big, fuzzy colored caterpillars.

6:11am: Geeklet wakes up.  She is making whiny noises, because she is hungry. I want DaddyGeek to make the bottle so I can feed her in bed, but before I can ask, he sleepily mumbles/asks if it’s OK if he sleeps in until 6:30am. I don’t say anything, because my mother taught me not to say anything if you don’t have something nice to say. I get the baby and go make a bottle and feed her.

6:20am: Geeklet and I are settled on the sofa, she is having her bottle. I put on the latest episode of Drop Dead Diva, a show I swore I wouldn’t watch but to which I am now addicted.

6:41am: Realize I forgot to wake up DaddyGeek – open the door and wake him.

6:57am: Cupcake is still not up, my show is over, and I am considering watching the episode of The Closer that I haven’t yet watched. I realize I should brush my teeth, maybe take a shower, but decide instead to wear a ponytail again today.

7:00am: I realize that Geeklet has pooped already.  I suggest to DaddyGeek that he should change a diaper, I don’t tell him it’s poop. He suggests I make coffee. I win! I feel better about him sleeping in.

7:15am: Coffee is made, but Geeklet’s diaper hasn’t been changed yet. I refuse to change that damn diaper. Hubby is nowhere to be found. He must be in the bathroom.

7:20am: He was in the bathroom. I’m not sure, but I think I should wait before going in there. I use this as an excuse to get my computer open. Cupcake is still not awake.

7:21am: My computer is out of hibernation, and I quickly jot off a reply to AmazingGreis regarding moving her blog over to Wordpress. Silly girl, she doesn’t think she has any subsribers. What am I, chopped liver?

7:30am: After a little more mindless web surfing, Cupcake has woken up. I go into the room to see if she wants me to carry her out, as is the custom, but today she tells me to go away — she wants to “Get out of bed all by myself.” I almost die from the cuteness, but am revived by reading my Twitter stream.

7:41am: After lengthy discussion with DaddyGeek regarding getting a better design for his blog and silently consider harey-carey because GOOD LORD the man is picky. Don’t ever go clothes or blog shopping with this guy. NIGHTMARE.

7:57am: Quickly dress Geeklet and Cupcake to get out the door and start the morning commute.

8:06am: Begin loading the car, including the super-stinky trash that must go to the dumpster today or I’ll vomit when I get home.

8:09am: Everyone is in the car, thank god. Put the windows down so the car doesn’t stink and drive over to the dumpster. Unload stinky trash, and we’re on our way!

8:16am: Call my mother to tell her we are 10mins from the house. “Heads-up” phone call, morning tradition. She stays on the phone with me until I get there, talking to me about my brother.

8:28am: Try to get some dirt of Cupcake’s nose, she freaks out. Toddlers = Evil.

8:37am: After everyone is settled in, I give kisses & hugs and head out.

8:48am: My mother calls. We manage to talk about the fact that Cupcake picked the healthy cereal over the unhealthy cereal for the next twelve minutes.

8:58am: I arrive at work, still talking to my mother. Luckily she recognizes the sounds of the office and excuses herself, we hang up. My coworker is shocked I am here so early. More on that in another post, entitled “Being a Working Mother Fucking Sucks Donkey Balls”, or somesuch. Stay tuned!

9:06am: Decide I am going to live-blog the rest of my day.

9:11am: Get a cup of french vanilla, mild blend coffee. Second cup of the day. I won’t finish it, but I like to sip on it while I sit at my desk.

9:14am: Twitter isn’t working?! What is happening?! AHHHH!!!

9:34am: Realize that I should be doing a CSV Import into the CRM client that we use, because the marketing team needs the leads. Oops. I’ll start that.

9:36am: Twitter still isn’t working. I am going to cry. How are people going to know I am live-blogging if I CAN’T TWEET ABOUT IT? Also, I have no idea what anyone is doing and I am starting to feel panicky. I’ll check my email, maybe someone emailed me.

9:37am: SWEET! AmazingGreis emailed me. She is hosted with JustHost, my current host, and my current recommendation, in case you were wondering. Love the easy sign-up process, easy two-click install of Wordpress and general usability of the system. By the way, did you know that I switched Issa’s blog from Blogger to Wordpress in less than 24 hours? I feel like a fucking rock star.  Oh, and that template is a free template. Awesome, no? I did tweak it a bit though.

9:40am: Thank God. Twitter is sort of working. At least I know what MommyMelee is doing now. Oh, sweet tears of relief….

9:43am: Story in Boston about “Grounded Unicorn Finally Freed” was not actually about a unicorn, but a boat. Damn.

9:48am: OK, Twitter isn’t really working, but at least I’m getting some work done here. CSV import is on it’s way. Did I mention that lately, I sort of hate my job? The system I am “administrator” for — it sucks. A lot. And it’s broken.

My mornings are hectic.

10:10am: Just read Nic’s post at Violence Unsilenced. I am struck speechless by her powerful words… and her pain.  Please, go read. Support her. She is so brave to tell her story.

10:35am: My mother calls. Geeklet has learned, at 9 1/2 months, how to have massive temper tantrums. She screams about everything. She needs to vent, and I can’t blame her…. thankful that I don’t have to deal with it all day, and feel horribly guilty that I feel thankful. *sigh*

11:03:am: Twitter still down, apparently due to a Denial-of-Service attack. That sucks. Who hates Twitter that much?

11:49am: Working on Issa’s new site — added Google Friend Connect, and then troubleshooting a problem with her feed. Turns out I forgot to set the timestamp so her post last night isn’t showing up on readers because they think it was future-posted… like, this afternoon. Oops! ((blushing))

12:34pm: Goddamnit, the cool comment-reply plugin is not WORKING on Issa’s blog and I can’t figure it out. FAIL.

12:37pm: Ok, turns out I just needed to be more patient.  The plug-in is working, just not at lightning speed…. lol.  Well, I never said I was a patient person. I always get my gifts early, and I hate waiting for surprises. Or results.  That’s why I always quit dieting and working out…

12:45pm: I haven’t had lunch. Stomach is growling and hurting, so hungry! Bonus: Husband works with me, he has gone to get lunch, he is awesome. Unfortunately I was distracted by IMing with Issa and coworkers, so I have no idea what he is buying. Oops.

1:26pm: I swear, I’m doing real work, too… but I also figure out how to at least get Issa’s blogger main URL to redirect to her new URL. Was hoping to redirect posts, too, but no luck. Blogger doesn’t like that. Naturally… ;-)

1:42pm: Twitter appears to be back in business, which is a good thing, because seriously I was really getting anxious there for a little while. Also, I needed to complain about being hungry, and how ELSE would I do that?

2:01pm: Several months of searching, and I couldn’t find exactly what I wanted.. but Kay from Chains of Yesterday just sent me the link like it was nothing! She rocks. A plug-in to let you respond to comments on your blog AND email the original commenter ALL AT THE SAME TIME…. It’s magic.  Will be installing and testing today!

2:41pm: Damnit, AmazingGreis’s site is not redirecting for everyone in the world… except me. Me, I get her page fine. Everyone else? Stupid JustHost page. WTF?

3:16pm: OK, turns out the Greis issue was a patience issue, too. Whoops! Looks like I have a “problem.” I need some sort of OverEager Anonymous Group or something. I don’t know. Anyway, her DNS hasn’t resolved yet, can take up to 48 hours. Hopefully won’t take that long! I think it’ll be resolved more quickly than that, but we’ll see. Meanwhile, I wait. Because I can’t even load her template or anything until it’s finished. Geez!

Ok, I’ve missed a whole chunk of time. The end of the day is always a blur. Summary? Greis’s site was up, template uploaded, posts imported, I did a dance of joy. I left for the day, hit the grocery store for my mother, got stuff for dinner tonight (chicken fajitas made by my dearest-most-darlingest-husband (I have to say that or he won’t cook for me anymore and I’ll starve) ) and picked up the kids. On the way home, talk to a friend of ours who is starting culinary school in less than two weeks! (So maybe I could get with him if DaddyGeek refuses to cook for me… or not) So happy for him. My mom called, I forgot the damn fajita mix/seasoning at her house, but thank goodness we had some at home. Dinner saved!

We ate dinner by 7pm. Bathtime was at 7:47pm, and by 8:28pm the bottles were made, diapers changed and pajamas donned. DaddyGeek went in for bedtime with Cupcake, I put Geeklet down to sleep (easy, thank goodness) (though I just heard her sqwaking in the other room of course) and got back on the computer.

9:06pm: Nearly threw the computer out the window because I can’t upload a check to my bank via our depost at home feature, because the stupid check is written stupid and stupid stupid dumb. Didn’t, because it’s not the computer’s fault. This time.

9:11pm: I buy a new theme for DaddyGeek’s website and try to install. It won’t.

9:12pm: I post a thread to the user forum. I check my email a thousand times in the next ten minutes to see if anyone psots a reply. Nothing. Obviously.

9:30pm: Go get hubby – he has nearly fallen asleep and I am almost sure that Cupcake finally fell asleep, too.

9:32pm: Dissapoint hubby because his site isn’t done. :( Fail.

9:46pm: Hubby wants to know if he should go to bed. He just farted, so I am going to say yes.

9:47pm: Hubby calls me mean because I blogged about his fart.

9:48pm: I giggle with glee at my blogging. I am so funny.

9:48pm: Going to bed. Ok, so I’ll probably eff around online, and play with Greis’s site a little more and watch the rest of this episode of The Closer (see, I got around to it), and then I’ll go to sleep. But this is done.

Goodnight!

Liar McLiar

I’m attending the Mommyblogging: “Balance” is a Bit, Fat, Lying, Mcliar LIE for Moms who Blog (and the rest of us too).  I am so excited for this session, because, um, YEAH.

1pm: So far, so good. The Strawberry Shortcake SWAG is awesome — they are sponsoring this session – and I’ve only managed to offend one person so far ( a nice older Asian lady sitting near me) when I adjusted my “feminine napkin” because I think I’m getting my period and NOT FAIR because it’s not yet TIME for my period WTF?.

Oh well. She probably doesn’t want to read this blog anyway. She doesn’t look like the swearing type. Or the p0rn type!

We interrupt your normal programming for the following announcement:
SQUEE!
Marinka just came up and said hi to me!!!!
Thank you for your attention. Now back to your regularly scheduled programming.

1:15pm: The session is about to start, and the room is definitely filling up.  Not sure yet if it’s going to be a full house.  If you’re at BlogHer and reading this, there’s still room and SWAG! Come on by!

1:17pm: This session features Lisa Belkin writer of Motherlode for NYTimes, Angela Tseng of MommyBytes, OHMommy (Pauline) and Rita Arens of Surrender, Dorothy.

2:23pm: Holy crap, Lisa Belkin writes 2-3 posts a day. There is no way that balance can happen that way! Yikes! (PS, the session has started)  Mostly moms in the room, though definitely some non-moms. We’re about half & half SAHMs and WAHMs. Good mix!  And now the big question…. How many came to get advice on balance (a few)  and how many are here to get confirmation that balance is a really big fat liar McLiar lie? (most of us!)

2:27pm: Rita speaking now.  “I think balance is more about being on a balance beam, trying not to fall off.”  She is going on to say that you can only focus on one thing at a time, because “if you don’t pay attention to the area of your life that needs it when it needs it, you’re going to fall off.” Her final words? “You can have what you want, but you’ll have less.”

Lisa asks Angela, “What is the equation?” referring to balance. Angela says that for her, “you have to give things up. I don’t watch TV anymore. I don’t have time.”  She says that she blogs mostly in the evenings, but sometimes when her kids are awake.  She says the one thing she doesn’t have balance in? How much sleep she is getting. (Angela, you are not alone.)

2:34pm: Lisa wants to know how we decided how much of our lives to devote to blogging. Is it a conscious thing or do you just go? Rita says that she blogs a lot (5 times a day at her personal blog, twice at BlogHer, and more) but that she doesn’t see it as “carving out time” – she is just being herself.

Revelation: The way to attain balance is to get a husband who takes care of everything else so you can blog. I get it now. ::wink wink::

2:36pm: OHMommy says that she just gets sucked in! “Before you know it, it’s midnight…I find myself going to bed later and later.”  Rita responds, saying that she needs to “compartmentalize” in order to avoid getting sucked in.

2:38pm:  Lisa wants to know why our panelists aren’t angsty. She’s going for the jugular! Rita says “My daughter’s Barbie’s all blog. They all have laptops…. She’s totally into it!” She goes on to say that as long as you are not trying to avoid your children while indulging your habit, it’s “totally fine” for your children to see you.  She suggests that you can use it as a teaching experience — “Hey, it’s fine to have hobbies that aren’t you, kid”  (I agree!).

Angel says that she tries to involve her kids in her blog – they’re asking if there are comments about them, or if she’s posting about them. (They aren’t teenagers yet)

2:45pm: Lisa goes on to say that these kids are growing up with this as the norm — perhaps they’ll feel differently about this. Maybe they’ll feel like celebrities!

Question from the audience — I didn’t catch her name, crap.  She asks if there is no relaxation or serenity in our lives anymore, because we’re always doing something that is, in a sense, “work” — self development (blogging), etc. Rita says that she doesn’t find TV relaxing – but that “you have to have the laptop shut at certain times…. It’s Ok for them (the kids) to see you doing your thing, but it’s also important that they see you shut the laptop.”

2:48pm: Lisa says of professions/hobbies that include staring at screen…. “It’s a ball you need to keep your eye on” – because we are possibly increasing the chance that no one will ever speak to each other anymore.

2:51pm: Another question from the audience…. Jennifer,  Confessions of an It Girl.  She says that she wants to know how the panelists express what is important to them to other people…. how do they express that “Yes, this is a priority for me….you need to suck it up”.  Angela says that her husband knows that if she’s cranky, she needs to blog.  OHMommy says her husband also knows that she just needs to blog, she needs her “me” time.   Rita says that she has one child, and she respects big families but for her, one child is all that they need, because there are other things in their lives that need attention and adding more children means taking attention away from other things. She says she has faced criticism from friends and family about that decision, that it has been called selfish, but that’s what they’ve decided is right for their family.

2:54pm: Angela’s mom is speaking! She says she is very proud of her daughter.  She says she’d like to communicate with her daughter but she’s too heavily scheduled, but she can’t call her because she’s too busy! However, Angela’s blog gave her a lot of comfort because she enjoys reading it and keeping up with her daughter this way. She also says that she’s not a blogger, but she’s here and having a great time!

2:57pm: Does your mother read your blog? We often receive criticism because we’re doing things wrong, or doing too many times.  Lisa says sometimes she wonders if her mother is right – she’s not having enough fun. Sometimes, she thinks she’s having a lot of fun.  She finds blogging as an outlet. OHMommy is joining in, saying that last year was a tough year for her because she had three kids who were napping throughout the day so that at least one kid was napping at any time between 10 and 4.  At that time, she started getting really into blogging because she was home all the time, stuck.  She says, “Wow, what a community.”

Rita says, “I think a lot of us started blogging when we felt isolated.” Lisa says that her mother read books rather than blogging – and says she thinks it’s “lopsided” because it’s not interactive. “There is a community that fills a space in so many people’s lives… it’s not just what you’re putting in, it’s what you’re getting out of it.”

3:00pm: Lisa asks “Are women the only people talking about this” referring to balance.  Our audience says yes, we think they are having trouble with it… but not necessarily talking about it.  An audience member (I didn’t catch her name) says that many men are not staying home with their families. She believes it’s more of a generational thing.  Another audience member (didn’t introduce herself) says that she also thinks the roles are reversing because her husband is staying home with a sick child but her father never would have done something like that.

3:06pm: Jodi from Jodifur jumps in on the male/female balance issue – are they talking about it.  She says that her husband has worked it out with his employer to ensure he’s home to be with her family, and that at times he works from home after bedtime.  She says it was a condition of him taking the new job – and that she believes that people will talk about work-life balance if you bring it up.  Angela rebuts to say that it definitely depends on the corporate culture at the place that you work. (Me? I believe that smaller companies are more likely to work with you.)

3:09pm: Another clever, well-spoken audience member points out that technology has affected our lives in many ways, and our parents lived in an “easier” time – it was easier to shut down because the world shut down.  She says that she believes our country is getting cranky – and that we need a nap.

3:11pm: Audience member Kristin from Manic Mommies says she wants to give props to the Dads in the blogging world — she’s seeing more father being willing to speak up and talk about their struggles.  Lisa disagrees a bit, saying that she doesn’t hear from Dads very often.  However, she, and Rita, believe that there is a change starting. Author of Toast on the Ceiling says that her husband would never do it – because it would be “setting himself up for ridicule” but that for her husband – it’s not even a possibility.   Angela responds and says her husband doesn’t want to blog or reach out into the community but that he does understand the difficulty in balancing.

3:15pm: Michelle from CafeMom says their founder is a man — and that people always ask him why there isn’t a CafeDad, and that his response is “Well, it’s called ESPN.”  She says that she thinks as time goes on, we’ll see more dad bloggers. “More and more men will come blogging….The more accepting that we are of DadBloggers the more we’ll see.”

I’m not sure why we are talking about whether Dad bloggers are up and coming. Oh, good, Lisa is bringing it back around. Although this is a great change to plug my husband’s new blog! Check out Evil Emu of Doom. (he’s silly)

3:22pm: Rita and OHMommy are saying that it’s hard to respect the privacy of the people in our lives. For bloggers, she says, “it’s especially hard” because people know that, usually, we’re writing nonfiction.  Rita says that when she and her husband were both blogging, there were things that they learned about each other: “Oh, that made you mad?”  She goes on to say that you need to  make sure you present the full perspective – a “complex person, especially someone you love” in order to ensure that you aren’t hurting the feelings of the person that you are writing about.  Don’t always just “bitch that he didn’t take out the trash.”

3:24pm: Lisa says that she is writing about parenting while raising two teenage kids – and she asks him whether it’s OK to post something.  This past year her son was applying to college – and she had to ride the balance beam of talking about it without giving too much detail. “No blog post is worth a relationship… but you can’t do this without exploring certain territory.”  Rita agrees and says that she thinks it’s important to have a conversation with friends and family and say “You know I write stories, where are your boundaries?” She says “It depends on their comfort level, too” – and not just ours.

Last question of the day. Carrie says that she loves to take pictures, but that sometimes it made her feel as though she wasn’t “in” the moment. “I purposely set aside my camera and try to be in the moment.” She says she has tried to make the same commitment with her blog.  She also says that at times, if she really wants to write about something, she is lucky enough to have friends who allow her to guest-post on their blogs anonymously.

And we’re done.

So what do you think?

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