Old Writing

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Steve is looking over his old journals.  In some ways, I am envious of the fact that he has them.  He can read what he was doing on March 12, 1986 (provided he wrote that day) and marvel over his dorkitude.  I kid, of course.  Or do I?

I kept a paper journal for a few years in high school.  I don’t know what ever became of it.  I sometimes I wish I had it now.  I distinctly remember taping the first penny minted in 1987 that I came across that year.  There were all kinds of things like that stuffed in there.

I don’t have that, but I do have online writing dating back to late June 2001.  There are reasons why I don’t want to move it all over here, but I have come to a decision to upload some of that writing here.  Rather than make you dig around, when/if I upload some thing old, I’ll alert you to it in a post, should you care to read.


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Literature Carnival, Seventh Edition

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Finally!  I apologize for the carnival’s long absence.  Hopefully we can get this thing back on a bi-weekly schedule now.  Because I have limited time (I have a lot of essays to grade this week), I am limiting this week’s carnival strictly to submissions I received.

The Library Girl discusses the joys of enjoying one’s favorite hot beverage along with a good read.  I heard there used to be apparently still is a good bookstore in Atlanta called the Cup and Chaucer.  I live about a mile away from Coffee Buy the Book.  There’s just something about a nice hot cup of coffee or tea that goes so well with reading.  I can almost feel my IQ points go up when I go inside a coffeehouse or tearoom.

Grrl Scientist of Living the Scientific Life (Scientist Interrupted) reviews Michael Ruse’s The Evolution-Creation Struggle.  Very interesting book review — I would like to recommend Ed Larson’s books on the subject, mainly because I’ve heard him speak and he didn’t win the Pulitzer for nothing.

I read Jacob I Have Loved by Katherine Paterson in college as part of a course in Young Adult literature.  It’s a wonderful book.  The Autumn Rain thinks so too — read her review “When the Angst is Worth the Beauty.”

I’m afraid those are all the submissions I received — all very good ones!  I encourage you to submit your literature-related entries to the carnival now that we’re back on track.  I believe I received two other submissions that didn’t come through properly due to problems with my form.  When I invited the authors to resubmit, I didn’t hear anything.

If you would like your blog post to be featured in the next Literature Carnival, please use my carnival submission form.  Hope to see you in the next edition!


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Twenty Years Gone

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Twenty years ago I was in the 8th grade and in the midst of my first crush.  In Sixteen Candles Molly Ringwald’s character Samantha has a crush on Jake, one of the most popular boys in school.  When she tells her dad about how she feels, he says, “That’s why they call them crushes. If they were easy, they’d call them something else.”  Such an obvious statement, yet so true.

My first crush was on a blond, light-eyed boy named Tracy Bishop.  I have always wondered what happened to him.  I can’t believe twenty years have passed now.  Sometimes I can conjure up exactly how I felt.  That first crush is a killer.  Especially when it is neither requited nor reciprocated.

Tracy and I had gone to different elementary schools.  The first time I met him was in 6th grade.  We were on the same team (you remember how middle schools divided — and still divide students into teams?).  I don’t recall being in his classes.  I really wasn’t that interested in boys, yet, anyway.  We were selected as students of the month by our teachers — I think he was December and I was January.  Our teachers took us out for pizza in the middle of the school day to one of those grand pizza places that were drummed out of business by the likes of Chuck E. Cheese.  Crystal’s Pizza had a movie theater that showed cartoons, all kinds of games, and a late Victorian/Edwardian era decor.  I remember the place was fairly empty.  We were allowed to play games, but Tracy and I didn’t really know each other, so we kind of drifted in different directions.  I was playing skee-ball — very badly — and I heard a soft laugh behind me.  Evidently Tracy didn’t think much of my skills, either.  We didn’t say anything.

I went to a different school the next year because my family moved, but I returned to my former school for 8th grade when my parents had to sell their house — there was a lot going on that isn’t germaine to this story, so I won’t get into all of that.

Tracy’s family had gone to Germany on vacation the previous summer.  I just remember all of a sudden, there he was.  Omnipresent in my thoughts.  In my classes.  He joked around with me.  He probably had no idea how I would cling to each conversation.  I think he knew I had a crush on him.  I think he was even flattered.  Perhaps in another world that didn’t revolve around how cool people thought you were, he might even have acted on it.  That’s the sense I get, anyway.  But middle school isn’t about being true to yourself.

No one really seems to know exactly what happened to Tracy.  I moved away to another state after 8th grade, and I finally just learned that Tracy moved away while in high school.  I don’t know where he graduated from, so I haven’t tried to track him down.  Wouldn’t be any point now.  That’s twenty years gone.  I passed the point of wondering what if a very long time ago.

Still, every once in a while, I think most people think back on that first crush.  It just occurred to me this morning that it was twenty years ago.  That seems like a long time for memories that you conjure up in such crystal clarity.


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Maggie

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Five years ago today, I was holding my brand new baby, Margaret.  We thought then that she’d be a Meg or Meggie, but she’s grown into a Maggie.

We went to Chuck E. Cheese and had chocolate cake.  Maggie requested a trip to the bookstore for her present instead of the toy store (that’s my girl), but when she was there, she picked out a Dora the Explorer book that plays music, a Hello Kitty backpack, and a stuffed white kitten she had already named Miss Tickles before we were out of the store.

Here are some pictures:

Maggie entering Chuck E. Cheese

Maggie at Chuck E. Cheese

Dylan sipping his Coke

Sarah and Dylan in the car

Actually, that last was taken a couple of days ago, not today, but I thought it was cute and wanted to share it.


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Almost There

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The Pensieve has been completely restored (I think) thanks to an old MT export file I made in October.  I had to manually upload entries made after that.  Ditto for the genealogy blog.  I think there are still a few missing from that one.

I’m not sure I can restore the posts I made here after I migrated to Word Press in January — the posts from January and February.  At this point, I can’t figure out how.  I’ll keep working at it.  I especially want to restore the carnival entries.

On the other hand, restoring the education blog will take some major work, as I never did an export of it, and I have decided not to restore the classroom blog.  It’s a shame, but I don’t feel like much of significance was lost.  That’s something my students and I should work on.


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Headache

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This site restoration is looking more involved by the moment.  I don’t know when I’ll get this accomplished, so don’t hold your breath (if you were).

At this point, doing manual reposts is looking like the simpler option, and considering how time-consuming that is going to be, we’re looking at a long period of time.  However, the good news, I have to keep telling myself, is that I do indeed have the posts.  Yep.

I wish I knew something about perl.  If you think HTML or CSS looks like a jumble of characters, try looking at perl.

Oy.

OK, so unless I have takers to host the Literature Carnival, that’s off for a week.  Also, the HP Carnival I host at the Pensieve (which isn’t close to being fully restored yet) is off for this week, too.


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Site Restoration/Literature Carnival

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I have had NO free time this week to speak of, and today is the first chance I will have to attempt to restore my website completely. I can’t do everything, so I’m afraid I won’t have time to post a literature carnival, particularly when I have not received enough submissions to cover the whole carnival. I’m afraid that will have to be put off — unless someone wants to host it for this edition, that is.

I’m working on restoring the site right now. My game plan is as follows:

  1. Install Movable Type temporarily and upload each blog into a temporary directory.
  2. Export each blog.
  3. If this fails, restoring the site will take a lot longer than this — months, maybe — as I manually restore each entry.

Wish me luck. This one will be my lowest priority, because I happen to have restored most of it (with the exception of two months of entries).


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