dotinthesky: (Default)
June 10th: Do you revise and add more plot if you feel your story is too short?

Not at all. I add or subtract as I see fit, if it feels like there's more to be told. Usually, I have an excess of material and it's more a question of cutting back and polishing until I have the final piece.

June 11th: Is it okay to use a comma before a dependent clause? Or anywhere else?

I had to look this up. You apparently shouldn't really use it before a dependent clause if the clause appears at the end of the sentence. If the sentence starts with the dependent clause, then you can use the comma after it. But, for me personally, don't worry about these rules. Do whatever you want. If your piece has a strong mood and interesting use of language, you'll have me hooked.

June 12th: Which social media channels do you use as a writer? Which gives you the best engagement?

I go back and forth on this one. I currently update friends on Facebook, Mastodon, Threads, Substack, Livejournal and Instagram. Mastodon tends to get the most engagement (because of the writing-related hashtags). Livejournal gets sometimes the deepest conversations on writing, and Facebook the strongest cheers (I only have 60 connections, but they are all close friends).

Winning

May. 25th, 2024 09:50 am
dotinthesky: (Default)
This is weird but... I appear to have won that LJ hashmob competition?! I honestly wasn't even trying. Just wanted to participate as I thought it would be fun... and I love a LJ questionnaire!

I've had a couple of friends from the UK visiting these past few weeks and I spent 5 days with them in São Paulo, which has been incredibly fun and re-energising. I'll post a proper update soon.
dotinthesky: (Default)
I forgot to mention LJ in my last post, but it's worth bringing it up as well.

I now have only 5 active friends here! It's such a change from the earlier years, when I had over 300 active friends. I've been reading my LJ chronologically (currently in 2009) and we all posted so often back then, and there were so many comments...

I've been thinking: with the advent of A.I., if there was some way for Livejournal to incorporate it and give us a functionality that translated posts and comments, maybe that would open a new world for us? We could start connecting with the other side of LJ, and vice versa?

That's my tip for you, LJ Development Team!
dotinthesky: (Default)



After months of indecision, going back and forth, I've finally dipped my toe into Subtack's waters and launched my first newsletter/post. Here's my little town: ollieredfern.substack.com

I've changed my mind and now think it's a fairly good site, for now. So many of my favourite authors are there, a lot of interesting ideas are being exchanged, and the site itself is beginning to morph into something resembling a hybrid of Wordpress + Mailchimp + Twitter instead of just a newsletter platform. It feels like the next stage for bloggers and writers.

I'd previously written about how Substack had decided not to do anything about Nazis monetising via their site and how this had made me pause for thought. But then Substack went and banned the Nazis (though they didn't change their terms and conditions - they just applied the clause that prohibitied content that incites violence.) It also turned out that there were only 6 Nazi newsletters, in a sea of 100K newsletters, and that the investigative reporters for The Atlantic, who broke the story, had to do a lot of digging and searching to find them.

Read more... )
dotinthesky: (Default)

Dear friends on Livejournal and Dreamwidth, I've done some changes to my subscriptions.

If I follow you both on Dreamwidth and Livejournal, I've unsubscribed from your Dreamwidth account and will read and comment only on Livejournal. For those only posting on Livejournal or Dreamwidth, nothing has changed - I'm still following you!

Please feel free to do the same to me if you also follow me on both platforms, to make your reading experience easier - I don't have any plans on posting content on only one of these platforms!

Cheers

dotinthesky: (Default)
I've started reading my Livejournal from the start, warts and all. Every day I read a few posts, get through a few months. Sometimes I do an entire year. There were so many comments back then under most posts - I skim through them (most of them were just chattering that happened on LJ as if it were instant messaging. Emoticons before there were emoticons.) So many LJ friends who have now deleted their journals, so many people who I'd forgotten about.

I joined LJ in 2001, under [livejournal.com profile] commonpeople. The journal belonged at first to myself and colleagues from an ESL school I worked for in Londrina, Brazil. We used it to slag off the school and we constantly worried that the school's owners would find out. I then slowly took over the journal and became its sole owner by the end of 2002. Then, in 2014, I decided to conclude that journal and start this one.

Visiting a previous version of yourself is illuminating, funny and cringe-worthy. It's like looking through old photos and being reminded you once wore a mullet. Still, you are smiling in those yellowing photos. Old LJ posts also remind you of so much your forgot. Old work colleagues, doubts about your fledging career, fears about the impending war with Iraq, but also which Lord of the Rings character you are based on a short questionnaire you filled out online.

I was a temp back then, often had very little to do at work, and I was also recently arrived in London and had few friends. It made sense to spend my time on LJ, connecting with people. Many of them would become lifelong friends who I'd eventually meet in real life. Reading back makes me realise why I spent so much time on LJ back then, and so little time now.

I'm grateful I wrote all those posts and I'm reminded of the importance to keep writing, for the pleasure of one day reading back through it.

Game Tilt

Jul. 26th, 2021 12:47 pm
dotinthesky: (Default)


Before the crash.

Before the crash.



I set myself up in the reception area this morning, determined to get through all my pending financial work (updating an Excel sheet with all our expenses) as well as Livejournal reading.

A little before lunch time, my MacBook laptop crashed. Attempts to reboot on the safe mode failed. The green, pixelated screen, according to Mac forums perused via my iPhone, inform that I probably lost my graphs board.

Fuck.

The nearest Mac technician is 3 hours away in São Paulo.

dotinthesky: (Default)


About to read LJ.

About to read LJ.



I’ve discovered the best place and time to catch up on LJ: mornings when I’m sitting in the kitchen, waiting for guests to arrive for breakfast!

Perhaps not the best time to catch up on everything, but if I can read a little here, a little there, I’ll always be up to speed with you lot.

Happy Sunday. 🌿❤️

Delete All

Jul. 9th, 2021 09:47 am
dotinthesky: (Default)
Yesterday, after 16 years of use, I deleted my personal Facebook account. (And by delete I mean, I removed all friends and groups, leaving it only as an admin account for my pousada's FB page.) If I didn't have a guesthouse with so many fans on Facebook, I'd permanenly delete everything. But I have to be realistic, and so the best I can do - for now - is to remove the app from my phone, the shortcut from my browser, and only use the site for work purposes.

I also deleted my Tumblr blog, my writings on Wattpad, my Feedly and Snapchat accounts. And all dating and hook up apps.

I didn't feel anything - no weight lifted, no great shift. It was just something to do, and a truth to recognise that these sites no longer served me and merely held traces of my digital presence. I felt slightly uneasy later about not feeling anything.

Today, I'm reflecting on Livejournal and if I honestly still wish to use this site. As I write this, I can see shortcuts to YouTube, Twitter, Pinterest, Instagram and Goodreads on the browser's tabs. A part of me fears I'll be completely isolated - more so than I already am - if I no longer have any social networks.

And don't get me started on WhatsApp...

Rainy Day

Jun. 22nd, 2021 11:34 am
dotinthesky: (Default)


Catching up with LJ with Paçoca on my lap.

Catching up with LJ with Paçoca on my lap.



It started raining overnight and hasn’t stopped. This means I get a day off - can’t garden, can’t clean apartments, can’t do any laundry (though I stupidly left some hanging overnight which will need to be rewashed.)

It’s nearly lunch time and I’m still in my PJs. One of my cats, Paçoca, has decided to be besties today. Absolutely nothing at all to do with the cold and rain. We are catching up with LJ and after lunch we plan on updating Goodreads.

dotinthesky: (Default)
Barging Round Britain: Exploring the History of our Nation's Canals and WaterwaysBarging Round Britain: Exploring the History of our Nation's Canals and Waterways by John Sergeant

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

"Barging Round Britain" sounds good as the title of a book on the history of Britain's canals and its narrow boats - it has a ring to it - but it's an intriguing choice nevertheless when you consider that boats people found the term "barge" and "barging" offensive! Maybe the authors are signalling that despite their knowledge of the topic they are not boaters?

The book is perfect for anyone wishing to move into a narrow boat, already living in one, or keen on British history (especially engineering history). It's structured chronologically, starting from the first canals until the last one built. After each chapter detailing the history of a particular canal, the book then offers a guide for the journey on that particular canal, for any readers who chooses to have the book with them as they cruise the canals. It's worthwhile reading these sections, though the desire is high to skip them, as they contain interesting tidbits of English and Welsh history. For example, near Liverpool there is a National Nature Reserve with the largest area of peat bog in the country where the military set fire to moss during WWII to make the Luftwaffe think it was Liverpool and drop their bombs there.

The most interesting section, in my view, is towards the end, where it goes into the canal's social history. The miscreants that manned the boats in its early days (considered the worst of the worst for their boozing and depravity), to the families that then grew from them - entire communities that were born and raised in tiny cabins, shunned by "good society", living in awful conditions (no lavatories, washing their clothes in canals dirtied by the industrial revolution) - there were so many interesting facets mentioned (boat schools created, for example, as well as floating chapels!)

There's a lot of interesting info for history buffs:

- Charles Darwin's grandfather was directly involved with the implementation of canals in England, which led to the Industrial Revolution. He'd have been proud to know his grandchild would one day be the father of the theory of Evolution.
- Boats were drawn by horses on canal paths. Once they reached tunnels, there would be men and women waiting to offer their help in pulling the boats along them. They (known as leggers) would lie on their backs on top of the boat and push with their legs. Wasn't unusual for some to fall in the water and drown. Horses, in the meantime, were worked to their death and were considered the worst treated animals in the country. It wasn't unknown for horses to drop dead into canals and be left there.
- Birmingham was the epicentre of a lot of discoveries that propelled the Industrial Revolution and changed the world, such as the first steam engines. The expansion of canals there also involved a lot of corruption.
- There was a "Canal Mania" at the end of the 18th Century, when canals shares steadily grew, encouraging frenzied speculation and investment - often on canals that never got their permits through Parliament or took decades to finally be completed. Fortunes were made and lost. All interest, sadly, was in making money and not maintaining the canals or creating decent working conditions - so only the worst possible characters took on a boating life. Crime was rife.
- After the "Canal Mania" came the "Rail Mania", killing off canal trade. It made me think of MySpace, killed off by Livejournal, which then got killed off by Facebook... which then got killed off by TikTok?

Luckily, the canals didn't die - thanks to a revival of interest in the Second World War, enthusiasts worked on restoring many stretches, and soon the leisure boating industry moved in. Nowadays, canals are seeing a really strong revival, with many people moving into narrow boats thanks to the high cost of living "on land" (the book doesn't go into this, though.)

View all my reviews
dotinthesky: (planet)
Hello livejournal!



I joined this lovely site on September 24th, many many years ago. I love it here! I've learned that to KEEP loving it here, it's nice to be finding new friends. You know... if I joined a cool new hip social media site, I'd be running around seeing what's new, right? Why not put that same effort into livejournal, a place I've known and loved since forever?

So this is not a new idea, I've seen it done lots over the years, just never tried it myself! I figured in honor of my anniversary I'd give it a go. I'm excited, because it's a friendzy I won't be hella late for!

It's called a Friendzy. Friends, countrypersons, lurkers, visitors from a page... if you like building the friends list every once in a while, copy this info into a comment here! Wave to each other, virtual hug, whatever you'd like!




Then share it in your journal, and everyone else can gather up :) Here's my rainbow goat but I don't care how you share it, linking back casually is obviously okay!

dotinthesky: (Default)

“If I had moved into a narrowboat ten years ago, the whole experience would have been documented on Livejournal,” I told [livejournal.com profile] olamina yesterday.

She laughed and agreed with me. And although she posts more regularly than me – about twice a month – even she’s getting some grief from her friends that she doesn’t post often enough. I must be in the dog house with some of my friends! :)

[livejournal.com profile] olamina is one of my oldest Livejournal friends and we have now fallen into a lovely pattern of meeting once a year, when she comes over to Europe to visit her family in London. (Though this might change next year if K and I finally move to Montreal and will be nearer to her in New York.)

I have been thinking about LJ lately – not only because [livejournal.com profile] olamina was in town, but because I also caught up recently with another old LJ friend, [livejournal.com profile] gnossiennes. It had been 13 years since we’d last seen each other! Like myself, [livejournal.com profile] gnossiennes has stopped posting on LJ. We reminisced about the days when we’d post sometimes 5, 6 times a day. Short posts, long posts – thoughtful posts, posts about nothing at all.

Why did I stop posting regularly to LJ? Why has everyone moved to Facebook and stopped sharing their lives’ grit and bones? We have all asked these questions before…

It’s the 1st of August and I’m going to try – AGAIN – to kick start my LJ. For myself, for my memories, for the practice of writing, for the few readers who still use this site, for maybe making some new friends here, for documenting K and mine’s narrowboat adventure.

Please give me grief if I don’t stick to my plans! ;-)

dotinthesky: (Default)
I'm going to make an effort with Livejournal again.  Not for the many readers (there are hardly any left) but for myself. For the writer in me that started out fairly rubbish in 2000 and progressively improved his style and spelling.

Starting tomorrow.

(Back in the day, how often did we write these tiny updates throughout the day?  Days filled with many posts, of varying lengths, in a sea of updates that we barely kept up with...)

Dreamwidth

Apr. 15th, 2017 09:27 am
dotinthesky: (Default)
Gay Russia
 

I have also moved over to Dreamwidth, like most people on my Livejournal's friends list.  Don't know if this is another false alarm - like the many in the past when changes took place and people on Livejournal freaked out (and wasn't the creation of Dreamwidth one of those?) - but I thought this time I should do it, just in case, to back up my journal, but also to show some solidarity to the LGBT community in Russia.

Crossposting for the near future.

https://picosgemeos.dreamwidth.org/

And my journal before that: https://commonpeople1.dreamwidth.org/

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