Mockingbird Hill Cottage

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Chatty on Wednesday

October 7, 2015 at 8:56 am by Claudia

10-7 mini rainbow

•  Early yesterday evening I was outside with Scout. I looked up and saw this.

The sun was to the right (out of picture range) and was it the moon glowing under that cloud? I’m not sure, but that little rainbow-like slash of light appeared. Since my eyes are very sensitive to light, I thought maybe I was seeing something that wasn’t there.

But the camera saw it, too.

A lovely little moment in time.

•  We bit the bullet yesterday and ordered heating oil. Gas prices are pretty low at the moment, so we thought this would be a good time to do it and sure enough, our oil guy told us that now was the time because prices were soon going up. High or low, heating oil is expensive.

The heavy gold quilt is covering the bed once again. I’m wearing my flannel pajamas.

I’m pretty sure it’s Autumn.

10-7 zinnia with web

Meanwhile, the zinnias just keep on blooming.

10-7 orange zinnia

•  Design Sponge, one of my favorite sites, did a Guide to Ulster County, NY yesterday. That’s where we live. You might find it interesting. Grace Bonney, the founder of Design Sponge, recently moved up here – she’s not all that far from us – and has fallen in love with this beautiful area, just as we have.

We’ve got it all here. And this time of the year? Simply glorious.

•  Housekeeping: If you’ve noticed the Cookie pop-up at the bottom of the blog, let me explain why it’s there. The European Union has a law that requires websites to indicate if cookies are being used on their site. Cookies, in case you’re not familiar with that term, are:

‘small pieces of data sent by a website and stored in the user’s web browser while the user is browsing that website…Cookies were designed to be a reliable mechanism for websites to remember information (such as items in a shopping cart) or to record the user’s browsing activity (including clicking particular buttons, logging in, or recording which pages were visited by the user as far back as months or years ago.” Wikipedia.

Every website uses cookies. Ads use cookies. The EU thinks anyone viewing a website should be alerted to that fact. And Google is now enforcing that law. So, any of us who have potential visitors from the EU have to have a ‘cookie warning.’

Blogger blogs already have one. The rest of us have to take care of it ourselves, hence the plug-in I added yesterday (on both my blogs.)

Oy. It’s a bit of a pain in the tush, since anyone who goes on the web for even a minute encounters cookies. You can set your web browser to not allow cookies, if it’s of any great concern to you.

But we do what we have to do, right? I’ve tried to make it as unobtrusive as possible. So, there you go.

I spent a chunk of time yesterday diddling around with all of this and it’s time I’ll never get back. Sigh.

•  Book review of X  by Sue Grafton on Just Let Me Finish This Page today. Click here.

•  Whoops! Forgot to add that The Poisoner’s Handbook (starring Don Sparks) is now showing on Netflix! We saw it listed last night and Genevieve, one of my readers, also wrote me to let me know about it.

Happy Wednesday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Filed Under: autumn, blogging, flowers, garden, new york 34 Comments

Drawing a Line: An Agreement with Myself

August 15, 2015 at 9:46 am by Claudia

8-15 lit coneflower

Now, that’s pretty, isn’t it? I find I like starting my day gazing upon this beauty.

Oh, but I forgot – I actually started my day with a cup of coffee and a good book. As you know, I’ve been doing that for a week or so. I cannot tell you what a difference it’s made in my early morning hours. As of today – mid-August – I’ve read as many books as I normally read in an entire month. (By the way, I keep a list of the books I have read on Just Let Me Finish This Page – it’s in the navigation bar.) Obviously, I deeply love reading, but beyond that, the more I read, the more books I can share with you, either on this blog or on Just Let Me Finish This Page. I feel much more productive. And I feel calmer, more rooted, because reading a good book does that for me.

It’s so much more satisfying than endlessly surfing the web.

And that’s the other change that’s happening right now. I am being very selective about when and for how long I go online. I go online at some point in the morning to write my blog post here and every few days, an additional post on JLMFTP. I read my email. I reply to comments. And I visit some blogs and news sites. I check in on Facebook.

And then I sign out.

The internet is wondrous, yes. But it can also be a black hole. We all know how easy it is to go online and come out on the other side several hours later. We shake our heads and wonder “where did the time go?” I’ve been there many times. And sometimes that is necessary; doing research, for example – I do a fair amount of it for my professional work. But most of the time, it isn’t, really – it’s just a visit to a virtual world. And that world is stimulating and full of friends and interesting and educational, but…it’s still virtual.

You could argue that my visits inside the pages of a book are not based on reality, either. And that would be true. But a book stimulates my imagination in a way that my laptop cannot. Books have been a constant in my life since I was a wee girl. That has never changed. And when I read a book, I’m not surfing. I’m reading. I’m following one story, written only in those pages, and a world is created in my mind and not on a laptop screen.

And then there’s life. A life that includes watching a bunny chew on my grass this morning and seeing a young deer eating some vegetation outside my den window, watching birds frolic in the birdbath, cuddling my dog, observing what’s going on around me, taking walks, mowing the lawn, interacting, helping, talking to my husband, talking to my family and friends, doing something creative, gardening, listening to music. Being.

In the end, that’s far more important.

Don and I have discovered that we really have to guard against being on our laptops – he in the living room, me in the den – for long periods of time. Yes, we’re in the same house and we’re together, but we’re also in our own little virtual worlds. There’s that time suck again. The black hole. We’re getting much better about it, I’m happy to say. I’d rather talk to Don, see his face, hear his thoughts, than bury my head in my laptop. We’re working to make space for that in our morning hours. There’s nothing more important.

8-15 coneflowers

I write two blogs. One is a book blog, so it involves a fair amount of research, reading and then reviewing books, and searching the web for newsworthy information about all things bookish. This blog is a different animal. It’s a journal of my daily life. I use only my photos, which means I also edit them. I write original content every day – my voice, my words, nothing pulled from Pinterest or other sites – because that’s a choice I made long ago and one I am committed to. I reply to comments. I deal with email. I visit other blogs.

Let’s be honest here, even with all that being done on a daily basis, I really don’t need to be online more than 2 or 3 hours. Often less. Lately, decidedly less.

As always, these are simply my thoughts and realizations about how I choose to spend my time. I love what the internet has afforded me, not the least of which is the opportunity to be a blogger. I can’t even begin to say how wonderful and life-changing that has been for me. I love to write and this blog has been a wonderful way in which to share my writing with you. But now that I’m older and wiser (I can only hope) I have learned that I have to draw a line in the sand. On one side: the internet. On the other side: life. A life lived online for too many hours is not a good thing.

Silly, but sometimes it’s a relatively small change that makes a huge difference. Choosing to read a book for an hour or two upon rising each morning. Not opening the laptop until later in the morning. Knowing when to sign off and close it up.

An agreement with myself.

I’m off to work outside for a while. After I cuddle my doggie and kiss my husband.

Happy Saturday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

 

 

 

Filed Under: blogging, Don, internet, life, Scout 26 Comments

Thoughts on Walking the Blogging Tightrope

July 11, 2015 at 9:27 am by Claudia

7-11 crown vetch in bloom

I’m rambling a bit this morning.

Every once in a while, I find myself observing my blogging experience from a dispassionate distance. Invariably, this thought occurs: “What the hell am I doing, sharing all this information with people all over the world?”

Because, if you stop for a moment and think about it, that realization can be alarming. When this happens, I often have another thought almost simultaneously: “I’ll just stop blogging and delete everything.”

Obviously, I don’t act on that thought. But who knows? I might, someday.

Don and I were talking about blogging the other day; about what I choose to share with my readers and what I keep private for whatever reason. Every blogger wrestles with this kind of decision and every blogger has a different comfort level as to what makes the cut.

I’ve always aimed for honesty on this blog. I think that you have a pretty good idea of who I am. I hope, in turn, that I’ve been honest enough in my writing to indicate that I’m not perfect. I have my moments of insanity. So does Don. Sometimes I share them with you; often, I don’t. I don’t necessarily want to share my middle-of-the-night worries with you. I don’t share the daily stresses of our life, though we have them. We have a very, very good marriage, Don and I, but it’s not always choirs singing and rose petals covering every surface.

7-11 scaevola

In other words, we are good, but flawed, people trying to be even better people.

All bloggers, if they are truly honest about this process, will tell you that they present an edited version of themselves to their readers. Because who wants to read everything? Who wants to read a steady stream of negativity and worries and complaints? I sure don’t. That doesn’t mean I read blogs to escape – I don’t. I like to get a sense of the blogger behind the words.

The balancing act comes from walking the tightrope of what to share and what to keep private, when to be positive and when to share fears and challenges. It’s tricky, that tightrope.

7-11 yarrow

Overall, I think I handle that challenge fairly well. The truth is, I’m basically a positive person who finds humor and beauty in my daily life, though there are the occasional dark moments. What you read on a daily basis on this blog is a pretty good indicator of my frame of mind. You don’t need to hear about all of my worries. You don’t need to hear about trying to make the mortgage payment every month or constantly hear about the ups and downs of working on freelance basis in the Performing Arts. Occasionally. But rarely.

After all, those challenges are also our choices.

You also don’t need to hear about my daily worries about Scout and the ups and downs of her life at the age of 16. Only occasionally. I learned about that the hard way when I shared a lot about Riley’s struggles and a reader left a mean-spirited, very long and very judgmental comment in which she decided she should be the one to tell me it was time to end his life. She, apparently, felt she knew best. When I kindly but firmly told her she had overstepped, she went off in a huff. Good riddance.

Because, you see, sharing with readers also means that you’ll have the occasional insane comment. Inviting readers into your blog home means that you run the risk of encountering an ass or two. That’s okay, I guess. On the whole, I have encountered that sort of thing rarely. My readers are pretty classy and wonderfully supportive, if I do say so myself!

But just as in real life, you learn the hard way what to share and what to keep close to the chest. I’ve had the occasional encounter with a supposed ‘friend’ who decided to blab about things I had shared in confidence – who took that information and twisted it, using it against me. That sort of thing always gets back to you. The consequence? You’re more careful about what you share and who you share it with.

I suspect we’ve all been there, at one time or another.

In my seven years of blogging, I think I’ve firmly established my sharing-comfort-level. I’ll always be honest with you, dear readers, but I won’t share everything!

Believe me, you should experience a sense of relief after reading that statement.

The tightrope is tricky. But I won’t be getting off any time soon.

By the way, nothing has happened to spur this post. Just thoughts based on my talk with Don – a talk that made me think about this crazy, but wonderful, blogging existence.

(Photos: top, crown vetch in bloom; middle, scaevola; bottom, yarrow.)

New post up on Just Let Me Finish This Page – hint: my thoughts on the publication of Go Set A Watchman.

Happy Saturday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Filed Under: blogging 60 Comments

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Welcome!

Welcome!

I live in a little cottage in the country with my husband. It's a sweet place, sheltered by old trees and surrounded by gardens. The inside is full of the things we love. I love to write, I love my camera, I love creating, I love gardening. My decorating style is eclectic; full of vintage and a bit of whimsy.

I've worked in the theater for more years than I can count. I'm currently a voice, speech, dialect and text coach freelancing on Broadway, off Broadway, and in regional theater.

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Scout & Riley. Riley left us in 2012. Scout left us in February 2016. Dearest babies. Dearest friends.

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