It's been a tough week for this Wild Rose Press author. I'm revising a
book, waiting for editorial notes on another, and thinking about a
third. Meanwhile, I'm tweeting and Facebooking and checking in with
Goodreads and Amazon Authors. For me, social media is fun, but my
website, now twelve years old, is my rock. It's my core online identity
and truly a part of me. My non-writing friends don't understand when I
say things like this, but my website is like a child. I have nurtured
and cared for it during all the phases of its life, and when it goes
down, I worry.
My son suggested I start blogging twelve years
ago, promising to "help." He's in the business, but at the time he was
just out of college and working for a small family company in Michigan.
Then he decided to apply to grad school in California. And got accepted.
He fell in love with the West Coast and I don't think he'll be
returning to Michigan except to visit. Much has happened in his life
since he "helped" me (ie. does everything except write the posts) put a
website together: he's married, has a family, a big job, a home of his
own. Yet he's still taking care of my website way past the time when we
should have made other arrangements.
At first, the website was
mainly used to host my blog and archives, which for all those years I
called "A Writer's Diary." I managed to find fresh material almost daily
for ten years, but then, things slowed down and I knew writing about
writing was, for me, growing stale. I tried many different ways to blog.
New subjects were tried and rejected. Finally after almost two years I
decided to just call the site http://www.cynthiaharrison.com.
I
thought about having a static front page with links to my books, the
covers of which now march in a vertical
Through these years,
I've been hacked a few times. It's never fun and something is always
lost. Recently, I was hacked again and while my son tries to juggle all
the demands of his own life and work with my little blog project that
has grown larger and lasted longer than either of us imagined, I sit and
wait and wonder: who am I without my website?
column down the right side of
the site. This is what I dreamed of all those years ago, and now it has
happened. That "trying to get published" part of the journey is over and
now...I've been writing about real life these days. I love reading
memoir and my family posts remind me of mini-memoirs. I also post about
mind/body and spiritual stuff. Also diets.
Find Cynthia's Books Here on The Wild Rose Press
I enjoyed reading your blog as I have recently started doing creative writing. I have written a few short stories and have even had some success in getting articles published in magazines. I have an idea for a book as weell- I just need to make the time to get it written. I look forward to reading your book. Good luck with your future projects.
ReplyDeleteSteven @ Cambridge Local Marketing
I completely get it. If you're a writer that's who you are, not what you do. It's how you experience your existence and process your thoughts so when you're not writing a particular piece of course you'll be on your blog writing something else. I think most of us are the same, what we write isn't as important as that we do.
ReplyDeleteEdwin @ Clicks In Motion
For a writer, the only thing we know is simply just writing. Whether it is a blog or on a notepad diary, it is what we love to do. I am inspired by your blog. As a writer just getting started I look for inspirational stories like yours to figure out how to get started and how to cure my crave for writing. Keep up your blog! It's worth more than you will ever know!
ReplyDeleteCharles Campbell @ EVM Digital