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Did You Hear About The Food?

March 1, 2007 by SOBCon Authors

Sometimes when you register for a conference and you look at the schedule you see those painful words “Lunch on your own”.

You know what that means – rush to get out of the room as soon as the session is over so you can find a restaurant within walking distance before the line gets to long.

Well that won’t be a problem at SOBCon ’07! Just look at our schedule.

Our plan includes a reception on Friday evening during the Live Open Mic night. I had to ask our folks in charge what “reception” meant. They said, “We’ll have light hors d’oeuvres.”

My immediate response to that was, “Sounds French!” (Felt a little silly after I said that. Oops!)

Then on Saturday we’ll have what they call “Breaks” in the morning and the afternoon. The people in the know said there will be coffee available.

Can I get a cheer from all you caffeine addicts out there?!

But that’s not the best part. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: bc

We Talked About the Weather . . .

February 28, 2007 by Liz

The Weather

Everyone talks about the weather, but we did more than that. Plenty of folks brought cool links to share. We’ve got them all right here.

  • My winter photos on Flickr.
  • Thunderbolt Tours
  • To watch one or a thunderstorm is an emotional rush
  • change a bulb, change everything.
  • Spin the Wheel of Lunch!
  • Texas has one of the best manuals on rain water harvesting
  • You should check it out for your blog. It’s amazing. Hungry for hunger
  • Sydney Bureau of Meterology
  • Thunderstorm radar image
  • Storm about to hit in Sydney
  • The SOBcon 07 blog
  • Glenda’s Weather Story

Who Says We Don’t Like to Talk about the Weather?

Tornadoes were the star of the show until late, late, in the 300s. Then Cat and Rodney each told a compelling story about a wild fire. Beyond can you guess who was the one who woke up with a cat and new kittens? Who was the one who decided to help us name a new business>

  1. Joe
  2. Char
  3. Marti
  4. Becky McCray
  5. Jim Turner
  6. Carolyn Manning
  7. Rick Cockrum
  8. Sheila at Family Travel
  9. Kristen King
  10. Sean
  11. Lisa
  12. Robert Hruzek
  13. John Richardson
  14. Chris Cree
  15. Leah Maclean
  16. Sandra Renshaw
  17. Douglas
  18. Brooke
  19. GP
  20. Glenda Watson Hyatt
  21. Rodney Rumford
  22. cat
  23. Mike

Thanks to everyone for the cool links and for the conversation.

See you next Tuesday? I sure hope so.
–ME “Liz” Strauss

What is Tuesday Open Comment Night?

WANT TO GUEST HOST AN OPEN COMMENT NIGHT WITH ME? PICK A THEME AND TELL ME ABOUT IT. C’MON IT’LL BE FUN!

Filed Under: Community, SOB Business, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog_promotion, discussion, letting_off_steam, living-social-media, Open_Comment_Night

Are You a Writer? 7 Traits that Writers Have in Common

February 28, 2007 by Liz

(Updated in 2020)

Photo by Brad Neathery on Unsplash

Bloggers and Writers

Lately I’ve noticed a number of bloggers who draw a line between themselves and the word writer. I already knew a number of writers who do that as well. That word writer seems to be one that can take years to claim.

When I investigate why this is so, the answers are intangible. The idea, writer, seems to fall into a category with ideas like success. Every person is struggling to find a meaning that makes sense. It’s not about money. It’s not about volume of work. It’s about meeting a self-defined goal of becoming a writer.

Becoming a writer — that resonates with every writer I know.

People ask me how I knew I was, how I know I am, a writer.

Let’s talk about writers I know.

Are You a Writer? 7 Traits that Writers Have in Common

Naturally, if the idea of a writer is self-defined, I can’t tell you when you will feel that you can call yourself a writer. However, a few things seem to be true about all writers — from every first grader I taught how to construct a sentence to every great writer I’ve ever researched.

  1. A writer is a paradox of ego and self-doubt. We need both to keep on task and to keep in control. Knowing oneself is the only way to invest in the work and still be able to let go when it’s time to stand back and revise it.
  2. Writers often start out feeling like an imposter. The message we’re told is that the writing is strong and compelling, or well on its way, but we think the messenger could be mistaken.
  3. Writers get lost if they compare themselves and their work to other writers. The same is true if they write for approval.
  4. Even the most inexperienced writer knows when the writing is wonderful. The problem is that we have to learn how to tell when the writing is not good and how to have the courage to fix it.
  5. Writer’s block is fear, or exhaustion, or both. It can be managed if we know its source.
  6. Every writer is in a self-actualizing process. Writing is an apprenticeship. A writer is always becoming a writer.
  7. Nothing in life can prepare you to be a writer, except everything in your life.

I would say the best advice is to paraphrase Troy Worman. “Don’t wait for permission to be a writer.”

Every day I write, I learn something about myself and other people.

How do I know I’m a writer?

Try as I might to avoid it, I simply must write.

Be irresistible.
–ME “Liz” Strauss

Filed Under: Successful Blog, Writing Tagged With: becoming a writer, bestof, Power-Writing-for-Everyone, traits of writers, what makes a writer, writer traits, writers-block

13.3 Glenda Watson Hyatt, Learning to Write

February 28, 2007 by Liz

A Life Changed by a Book

Glenda Watson Hyatt's photo

Yesterday, Glenda and I talked about what it felt like to become a published author. She shared the experience of touching her books for the very first time. Her description makes it easy to imagine how it must have been — one more example of Glenda’s skill as a writerr and storyteller.

Glenda’s accomplishment and that thrill of achievement are a future that many people reach for. Yet Glenda became a published author following a distinctly different path from the usual road. I wondered about that path and asked Glenda these questions.

How did you learn to write? How did you learn to type out the characters? How did you learn to find your clear, authentic musical voice?

Please allow me to share this except from I’ll Do It Myself about learning to print in Grade One in the Special Education class:

“Because getting to the chalkboard was difficult for most of us once we were placed in our seats, we each had an 18-inch square piece of chalkboard at our desks for practicing our printing. It was also easier to work on a horizontal surface rather than a vertical one. Initially, my printing was wobbly scribbles. With practice and extreme concentration, I controlled my jerky movements enough to make my letters almost legible more of the time. I also kept a chalk eraser handy, though inadvertently an uncontrollable movement erased a good letter. In frustration, I did the letter again.

Although learning to print, and then to write, were important steps in learning to read, it was evident that printing would not be efficient. It took too much energy and was too time-consuming to keep up with my work, and that would only worsen through the grades. Learning to use a typewriter was a necessity.

An electric Smith Corona typewriter was placed at the back of the room, which a few of us shared. When it was time to do typewriter work, Mrs. Rutherford dragged me in my desk chair over to the typewriter table and then dragged me back to my desk when I was done. Then it was the next student’s turn. A while later, perhaps once funding became available, we each had a typewriter at a second desk beside us. We simply dragged the typewriter back and forth as we needed it. It was much easier, especially on Mrs. Rutherford’s back.

As I have only one somewhat functioning hand, I only typed with one hand, my left hand. While typing, I steadied my hand on the typewriter hood to give myself some control over the spastic movements and used my thumb to hit the keys, causing my wrist to be in a dropped-wrist position. This concerned the adults, particularly the physio and OT [occupational therapist]. Although this was decades before repetitive strain injury and carpal tunnel syndrome had been invented, they were concerned that the dropped-wrist position would cause damage over the long-term.

They decided a splint with a stick to hit the keys was needed to keep my wrist in a good position. With this contraption snuggly Velcro strapped to my arm, I was expected to have enough arm control to steady my hand mid-air, without resting it on anything, and to accurately hit the keys. And this was less frustrating than printing with a pencil? After a few days, the splint ended up in the back of my desk drawer, and I resumed typing with my left thumb, my hand in its compromising position. I type the same way today, as nothing else feels as natural. For a non-verbal individual who relies on written communication, my left thumb is my most valued body part.”

I have always enjoyed writing; that is my means of communication and expression. I fondly remember our Creative Writing sessions after Friday morning recess in the Special Ed class. In the regular Grade Seven class, as a replacement assignment if there was something I couldn’t do, the teacher had me pick one moment or incident and write as much as I could about it by describing all of my five senses. The idea was to expand that one moment in time as much as possible and to include as many details as I could remember. I still use that technique if I’m stuck while writing.

Once I got my first computer in university, my writing improved because rewriting and revising were easier. I no longer had to type a rough copy and then a good copy or mess around with that darn correction paper. I love when the words just flow through me; that when I am in my groove and truly using my gift.

Gosh, Glenda, that’s a story. Thank you.

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Related
13.2 Glenda Watson Hyatt, published author
13.1 Meet Glenda Watson Hyatt
A 4-Part Series: An Interview with the Amazing Glenda Watson.Hyatt

Filed Under: Interviews, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, cerebral-palsy, emoms-at-home, Glenda-Watson-Hyatt, ill-do-it-, Wendy-Piersall

A Ready Made Proposal To Convince Your Boss To Send You To SOBCon07

February 28, 2007 by SOBCon Authors

We’ve had some requests for help here at SOBEvent.com.

Apparently there are some employers that are balking at the idea of sending their employees to SOBCon ’07. Or at least there are some employees who suspect their employers might balk a the idea.

Well we’re here to help. We’ve put together a little memorandum that’s guaranteed to convince your boss to send you to SOBCon ’07.

Oh. Wait. Well, it stands a chance…

Our legal department is balking about the guarantee thing.

How about we say you could just give it a whirl and see how it goes? You can’t get what you don’t ask for, right?

Just copy the below into your own document, change the particulars for your unique situation, print it out and pass it to your boss.

We sincerely hope you aren’t escorted back to your desk to howls of laughter… [Read more…]

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: bc

The Mic Is On: Let’s Talk About the Weather!

February 27, 2007 by Liz

It’s Like Open Mic Only Different

The Mic Is On

Here’s how it works.

It’s like any rambling conversation. Don’t try to read it all. Jump in whenever you get here. Just go to the end and start talking. EVERYONE is WELCOME.
The rules are simple — be nice.

There are always first timers and new things to talk about. It’s sort of half “Cheers” part “Friends” and part video game. You don’t know how much fun it is until you try it.

Weather Montage

Let’s Share Weather Stories. . .

We might talk about

  • Weird weather stories
  • Weather we love to experience
  • Weather that’s beautiful
  • How weather got in our way
  • How weather saved the day

And, whatever else comes up, including THE EVER POPULAR, Basil the code-writing donkey.

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Related article
What is Tuesday Open Comment Night?

Filed Under: Blog Comments, Community, Links, Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Outside the Box, SOB Business, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog_promotion, discussion, letting_off_steam, living-social-media, Open_Comment_Night

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