Home > Personal, The Human Mind, Writing > Blog Award: Me? Are you talking to me?

Blog Award: Me? Are you talking to me?

September 5th, 2008

I was awarded my first ever blog award which I find completely humbling. I do live a rather isolated life on this blog an and a lot of the feedback that I get, is not published in the comments, simply because the authors prefer to send them to me over twitter, plurk or Facebook instead of using the already slightly outdated ‘Comment’ function directly under the post.

So, I was really surprised this afternoon when in my inbox I found a comment that was entitled: I’ve awarded you a blog award.
To be entirely honest, I thought it was a spam at first until I read from who it was of course. This was no spam, but a small lovely blog love sent to me by Inge. Thank you very much Inge for the award. You’re a star!

This award seems to be organised in form of an avalanche across the internet and even if normally I do not support anything that even remotely smells of chain mailing, I will make an exception with this one. ;-)

Here are the rules:
1. The winners can add the logo to their blogs.
2. Add a link on your blog to the one awarding you.
3. Sent the Award to at least seven other bloggers who stand out because of content, themes and designs.
4. Put the links of these sites on your own blog.
5. Leave a comment on their site.

And here are my favourite seven:

  1. Hunk of Junk: Joel – my husband’s blog on the various things life hold in store for him or rather he for the world. A must read on it: his quotes of the month collection. He copied the idea from me, but, dear, oh, dear, he’s made an art out of it!
  2. The World according to Taquoriaan: Inge’s blog on everything that she goes through or makes. Loved it from the start and always a pleasant read. Particularly her considerations on green living and cooking.
  3. Will Wheaton in Exile: Don’t remember the name? Really not? And when I say: Wesley Crusher? Aah, see. Knew it. Well, on his side of the world, Will has been busy becoming a splendid writer that has brough more than one tear of both categories into my eyes. His blog is the collection of his change in life as an child star to isolated geek programmer and eventually freeing his poetical soul and father within. A touching story and if you check it out: worth every second you spend in his archive to get the whole story.
  4. The Happiness Project: Gretchen Rubin’s blog that started when she was writing a book with the same name. She explores the small things in life that might cast a small smile on your face and the ones around you. Quotes, projects and musings. What’s not to love?
  5. Solvitur Ambulando: Greg’s fairly new blog that good me immediately hooked onto his life story and the retelling of the various stages a man goes through when finding his place between faith, family, work and adoption.
  6. nBlog: Nike’s blog. She’s a nymph, a medieval storyteller, a mother, a photography and photoshop artist and so much more. The blog is in German and English and worth every second spent on it.
  7. Mark Johnson’s Blog: My friend and collegue’s personal non-thomistic blog ;-) And even though he’s not as active on it as others, ever post brings a small thought where it’s needed.
  8. Amorphismen: Manfred G.’s – my oldest moderator buddy – first try at a blog (he ended up using Livejournal. *sigh*) and I am so glad he made the jump. His insight and openings on art and German literature, religious studies is fresh and ever time a small surprise is hidden in a new post.

yseult Personal, The Human Mind, Writing

  1. September 5th, 2008 at 16:14 | #1

    Thank you so much, dear! :) I will choose my Seven next week (big party coming up this weekend).

    Oh, my blog is purely in English, btw. :)

  2. yseult
    September 5th, 2008 at 16:28 | #2

    Oops, I would have sworn I have read some German entries on your Blog as well. Sorry about that.

    Have a wonderful party, my Dear!

  3. September 5th, 2008 at 19:29 | #3

    Thank you so much, dear friend, for this nice response. Not least, because it is the first time in my life to win an award :-)

    So I have learned: Sometime it it worth waiting so many years ;-) (for what ever …)

    M.

  4. September 8th, 2008 at 13:12 | #4

    “he ended up using Livejournal. *sigh*”

    … but be honest, that was my fault ;-) But what’s wrong with LiveJournal
    asks Diana (who chose it because of Tom Disch’s Blog there)

  5. September 8th, 2008 at 14:54 | #5

    @Diana

    having been seduced by a goddess is never never never a fault in life!

    M.

  6. yseult
    September 9th, 2008 at 07:03 | #6

    I am not sure if I’m traipsing into the trap here, but: what’s not wrong with Livejournal?

    I’ll only pick one thing that every blogger needs to think about: commenting. A system that does not allow for unregistered users to comment with their name, is a system that screams ‘We’re not interested in your opinion if we don’t already know you’. And just registering an account there to comment is just too much of a hassle.

    But I understand that the simplicity of design and administration is appealing to a lot of people. I just prefer to have a higher degree of control over what’s on my page and what not and with Wordpress I have that control and an easy to use base.

    *smiles*
    My comment thus was more directed at Metapher’s silent acquisition of a blog without telling his free lance blogger friend about it ;-) I would have helped set it up if only he’d asked.

  7. Greg
    October 17th, 2008 at 17:57 | #7

    Thanks for the tap. As you might have noticed. My creativity for blogging has been in short supply lately. I will get to it though, it just might not be until Christmastime (yes, really!)

  8. yseult
    October 20th, 2008 at 06:05 | #8

    Ah, Greg, I am not much better, but while I DO have a list of topics to write after a day of writing professionally I sort of have lost ‘my voice’ to write either the blog or any poetry lately. Time… let’s take time and I’m glad to read you again when you get the time to write.

  1. No trackbacks yet.