Thirty-one days of the Slice of Life Challenge have
passed. At the beginning, I was gung-ho, excited to be able to share my
thoughts
and to have an excuse for blogging daily. But now that the month is
over, I admit to being a bit worn out.
In 31 days, I never failed to
post, though as I exhausted my stockpile of partially written posts and
struggled to fit writing into my seemingly ever-busier schedule, my
Slices published later and later, and the comments were fewer and fewer
(could it be that other Slicers were getting tired just like me?). So
yes, over this month, I have run out of time and energy.
But I have not run out of ideas! There were so many things I wanted to Slice about that I never quite got around to.
I
wanted to discuss buying clothes online—specifically a cost-benefit
analysis of the value of the clothes versus the likelihood of having to
return them. Sounds thrilling, right? That entire topic fell by the
wayside when I gave up self adornment for Lent.
I did think it
might be interesting to share what I was doing instead of self
adornment—things like learning Indonesian, putting together a Wordpress
site, using my old nail polish collection to decorate a cookie
tin....and of course, blogging—but there! I just told you in a
sentence.
One day, I wanted to share the song I had stuck in my
head. That cheesy country song about how life is like a game of poker.
If I had to be listening to it in my mind, shouldn't everyone else as
well? Oh, well, if you know it, you're probably hearing it right now.
You're welcome!
This morning, I had a crown put on my tooth, and I
really wanted to blog about that singular experience—but since I have a
follow-up appointment in two weeks, I thought I might wait until then.
And besides, I had an SOLSC recap to write!
I wanted to talk
about web-development geekery: how much I love coding, and the
pronunciation of "favicon" (that's also language geekery, by the way),
but I decided given the audience of mostly non-developers, I could do
more interesting things with my platform.
Speaking of my audience
of non-developers, I was struck throughout this challenge by how many
Slicers are teachers. I came dangerously close to a teaching career, so
their stories were simultaneously impressive and terrifying to me. I
wanted to say something about that, but I could never figure out exactly
what.
Other half-formed topics are multitudinous: the similarity
of the SOL logo to that of Slice soda, a the long-lost soft drink of my
youth. The interesting phenomenon of my always-increasing need for
sleep, and maybe my absolute awe of the people who can get up before
sunrise and survive the day. The way gory movies are horrifying even
when you can't see what's going on (like when someone in the room is
always watching them on the iPad while you try to go about your day). My
tentative attendance at AwesomeCon next month, and in a similar vein, a
question: What is it that makes Game of Thrones mainstream while any
other similar show would be considered geeky in the extreme? Speaking of
shows, why are there no homely and/or anxiety-ridden TV heroines for me
to relate to? Speaking of non sequiturs, is my ongoing consumption of
dairy products contributing to animal suffering?
The questions go
on and on. Serious and silly alike, every topic has a home in my blog.
Stay tuned and you might see some of these aforementioned subjects
dissected (or I might decide that my one-paragraph summaries here were
good enough). The Slice of Life challenge may be over, but the Slices
will forever keep coming—on a more sporadic schedule, thank you very
much.
Monday, March 31, 2014
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5 comments:
The upcoming slices will be like an artist's continuation on album 2! You have some great ideas...you just have to build them, right? And with space to do so, I have no doubt you will. I was thinking about you the other night when I wrote my slice about playing dress-up in my own closet -- could it be that I should've given up self-adornment for Lent? The answer is probably yes! Congratulations on slicing this month!!!
I love that you put words down about the "unsliced" - what a great idea...it shows that you "have caught the bug" - there is even more to come! Now you have me thinking, what haven't I written!
Whoever thought at the end of a month that we would run out of days before we ran out of ideas?
Great slice.Hope to see you here on Tuesdays.
What a great idea to slice about the slices left unwritten! I also have a document full of little bits of ideas.. things I considered and discarded or decided to let them wait for another day... another slice.
Sometimes blogging everyday can make you weary and tired, but I'm glad you stuck with it! :) Looks like you have so many more slicing moments just begging to be written! Keep it up!