Home - Category: Self Publishing

Category: Self Publishing

Check out my new blog

Posted on May 16, 2014 in Blogging Site News

No, I am not closing down Pax Nortona. I am merely making some separation. Chaparral Hiker is devoted to my adventures in the brush and beyond. Hope to see you there soon!

Just Letting You Know About It

Posted on May 26, 2010 in Blogging

Latest photo of me

I have a secret blog that I keep irregularly updated. Not many know about it, but it seems to catch a more antic — if not manic — side of me.

Click on the picture to catch the latest installment.

Of crashes and comments

Posted on May 21, 2010 in Blogging Site News

square665 The other day this site was down for a few hours. The reason? We had exceeded our quota. This puzzled Lynn and me because we don’t see that much traffic on our blogs. We’ve slapped down the spinning of spiders and steeled our site against bandwidth pirates. Our provider assures us that we’re being read: So where are you? Why don’t you speak to us?

Top

The Lori Drew Blog Hoax Got Me

Posted on December 11, 2007 in Blogging Scoundrels Suicide The InterNet

The whole issue of sham personas and the relationship of parents to their offspring’s Internet lives remain worth exploring.

Top

Suicide Online Again

Posted on November 26, 2007 in Blogging Scoundrels Suicide The InterNet

UPDATED: 27 November 2007 at 18:05

Police reports on the affair from The Smoking Gun.

square413Liz has righteously aimed both barrels at Lori Drew, a mother who impersonated a 13 year old boy for the purpose of seducing her teenage neighbor and then dumping her by posting “a hateful, hurting rejection”, precipitating the youngster’s suicide. Evidentally the girl had attempted suicide before: Drew thinks that this exculpates her from any responsibility for what she did.

meganmeier.jpgWhen some people get online, their common sense and, yea, their humanity disappears. I remember, for example, the case of Brandon Vedas who drank himself to death while other chatters watched. A few voiced concern about his increasing intoxication but a nasty core of others egged him on. When called on their actions, they could only say that it was not a crime.

And Lori Drew says that she doesn’t feel responsible because Megan had tried to commit suicide before.

The mentally ill do not lose the right to be treated fairly and above-board, Ms. Drew. Your sociopathy deserves investigation. What complicated feelings led you to do this? Unfortunately, as in the case of Vedas, what you did was not against the law, but I hope the members of your community ~shun you~. I hope you become unwelcome company in chat rooms. I hope your online identities become known and avoided by others. I hope social workers pay you a call. I hope you find no friends and no succor in the misery you deserve. You do not deserve the company of others.

But will even this put the point across to you?

Top

Top Ten Bipolar Blogs and Me

Posted on September 12, 2007 in Bipolar Disorder Blogging

square348Congratulations to Crazy Tracy for ending up in Psych Central’s Top Ten Bipolar Blogs! She deserves it!

I am not so sure about Been Broken being there. I went to that blog for months and in the end I concluded that all his work sounded just one note. He has his fans, but frankly I never felt either catharsis or transcendence in his work. Just “I’m depressed” in many different wrappers over and over again. I wonder if blogging is good for him because of this groove. Trick Cycling for Beginners just didn’t hold my interest for very long. I haven’t read any of the others.

I’ve taken a different tack on this blog which is to throw out my whole thinking with the exception of a few confidential areas. So I write about politics, the news, nature, daily life, my reading, and my disease. You won’t see me numbered on bipolar blogs because I don’t conform to the type the board is seeking nor do I advertise myself as a bipolar blogger. I try to be a human being first, a sufferer of my disorder second. This is what my therapist insists upon — that I do not box myself in as “a bipolar”, that the disease doesn’t become the whole of my creativity.

I do continue to suffer over what appears to be the death of my creative impulses after stabilizing. I’ve never been much of a master of writing the long, self-expository confessional — I prefer to be like a camera taking snapshots. If my disease is there influencing the show, then it is there, but it isn’t always going to be the main attraction. I am a polyglot and that is what keeps me vibrant in this world where I count eighteen pills every day (the big swallow is at dinner) just to compel my body to a healthy neutrality. How many times can I write about the sharp corners of Lamictal’s blue shield or the blue-green horse pill that houses my dose of Cardizem?

If I go out in the world seeking the strange, I will find myself strange. Can I afford this?

Top

A Remarkable Site

Posted on September 10, 2007 in Blogging Pointers

Off of PC Magazine’s Top 100 Undiscovered Websites, I found this: Copyblogger.

Also try Verbotomy.

And check out the article on bipolar disorder at Uncyclopedia.

bipolarrabbits.jpg

Top

Not Another One

Posted on September 8, 2007 in Blogging The InterNet

Yet another conference, featuring another expert who hates the Internet, especially blogging:

[[Andrew Keen]], in his recent book ‘The Cult of the Amateur: How Today’s Internet is Killing Our Culture and Assaulting our Economy’, argues that whilst blogs, podcasts, amateur videos and music may be harmless or sometimes even enriching forms of media, they are destroying mainstream newspapers, record companies and film-makers. Wikipedia, the popular free online encyclopedia, he describes as ‘dumb’.

He will go head-to-head with leading authority on innovation and creativity, [[Charles Leadbeater]], author of the forthcoming book ‘We-think: the power of mass creativity’. This aims to understand the new culture in which people do not just want services and goods delivered to them, but also ‘tools so that they can take part, and places in which to play, share, debate with others’.

Charles Leadbetter disagrees that people are being duped. The more sources of information available, the more critical they can be, he has argued.

Get this: people are writing to one another again. Does Keen believe that illiteracy and addiction to visual media is a good thing? As Bugs Bunny used to say “What a Maroon!”

Top

Problems with the Gist of Democracy

Posted on August 20, 2007 in Blogging Journalists & Pundits

square322Professor [[Michael Skube]] thinks that blogs are nothing more than a noise machine, that bloggers are not journalists. Thank you, Dr. Skube for seeing what most bloggers have known all along. We’re not part of the establishment.

Skube decries our failure to take risks (tell that to Majikthise and me for that matter). I countersuggest that this culture of risk-taking, of getting onto the battlefields, the survivalist camps, etc. may distort the true picture of the world. If you hang around all the places where violence is happening, you’re going to believe that the world is a uniformly violent place.

One thing that impressed me when I went to Croatia in 1992 was the large parts of the country that were not emeshed in the war. The same held true for Serbia. Farmers grew tobacco. Trollies ran on time. Put down in the right place you could buy into the proposition that the nation was at peace, that the distant booms of gunfire that you could only hear on the fringes were something else.

Think now of the United States which is embroiled in two wars. What have you seen of soldiers and civilians falling here? The war is playing out as entertainment for we safe ones. News coverage does not enhance our decision-making but plays us for rubes.

Journalists love wars for the adrenaline rush and the chance to tell an offbeat story that we’re hearing too much today. (No, not an offbeat story about how the war is a sham and the people of Iraq don’t deserve this treatment. An offbeat story about violence and alleged success swatting Iraqi cockroaches down served straight from the military spin machine.) Their obsession with getting in leads them to make devil’s bargains: we will not speak badly of the military lest they take away our press credentials.

I see bloggers as a necessary check from the place where the war is not happening. My friends and I who worry about the peacetime effects of war — [[post-traumatic stress disorder]] for example — don’t print out the words of the military spin machine (which is now telling us that PTSD is a [[personality disorder]] and therefore the fault of those who have it). Skube calls us guilty of manifesto because we don’t “weigh out both sides of the issue” (something which Skube himself does not do in his opinion piece.)

If I am to single out any problem with journalism that I find most debilitating it is its insistence that both sides be “weighed out” even though one side has been thoroughly discredited. A classic example of this is the creationism versus evolutionism “debate”. I believe that journalists have contributed a great deal to the legitimacy of creationists by treating their side as equal in weight and evidence to the evolutionist side. It has only been the miracle of a capable judiciary (a fact that could change thanks to Bush) and scientists willing to defend the scientific method that has prevented the tinpots from taking over. But to read the papers, the evolutionists have no more grounds for their view than the creationists do. The theory of evolution is falling apart, they echo the Creationists saying, which shows that those writing the stories have little or no understanding of scientific debate. A little appreciation of the scientific method would quickly reveal why this debate should not even be covered. It only brings in dollars that the Creationists can use to destroy education.

Manifestos dominate blogging because journalists have left us with the need to work overtime to counter their failure to investigate their stories deeply enough. The press may be the fourth estate, but I dare say that the public — manifest in bloggers — represents what could be called the Mega-Estate, the one that encloses the other four and keeps them in check. Unlike journalists, we’re not in it for the money, but for ourselves as taxpayers and human beings. If Skube doesn’t like this as a justification for blogging, then he has a problem with the gist of Democracy.

For another, perhaps better answer to Skube, click here.


In other news, a Philadelphia Inquirer columnist asks us to forget about who has the most money and the biggest poll numbers: tell us what the ideas are. Echoing that could be a very good thing for bloggers to do.

[tags]journalism, journalists and pundits, journalists & pundits, blogging, blogs, punditry[/tags]

Top

A Sedated Brain

Posted on August 2, 2007 in Anger Bipolar Disorder Blogging Psychotropics

square303I wonder: does my sense that I don’t have much to write about or will to charge my words with vigor come from the numbing effect that the drugs I take have on my brain or from my loss of fight, of anger, of the desire to stake my writing on deeply held aggression? At first I suspected the former, but now, I suspect the latter. Except it may be that I am just too cautious about reserving my rage? Or else do I avoid people who piss me off?

[tags]bipolar disorder, rage, anger, psychotropics, pharmaceuticals, drugs and writing, drugs, writing, brain, the brain, blogging[/tags]

Top

New Podcast

Posted on August 2, 2007 in Podcasts

A new podcast has been posted at Vox Nortona.

Still not at the level of expertise that I desire, but that will come.

Top

Podcast 01 Remastered

Posted on August 1, 2007 in Podcasts Site News

I’ve added music and moved the central focus of my podcasting to Vox Nortona.

Another podcast, recalling the disaster of the last few days that kept me offline will appear by the end of the week.

Top
  • Recent Comments

  • Categories

  • Archives