East Meets West

East Meets West or In Search of an Orange Dot.

I found an orange dot on my computer screen. I couldn’t figure how it got there and I tried to clean it off. Next time I looked, it wasn’t there.

Then it was back, in the same spot. I tried to remove it again, this time paying attention to what I was doing. It stayed put. Hmmm. A mystery.

Do you know about some of the neat features that WordPress provides to its bloggers? They give us counts as to how many viewers visit our blogs, the count for our busiest day, and which search terms led someone to our blog. Pretty neat, I think. (Stay with me, here.)

A fairly new WordPress feature is a map of the world showing the countries where the viewers are from. When I first noticed this, my browser screen was not at its full size. Sometimes I could see that Alaska was colored in. Ooh, I thought, someone in Alaska read my blog? Cool!

Cool, maybe, but not necessarily true. Once I increased the size of my browser screen, I noticed that all of the United States was orange-colored, meaning that the viewer from the USA could have been from any state, including Alaska and Hawaii.

Which brings me back to the orange dot that I kept trying to clean off of my computer screen. It was Hawaii on the WordPress global map. Hawaii is, of course, way off in the middle of the Pacific and very small.

Mystery solved.

Sometime after that, I noticed another orange dot on the right side of my computer screen. I tried to clean it off. (A conditioned reflex; that’s my excuse.) On the map, it was north of Japan and just off the coast of Russia. But Russia and Japan were not highlighted as points of origin for a blog visitor. In fact, no country on the right (east) side of the map was highlighted. The only country highlighted was on the left (west): the United States.

That little orange dot is part of the United States? As it turns out, yes.

With a little Internet research I discovered that the orange dot is the easternmost part of the Aleutian Islands, Alaska. Why then, was it on the right/east part of the map and not on the left/west part of the map with the rest of the United States? Because, geographically speaking, that orange dot, Semisopochoi Island (Russian for “having seven hills”), is in the eastern hemisphere, 14 minutes east of the 180th meridian. That makes Alaska the northernmost, westernmost and easternmost state. Hawaii is the southernmost state.

Learn something new every day. Well, some of us, some days.

Weekly Writing Challenge: Mind the Gap

Weekly Writing Challenge: Mind the Gap

Turns out there were more Tweets in a single day about the 2012 Olympics than during the entire Beijing Olympics.

The Mind the Gap question from WordPress:  Has social media changed how you view the Olympics?

My answer:  No, I didn’t watch or keep up with the Olympics.

Seems the gap is bigger for some of us than for others.

Dangerous Words

The four most dangerous words in the English language:  I can do that.  They are especially dangerous when I hear them come out of my mouth.

It’s that type of thinking that led me to sign up for  StoryTime at the Cactus Cafe at the Texas Union on the campus of the University of Texas at Austin.  StoryTime at the Cactus Cafe is an event sponsored by KUT, the local NPR radio station. The event opens with two featured story tellers followed by those who signed up to tell a story.

That was me.  In front of a microphone, in front of an audience.  An audience that was not an at-the-office meeting, not a captive audience where they had to be there.  No, these people were there voluntarily.  And so was I.

I heard the announcement for the event on a Saturday while driving.  At the next red light, I wrote myself a cryptic note (Cactus Cafe), put it in my purse and forgot about it.  I found the note Monday morning and looked it up online.  The next event was that upcoming Wednesday.  Each story teller gets a maximum of five minutes, they said.

That’s when I heard myself say:  I can do that. Had I ever done anything like that?  No.  Had I even thought about doing something like that?  No.  But as soon as I heard about it, I wanted to do it.

I chose one of my blog posts for my story, the one about a bad first date. I practiced with one of my friends at work and he timed me:  4 minutes, 10 seconds.  I was ready.  Hubby and two friends went with me for my story telling debut.  I signed up to be first.  Yes, first.  If I’m going to do it, I’m going to do it right.

I saw that both of the featured story tellers adjusted the height of the microphone.  I don’t know how to do that.  Yes, yes, I’d seen it done a million times on TV, but I never had to do it myself.  I didn’t want to waste any of my precious five minutes on trying to adjust it and then have it fall apart or something.  However the microphone was positioned when I walked up to it, that’s how I was going to use it.  I was ready to bend down and lean over sideways, had it been too short. I was ready to stand on my tippy-toes, if it was too tall.  Fortunately, the featured story teller just before me left it at a usable height.

I took a water bottle with me, in case my voice vanished.  This happened in one of my college literature classes.  The professor called on me to read a passage from a book.  I started out fine, but I was so nervous that my voice started squeaking around the third sentence.  By the end of the paragraph, it was a minuscule croak.

I got up on stage, put my water bottle on the stool and looked out over the audience.  I could not see a thing.   The stage lights were so bright, my vision stopped a few inches past the microphone.  That didn’t matter. I told my story.

I’m happy to report I did not not lose my voice.  I did not forget my story.  I did not mumble.  When they flicked the lights at the 4-minute mark, I had about two more sentences and I was finished.  I’m very happy with my story telling debut.  We stayed for the whole show and enjoyed all the stories.  Well, most of them.

Maybe this is the beginning of a new career, I thought.  Delusions of grandeur danced in my head.  If Ellen DeGeneres goes on vacation and needs a guest host, I would be available.  The next time Carol Burnett came to town, I could open for her. Alas, no talent scout chased after me as I left when the show was over.  I went to work the next morning, as usual.

Shortest. Career. Change. In. History.

Hubby recorded my story telling debut on his smart phone.  You can’t see me so well — I’m the glob of light at the microphone — but the sound is pretty good.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=26LZAU5ceBI

Ellen, Carol!  Call me!

Lipogram, No S

A lipogram is a piece of work that intentionally leaves out a letter. I left out the letter “e” from my first lipogram. I wrote another one and “s” was the letter I didn’t include this time. Here we go . . .

My cat, Nike, definitely preferred the night time to be active, totally contrary to my internal clock. I commonly arrived at the office bleary-eyed, trying to explain to everyone that the feline creature that owned me quartered no mercy. Only one week ago, I arrived limping, to the amazement of everyone in my cube farm. In the middle of the night Nike decided to play with my feet, which were hanging over the edge of the bed, and playfully punctured my big toe on each foot, rendering me bilaterally, partially, and I hoped, only temporarily handicapped. My office mate took one look at me. I mouthed “Nike.” He nodded and went back to work. I limped over to my chair, carefully lowered myself into it and began my work day.

(Making sense in a lipogram isn’t so easy.)