Since reading the delightful blog of a certain newly pregnant friend, J. has recently nudged me a couple times about the fact that I haven't been properly blogging. I did a lot for my students during the school year, then got lazy; I was shocked to discover that I haven't written anything here since October. Sheesh! Then I realized a couple things: (1) Facebook seems to have swallowed up my blogging impulse, since it gives me a lame excuse to write status messages instead of longer, more meaningful posts; (2) the amount of time I've spent blogging seems to exist in inverse proportion with how much TV, particularly MSNBC, I watch. To excuse myself somewhat, I can argue that many more friends and family members seem to keep up with me on Facebook than ever did on my blog (and I'm fairly sure that all my blog readers actually track me on Facebook, too). On the other hand, short attention-span writing isn't ever going to get me closer to the eventual goal of developing the discipline to actually write a whole book on any one of the zillions of topics I've thought of over the years.
Now that I'm well into the last (!) month of pregnancy (in case there are any of you out there who were not previously aware, BNB and J. are expecting a baby to arrive within the next 4 weeks), I am realizing more and more that I have to get out of the lazy TV habit. I may not feel as energetic as I'd like to at the moment (and J.'s recent nesting frenzy sometimes leaves me feeling like I need yet another nap), but I've decided that sitting on the couch all day sort of sucks the life out of me. Plus, we want to put little guy (once he arrives) on a good path to playing, being creative, and interacting with other people rather than sitting in front of the TV. Thus, I've been working on a new article, due next week, and have been actually listening to music (revolutionary idea) rather than keeping the TV on all the time in the background. I also started reading lately-- things of greater length than my The Week magazine and more literary value than my birthing books. And my lack of knitting productivity has stopped, and I'm well on my way to actually finishing the baby blanket I started 7 years ago for my first nephew (which will now be completed for my own progeny).
Before I finish for the evening, I'll tell you about the two rather good books I've read lately. The first, Roya Hakakian's Journey from the Land of No, is not a happy tale, but it is in important one. Kol Emet (one of the two local synagogues I more aspire to attend than actually regularly visit) chose it for the congregation to read. I missed all the book group events (since napping seems to have taken precedence over almost everything else while I've been gestating), but finally got around to the book right before the election in Iran. As a result, I really had a sense of what the commentators were saying when describing how the Iranian people saw the election and their initial protests as a continuation of the Revolution rather than a repudiation of it. (Now that the illusion that their government was anything but a sham democracy has been lifted, I hope that more real change will occur.)
The other book I heartily recommend is Fool, the latest by Christopher Moore. It is a hilarious and salacious retelling of King Lear (my favorite Shakespearean tragedy) from the perspective of Lear's Fool. It is the first book I haven't been able to put down in years. It's permeated by a foul, quasi-Shakespearean tongue that had me in stitches.
Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts
Saturday, July 25, 2009
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