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Sparkle (2)
I don't know what to do with my BlogHer blog yet. I don't think I want it to be an echo of my personal blog - Jane In Her Infinite Wisdom. But I don't want to abandon it now that NaBloPoMo 2011 is over either. Until I figure it out though, I thought some of you might be interested in following along with my #reverb11/#resound11 posts - my next challenge...as I write them.
I don't remember the name of the blogger, not to mention how I found her, who turned me on to #reverb10.
I followed her for awhile but, eventually, she fell off the blogosphere and I guess I must have unsubscribed as I can't find her in my subscriptions list anymore. That isn't the point. The point is that, as NaBloPoMo 2010 was wrapping up, I felt on fire for writing and, looking for a new challenge, I signed up for #reverb10 readily without really thinking it through.
I'm not big on prompted writing. Usually I don't lack for things to say - even if it's just random brain dumps where I vomit up all the random thoughts that have been cluttering my mind matter into one neat little package. Of course, that's what most people use Twitter for - a medium for which I've not developed a taste - but, even when it's just miscellaneous crap, I still have a difficult time summing it up in 140 characters or less.
The biggest reason why I don't tend to go for prompted writing though is that I start to feel...claustrophobic, boxed in, defensive. I don't want to feel that way when I write. Even when I know, intellectually, it's good for me to stretch myself.
Regardless, I signed up last year and I successfully completed - occasionally while filled to brimming with resentment - the challenge. All entries are tagged with "#reverb10" if you're interested.
However, even when I was feeling bitter and stretched and suffocated by it, there were a couple of things I ended up fully appreciating about #reverb10. First, it brought to my attention Geekin' Hard, Uncle Typewriter, and Schmutzie. I have faithfully followed these 3 since last year and have not once been disappointed that I took the time to add them to my subscriptions. All but Geekin' Hard have no clue I exist but that wasn't the point. The point is that I found them and have adored them since.
The other thing is that, while I felt resentful for being pulled kicking and screaming from my denial, #reverb10 was the catalyst for causing me to focus in on paying off my longstanding debt - almost $20,000 worth. That is no mere trifle. I've done well. I'll be finished up by the end of next year.
So, as this year's reverb challenge - whatever it might be called - was approaching, I felt ambivalence. There were qualities about it I loved. There were qualities I could most decidedly live without. I had not yet decided if I would accept it when, not if, the invitation to participate arrived.
It never arrived.
On November 29, two days before the challenge was supposed to begin, the original organizer, Gwen Bell, e-mailed the list from last year to let us know she'd moved on from the project and was no longer interested in reverbing. And even though I understand why she let it go, I know there are many people out there who had been looking forward to her 3rd annual challenge and were sorely disappointed (read angry) to be left blowing in the breeze of what was left of 2011.
A number of people - including Geekin' Hard who is actually trying to wrangle all these cats into one place - stepped up to the plate then and decided they'd take matters into their own hands. The result? There are, as near as I can tell, a number of people and groups who have decided to reverb on their own, creating their own prompts and writing about them and then sharing them with the interwebz via Twitter and Tumbler and...I don't know what all other platforms (hell! I don't even remember creating a stumbleupon account).
The consequence is that not everyone is writing about the same prompt - at least, not at the same time.
I'm still ambivalent. I'm still...not wanting to be caged. And yet, I've signed











