How to Write a Blog Entry

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Svitlana, one of the 2012 TechWomen, was kind enough to ask me last year how to write a blog entry. This is finally in reply to her question… Of course, this only represents how I write my blog – every writer must find her own voice.

I have been writing a web log since 2005, at the rate of over three entries a week, for a current total of 1,325.* In putting together a blog entry, I focus on three areas, in this order:

  1. Topic
  2. Images
  3. Writing Composition

I consider a single topic for each blog entry, picking a subject that I find of special interest. Within that general requirement, each entry topic must also be one or more of the following:

My family and friends lovingly inform me that I take too many pictures. My generous and patient husband (our family system administrator) is always trying to stay ahead of my photo storage and sorting requirements. There have been 47,674 images posted in our family Flickr archive since 2008. I take pictures not only to illustrate blog entries but also to make a record (as when taking a picture of a business card, or notes on a whiteboard), or because an image seems beautiful to me. This is an extension of the famous William Morris sentiment:

Have nothing in your houses that you do not know to be useful, or believe to be beautiful.

A photo often starts me writing a blog entry – expressing what I found of interest in that image. Starting with a photo makes a more interesting story than an formidable wall of plain text. Once I start composing, I work to ensure that not one word is wasted. One friend told me that he has to rest between reading my paragraphs because the text is so dense. I see it as being respectful of my reader’s time and precious attention to be succinct. I write until I have no more to convey. As Lewis Carroll’s Red King said:

Begin at the beginning and go on till you come to the end: then stop.

I check facts carefully and provide links to references or data sources when available. Even after checking my work, I often have to go back to a published entry to add missing words. Still, I publish as soon as the entry feels complete, in accordance with my motto:

Done is Better then Perfect.

I also go back to much older blog posts and clean them up from time to time – to fix software rot causing broken links and format changes.

7 March 2013 Addition:
Here is some good advice on how to write: Kill Your Darlings: Five Rules for Writers by Rita J. King, EVP Science House, 6 March 2013:

  1. Have Fun
  2. Don’t Have Fun
  3. Kill Your Darlings
  4. Do the Research
  5. Ask Yourself: Why?

29 January 2016 Addition:
On 23 October 2015, I gave a presentation with updated information on this to the TechWomen at Symantec in the Silicon Valley: “How to Blog: Best Practices”.

Image Copyright 2009 by John Plocher
* 2005-2009 on blogs.sun.com/katysblog and 2009-now here at katysblog.wordpress.com. I have also been a guest blogger on other sites.

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Old Billings Wrench

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In looking for paperweight (something long, flat, and heavy to keep a book open for reference), I came across an old steel Billings-brand wrench which works well. This particular 8-1/4″ wrench was probably used by my grandfather, Ben Wade Orr Dickinson, Junior, to fix cars.

In finding out about this, I discovered that old tool collecting is popular: there are even web sites devoted just to wrenches. The Billings stamp style indicates that this wrench was made sometime between 1926-1962. From the silky smoothness of the handle and the old-style screw design, it is probably from the earlier part of that time range. (No – it is not for sale!)

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B.W.O. Dickinson, Junior (my father’s father), was a master machinist. Here he is working on a metal lathe in about 1970 (in Sharon, Pennsylvania):

1970.BWOD2.machineshop

Images Copyright 2013 by Katy Dickinson

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John’s New Job with EVault

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This week, my husband John Plocher started his exciting new position as Principle Architect, Open Storage, at EVault, a wholly owned subsidiary of Seagate, the largest data storage company in the world. John now takes Caltrain’s Baby Bullet express train in the morning from San Jose to San Francisco – which gives him a walk and a train ride each day (both good things!). Unfortunately, at this time of year, he leaves for work in the dark and arrives home after dark.  We are still getting used to the new schedule and hope that there will be some work from home days in the future.

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Images Copyright 2013 by Katy Dickinson

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Porch Ironwork

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Installation of the iron work on our new porch has started – the last major element to finish. We now have a new gate, round window grilles, and ironwork panels in the arched wall openings. I bought the ironwork panels many years ago – they are about a hundred years old and were originally part of an elevator. The window grille design was inspired by a picture in the 2002 book Red Tile Style: America’s Spanish Revival Architecture by Arrol Gellner and Douglas Keister.  The new gate is patterned on our original garden gate.

I am very happy with the results so far, despite all of the work, delays, and cost overruns. The breakfast bar and railing are the last pieces of ironwork to go in – and are still being made by Brian’s Welding. This weekend, I start repairing my poor garden – all torn up by construction.

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IMG_1976

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Images Copyright 2013 by Katy Dickinson

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AAUW National Mentoring Month Interview

I am honored to announce that the American Association of University Women* just published an interview with me: “National Mentoring Month: 3 Tips from a Guru”. It includes an interesting word cloud graphic “Mentoring, in Your Own Words”.

About AAUW:

The American Association of University Women (founded 1881) empowers women and girls through advocacy, education, philanthropy, and research. Our nonpartisan, nonprofit organization has more than 150,000 members and supporters across the United States, as well as 1,000 local branches and 700 college and university partners.

I have already passed this article along to my MentorCloud mentees. I plan to refer to it in presentations during my trip with the TechWomen (U.S. State Department’s mentoring program) delegation to Jordan next month.

Here I am at the University of California at Berkeley, at the start of my career as an American University Woman:

1979.UCBgrad.1.dickinsons

* of which I am a proud member
Image Copyright 1979 Katy Dickinson

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Dog vs. Stone Cat

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Last weekend, I picked out a cement-stone cat as a garden ornament. While I was shopping, it became an object of great concern to a small dog in an adjacent cart.

Image Copyright 2013 Katy Dickinson

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Family Research

I am enjoying researching our family tree, with the help of the Ancestry.Com web-based resources. I have collected family records and pictures for many years but having all of this information in boxes is not the same as giving it structure. Scanning of images started for my father’s 80th birthday video in 2006, then expanded to make books for his 85th birthday and my mother’s 80th birthday.  Starting with bits and pieces of family history – from letters from cousins to copies of the birth/death pages from the family Bible – information is checked against public records such as the U.S. Census to profile each family member.

It is interesting to figure out the exact relationships of cousins and family members I have heard of all of my life.  Also, to realize that I know much more about some than others.  For example, Stella Vaughan Creekmore was appointed U.S. Postmaster in 1915. Two of my great-grandfathers were coal miners (on different sides of the family, in Kentucky and Pennsylvania).  Ben Wade Orr Dickinson was a farmer and then the printer for the Sharon Pennsylvania Herald newspaper for 25 years.  Family legend has it that we are related to John Dickinson who signed the US Constitution but I am still trying to work out how.

Here are images of our family for the last few generations:

Me: Katy Dickinson . IMG_5225 copy copy
My parents:
Wade Dickinson, III
(1926-2011)
Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson
(1931-now)
. 1989.Wade.Eleanor.USMA40th
My father’s parents:
Wade Dickinson, Jr.
(1898-1971)
Gladys Oakes Dickinson
(1901-1980)
. BWODickinsonJr.Gladys.1945
My mother’s parents:
Robert Elmond Creekmore
(1892-1976)
Evelyn Van Gilder Creekmore
(1905-1990)
. Evelyn.RECreekmore
My father’s father’s parents
Wade Dickinson
(1867-1933)
Mary Magdalene Snyder Dickinson
(1873-1959)
. MarySnyderDickinson.BWODickinson.1930
My father’s mother’s parents
Robert Edwin Oakes
(1875-1944)
Edna Cannon Oakes
(1878-1966)
. EdnaCannonOakes.RobertOakes.1935
My mother’s father’s parents
George Washington Creekmore
(1876-1949)
Stella Vaughan Creekmore
(1878-1956)
. GeorgeWashington.Stella.Creekmore.1920 copy
My mother’s mother’s parents
Walter Atkins Van Gilder
(1870-1943)
Ellen Rachel Bolli Van Gilder
(1880-1958)
. 1911.EllaBolliVanGilder.oilportrait . Walter.VanGilder

Images Copyright 2006-2013 Katy Dickinson

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