Farewell: an ode to all those moving on (short story)

*This is an Iowa State Daily column by Ian Timberlake written for graduates*

Just past seven in the evening, the sun is making its departure and its warm rays blanket your body as your fingertips tickle the tall grass. Monstrous, white clouds pock the bluebird sky, casting intermittent shadows across rolling fields of flora swelling in the breeze.

You inhale just as a breeze blows by, taking in a thousand flowers and the scent of a spring morning rain. Dense woods in the distance percolate the soft soil you trod so lightly, barefoot, feeling the dirt, pebble, and grass groom your feet.

A lone cherry tree, atop a cresting hill of grass gives way to some vivid pink blossom with every firm breeze. You slowly, joyously, stroll through the grass and up the hill, making your way towards the cherry tree, not quite sure where you are or where you’re going. The hill stretches on upwards, seemingly growing, making you realize you misperceived the majesty and illusion of this hill; With every step, the cherry tree looms larger, broader.

On top and out of breath, you bask in the shade of this cherry tree, completely absorbed in its greatness. The wind now tests your foot and drowns out the song of birds from below. You place your hand up to the tree and look up, admiring its wonder, slowly strolling around its base grazing every aged crack juxtaposed with its smooth bark, stepping over the roots sinking deep into the Earth.

“Where am I?”

Stricken with a smell, your attention is stripped from the cherry tree as if pulled from a dream. A smell so distinct you can taste it under your tongue. It tastes rocky and bitter, like a dry sweat after an afternoon of yard-work.

“What is that?”

You dismiss it and lean your back up against the cherry tree, sliding gracefully down to a seated position to, only momentarily thereafter, have a cherry blossom fall to your lap.

You stare at it awhile, as if it was looking at you… looking at you with the same wonder you look at it. No judgement. No prejudice. No ridicule. And no expectations. Just inquisition. Just curiosity.

Eventually you pick up the cherry blossom, feeling its silky smooth pedals, its flutes with globules of pollen at the end, its delicacy more than a vase. Bringing the blossom up to your nose, you smell it, but it doesn’t matter because you’re already sitting under the greatest cherry tree of your life. What were you thinking you’d smell?

You remember hearing once that cherry blossoms were edible. Looking at the beautiful flower resting in the palm of your hand, you grimace. But…

“What the hell”, and you eat it. A light, and comfortable taste washes across your palate. Nothing too strong or specific, too crunchy or too soft. Smiling, a happy taste, if that means anything. You laugh.

A gust of wind blows through, you can feel your hair disarranging, but you don’t care… you get a quick shiver down your spine. You taste the bitter in the air again, almost thwarting the happiness of your recent cherry blossom. More inquisitive now, you look over your shoulder and around the tree trunk.

Now, with more attention paid and curiosity gathered you notice a slightly larger hill a good stroll away. This hill was just tall enough to block your view of what lay beyond, it was connected to the hill you sat on by a smooth, grassy loft.

“Hmm.”

Standing up, you look around, doing your best to admire where you are, and somehow, take-in your surroundings, and begin your stroll across the loft. slightly down and slightly up to the top of this bigger hill, still barefoot, still taking in deep breaths of flowers, still closing your eyes and admiring the sounds of the rushing wind over the faint bird chirps. The bitterness gets stronger, the wind grows to be confused with a rushing ocean.

You crest up and over this broad, grassy hill with the cherry blossom far to your back.

Awe struck, you say under your breath, “My… That’s a big ocean”.

You look down the now sandy hill at the long, white beach, and see a washed up rowboat, made of wood. It was of chipped white paint and faded red trimmings. In no time, you sink your feet into the warm sandy dune, towards the rowboat, saying nothing less than a smile.

Farewell.

 

Online dating expands potential pool, proves viable [OkCupid]

*Iowa State Daily column by Ian Timberlake*

For the past three months, I have been experimenting with online dating. Piqued by curiosity and listening to friends’ first-hand accounts of various websites, I decided to make an OkCupid account. Recently purchased by Match.com, OkCupid is essentially the free version of many online dating sites and is arguably the largest. Even the Boston Globe called it “the Google of online dating”; take that as you will.

The site has over 3.5 million members, recording an average of two logins per month for every member. The method of matching seems to be quite complex. Including your age, location, sexual preference and miles willing to travel, there are literally thousands of questions you can answer. You can answer as many or as little as you like, and all are neither correct nor incorrect. On a level of importance, you rank each question asked.

All being calculated, this leads to a “match percent,” “friend percent,” and “enemy percent” in the users that fall under the age, location, sexual preference and distance willing to travel stated above.

The goal, obviously, is to narrow down the selection to people whom have a high “match” and “friend” percent and a low “enemy” percent. And it seems they do a good job of that, in my experience.

I went into this curious experiment with a fairly negative view of online dating, but I have to say that my view has severely changed. I was quite impressed with how the selection process worked and how close matches were politically, religiously, educationally, and sexually among many other things.

There were still a few hiccups, however. I warn you that I may speak discriminatorily and highly judgmentally in the next few paragraphs; and that has to do with either how I presented myself on OkCupid or how most women who use OkCupid behave. In other words, my experience has only to do with women who were narrowed down based off my supposed personality.

A trend seemed to be severe flakiness. Regardless, if a woman’s profile says she is willing to chat with anyone and was not shy, she still was flaky — so much so it made me take every profile with a serious grain of salt.

An attribute of myself may have caused that; I am very blunt, as my profile exclaims, but whether I am the one writing the initial message, or the one receiving the initial message, few of the women I chatted with held a conversation long enough to even get to any real “deal breakers” that weren’t already taken care of in the OkCupid questions.

As you might judge, there were (in my eyes) plenty of women on OkCupid that seemingly fit the bill as someone who might find difficulty in finding long-term relationships offline: bisexuals, atheists, overweight people, single mothers, etc. Don’t get me wrong; this isn’t the majority, but I will agree that online dating is a great place for people to meet who have a taboo attached to them, including myself.

I did go on a date with a smart, beautiful and charming woman from Des Moines. We were like-minded but our future plans simply didn’t pan out after that honestly delightful experience.

However, on two occasions, I was asked out by women who ended up backing out; and aside from my above example, a handful of other women I asked out accepted and then backed out at a later time. It was really quite disappointing.

Every woman seemingly wants her own white knight story. A moment of captured bliss bringing two people together, a sense of meaning, or even destiny. I don’t blame her. Every man wants a beautifully charming girl to traipse along around the corner and smite him, though, he will never admit to that.

Online dating does not do that, but I do know that online dating is successful. I personally know a few people who are likely to marry the person they met online, including one couple which met with over 1000 miles between them and now live together. For this reason I will keep participating. It only increases your dating pool, and is actually quite fun to take part in.

For any ladies out there who have seen or will see me on OkCupid (using my full name) and now think none of it was serious, think again. I am currently single and looking to date, and will continue looking to date both offline and online until we find each other. Overall, I approve of online dating, and I’ll say it again, ladies: I’m single.

Seek danger and adventure in life

*Iowa State Daily column by Ian Timberlake*

I was born to die, and so were you. Death is the inexorable disease inseminated upon conception. Fear of death is more compelling than compassion, love, hate, envy and hope.

Value: Where do you think it comes from? Is it from family? Friends? How about religion? Maybe all three. While these may be very important to a lot of people, I could feasibly generate a valuable life even after expelling all three (or in my case just two).

Camp Muir on Mt. Rainier. 10,000 ft of the 14,410 ft mountain.

Universally, life value comes from time. Time is the currency of life — thus, it is because we die that makes life unimaginably worth living.

The adventurers of the world have become more aware of their time spent on Earth. Be it the Alaskan kayaker, the Amazon jungle trekker, the Everest summiteer or the planetary circumnavigator — they all know about imminent death.

Three years ago I committed to attempting the “7-summits” — the tallest mountain on each continent: Aconcagua, Carstensz, Denali, Elbrus, Everest, Kilimanjaro and Vinson Massif. This was a goal of mine in my desire to chase the dangerous.

This summer I successfully summited Mt. Rainier in the state of Washington. Standing in at 14,410 feet, it is the most prominent mountain in the contiguous states and a rite of passage for mountaineers in the world. In late May, I attempted the mountain and was snowed in for five days and never was able to summit. Rescues were made and a ranger even lost his life during those (at the time) winter conditions. Early August I returned, blessed with near perfect weather and summited in two days time.

I have relatively high control over what happens to me on a mountain such as Rainier, aside from avalanches and falls (which has a level of risk analysis). I, however, have little control over natural disasters, violence, vehicular accidents and disease, among other things. It’s rather disconcerting that the act of fearing death simultaneously brings bore to the commons. Tell me this: Would you just as soon prefer a death by death-bed heaving up your own lungs and drowning in body fluid, as death by blowing off a mountain? I believe a serious judgment of character can be made by your answer. Only a boring person would prefer the former; and I claim that statement.

On May 29, 1953, Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing Norgay became the first team to successfully make a confirmed summit of Mt. Everest. Nearly 30 years earlier and many deaths accumulated, mountaineer George Mallory was asked by a reporter: “Why climb Everest?” Mallory replied: “Because it’s there.”

Mallory also said: “What we get from this adventure is just sheer joy. And joy is, after all, the end of life. We do not live to eat and make money. We eat and make money to be able to live. That is what life means and what life is for.” Mallory soon perished somewhere near the summit of the 29,029 foot mountain.

Mt. Rainier is just a training wheel in my quest for the “seven summits,” including Everest. Why you too should seek the vulnerable is because it’s only when you lay eyes on fatal departure that you truly feel alive. Experiences and knowledge reveal themselves where they wouldn’t otherwise. Views are made that humans aren’t supposed to make, and as Henry David Thoreau puts it in “Walden”: “I want[ed] to live deep and suck out all the marrow of life, to live so sturdily and Spartan-like as to put to rout all that was not life.”

Every person has stakes in the game of life. Until you understand that your life value only exists because you will eventually die, then you might as well not have a purpose. Given the option to live forever, I would politely decline. It would suck the value out of the actual living part of existing by removing what might be considered difficult to do within the span of a lifetime.

With unlimited time, there’s the possibility for unlimited achievement and therefore all respect would be expunged. The old adage remains true: “With great risk comes great reward.”

Death is more connected to life than anything else, so live it up, and make yourself worth something — use the time such that when you take your last breath, you’ll be able to look back and say: “Yes, that was worth it.”

Original: http://www.iowastatedaily.com/opinion/article_01f9857e-ebc3-11e1-b9cb-001a4bcf887a.html

Facebook Fan Page: https://www.facebook.com/InsanityIsJustAStateOfMind

Sensory Overload with GASS Racing

Bridling at over 400 horsepower, smelling the gooey rubber as it pealed across the radiating asphalt, tasting the bitter 100+ octane fuel vapor in the air, blinking away the sweat rolling in my eyes as my vision ever narrowed, deafened, and feeling the weight of my innards being thrust out of place, my brain was processing information faster than if I were attacked by a lion… although, I could argue I was being attacked by a lion.

Suiting up!

Nearly one week before Memorial Day, I was in the passenger seat experiencing all of the above in one of GASS Racing‘s professional stock cars. GASS Racing School offers racing fans, or gearheads in general, the opportunity to either ride-along for an experience, all the way to a full day of racing lessons and entrance into an official stock car race broadcasted on GASS TV. I was there for a ride-along followed by watching the professionals do it from the hot pit. Soon, I plan on returning and actually race one of these beasts.

My initial reaction upon arriving to the Newton Iowa Speedway was that of sheer zeal. Pulling up to the immensely large oval speedway to find out it was actually short by speedway standards (7/8 mile), followed by the rumbling echo of highly tuned V8s jackhammering their way around the track. I was entering the pits as a car would thunder by on their qualifying lap at roughly 150 mph, disappear for a matter of seconds only leaving a trail of sound and sticky rubber behind, to reappear with an even more thunderous hurrah than it came with. Spin-outs were commonplace as racers pushed their cars to the limit of grip in an attempt to get as high of a pole position as possible once the official race commenced. I watched all of this in aw, at the same time itching at the eventuality that I would soon be in a first person narrative of the racecar, lack third person.

My number 20

Suiting up, I could hardly contain my excitement. The cars were all in the pits, lined up and ready to be released from the gate. I put on my fire suit provided by GASS Racing, my Nomex head sock, Nomex gloves, neck protector, and then finally my white racing helmet… initially with the visor up. I stood next to my black, number 20 car, waiting to be assisted into the window (there were no doors). A man with GASS began locking me into my 5 point harness, two at the shoulders, two near the legs, and one on the helmet… the word “move”, does not exist within the racecar, but it sure as hell does outside of it. This is when claustrophobia can easily creep in. Not to mention it was easily 100 degrees inside the car, sweat was dripping everywhere and it was impossible to wipe my brow, noxious fumes coupled with melting rubber was all that could be smelled, followed by the waiting anticipation of wanting to just “GO!”.

Immediately before given the green light

Given the go-ahead, my driver Paul turned on the engine, which was immediately deafening. The sensations were incredible, it was quite literally a sensory overload… a true symphony of science was at work. A mechanical machine melded with an organic man, simultaneously conspiring to get around this racetrack as fast as both will allow. You can tell from my first paragraph that no input was left unchecked. The true mastery of what happened when I was in that racecar could never be accurately expressed in words, let alone video or photography. A watched 10 minutes on the track was a mere 30 seconds internally… how’s that for relativity?

Full speed with me in the black car and my friend in the white car.

I do plan on going back, but next time I will be behind the wheel… I can’t even imagine the experience that will ensue once that cultivates. All I can do now is tell everyone and their nearest friend to get out and experience it themselves because nothing really compares, except for maybe being attacked by a lion.

 

Facebook Fan Page: https://www.facebook.com/InsanityIsJustAStateOfMind

The Greatest Cars of All Time: PicDump

I have always wanted to compile a list of my favorite cars of all time. Here they are, in no particular order. Weeks were spent compiling this list, trying to remember every vehicle… not to mention a great picture to go with it. Doing the best to keep the list to only road legal cars, there were a couple I just couldn’t keep out. I sure as hell hope I didn’t leave anything else out that is worthy enough, aside from the obvious Model T. Be it beauty, history, performance, legacy, influence, or innovation… these vehicles made the cut of my greatest cars of all time, hope you enjoy.

1941 Willy MB Jeep

1930 Cadillac V-16

1953 Ford F100

1965 Aston Martin DB5 Vantage

1967 Chevy Camaro SS

1970 Ford Mustang Boss 302

1970 Plymouth Hemi Cuda

1965 Shelby Cobra 427

Audi R8 V10

Dodge Viper RT/10

Jeep Grand Cherokee

1961 Jaguar E-Type

Acura NSX

1969 Porsche 917

1973 Pontiac Trans Am Super Duty

1963 Chevy Corvette Stingray

1938 Bugatti Type 57 Stelvio Cabriolet

1972 Lamborghini Miura SV

1932 Duesenberg Model J

1963 Ferrari 250 GT California Spyder

1955 Mercedes Benz 300SL

2011 Ferrari Enzo

Nissan GTR

Lamborghini Murcielago LP670-4 SV

Mercedes McLaren SLR 722

Aston Martin DB9

Pagani Zonda R

Koenigsegg Agera R

DMC Delorean

2013 Hennessey Venom GT

Volkswagen Microbus

Mini Cooper S (old)

Ariel Atom

Lancia Stratos HF

Ferrari F40

Caparo T1

Rolls Royce Phantom

Porsche Carrera GT

Saleen S7 Twin Turbo

2003 BMW M5

Ferrari 599 GTB Fiorano

Range Rover Sport

Alfa Romeo 8C Competizione

Porsche 911 Turbo S

Ferrari 250 GTO

Base Jumping: Wingsuit Flying

Ever since I witnessed this in a video, I knew this was going to be something I would attempt to do before I die. Flying has been something I have wanted to do since I was 3 years old, watching the Chicago Air and Water Show on the roof of my apartment overlooking Lake Michigan. I got into high power amateur rocketry, worked at a hobby shop, joined the US Air Force, went to school for Aerospace Engineering, learned to fly propeller aircraft and have dreams of one day designing and flying my own aircraft. This insatiable urge to fly combined with my NEED for adrenaline (my drug of choice)… only leads to the absolute ultimate adventure… wingsuit proximity flying. Not too different from base-jumping except in the fact that an airfoil is integrated into the arms and legs of the flight suit. This allows for a huge gliding ratio for a freefalling body, about 4:1. It is highly recommended that you have 200+ logged jumps before even stepping into a wingsuit, many businesses won’t even allow it until you reach four or five hundred. Then you must train out of an airplane before you can base jump. It is a highly dangerous sport. In the first video, Jeb Corliss, has already had several friends die while wingsuit flying. To be honest, if I could die by some choice… dying by wingsuit would be one hell of a way to go out. Sure beats taking a last breath as a cripple on a death bed. Hope you enjoy the videos… you can leave a comment and/or share below.

 

The Passive-Aggressive Religious & Famous Atheists

John Lennon - The Beatles

Countless times I have been told by religious people (friends included) that I have no moral structure, don’t know love, don’t have a purpose, and more. The absolute worst is when a religious friend makes a remark that is condescending when they don’t even realize what just came out of their mouth. There have been times where a religious female friend of mine finds out I’m dating a new woman and I get an unintentional passive-aggressive grilling as to how I’m treating said woman I’m dating. It’s almost like my religious friends are assuming that because I don’t believe in their religion, I lack the care and integrity of others, including the people of whom I’m dating. This stuff comes out of the mouths of friends of 4+ years, and it still astonishes me. It makes me question why I’m friends with them (or why they’re friends with me)… but then I realize that without that delusion, they are great people and fun to be around.

“No, I don’t know that atheists should be considered as citizens, nor should they be considered as Patriots. This is one nation under God”.

- George Bush

Ricky Gervais on Atheism

I am an agnostic-atheist. Agnosticism, is often mistaken for a belief… but nobody can be only agnostic. You are either an agnostic-theist, agnostic-atheist, gnostic-theist, or gnostic-atheist. Realize that there are very few “true” atheists… someone who claims to know that a god does not exist. Most people who claim to be “atheist”, are of the form agnostic-atheist. I, therefore, believe we will never answer the question as to whether a higher power exists or not but that the answer is most probably that one does not exist. This is a form of “Freethought”, which is more fundamental to my beliefs:

Freethought holds that individuals should not accept ideas proposed as truth without recourse to knowledge and reason. Thus, freethinkers strive to build their opinions on the basis of facts, scientific inquiry, and logical principles, independent of any logical fallacies or the intellectually limiting effects of authority, confirmation bias, cognitive bias, conventional wisdom, popular culture, prejudice, sectarianism, tradition, urban legend, and all other dogmas. Regarding religion, freethinkers hold that there is insufficient evidence to support the existence of supernatural phenomena. – Wikipedia

Here is a list of famous atheists:

Woody Allen, John Lennon, Robert Altman, Daniel Radcliffe, Abe Lincoln, Isaac Asimov, Bill Nye, Barry Manilow, Peter Atkins, Kevin Bacon, Adam Savage, Jamie Hyneman, Kari Byron, William Shatner, Penn & Teller, Morgan Freeman, Angelina Jolie, Mark Twain, John Adams, Douglas Adams, Seth Green, Jodie Foster, Bruce Lee, Rafael Nadal, Bertrand Russel, Ivan Pavlov, Mark Zuckerberg, Olivia Wilde, Natalie Portman, Albert Einstein, Francis Crick, Marie Curie, Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens, Dan Dennett, Sam Harris, Thomas Edison, Stephen Gould, Steven Pinker, Carl Sagan, Richard Feynman, Dave Mathews, Sir Ian McKellen, Julianne Moore, George Clooney, Jack Nicholson, Christopher Reeve, Gene Roddenberry, Susan B. Anthony, Lance Armstrong, Ricky Gervais, Warren Buffet & Bill Gates (have donated over $70 billion to charity), Ernest Hemingway, Charles Schulz, Richard Branson, Keanu Reeves, James Cameron, Arthur C. Clark, Stephen Hawking, Sigmund Freud, Kathy Griffin, Seth MacFarlane, Friedrich Nietzsche, George Orwell, Charles Darwin (later life), Brad Pitt, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Ayn Rand, George Carlin, Matt Stone, Pat Tillman, Kurt Vonnegut, Roger Waters, Gene Wilder (yes, Charlie Chocolate), Steve Wozniak, Rodney Dangerfield, Marlon Brando, Hugh Hefner, Billy Joel, Sarah Silverman, Ted Turner, Ted Williams, Charlie Chaplin, Larry King, Helen Mirren, Katherine Hepburn, Ray Romano, Joe Rogan, Edgar Allan Poe, Hellen Keller, Ben Franklin, Frank Zappa, Robert Frost, Voltaire, Thomas Paine, Pierre Laplace, Napoleon, Walt Whitman, Thomas Huxley, Andrew Carnegie, H G Wells, Frank Lloyd Wright, James Joyce, Howard Hughes, Confucius…

… and many many more. Feel Free to comment and/or share below.

My Bucket List (In Constant Continuum)

As 2011 winds to a close and the 2012 new year commences, it only seems fitting that I post (part 1) of my ongoing bucket list. If you are a continual reader of this site you will notice I talk a lot about experiences… and how you should do everything within your power to make new experiences as often as possible. Of course, this being the last new year the world will see (rolls eyes), you now have a reason to tick off the things you have always wanted to do (although, you being alive should be reason enough). I will share with you the first part of the things I wish to do before I kick the bucket. Feel free to share anything you want to do before you die in the comment box at the bottom of the page.

Time is killing you

1. Climb the 7-summits (tallest mountain on each continent)

2. Wingsuit base jump in northern Europe

3. Drive a Formula 1 race car

4. Go to space

5. Design, build and fly my own airplane

6. Finish writing my book and get it published

7. Start my own Aerospace Engineering company

8. Become an inspiration to many

9. Solicit a new way to perceive the world and its inhabitants

10. Learn to become patient

11. Explore an island that has primitive human civilization

12. Make a contribution (any contribution) that improves the human condition

13. Relearn trumpet and learn piano

14. Never stop traveling the world

15. Own and operate a sailboat

16. Never stray from the truth

17. Get a meaningful tattoo (or two… or three)

18. Avoid news networks

19. Never settle

20. Compete in another Tough Mudder (my latest TM)

21. Kayak expedition in Alaska

22. Try not to let my heart talk before my brain, instead, always let my brain tell my heart what to say

23. Find someone to spend the rest of my days with

 

A must read, related: http://iantimberlake.wordpress.com/2011/01/07/the-new-type-of-resolution-throw-yours-out-the-window-ive-made-mine-whats-yours/

 

Big Bessie Rowboat Blues: A Short Short Story

I was floatin’ down the muddy river in my old row-boat starin’ at my ugly ass wife Big Bessie. For 30 years all she does is give me the stink and the scowl like a scorned bull frog. I sat at the bottom of my whiskey glass in that old ass row-boat cryin’, “I’m fixin’ to die, I’m fixin’ to die, and I can’t be satisfied… why oh why am I going to die in this old ass row-boat of mine.”

Big Bessie looked in my eyes and said, “You’ll be dead faster than a skeeter if you haven’t bought me that dress and wine”.

“Bess, I don’t have your dress, I don’t have your wine, why do you see dollar signs? Stop askin’ me to buy you what I cannot afford, we live in a trailer on a muddy shore, and all I own is this nasty ass row-boat of yours.”

“Damnit Little Willie, you good for nothing hick, I’ve had it with your bullshit, I’ll beat you in this fuckin’ crick.”

So Big Bessie lunged at me with that nonstop scowl she wore. Her toothless whiskey breath choked me as she choked me, all 300 pounds. We wrestled and jostled until I pulled out my 40 and shot Big Bessie right in the head. Blood and brains were everywhere, sloshin’ around this damn rowboat of mine. And for the first time in those last 30 years I finally felt fine.

I rowed my way back to the shore with this big fat grin a gleamin’. Big Bessie rollin’ about in the base of the boat completely sap of scowl. For now I’m free of her tyranny and livin’ life as happy as can be as the cops pull in on me.

They threw me to the ground handcuffin’ my wrists yelling all sorts of vulgar and piss. Lookin’ out the back window I was wheeled away with nothing less than a smile to say…

The Word “Blog”, I Hate It

Blog. Doesn’t it just sound gross? It sounds like an old fat man wallowing in a pond… no offense to old fat men, of course. I am not a “blogger”, and no I do not “blog”. I have a website hosted by a business called WordPress and within the website I write articles for the purpose of entertainment and/or education. When I hear the word “blog”, 1 of 3 things comes to mind. I either picture a pre-pubescent teen writing a daily journal about the most trivial “1st-world-problems” such as a teacher not allowing the chewing of gum in class. Or I picture a college liberal arts major documenting their study abroad travels to all the typical tourist locations, like the Eiffel Tower, the Vatican, the Tower of Pisa, Munich and Amsterdam. Or lastly, I picture a recently wedded couple who posts billions of photos of their marriage and/or their newborn baby.

The word sounds amateurish… although, what I am doing is amateur. As in, not a profession. But if you have the mentality that what you are doing isn’t amateur and you take your work professionally, then your writing becomes infinitely better, more well read and respected. I hate the word “blog”.

Not too long ago a friend found out I had a webpage and their immediate reply was, “oh, I didn’t know you had a blog!” I told them, “I wouldn’t call myself a blogger”… “Well why not? Isn’t that what this is?”… “Blogging is when you don’t take your writings seriously, I take my writings seriously”. Personally, I don’t care as much about my website as others do, but everything I write, I write with full and complete honesty with the utmost attention to content quality.

This might turn out to be the shortest “blog” I have ever written… just remember, when you write, whatever you write, be honest and professional and don’t use the word “blog”.