A Personal Milestone
I began this blog on March 7, 2004. Ten years ago.
I took Poliphilo from a book I was reading at the time. His name means lover of all things. The book is called Hypnerotomachia Poliphili. which I roughly translate as Poliphilo's Eroticdreambattle. It's an Italian Book- late 15th century. Poliphilo is journeying in search of his truelove, through a landscape full of impossible buildings and Botticelli maidens. it's weird. It could well be the weirdest book ever written.
The author was probably a man called Francesco Colonna- who was a monk. The Hypnerotomachia isn't a monkish book, but then a lot of monks weren't monkish either.
-
I forget why I chose Livejournal as my blogging venue. I don't believe it was recommended to me. I think I just happened on it- either by chance or by asking Google to find me a free blogging site. After a while- after I realized I was serious about blogging- I put down the money for a permanent account.
My first posts were exercises in creative writing. Nobody read them.
Ten years ago Livejournal was at the frontier of something. Then the frontier moved, as it always does. ,The cattle barons with their rolls of barbed wire will always win- if you can call it winning.
Billy, they don't like you to be so free.
But I've hung around. A lot of people went elsewhere. To Twitter and Facebook. Or to other blogging sites. But I was hardly even tempted. Livejournal suits me. I like how it's both a social networking site and a place where serious blogging happens.
Ten years. That's almost a sixth of my life.
I took Poliphilo from a book I was reading at the time. His name means lover of all things. The book is called Hypnerotomachia Poliphili. which I roughly translate as Poliphilo's Eroticdreambattle. It's an Italian Book- late 15th century. Poliphilo is journeying in search of his truelove, through a landscape full of impossible buildings and Botticelli maidens. it's weird. It could well be the weirdest book ever written.
The author was probably a man called Francesco Colonna- who was a monk. The Hypnerotomachia isn't a monkish book, but then a lot of monks weren't monkish either.
-
I forget why I chose Livejournal as my blogging venue. I don't believe it was recommended to me. I think I just happened on it- either by chance or by asking Google to find me a free blogging site. After a while- after I realized I was serious about blogging- I put down the money for a permanent account.
My first posts were exercises in creative writing. Nobody read them.
Ten years ago Livejournal was at the frontier of something. Then the frontier moved, as it always does. ,The cattle barons with their rolls of barbed wire will always win- if you can call it winning.
Billy, they don't like you to be so free.
But I've hung around. A lot of people went elsewhere. To Twitter and Facebook. Or to other blogging sites. But I was hardly even tempted. Livejournal suits me. I like how it's both a social networking site and a place where serious blogging happens.
Ten years. That's almost a sixth of my life.
no subject
no subject
This is my home from home.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
Do I want a bigger readership? I'm not sure. I've been on Facebook and I really didn't like it.
no subject
no subject
no subject
And congratulations! I am glad you are here.
no subject
I like that flexibility too. I feel as if I can post anything I want here- one-liners, mini-essays, reviews, poems, pictures- and have them find an audience.
no subject
no subject
no subject
Yes, you can pretty much rely on LJers to be thoughtful and well-behaved.
no subject
no subject
no subject
The biggest difference I see is that LJ doesn't have communities anymore. They used to be so active, I think they have moved to FB, which is a good venue for them, I think.
no subject
I as never a great one for communities. I started an Ingmar Bergman Community but it quickly sputtered and died.
no subject
no subject
In the latest piece of stupidity, their editing suite is no longer fully functional for those of us who use IE- as ever, they make excuses, but they provide no solutions.
Sigh :o(
no subject
no subject
I'm up to eleven years now, I think, and it's hard to imagine life without LJ. It's a wonderful record of my last decade.
no subject
LJ is important to me. It has enriched my life enormously.
no subject
So, congratulations! We have known each other here for a good part of our respective 10 years and I am very glad you're still here.
It has been good to read through the comments and see quite a few others whose loyalties haven't wavered.
no subject
no subject
no subject
10 years ago I was looking for a site that would make blogging easy (there was no way I was going to learn to write HTML) and LJ was it.
no subject
no subject
no subject
I'm very glad you have.
Happy ten years!
no subject
no subject
I don't know how long I've been on livejournal, but it has been a while.
no subject
It makes me happy that you remember Purchas. :)
no subject
Many happy returns. ;-)
no subject
no subject
Lover of many things. Lover of *all* things is Panphilo.
He who cannot approach Pan approaches Proteus in vain. :D