November 01, 2020

Tooting Your Trumpet #16


Some people toot their own trumpet. I mean to toot yours. On the first Sunday of every month, I'm sharing your posts, your sites, anything interesting I stumble upon during my internet vagrancies. This month on TYT...
  • A DAY IN THE LIFE OF A DISABLED TEENAGER (a personal/ispirational post on Simone's blog The Wheelchair Teen)
  •  HELPFUL BLOGGING HINTS FOR THE NEW BLOGGER INTERFACE (a series of tips for Blogger users on Mary's blog Dark Thoughts)
  • THINGS BLOGGERS SHOULD WORRY MORE (AND LESS) ABOUT (an advice post on Jen's blog Jen Ryland Reviews)
  • OCD AWARENESS WEEK: MY PROBLEMS WITH THE WORD "OBSESSION" (a think piece on Emily's blog Paperback Princess)
Please note: all the graphics featured in these posts are property of the blog/site owners, and are only used in association with their blog/site links.

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    A Day in the Life of a Disabled Teenager (personal/inspirational post) - by Simone


    Simone's posts are always inspirational, and this one is no exception - it even goes above and beyond the usual level. With videos and pics and graphics, she lets us have a peek into her everyday life, the challenges she faces as a disabled teen, and the way she manages to overcome them. I was in tears by the end, and I felt ashamed of myself for giving up so easily on things that don't even necessitate a fraction of the willpower Simone puts into everything she does. Seriously, read this post and watch the videos. You'll see your (maybe privileged) life in a new light.

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     Helpful Blogging Hints for the New Blogger Interface (Blogger tips post) - by Mary  


    Mary compiled a very welcome list of tips for the new (and annoying to no end) Blogger interface. From paragraphs to videos to pictures, she provides a series of simple how-to hints for a few things that have bugged some of us lately.

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    Things Bloggers Should Worry More (and Less) About (advice post) - by Jen


    Jen has an ongoing post series called The Lazy Blogger's Toolkit (😂), where she shares her 10-years-of-blogging-wisdom with us. This time she dissects blogging platforms, posting schedule, followers, page loading, analytics and more, but her overall message is "think about and define YOUR blogging goals" and "stop worrying about doing it all". We never hear it often enough.

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    OCD Awareness Week: My Problems With the Word "Obsession" (think piece) - by Emily


    From an #ownvoice point of view, Emily analyses the casual use (or better, misuse) of the terms "obsession" and "OCD", and explains why we should find a substitute for them when they're not appropriate. Ableist language is so ingrained into us sometimes, we don't even realise we're harming people with specific mental health issues by casually using words that, for them, mean something completely different...and painful. We have to do better.

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    That's all for now folks! See you the first Sunday of every month for more!

    12 comments:

    1. Thank you for adding me to your list. I will check out the other posts as well.

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      Replies
      1. Thank you for the post! We never get enough Blogger advice LOL.

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    2. Thank you again for sharing my post, Roberta! I'll have to pop over to Mary's blog and check out her tips. We have already had this discussion before but the new blogger interface is... interesting.

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      Replies
      1. I think we never talk enough about those things that everyone has been doing or saying for decades, but that have always been wrong...only, we weren't woke enough to address them back then.

        Haha, "interesting" is the word.

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    3. Thanks for sharing these! A few of them are ones I've shared recently too---they were obviously impactful. :-)

      Going to go check out the others now...

      Nicole @ Feed Your Fiction Addiction

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    4. Thank you so much for sharing my post! It really means a lot. That was one of my most favourite posts that I have written - and the reaction to it made every word worth it. Thank you for these other reccomendations too. I'm definitley going to check out Emily's post. I also have more to learn when it comes to ableism, so I'm always eager to learn more about how I can avoid it.

      ReplyDelete
      Replies
      1. Your post meant a lot to me, and I know it will to many other people, so it had to make the rounds. And Emily's was so eye-opening.

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    5. These all look like worthy posts. :) Hope you are well.

      ReplyDelete
      Replies
      1. A varied bunch, but every one of them brings something interesting to the table.

        Thank you, I'm well - I hope the nasty Covid subsided for you!

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    6. How did I miss Jen's??? lol I'm so far behind on all posts so glad you did this round up.

      Karen @ For What It's Worth

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