Concerning Life as It Is Supposed to Be

Blogging Between the Cracks


My friend Chris was a blogger before I knew the word. But she admits to not knowing how to make a post that appears later than when she writes it. My friend Dwight believes that he has evidence of my early rising by the early times on the majority of my posts. And another friend and blogger Mike commended me on my diligence in posting (and he assumed writing) daily. So, let Toto pull back the curtain on me as I reveal the smoke and mirrors which makes it LOOK like I’m doing what I’m really not.

I blog when I get a chance. Between the cracks in my schedule. Most of my posts are written three, four, or more at a time, and only made to appear as if they are produced sequentially. My guess is that readers don’t want six posts at once followed by six silent days. So, I write when I get the chance, and space the posting magically over a period of days.

In the interest of full disclosure, I sketched the idea of this post on the morning of Monday, July 20. I am typing it on Tuesday night, July 21. And since it is not date specific (unlike this or this) it is slated now to appear no sooner than July 31, ten days from now.

How’s he do that?

My happy secret is a little helper called MarsEdit. MarsEdit allows me to write drafts, date them, edit them, preview them, and post them, without ever having to actually go to the blog site itself.

Why is this helpful?

From the purely aesthetic point of view, using this software insures a consistent visual style on the blog. Though that can be accomplished through other means, with this I don’t have to think about it anymore.

This guy earns his keep as a time saver and organizer.

When I get an idea for a post, and I’m not near my computer, I scribble it down on a piece of paper and put it in a folder. When I am near the computer, or if the idea comes to me when the computer is open in front of me, I open a draft post in MarsEdit. I need not be anywhere near an internet connection at this point. I only need to open the draft window and jot a few notes down. I can go on doing what I was doing, so that I’m not interrupted in whatever the main thing is at the point.

Later, when I have the occasion to do so (often on Tuesdays when I bring my son and grandson to Chick-fil-A, like tonight) I open MarsEdit and will find a few drafts that are in need of development. Some sit for a long time. Currently there are 23 undeveloped drafts, some of which will NEVER be developed.

Though I am writing this at Chik-fil-A, it will probably be finished between innings of the upcoming Rays game. The point is, I try to not have blogging interfere with other things that I’m supposed to be doing.

Posts which demand more care, thought, and even research, may be developed in Scrivener, NovaMind, or Microsoft Word. These are topics which may require development across several posts and demand more careful preparation. (I have half dozen potential posts in that form at present.) But they will all end up passing through MarsEdit before hitting the web.

In MarsEdit I can add links, emphasis, or whatever else I want. I can also add media, but I prefer to do that on line.

Plus, and this is the real magic, I can specify the date and time of publication. I have set this post to publish on July 31, 2009, at 5:46:08 AM. That may change, but for now that is what we have set. I could just as easily set it for October 13, 2120, but I rather doubt that Somber and Dull will be in existence then.

By the way I set posts to go live early in the morning in order to great early morning readers.

When I’m generally satisfied with the post, I simply click a button which posts it to Blogger, though I’m told it works with other blogging sites as well. I can set the post to be published immediately or to be posted online as a draft.

It is from within blogger that I add pictures or video, make any necessary final edits and, if I have not set the publication time, I do that. (Chris, you select ‘post options’ at the bottom of the post editor. Pretty simple.)

That is all there is to it.

Okay, back to the Rays game.

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3 Comments

  1. Gail and Keith

    and now the bubble is burst! Poof!

  2. TulipGirl

    I love the image posted, "ignore the man behind the green curtain." I had a friend who was going to use that as a theme for a blog / site on Joseph Smith. . .You're so organized. . . Half of my blogging thoughts occur while I'm driving and I don't have a great capture system set up for those ideas. And so. . . I just wait until the muse strikes and I have the laptop.It's odd, though. . . Since we have wireless at home and at Sbux and Bella's, I've never really thought about the what-ifs of wanting to write without an internet connection. I don't usually have the computer without a connection of some sort.

  3. Randy Greenwald

    Down here where I live they have these things called traffic lights. Sometimes I actually stop at them. And when I do, and have an idea, well, grab a pen and the back of a receipt, a napkin, or a candy wrapper, and the idea is captured!

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