Champion family values to defeat the hollow patriarchy

mag-article-largeThere was a fantastic article by Stephen Marche in the July/August edition of The Atlantic. I found it an extremely articulate examination of the connection between patriarchal inertia and modern parenting trends. The article’s sub-head declares that “The central conflict of domestic life right now isn’t men versus women or mothers versus fathers; it’s the family against money.” It postulates that most domestic decisions in younger couples these days are made because of financial imperative rather than patriarchal power dynamics, and yet the hollow shell of our patriarchal societal structure does not help equalize the residual disparities. One of many excellent paragraphs:

We live in a hollow patriarchy: the edifice is patriarchal, while the majority of its occupants approach egalitarianism. This generates strange paradoxes. Even women with servants and powerful jobs and hundreds of millions of dollars feel that they have an institutional disadvantage. And they’re right. Women in the upper reaches of power are limited in ways that men simply are not. Various men’s movements have emerged, purportedly to provide a counterweight to feminism, but this proposition is inherently absurd. The greatest power still resides in the hands of a few men, even as the majority of men are being outpaced in the knowledge economy. Masculinity grows less and less powerful while remaining iconic of power. And therefore men are silent. After all, there is nothing less manly than talking about waning manliness.

The article ends with a call for more men championing federal support for subsidized childcare and parental leave. Please read it.

Whitmore Directory

I was trying to find out the office number other day of a certain UMass department. But there is no directory online of Whitmore Administration Building, so I was out of luck. But then when I went in to deliver something, I noticed that there’s a directory in the first floor lobby. I took some pictures, and here they are, internet, for your pleasure. They’re a little blurry, so I transcribed the listing:

Whitmore map

Whitmore Administration Building
181 Presidents Drive

Student Services

Bursar’s Office – Student Billing and Payments: 225
Dean of Students: 227
Disability Services – Main Office: 161
Disability Services – Exam Accommodations: 169
Financial Aid Services: 243
Registrar – Transcripts, Records, Registration: 213
Residential Life – Housing Assignments: 235
Student Employment Office: 243
UCard Services: 168
Veteran Services: 231

Executive and Administration Offices

Chancellor: 374
Provost: 374
Vice Chancellor for Administration & Finance: 340
Vice Chancellor for Development & Alumni Relations: 239
Vice Chancellor for Research & Engagement: 362
Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs & Campus Life: 319
Vice Chancellor for University Relations: 390
Chief Information Officer: 374

Academic Planning & Assessment (OAPA): 232
A&T Administrative Systems Support: 150
Budget Office: 343
Bursar’s Office: 215
Disability Services – Administrative Offices: 233
External Relations and University Events: 305
Financial and Cost Analysis Office: 353
Human Resources – Employee Service Center: 325
Human Resources – Administration Offices: 330
Human Resources – Employment Office: 167
Institutional Research (OIR): 237
Legal Associate Counsel: 309
Registrar’s Office: 213
Student Affairs Information & Technology Services: 229

Conference Rooms

Chancellor’s Board Room: 370
Provost’s Conference Room: 358
Conference Room 319 – Student Affairs: 319
Conference Room 337A – A&F: 337A
Conference Room 347 – Budget Office: 347
DR [quite blurry, this is my best guess] Conference Room: 103

General Services

Print Services: 139
Whitmore Cafe – Snack Bar: 157

CDSS Newsletter: band names

There was a great article in the most recent edition of the CDSS Newsletter. Jody Kruskal’s “What’s in a Name” categorized different types of band names one finds in the folk world. Since CDSS only posts newsletter articles in PDF form, and generally I think good writing deserves dissemination, I’m re-posting the article here. All credit to Jody & CDSS.

What’s in a Name? by Jody Kruskal

I’ve been trying to think up a really great band name. My duo is scheduled for a mini-tour down from New York City to Washington, DC. First we sing a concert on Friday. Then we have an amazing local piano player to join us for the Saturday contra dance. We’ve never played with him before. So, what should I tell the producers? What’s the band’s name? We’ll probably never use it again…but, who knows? So, it better be good. The current band name search is on.

“Easy,” you say. “Whatever comes off the top of your head,” you say. If that’s what you think, you have another think coming.

This question, “What’s the band’s name?,” has been plaguing and entertaining me and my playing friends for years now. Uproarious laughter has accompanied many a family dinner, giggling at the silly, trashy, ridiculous names that we’ve come up with at band-naming time. It’s hard enough being a musician in these times, but now I have to be a poet too? Band name rules and conventions are even more restrictive than haiku.

My wife vetoes almost everything. Thank goodness someone around here has good taste. My names are always too…something. Or perhaps not enough…something. Of course, you can’t please everyone, but it’s got me thinking. What makes a good band name anyway? I’ve come to believe that the best names should have all of the following qualities:

  • Short—two or three syllables would be good; more than six too long.
  • Clear meaning—don’t keep me guessing. (“You are called the what?”)
  • Original—plagiarism is frowned upon.
  • Memorable—an elusive, distinctive and unique quality that etches it into your brain.
  • Recognizable—“I’ve heard that before, sort of!”
  • Conjures up an image—this is the big one. If the five qualities above can be combined with a new vivid mental picture, then…WOW! POW! There’s my next band name and the album cover concept to boot.

Other factors that can make for a great band name:

  • Alliteration and flowing off the tongue is always good—The Capitol Quick Steps, The Thistle Biscuits, A Joyful Noise, Pullets Surprise, Racket Factory, The Tribal Tune Twisters. These all qualify for the alliteration prize as does Lemmings Dilemma and Possum Project.
  • Outright rhyming—Anna’s Bananas, Termite’s Delight, Ants in the Pantry, Vulgar Bulgars, Contra Mantra, Holy Coyote, Zing Kings, The Reel Dealers, Tofu Snowshoe, Too Old To Be Controlled—all rhyme nicely.
  • Oxymorons can get your attention—The New Old Timers
  • A descriptive name might tell you to expect Klezmer-influenced music if you go dancing to Oy Diddle Diddle.

Band-naming conventions include:

  • A bragging name—Mighty Possums, The Amazing Yokum Twins, The Road Kill All Stars, Surreal Doozies.
  • Taking the piss out of yourself can be amusing—The Knuckleheads, The Meandering Cowpaths, I’ve Heard Worse Stringband, Bottomfeeders, Ubiquitones, Contradictions, The Good Intentions Paving Company, Village Idiot, Underindulgence, Fiddlin’ Luke Warm and His Hot Band, Not Rocket Surgery, The Oxymorons, The Noodles, The Toe Whackers, Toss the Cookies, The Try Hard String Band and The Try Harder String Band are all contenders for this prize.
  • Star power, featuring the star of the show—Dr. Ruth and the Pleasure Seekers, Laura and the Lava Lamps, Long John and the Tights.
  • Verbs—I’ve seen Clodhoppers, Cliffhangers, Footscorchers, Hellbenders, Roach Stompers, Barn Burners, Cowtippers, Possum Knockers, Moonshiners, Sheep Stealers, Window Smashers, Kickstarts, PepSteppers, Hayburners, Privy Tippers, Quarry Jumpers, Whippersnappers, Beat Pickers, Rugg Cutters, Sod Busters, Serenaders, Strutters, Pickers, Rubes, Rockers, Rangers and Ramblers.
  • Rough characters always add character—Misfits, Drifters, Hicks, Hotshots, Cutups, Nomads, Moonshiners, Rounders, Saints, Prophets, Sluggers and Hussies abound, and then there are the Mars Rovers and the Contrabandits.
  • In the gender category we have the top contender, Mamma’s Boys. Then there are The Lucrative Gig Boys, Three Wise Guys, Chicks with Guns, Grumbling Old Girls, Sandy Gals, and Swamp Mamas.
  • Kin and Friends—Rodney Miller and Friends is quite straightforward, but then there are The Evil Twins, Fish Family and The Whistling Anchovy Brothers.
  • Claim your crowd with The Chain Gang, Pick-Up Dance Society, Group de Jour, Transylvanian Buskers Association, The Bog People, Clan Loki or Wild Goose Nation.
  • Geography—Perhaps where we are from is most important as in The Catskill Rats, Rachet Mountain Rock Farmers, Carolina Chocolate Drops, Cook County Revelers and the inspired Ill-Mo Boys.
  • How big is the band? —There’s Duo de Jour, Fromage à Trois, Trio Brio, FourGone Conclusions, Five Reasons, Six Standard Deviations, Game 7
  • Deliberate misspellings can add some zing—All Strings Projekt, Katz ‘n’ Dogs, Phat Poppy, the Polite Boyz.
  • A tune name from the band’s repertoire would be fine inspiration—Boys of Blue Hill, Cocks O’ the North, Fine Companions, Great Big Taters, Mad Robin, Rambling Pitchfork and Shrewsbury Lasses.
  • Food and drink imagery is fun—Applejack, Apple Crisp, Barley Moon, Better Than Toast, Burnt Turnip, Atomic Fireballs, Choice Morsels, the Beat Greens, Jam Junkies, Hold the Mustard and Scrod Pudding all sound delicious.
  • Animals are always popular, as in—Nightingale, Jaybird, Boiled Buzzards, The Bushtits, Horse Flies, Brasstown Bonobos, Holy Mackeral, Dixie Butterhounds, Killer Bees, Swamp Monkeys, Screaming Earwigs, Something Fishy and Mortal Wombat. There are at least four bands called Firefly in North America. Perhaps I should jump on the band wagon.
  • A musical quality or technical term could form the basis of a band name, like the Rhythm Rascals which sounds way cool, or Rhythm Method which is really very funny. Then on to the Boom Chicks, Groovemongers, Drastic Measures, Notorious, Pluck and Fret, Unstrung Heroes or The Rosin Doctors.
  • A featured instrument could work—Squeezology, Banjulele, The Fiddleheads, The F Holes, Mando Mafia, Planet Banjo and String Theory are all fine names.
  • Good taste or deliciously bad taste can be achieved by avoiding, using or abusing the qualities of cute and clever, corny and downright silly, as in—Fishing for Cats, Hillbillies from Mars, Retrospectacles, The Flying Garbanzos, Latter Day Lizards, Prairie Chicken Asylum and one of my top favorites, Pachelbel’s Bazooka.
  • A joke name is always fun as in—Bambi in the Headlights or Cow Pie Bingo.
  • Some great band names are merely common expressions that sound very punny in a dance band setting. The most notable would have to be Yankee Ingenuity but there are others too—Swing Shift, All Strung Out, Some Assembly Required, One Good Turn, Moving Violations and the very clever Catch and Release.
  • Puns and word play are everywhere and we would be in good company with the likes of—The Young and the Fretless, Craicdown, Hey Wire, Reel to Reel, Off’n Ensemble, Schlock Therapy, Poultry in Motion, Whiskers Before Breakfast, Wabash Cannibals, Rebels Without Applause, ’Twas Brillig and the Mazel Toves, Squeaky Reels, Set Pistols, The String Beings, Brave New Whirl, Chiddle Fix, A Sheep at the Wheel, The Avant Gardeners, Tricky Brits, Forks of Nature, Les Z Boys, The Swing Chickens, Hot Under the Caller, With A Little Elf From My Friends, In-A-ContraDa-Vida, Old and Into Gray, Melodious Thunk, Musical Cheers, Spin and Tonic, Dead Sea Squirrels, The Gnutones, Dr. Grangelove, Imported Crackers, Impossible Feet, Quasimodal, Erin Ways, Happensdance, Oh Contraire, Prairie Frogs, Esteemed Clams, Keys to Excess and finally, The Flatland String Band…from Kansas, of course.

There once was a Hudson River-side picnic and summer dance where I was asked to play for Country Dance New York, just north of Manhattan. I called around to see who was available, and those who were in town formed the band. An unfamiliar combination of fine musicians. Still, we needed a name. Fiddler Michael Gorin came up with this brilliant switcheroo…Ten Gallon Cat.

Lovely, right? Cute. Unexpected. It slaps you in the face with its snappy timing and silly, memorable image. A cartoon in words… sure. Really a first class band name and perfect for a one night stand. Yet still…Ten Gallon Cat…well…that’s pretty stupid, right? How dumb can you get? Cats in Hats, ya know? Juvenile. You could certainly do better. It’s a very superficial pun of a name and though I do like it, you could go much, much deeper, right? Well, good luck! This band naming business is more tricky than you thought.

Depth and poetic skill in the band name can pack in multiple images and meanings that create a rich mysterious effect as in The Crooked Jades. I just love that name. They’re crooked and they’re jades. Wow! They’re both, what a combination.

Crooked means twisted and bent. Deformed and somehow evil. Also the band plays lots of crooked tunes (tunes with unusual or irregular structures). But wait, they’re the jades. They’re jaded. They’ve seen it all and are burned out. Just look at their faces and postures in your mind’s eye. See how crooked and jaded they look? Pretty vivid image for two words. Then go deeper and they are also Jades…precious exotic gem stones, carved into fantastic miniature landscapes and jewelry that you wear against your skin. Hmm, this is one of the deep ones. What a strange combination of evocative images for a band that plays a very dark brand of indie old time, new age music. You do have to hear their music to know what I mean, just how well this two word band name fits the sound of the band.

There’s a band name I have admired for a long time. BLT. So short and sweet you can bite it. Not only a bacon sandwich, it’s a mystery too, but still delicious. The letters cleverly stand for the initials of the last names of the musicians: Peter Barnes, Mary Lea and Bill Tomczak.

Grand Picnic, my first contra dance band and still going strong here in NYC. A happy bragging name that portrays a large assembly gathered for genteel frivolity, food, fun and the great outdoors. It’s a bit of a starched shirt, but with the jacket off and the sleeves rolled up. Grand, but with a snack and a drink, and no shoes, that’s us. It’s also the name of a great old-time tune that we often still play.

Wild Asparagus, an authentic backwoodsy name that quotes Euell Gibbons’ famous book Stalking the Wild Asparagus about eating wild food, hunting elusive mushrooms and a darling of the environmental movement. This band name claims to be wild, untamed and feral, yet at the same time, a limp and wholesome vegetable of a certain political stripe. Lots of depth in this name that goes well beyond the humorous oxymoron.

If some quality is taken to extremes, that can add value to a band name, perhaps shock value. For example, self-depreciation in a band name rarely works, but I love the name, The Wretched Refuse String Band. They were cuttingly funny, irreverent too, and the name fits them well.

Band names that paint a vivid picture, like Giant Robot Dance, Popcorn Behavior, Uncle Gizmo, Sleeping Giant String Band are all to be admired.

The most polite band name I’ve found so far is the Please and Thank You String Band.

The short and sweet award is shared by—Elixir, Flapjack, Footloose, Heyday, Leadfoot, the Primates, Shifty Tweeds, Riff Raff, Ruckus, Rumblestrip, RUMPUS, Skidoo, Spank Me!, Tally Ho!, Thrillville, Tom Foolery, Spin!, Hey!, Wha? and Wow!

There are a few band names I really like that don’t fit into any of the above categories, so here they are, in all their glory and all on their own—A Band Named Bob, Big Bandemonium, Waltz on a Dime, Future Geezers, Will Food Be Served?

Conclusion—after all of my investigations, research and analysis, I’m still no closer to coming up with a really good name for my new band. Help!

Author’s note: This article would not have been possible without the help of Ted Crane and his amazing database that includes 2,246 band names. Almost all the band names in this article are from that list and have actually publicized and played at least one dance.

Editor’s note: So what other examples of funny, obscure, soulful, mysterious, polite, short and sweet, delicious, alliterative, rhyming, geographical, animal, punny, poetic, etc. dance band names have you come across? Write to news@cdss.org.

R.I.P. Google Reader

feedlyI was a loyal user of Google Reader for years; it was the #3 site I used after Gmail & Facebook. When Google announced they were closing it up, I searched for an alternative and have been using Netvibes since then. I have not been incredibly satisfied with it; it’s too mouse-heavy and clearly not designed for my style of usage. Now that Google Reader has closed, I found another post suggesting gReader/Feedly. I gave it a try and it works awesome, on both my phone and my browser. Not looking back.

Health insurance coverage

mbrToday I called up Commonwealth Care to see what my options are for health insurance. It wasn’t as bad as the customer service at Straight Talk, but still, it seems unavoidable that the 3-week processing time for your application will lead to gaps in coverage for people who unexpectedly lose their insurance. And you have to fill out a long, clunky form to sign up for state-mandated coverage.

Why do we not have universal coverage again?

PDFs: scanning vs saving/printing

For formats that are better suited for other things, use a link or an image or an editable file, not a PDF. And never scan hard copies to PDF unless absolutely necessary.
For formats that are better suited for other things, use a link or an image or an editable file, not a PDF. And never scan hard copies to PDF unless absolutely necessary.

PDFs are often the best way to transmit information: reports, flyers, or just information you want to look a very specific way. The best way to create a PDF is to save the document in that format; nearly every program offers that option. When you save as PDF (or print to PDF), the text becomes searchable & highlightable, and the file size is quite reasonable.

However, a lot of authoritative entities don’t tend to create PDFs this way; they tend to create PDFs by scanning physical documents. When you create a PDF this way, it’s essentially an image file, it cannot be searched or highlighted, and its file size is huge.

How do you get around this when you don’t have the original digital file in front of you? I would spend 5 minutes looking for the digital file. Then for short documents, I would recreate the file before scanning it. That takes a little time, but it creates a much more useable document.

Also, there are some things for which a PDF is not the best format. Images should be in image files (JPG, PNG, TIFF). Websites should be linked to (or saved as a PDF; browsers let you do this). Anything you want someone else to edit should be sent as a Word/Excel/whatever document (or better yet, uploaded to Google Docs).

I understand that this isn’t something they teach you. But it makes workflow and digital storage space much more efficient.

Contra dance rides & web clearinghouse

There’s currently a discussion happening on the “Contra Dancers” Facebook group about rides coordination & having a web clearinghouse for dance information. I chimed in, and generally think it’s interesting, so I’m posting (selections from) it here too.

Original post: Rona Weiner, 6/19/13 10:46pm

Dear dance gypsies and dance organizers, are any of you working on a better method to coordinate housing and rides? I’m thinking this would be a lovely project for me to tackle. I’ve seen a couple of sites that have interesting concepts (like Ricky Rides), but nothing that seems like a perfect fit. Thoughts?

Tavi Merçapulcu, 6/20/13 1:01am

Let’s create a contra rideshare website!! I’ve been thinking for a while about asking the CCD folks if they would be willing to give away the url contradance.org so i could found a site that combines the basic introduction to contra, listings for any regular series contra that would submit, a log-in enabled collection of contact information for callers/musicians/bookers, perhaps even a choreography page for anyone who’s willing to publish their dances, and why not add a rideshare board while we’re at it?! Unless of course dancegypsy wants to add that, in which case i’d say go right ahead!

Rona Weiner, 6/20/13 9:07am

Thanks for sharing your thoughts, just to clarify, I’m thinking of something a little more automated than a mailing list or posts page. For example, something that will let me list that I have 1 bed and 2 floor spaces available, and allow people to “book” them. Some features that come to mind… offer and “book” housing space, hotel space, and carpool space, request bedding (when flying into a camping event, this is a life saver), use pre-defined lists to easily match requests (e.g. list of nearby airports for rides), etc.

Alex Krogh-Grabbe, 6/20/13 10:33am

Something automated like that would be great. Perhaps look at the (technological) model of AirBnB? I’ve never used it, but it’s quite popular.

Two other thoughts: a mailing list can do something, but I’m skeptical about how widely used a rides-specific mailing list would be. In Western Mass, we have the PVCD email list, onto which organizers post information about upcoming dances, people ask for or offer rides, lost & found notices happen, and OCCASIONALLY there are massive conversations about dance etiquette & philosophy. This list seems effective for rides, because people sign up for it for other reasons too.

Secondly, I’ve organized rides for Youth Dance Weekend for the past four years, and I’ve always wanted a more automated web interface like Rona suggests. Lacking that, I’ve found little reduces the need to just send lots of emails. The main thing that’s useful is to get rides information on the registration form (need/offer/all set? what region? how many seats?). After that, what I’ve found to be the most efficient is to just send out batched emails to all registrants within each region, saying “this is the ride situation in your region. Figure it out!” And they usually do. The main piece of information registrants are lacking is specifically who else in their area is going to the event. If the rides coordinator THEMSELF tries to match everyone up, it’s a ridiculous amount of work, and registrants get frustrated because they can do a lot of it themselves.

Also, Tavi’s idea of a contradance information clearinghouse is a cool one. It’s a huge undertaking, but would be cool. Maybe also a reddit-style voting system on which videos of contradancing are best to give a sense of what it is? Two other thoughts on this: thedancegypsy.com has a LOT of information about regular dance series and performers, though I think it might have a slight focus on the northeast. I’ve heard it’s a hassle to update it, though. Second, the CDSS website is a place I’d think about hosting such a web endeavor. The goal of CDSS is to be a resource for folk traditions such as contradance, and I can see this being a reasonable fit. But again, massive project.

Amherst’s duality

At work recently I’ve been involved in some conversations about what distinguishes Amherst (especially downtown) from other places. Here’s my answer: we are a mix of urban & rural and of young/modern and old/historical. I jotted down this diagram on some scrap paper, and here cleaned it up to show to you.

Amherst duality

The way these charts are supposed to work, the concepts would be at various locations around the grid depending on how much they embody the characteristics. But this chart is just a sketch to demonstrate the components of town that I think best exemplify the different quadrants.

Obviously there are some nuances here: cafes should be in the upper left too, and Barry’s hard to pin down as both an old-New-England farmer and a downtown developer. But what do you think of the general conceptualization of Amherst?

Customer Frustration

I’ve been setting up my new phone, a Samsung Galaxy S III on Straight Talk. I switched to it from my Samsung Nexus S 4G on Credo Mobile for several reasons:

  1. Credo is on the Sprint network, which is not as robust as I would like in Western Mass.
  2. My Credo plan was getting expensive, around $100/month and I was brushing up against the top of my 300 text limit.
  3. My phone was feeling very sluggish, and I just wanted something shinier.

So I was reminded that pre-paid plans tend to be much cheaper ($45/mo in this case), and heard that Straight Talk uses a number of different networks. I did the math, and even though I had to pay full cost for the new phone and I had to buy out of my Credo contract, I would break even in eight months, and after that would be saving money (and not bound by contract, either).

However, I have been plagued by some typical but thoroughly frustrating customer service issues:

  1. The website has been slow.
  2. The website has been unclear about what the service is an which network plans are on.
  3. The first customer service rep I called (to activate; I would’ve used the website but understood it to be discouragingly slow) had a thick accent and required me to re-spell all my information multiple times.
  4. My activation took a while, so I checked with the website, which basically told me “hold tight”.
  5. After we’d passed the two business days they said was a maximum for activation, I called back up. After giving my information and repeating my question to several more heavily-accented reps, and conferencing in a Credo rep, it turned out that I had given the wrong Credo account number, and the first rep may have spelled my name wrong as well (not hard, but something that should’ve been caught). The triumphant rep told me it should be all set by 6am the next day, if not before.
  6. It was indeed activated by the following morning, and I happily got to setting up my voicemail. I use Google Voice. The phone didn’t like that. Now, instead of the comfortable and delicate split I had set up, with both work and personal numbers ringing my phone and then going to separate mailboxes if I didn’t pick up, both were going to my personal number, the non-Google-Voice one. I tried a bunch of different settings (having done this before) and none of them worked. I figure out that Google Voice didn’t know what the carrier was, and that might’ve been the problem. So I called customer service again.
  7. The first time I tried, the customer service number wasn’t working. After a little while, it did work.
  8. But the reps had no idea what I was talking about. “So what you’re saying is you want to set up your voicemail box?” “No, that’s working fine; I want to set up Google Voice and need to set up conditional call forwarding. Can we just start with what network I’m on?” To which the rep asked me to call from a different phone so she could verify the model of my new phone, so she could tell me the network. Is it reasonable to expect someone who’s calling about their phone to have an entirely different phone lying around?
  9. Finally she was able to tell me what network I’m on. I’m on the Sprint network. Just like my old phone. Which I was trying to get away from. *facepalm*
  10. I don’t even remember what she told me about Google Voice.

The thing is, I’m sure this is all perfectly ordinary! And yet it caused me such seething frustration this morning! It’s not my calling, but it is seriously low-hanging fruit to make these processes more customer-friendly. This whole experience has destroyed what hopeful trust I had in this new carrier. I doubt that is something they’re trying to do.

Priorities and lists

Since I’m leaving my job soon, I’m in the midst of evaluating what I want to do next. That means thinking about what Jobs I would like, but even more fun, it involves thinking about what I want to do with the free time that I will have when not spending 16 hours a day in work mode!

To the rescue: lists. Blank piece of paper, brain, and pen. Here are what I identified as my priorities:

  • Reading
  • Writing
  • Playing music
  • Running/exercise
  • Cooking
  • Spending time in cafes
  • Playing games
  • Eating
  • Seeing friends
  • Movies/TV
  • Cleaning/house projects
  • Learning online skills
  • Computer mapping

It can be helpful making lists like this. Because of this one, I started weeding internet time-sucks out of my life. Facebook is great, but I spend to long scrolling through my news feed. So I decided to do less of that. It feels great! I’ve been really into decluttering in the past, and it’s so nice to return to that!