Still life with books and primroses by the Finnish artist Marga Toppelius-Kiseleff. 1886 |
Easter seems like a good time to try to put some new life into this blog again. I have written nothing for nearly two years but recently I had occasion to look back at my posts and wonder whether I could make another attempt to continue.
While many people began to write blogs and share their thoughts during the pandemic I went back to my handwritten diary and wrote much more regularly, almost daily, there. I have also spent much more time on social media, sharing daily art from my Pinterest boards on Facebook and expanding my use of Twitter to include more art, humour and even virtual friends.
The isolation of the past year has, in some ways, been easier for me than for many others. I have not been alone and my husband, the driver, has been the one to make forays into the outside world. As we are both retired we have not had any work worries as we are used to working from home on our various projects. We have adapted our routines to include many more deliveries than before and also Zoom meeetings of various kinds. We have also been able (when restrictions allowed) to see family and friends outside in various locations.
I have wondered why I did not include blog writing in my altered routine but can find no convincing answer except that I have always struggled to keep writing here and the uncertainty and fear underlying everything this last year did not improve my tendency to procrastinate!
As the seasons turn however I have found a new resolve to look again at my research into 18th century Quakers, particularly Catherine Payton Phillips, to identify gaps and fill them where I can and to do some writing with a view to publication in some form. I hope that writing here will help with that and that sharing what I write will also be of some use, both to myself and to others.
So here I go, making yet another new start. I hope to find companions on the way.
Being a companion on the way sounds relatively undemanding. Happy to sign up for that.
ReplyDeleteGlad to be your reader.
ReplyDeleteGil, as a fellow Quaker blogger, I am chagrined that I have only just discovered yours. I am going to let others around here (New England YM) know about it. I never fail to be insrtucted and refreshed by Quaker bio and autobio...
ReplyDelete-- brian drayton