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Herein you'll find my 'microblog': snippets to short for a dedicated place on my site, but still worth sharing, for your interest, and for my records. (Ordered reverse chronologically.)

Table Of Contents

2025

Attended my first virtual author talk for while: Lisa Jewell's. Haven't read her books but it's always wonderful to hear from a writer.

  • Fascinating stories often come from unanswerable questions you ask the most.
  • Novels often come from a singular, recurring image that won't let you go.
  • Write with love. People will notice.
  • Revisions follow the same paradox as time travel: woe if you meet your previous self.
  • Sometimes the most fun characters to write are the most awful.
  • The smallest things derail or make an entire story: use that to your advantage.
  • There's nothing wrong with writing stories that continually focus on the same themes.
  • A readership is a remarkable, delicate thing. Treat it with care.
  • Social media isn't for sales, it's for strengthening relationships with your readers.
  • Life lived through writing books.
  • You pour yourself onto the page only to leave so much unsaid...the beauty of subtext.


I've started notetaking when out-and-about, recording interesting things. Thought I'd share.

  • Café menu printed and formatted to look like an old newspaper issue
  • Woman wearing a t-shirt 'saying not inspired today, thanks'
  • Woman wearing a long-sleeve shirt with diagonal triangular sleeve cutouts
  • Man wearing a yellow t-shirt saying 'positive thinking'
  • Camouflaged trees
  • Person wearing a t-shirt saying 'I make my own money so I make mu own rules'
  • This is the food way
  • Woman carrying a mountain of apples

Found some old notes from an online poetry workshop last year from the Emerging Writers Festival on 6 Sep 2024: Erasure & The Burning Haibun, hosted by Muntia Tafassum Ahmed.

  • Erasure attempts to conceal and reveal: a beautiful juxtaposition.
  • Erasure is a collaboration/conversation between two texts: one old, one new.
  • Erasure doesn't have to be just crossed out newsprint lines, it can be an art form. Fade out the original text so you can still read it, or keep the erased text next to the original.
  • Make drawings to mask the erasures for a mixed media effect.
  • Create erasure with your writing: cross out words/phrases for two stories in one work.
  • What impact do you want it to have on the source text?
  • The haibun gained popularity in late 17th century Japan: a prose poem starting with autobiographical or non-fiction prose and closing with a metaphorical haiku.
  • The burning haibun is an erasure twist on the original created by Torrin A. Greathouse: it finds the closing haiku in the original opening prose.
  • The original haibun focuses on the external world, the burning on the internal.
  • Lowercase source text unifies the erasure.
  • A fascinating concept to play with for a burning haibun is a memory you have a different opinion of than when it originally happened.

Here's a poem I found when clearing out my notes. It's about Xander, from Don't Burn Too Bright.

he wears his scars like he has something to prove

has to declare his battleworthiness to the world

so they don't threaten to shatter him again

he's been torn apart by his nobilty

stitched back together with the ashes of his demise

he's watched the stars fall from their perches, the sun set itself alight and swallow the world he once treasured

created to be a destroyer of worlds

lost loves tattooed across his shoulders

bandages against the universe's battering ram

eyes like the burning volcano where he met his almost end

and still

he smiles


Below is a poem I wrote based on the prompt 'here again.' It's called 'The Persistance Of What Never Was' and it's the first time I've written poetry in years, let alone published it.

Energy like blazing sunsets inscribes itself across the tender membrane of memory. Your smile was a constellation of promises he nor you understood how to keep.

Time, that patient architect of longing, was all he needed to fall headlong.

How easily he mistook vertigo for love.

Banished from your mother’s arms when you stretched toward adulthood, claiming territory she couldn’t surrender...her rejection etched acid patterns in your eyes.

He hated her for that. Still does. Endlessly resurrecting his pain.

The light dimmed in your gaze as days collapsed into weeks, months, years.

As if someone adjusted a dial within you.

Turning down the brightness until shadows pooled in places once illuminated.

Preteens with teeth became your salvation myth.

Those awkward warriors with metal smiles who offered belonging when home became a geography of absence.

You swore this to him between whispers and midnight confessions, while they saved and devoured you.

You. The fool who trusted.

What would you think, now, knowing he became one of them?

The symmetry would wound you.

If that was how the narrative arc completed, this story would end here.

But grief is never so merciful.

He wishes you survived. But wishes alone can’t reconstruct molecules scattered beyond retrieval.

Here he stands, succumbing to memory’s persistent hauntings.

Your ghost refuses to leave.

It returns in the scent of rain on concrete, in the shade of afternoon light that renders the ordinary mysterious, in the laughter of strangers who sound nothing like you.

You haunt him with relentless grace, the persistent echo that refuses silence, mapping his days with your absence.

Here again, then gone, then here again: the rhythm of loss becoming his pulse.

No matter where he travels, or when he believes the wound has closed, your presence arrives. Uninvited yet essential: blood rushing back to numbed limbs, the painful reminder of continued existence.

When his own ending approaches, your face, frozen in youth’s impossible promise, a photograph never taken but developed in the darkroom of remembrance...

Will be what blurs his vision. Not his life unspooling in retrospect.

But you.

Eternal in your incompleteness.

The story that keeps beginning long after its conclusion.


Had the idea for recording things I've learned earlier this month but only just created it! So I learned these ~2 weeks ago. Still worth posting about!

  • In HTML, there are things called 'void' elements, like img because it doesn't have a closing tag. Another example is hr which creates horizontal lines. | (Source --- Archived)
  • Hippos are closely related to whales! And they don't have necks! | (Source --- Archived)

Finally watched What's Up Doc, this month's pick for the IndieWeb Movie Club, chosen by Joe Crawford. Described as a romantic screwball comedy... Exactly as written. The best way to go into this film is knowing nothing about it except the above. I will spoil it a little by saying it was a delight to watch.


This is my entry for the February 2025 Indieweb Blog Carnival, hosted by Joe Crawford. The theme is: affirmations. If you have a site, why not also participate?

While much gets written about affirmations and their positive benefits... It's never made it passed my intense skepticism. Why should I repeat to myself things which might not be true?

I always thought they had more impact if they came from others, but depending on the outside world to receive them... It's out of your hands. Writing and reciting your own is a way of taking back control. Besides, isn't it akin to a gratitude list or journal?

Call it trite, overly positive, unrealistic, or strange...

At its heart, it's just one of a thousand ways of cultivating joy.


Reflections from attending the Mildura Zine Fair in July 2024: my first zine fair and the first time I'd ever printed my zines.

  • Don't sell yourself short. People will like your zines!
  • Bring zines to trade as an excuse for interesting conversations.
  • Use the resources you have around you.
  • Make zines on paper and clean them up and arrange them digitally.
  • Print folded zines double-sided so there's an interesting surprise on the non-content side.
  • You can sew bindings for zines with a sewing machine.
  • Small Zine Volcano accepts free zines for distribution in Melbourne and surrounds.
  • Photocopying A4 (single-sided black and white) is cheapest.
  • Zines can be anything and everything!

In late December 2024, I attended an Are.na Channel As Gift workshop hosted by Laurel Schwulst. Such a fascinating idea! These are my notes from attending.

  • Gifting as a verb is more nourishing than the noun.
  • Gift giving is often separated as its own love language, but you could argue all other love languages involve giving a gift.
  • Attention and time are the ingredients for a good gift. Being a good gift giver is about listening, appreciating, and considering. You make connections between disparate things and the people you love.
  • Living with the intention of generosity is gift giving at its core. Even something an email can be a gift: putting in effort shows you care.
  • A wonderful gift is a Venn diagram of what you and the recipient enjoy. A moment of connection often becomes more important than the material thing.
  • Thoughtful digital gifts: a memory capsule of photos, a playlist, a reader of recommended articles or books, summarizing your shared existence, an imaginary museum, reasons they're loved, and a to-do list of fun activities
  • Gifting as an infinite game is a constant back-and-forth, a way of life.


Poetic Web Calendar on Are.na: "'Poetic Web' events: wonderful and unique." This sounds like a delightful way to find truly special online experiences.


Everest Pipkin's blog: "The many varied creations of an internet artist." A recommendation for exploring diverse and thoughtful digital art.


Jack Cheng's blog: "Thoughts on writing, slow tech, and life." Sounds like a reflective and insightful read for a thoughtful audience.


A Working Library: "Notes from having read esoteric, fascinating books." A perfect recommendation for fellow bibliophiles seeking unique literary explorations.


Craig Mod's blog: "Walking the world, and writing about it." Sounds like a wonderful blend of travel, observation, and insightful prose.


Fix The News: "Good news of the week." A welcome antidote to the often overwhelming negativity of current events, offering a dose of optimism.


Robin Sloan's blog: "Dispatches from a thoughtful, well-read writer and jack-of-all-trades." Suggests a diverse and engaging read from a polymathic mind.


Seth's Blog: "A fountain of thought-provoking, pithy ideas." A classic recommendation for concise, impactful insights on business, marketing, and life.


The Pudding: "Data-driven journalism in the best way possible." A compelling source for visually engaging and analytically rigorous storytelling.


Messy Nessy Chic: "Antiquarian treasures unearthed through the web." Sounds like a delightful rabbit hole for discovering unique historical oddities and forgotten gems.


Swissmiss: "A digital garden of delights." Implies a carefully curated collection of inspiring design, art, and life insights.


Billy Oppenheimer: "This man's ability to connect disparate threads amazes me." A high praise for insightful and synthesizing writing.


Ryan Holiday: "Pithy, opinionated writing on life and reading." A strong recommendation for concise and thought-provoking content, likely with a Stoic bent.

2024

The Marginalian: "Notes between the margins of the greatest of literature." A truly inspiring source for deep dives into classic literature and philosophical ideas.


App Defaults: "The apps the people use." A practical and curious resource for seeing popular and interesting software choices.


Blogroll: "A blog on blogs." A meta-level resource for appreciating the art and evolution of blogging itself.


Gossip's Web: "Handmade sites and experiments." A delightful peek into the creative and experimental corners of the indie web.


Low←Tech Magazine: "A site running on solar." A fascinating example of sustainable web design and thoughtful commentary on technology.


Ooh Directory: "Excellent blogs about anything and everything." A comprehensive resource for discovering new and interesting blogs across various topics.


The HTML Review: "Celebrating all you can do with the language." A perfect recommendation for fellow HTML enthusiasts, showcasing its versatility and power.


Uses This: "What tools the folks of the internet use." A practical and curious site for seeing how others approach their digital and creative workflows.


Alastair Johnston's blog: "Thoughts on a calmer life and internet." A great recommendation for anyone seeking a more mindful and less chaotic online experience.


Chia's Blog: "She puts the art in internet." A concise and appealing description for a blog that likely blends creativity with web design.


Chris Burnell's blog: "An appreciator of the fine work of CSS." A niche but highly valuable recommendation for anyone interested in web styling and design.


Chris Butler's blog: "A designer with much food for thought on the topic." Suggests a rich source of insights for design professionals and enthusiasts.


Chris Glass's blog: "Treasure troves of miscellanea to explore." Hints at a delightful, eclectic mix of content for curious minds.


Cory Dransfeldt's blog: "A whiz at automation, a media connoisseur and curator." Suggests a blog rich in technical tips and well-selected content recommendations.


Derek Sivers' blog: "A man of many contrarian ideas and endless wisdom." A classic indie web recommendation for profound, unconventional thought.


Forever Like This: "Insightful thoughts on many topics." A general but strong recommendation, promising diverse and well-considered content.


Jason White's blog: "Music, design, and interesting links." A concise overview of a creative and curated blog, appealing to varied interests.


Keenan's blog: "Just stunning, heartfelt writing." A compelling endorsement for emotionally resonant and high-quality prose.


Maggie Appleton's blog: "Digital anthropology, visual essays, and a wealth of knowledge." A fascinating and intellectual recommendation for those interested in the human aspects of technology.


Manuel Moreale's blog: "A pioneer of web minimalism, and a generous interviewer." A great recommendation for insights into clean design and thoughtful conversations.


A few weeks ago, I learned a new skill: button making! Thanks to the lovely volunteers at Sticky Institute which is a zine shop in Melbourne, Australia. Really happy with how they turned out!

A work in progress photo showing hand-drawn circular designs for pin buttons alongside blank metal pin components. The drawings include a green and blue Earth-like design, a blue geometric zigzag pattern, a purple and blue swirling design, and a lime green pattern with wavy lines and dots. Several silver-colored metal pin backs and clear plastic covers are visible on the right side of the white paper. The finished pin buttons displayed on a wooden surface with visible grain. Eight buttons are arranged in a circular pattern, showing colorful hand-drawn designs: an Earth-like pattern in green and blue, geometric patterns in blue and green, spiral designs in light blue dots, swirling patterns in purple and blue, and various abstract designs combining zigzags, waves, and geometric shapes. The buttons appear to be about an inch in diameter and have a glossy finish from the protective covers.

Rach Smith's blog: "Notes as colorful as the rainbow." Suggests a vibrant and engaging read, perhaps with a focus on creativity or personal growth.


Robin Rendle's blog: "Design and typography make for a visual feast." A strong recommendation for anyone interested in aesthetic web experiences and thoughtful design.


Robb Knight's blog: "Such a colorful, clever site." Promises an engaging and innovative online experience, likely full of unique content.


Sara Joy's blog: "Just pure fun." A simple yet effective recommendation, promising lighthearted and enjoyable content.


Tracy Durnell's blog: "Thoughts, book notes, and endlessly-readable weeknotes." Sounds like a consistent source of thoughtful reflection and literary insights.


Winnie Lim's blog: "Beautiful writing in its poetic sobriety." A compelling recommendation for those who appreciate understated elegance in prose.


Tracy Durnell's Notes: "Book recommendations and delicious food." A lovely combination of interests, perfect for lifestyle and literary enthusiasts.


Art Dogs: "Delightful dispatches on artists' companions." A charming and unique newsletter concept, appealing to art and animal lovers alike.


Austin Kleon's newsletter: "10 surprising, fascinating tidbits worth sharing." Promises consistent inspiration and curated content from a well-regarded creative.


Creative Fuel: "Thoughtful prompts for a creative life." A valuable resource for sparking inspiration and maintaining artistic momentum.


Noted: "A peek into the notebooks of thinkers and makers." Sounds like a fascinating glimpse into the minds and processes of creative individuals.


I've been featured in Issue 316 of Dense Discovery, with five of my recommendations! If you're unfamiliar with the brilliant newsletter by Kai Brach, give it a read, for fascinating tidbits on urbanism, design, tech, and living a more conscious existence.


Subtle Maneuvers: "The routines, habits, and superstitions of creative types." A captivating look into the daily lives and rituals of artists and thinkers.


The Art Of Noticing: "Ways to pay more attention to this beautiful world." A thoughtful newsletter encouraging mindfulness and deeper engagement with surroundings.


Beyond: "Insightful interviews with writers and heart-centered minds." Promises deep and meaningful conversations with compelling individuals.


Cosmographia: "Travel the world, but not as you know it." An intriguing recommendation for unique perspectives on travel and global experiences.


Dandelion Seeds: "Illustrated essays on the beauty of life." A charming recommendation for visually appealing and philosophically rich content.


Dense Discovery: "Interesting corners of the internet, curated." An essential recommendation for anyone seeking high-quality, diverse online discoveries.


Herein you'll find a collection of links I've enjoyed/found fascinating/worth reading/delightful, and their archive link for posterity's sake.


It'd Be Fun, They Said: "Heartwarming personal essays from a full life." A recommendation for deeply personal and relatable storytelling.


Jocelyn K. Glei: "Thoughtful essays on arts and culture." A solid recommendation for intellectually stimulating content on the creative world.


One Thing: "Curated curiosities, one at a time." A great recommendation for focused and intriguing discoveries, delivered thoughtfully.


Personal Canon: "Thinking through art, literature, and ideas." A strong recommendation for intellectual exploration and critical engagement with culture.


Curious About Everything: "Internet reads on everything and anything." A great source for broad, eclectic reading material to satisfy a curious mind.


Everything Is Amazing: "What the title says is true." A playful but earnest recommendation, promising content that highlights the wonders of the world.


Herein you'll find a collection of links I've enjoyed/found fascinating/worth reading/delightful, and their archive link for posterity's sake.


Naive Weekly: "Links to the poetic corners of the internet." A lovely recommendation for discovering beautiful and inspiring online spaces.


Recomendo: "Surprising, insightful, always helpful recommendations." A highly practical recommendation for useful and often unexpected finds.


Seven Senses: "Experience art and culture anew." A recommendation for deepening appreciation of creative works and cultural insights.


The Monday Kickoff: "Start your week with food for thought." A great recommendation for setting a reflective and productive tone for the week.


Things To Click: "Feed your curiosity with these rabbit-holes." A promising recommendation for discovering fascinating and engaging online content.


Bookbear Express: "In which she helps herself, and helps others." Sounds like a supportive and insightful newsletter focused on personal growth and shared learning.


Human Stuff: "Generous, tender writing on this being people." A recommendation for empathetic and heartfelt explorations of the human experience.


James Clear: "Habits, organization, and lots to think about." A solid recommendation for practical advice on productivity and personal improvement.


Escape The Algorithm: "Come for a internet wander." A compelling recommendation for discovering content outside mainstream algorithmic feeds.

I attended a virtual Are.na walkthrough: Travess Smalley & Daniel Lefcourt. They discussed how they use it to develop their ideas.

  • Unrelated fields overlap in unexpected ways: new insights in disparate connections.
  • Save everything you find interesting. You never know how it might inspire you.
  • If there ins't a word to describe what you're exploring, there's opportunity there.
  • Art is a language. And just as we study books to find how we write, we can study artworks to discover how we express ourselves.
  • Each painting sings the same song, uniquely.
  • When you discover something new, you want to find others like them. If the creators share their influences, you'll discover something unique. So share yours.
  • The beauty of mixed media is you can mix and match often separate senses for surprising results. For example, sheet music as artworks.
  • Learn the rules of software to break them to make art with unusual constraints.
  • Rules are freeing when overwhelmed by the limitless of creativity, but breaking them and creating beyond them is often where the most fascinating ideas come from.
  • If you're stuck on a problem, working it out on paper can lead to breakthroughs.
  • Our taste influences what we make. Begin with what you love and build upon it.
  • The computer is a creative assistant, a portal to inspiration, or an art medium. Experiment.
  • Creative processes as programming scripts.
  • Book or zine making is such a rewarding process as it allows for constant experimentation.
  • Paper is an excellent tool for processing information and engaging with a work.
Bibliography

Read again...

Zachary Kai's digital drawing: 5 stacked books (blue/teal/green/purple, black spine designs), green plant behind top book, purple heart on either side.

Zachary Kaihe/him |

Zachary Kai is a space fantasy writer, offbeat queer, traveler, zinester, and avowed generalist. The internet is his livelihood and lifeline.