Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Why?

Hello and welcome to my new blog (well, it is in fact my old blog, but with new content), for those of you that don't know me, I write two blogs already, one on NLP (here) and one on mindfulness, meditation, the slow movement and punk Zen (here). So why write another one? Well, it isn't really a blog as such, nor is it a daily diary. So, what is it?

Well, I am rubbish at the nuisances of written communication, it takes me an extraordinarily large amount of time to even write a simple and short blog entry (I have "issues" about such things, but won't bore you with the details). This means, even though I have half a dozen writing projects on the go (as well as regular articles, blogs and updates to my websites), I find every excuse not to do them.

Which is really starting to get to me now. After faffing around for many years, I really want to just get on with the stuff...

I am full of good intentions of writing, but often start my workday really, really badly. I do everything wrong, I check my email, twitter etc (a big "no, no" according the guru of productivity Tim Ferriss), then often mooch around the internet for an ever lengthening amount of time (not actually looking at anything relevant or useful) before finally settling down to a short burst of work, before distracting myself again with some other nonsense.

I have developed this Pavlovian response to opening a Word document; the very instant I open it my mind goes completely blank and I feel compelled to return to losing myself in the swamp of the internet. No matter how well crafted an idea was when I thought of it in the shower, or walking the dog, or washing up, the minute I come to committing it to paper my mind goes totally blank.

This blog is meant, primarily, to retrain my naughty puppy dog brain into actually thinking of what I want to write when I can actually write it! It is also here to help me improve the subtleties of my writing style; description, grammar, spelling, etc

The concept for this blog comes from an idea I have pinched wholesale from the comedian Richard Herring. On his website he writes a daily "diary" which he calls "warming up" (you can read it here), the purpose of which he explains as:

"The idea sprung up because of writer's block. I have been working hard this year and not really had a break and have been finding it hard to apply myself. This annoys me, because I know that if I just wrote solidly for three or four hours a day then I would never have to get into the mad rushes that I always do whenever a dead-line approaches.

It also makes me wonder about the stuff I could have written if I hadn't been playing Scrabble on my Gameboy"

He writes about anything on his mind for 30 minutes at the start of the day to "warm up" for his writing projects.

When I came across it, I loved the idea, so I thought I would give it a go to see if it drags me from this nadir of laziness and creative block.

Why do it as a blog, rather than just a private journal or word document? Well the reason is 2-fold.

1) By "putting it out there" (and therefore running the risk that someone may actually read it), I will do a better job (and probably stick at it longer) than if I was doing it for myself.

2) I have amassed a reasonable number of readers on my other blogs, and I thought some of them maybe interested in some of things I may ramble on about here (as it will be much broader, and will be about whatever is on my mind at the time of writing). This may of course just be hubris.

It is an experiment, it may be short lived, it may serve me for some time. We will see, please stick around for the ride.

Matt

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

This Blog Has Moved - UPDATED

This blog has moved to www.mattcaulfield.co.uk/blog

The new RSS feed is: http://feeds.feedburner.com/MattCaulfieldBlog

The thing I always liked about the internet was the way it allowed me to interact with people who visited my site, it allowed me to reach out to people all around the world. I didn't want just another 'brochure" site, but something that really connected with visitors.

Because of this, inspired by the Barefoot Doctors "Daily Doc Box" and Robert Anton Wilson's "Thought of the Month", I started doing a daily "NLP musing" on the homepage of my first website, back in 2003. It was very basic as I only had a tiny grasp of html etc in those days.

I then came across blogs in 2004 and thought it was an ideal way to do what I wanted and set up this, my first blog, in 2005. Even though I and the blogging and social networking world has moved on immensely in the last 5 years I have clung to this blog out of nostalgia and loyalty.

However, the time has come for me to move on and I have decided to put my "simple" philosophy into practical action and combine my blogs and different strands of interest and income into one site.

So, over the next few weeks I will be combining all my blogs:

mattcaulfield.blogspot.com (this blog, about NLP and related fields)
thetaichiguy.blogspot.com (my, to be honest, not very busy, Tai Chi blog, currently not doing a lot!)
www.tortoiseknowsbest.com (my blog about the Slow Movement and Philosophy, simple living, mindfulness and productivity)
www.thepracticebuilderblog.com (this blog gives you hints and tips if you want to create your own therapy or coaching business)

Into my brand new website www.mattcaulfield.co.uk

This will take some time to get right, so please bare with me. All the entries will be deleted from this site (other than this one obviously) in the next few days (once I have checked they have imported into the new site properly. And I have plucked up the courage...).

If you have any questions, comments or suggestions, please feel free to contact me.

Thank you for being loyal reader over the last 5 years and I hope you will continue to read and enjoy my posts at their new home.

The RSS feeds will change in the next few days, please make sure you update your reader links.

Best wishes,

Matt Caulfield