Queen for a day

Do you ever have days when you can’t seem to do anything right?

Or weeks?  Or months?  I go through long periods when I seem unusually prone to mistakes, and they overshadow anything good I might do. 

Lately it seems that every day I find an error in a blog post, about a millisecond after hitting the Publish button.  I am able to go back in and correct it, but the daily e-mails that go out to subscribers are indelible proof of my carelessness.

It makes me think of humor columnist Gene Weingarten, who won the Pulitzer Prize for featuring writing earlier this year.  Weingarten described his first emotion as “abject shame” because the column for which he won the prize contained a redundant phrase, “history of prior neglect,” which “suddenly seemed to sum up my life.”  He went on, “When the prize was announced, I became certain that my obituary in The Washington Post will begin: “Gene Weingarten, who once shamed this newspaper by winning a Pulitzer Prize for an article containing an egregious redundancy…”

While I can by no means relate to such prestigious acclaim, I can most painfully relate to the shame of a public mistake.

Yesterday, following about a week of stupid errors, I managed inadvertently to insert an obscure bit of code that made the entire blog post disappear.  After an hour of sweating and panting, I found and fixed the problem, but knew the mistake was already out there for all to see and ridicule.  Welcome to Loserville, Population 1

Just then I received an e-mail notice from WordPress, my blog host, that Word Nymph was one of 10 blogs featured in Freshly Pressed, its daily display of best blog posts that entertain, enlighten or inspire.

In selecting blogs for Freshly Pressed, WordPress considers among other factors:  unique content that’s “free of bad stuff,” images and other visuals, typo-free content and compelling headlines.

Or, it might just be that they choose at random, to give every blogger his or her chance at a global audience and 24 hours of fame.

Either way, I allowed myself to bask in the attention of thousands of fellow bloggers, many of whom posted playful comments that kept me giggling all day long.  I had the chance to become aware of hundreds of great blogs out there, which I plan to not only read but get to know their writers a little better.  

Yesterday opened up a whole new community of which I felt privileged to be a part.  I enjoyed meeting my new friends from Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Indonesia, the Philippines, the United Kingdom and other places.

While I won’t break into a chorus of “It’s a Small World,” maybe I will try to beat myself up a little less about errors and typos.  Well, probably not.

When I started Word Nymph, my mental image was of a playground.  My wish was that one day it be full of people, laughing and squealing and ready to play.

Yesterday that wish came true, even if just for a day.

Hey guys, come back tomorrow!

11 Comments

Filed under All Things Wordish, Foibles and Faux Pas, Technology and Social Media

11 responses to “Queen for a day

  1. Marty

    You forgot to mention India!

    Marty

  2. Sheree Moyer

    A well deserved accolade for good, entertaining and ALMOST ALWAYS grammatically correct blogging. Your fans adore you. Your friends LOVE you!

  3. I am getting totally exhausted each day clicking on the wonderful posts/blogs that get chosen for Freshly Pressed. I never stop just at the chosen post, but get engrossed in the different worlds they open up to me. Am really glad to have come across yours!

  4. Kathleen

    Please take into consideration that for every minor error you make, we are making a dozen, at least I was. Now I am more aware of my keystrokes and will spend minutes debating the use of a comma or an apostrophe.
    And I call the swing first!

  5. No, Freshly Pressed selections are not random, if evidenced by the amount of time I spend looking for well-written posts. Glad you enjoyed the traffic.

  6. William Greene

    Lest we become too self critical for our mistakes, let’s all be grateful that our surgeons are perfectionists and wonderfully talented, evidenced this week by a successful operation on my 89 year old father, and my 31 year old daughter. Both are doing amazing well. I was stunned by the number of doctors coming into the waiting room with smiling faces to greet the families, over and over again.
    Should I have hyphenated ‘self critical’?

  7. Deidra Darsa

    That’s wonderful. You’re an amazing writer – stop worrying.

  8. Dennis Jones

    Bask in it.

  9. We shared our day of glory…glad to have found your blog! Best to you~

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