Showing posts with label blog posts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blog posts. Show all posts

Thursday, January 26, 2017

200,000




I happened last Friday this blogsite reached another milestone: 200,000 pageviews (we're at 201,775 as of today). It was back in December of 2014 that we reached 100,000 pageviews. As I said back then, I don’t know if this many views is good, bad, or average, but the views are picking up since in two years there were as many pageviews as the previous four years.

When I did a post celebrating that first 100,000 mark, I listed the top 20 most popular posts up to that point. Today I decided to pick 15 of my favorite posts. There is some overlap from that first list two years ago. To see more listings of my favorite essays, click on the “Essays” tab at the top of the page. There is also a “Poetry” tab and a “Haiku” tab where some of my poetry posts can be seen.

I wish to thank all who follow this blog, all who have left comments, and all who stop by to read my posts from time to time.  Here is the list of some of my favorite posts:



















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Photos: Two views of Turkey Creek at Turkey Creek Nature Preserve
Credit: Charles Kinnaird

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Friday, January 3, 2014

Top Ten Posts for 2013



If you look on the right hand panel of this blog page, you will see a running tally of the top ten most viewed posts for the month. I thought it would be interesting to go back and see what the top ten posts for 2013 were.  I have my own favorites, but what I prefer does not necessarily reflect what others are most interested in.

Here are the top ten most frequently viewed posts for Not Dark Yet in 2013:

  1. Writing Haiku  During the month of April, I always pay special attention to poetry since April in National Poetry Month. This past April I posted an entry with information about writing haiku, the Japanese poetic form with three lines and syllable allotment of five, seven, and five. I thought it would be a good way to get people involved in writing poetry who might not otherwise think of themselves as poets.  I was amazed that this one went ballistic, with well over 900 views.  Seeing that kind of interest in haiku motivated me to start a weekly feature on my blog, Saturday Haiku, in which I write a new haiku each week. 
  2. Are Our Lawmakers Capable of Passing Humane Laws?  I had already posted several pieces on immigration in 2012. This brief commentary was one I wrote after reading about an encounter that Alabama’s Senator Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III had with some Latinos on the issue of immigration reform. 
  3. Where Love and Reason Dwell is a photographic essay I wrote after visiting the historic First Universalist Church of Camp Hill, Alabama. It was a wonderful visit to a place near my own hometown, although I had never encountered the grand old church until this year. 
  4. Everybody Knows (Leonard Cohen) was one of the Monday Music features with a video of Leonard Cohen from a concert in London. “Everybody knows the deal is rotten/ Old Black Joe’s still pickin’ cotton/ For your ribbons and bows…” 
  5. On the Waging of War is an essay presenting my anti-war stance. The essay was prompted by the increasing use of drones in military conflict. 
  6. Wednesdays with Dorothy: Making the Transition from Group Home to Apartment is from a series I did about my late friend Dorothy Burdette who spent half her life in an institution  (Partlow State School) before finding a new life in the community. 
  7. All Souls’ Day: A Time of Remembrance is a reflection on two friends who departed this life in 2013. 
  8. By the Waters is from my Saturday Haiku series. With each haiku I post, I always include a photograph from nature. This one featured a beautiful photo by Scott Wright. A lot of Scott’s friends saw this one which bumped it up to the top ten list.  
  9. An Evening with Garrison Keillor is my review of a very entertaining evening when Garrison Keillor came to Samford University with an event that was billed as “Garrison Keillor: A Brand New Retrospective.” 
  10. Recipes My Daughter Likes: Falafel  I posted several vegetarian recipes this year that are among my daughter’s favorites. This one got the most hits of all the recipes and was number ten on the most viewed posts for 2013.  




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Saturday, March 2, 2013

My Current Top Ten List


I was pleased today when I looked at the Top Ten list for my blog posts. It's over there on the right-hand column of my blog page.  I have it set to show the ten most visited blog posts over the past month. As of today, these are the ten most viewed:

1. A Poem for the Longest Night – “To Zarathustra” is a poem I wrote which looks back over the centuries at our celebration of light.

2. Psalm 23 ~ Bobby McFerrin – Bobby McFerrin does something remarkable with Psalm 23. The music is lovely, but the most significant thing he does here is to use the feminine pronoun in reference to God. It is amazing what this shift does for the effect of the psalm. The first time my wife and I heard it was on a PBS telecast several years ago – I think it was with the Boston Pops concert series. We were both moved to tears as we listened.

3. Every Grain of Sand – “Every Grain of Sand” by Bob Dylan (from his Shot of Love album) is one of the most beautifully poignant songs I have heard. Elvis Costello, in an essay for Vanity Fair on his pick of the top 500 albums, said it might be the best song Dylan has ever written. Emmylou Harris sang the song at Johnny Cash’s funeral. I first heard it when I bought Shot of Love back in the summer of 1982 and was taken by it. The title calls to mind the opening lines from lines from William Blake’s poem “Auguries of Innocence.”

4. Southern Nights and Stereotypes –This is a look at Rick Bragg's book,  All Over but the Shoutin'.  It is also a personal interaction with his memories of life in the South. This one has been on the top ten list continuously since it was first posted in July of 2010.

5. Native American, or American Indian? – An interesting perspective from the late Tony Hillerman, the mystery novelist who enlightened many of us on the ways of the Navajo.

6. Tibetan Sand Mandala: Precision and Prayer – This is another one that has been a perpetual “top ten” contender. It is my report of the visit in Noember of 2010 by the Tibetan monks from the Drepung Loseling Monastery in Atlanta when they came the University of Alabama at Birmingham to present "The Mystical Arts of Tibet." 

7. Amazing Grace: A Unitarian Perspective – Here is a theological choice: a hymn that actually gives singers a couple of options. It’s the beloved hymn, “Amazing Grace.” It seems that rather than forcing worshippers to sing about amazing grace “that saved a wretch like me,” there is an asterisk to indicate that one may sing, “that saved a soul like me.” Do you feel wretched or a soulful today?

8. How Pete Seeger Taught Me about Forgiveness –This is one of my favorite essays. It is a personal story of how I can to a deeper understanding of forgiveness that allowed me to move into a new realm of freedom. I am happy to see this one once again in the top ten list.

9. Wednesdays with Dorothy: With a Little Help from my Friends – This is part of my story about my friend Dorothy Burdette who went from dire poverty, to institutionalization, to finally find a life in the community. I am still in the process of sharing her story, and so very glad to see it among the most visited blog posts.

10. A Jungian Appreciation of Mary – Another of my favorite essays that has personal significance. When I first posted it in August of 2011, it got off to a slow start, but has continued to garner readership.  It has often made its way to the top ten list.

So there you have the ten most viewed blog posts for the month. If you haven’t visited them, I hope you will take a perusal and see why more are reading these particular posts this month.

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Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Wednesdays with Dorothy: A Blog Series


My friend Dorothy Faye Burdette was laid to rest in April of 2012. For a life that began in crushing poverty and abuse followed by harsh institutionalization from the age of ten until she was forty-five, she had her own unique style. Because she was willing to tell her story, her memorial service at Glen Iris Baptist Church included some of her own recollections about the struggles she endured. It was a fitting tribute to her life. I am using my blog to tell Dorothy’s story by sharing of some of the conversations I had with her. The series is called "Wednesdays with Dorothy," with a new post to be added each Wednesday.

The following posts may be found by clicking on the title:


2.  The Life Story Project

Early Childhood