16th August 2008

Forever in blue jeans

posted in Blogging, Fashion, Reader Input, School, Writing the Blog |

So, let’s see:

Mamasan and Anne suggested Gloria Vanderbilt.  Mamasan also suggested low- or mid-rise jeans, which Wendy, Anne,  and Mrs. Figby seconded.  There were a trio of mentions of “Not Your Daughter’s Blue Jeans” from Nordstrom’s (Noreen, Carol Anne, and Anne), and a couple of mentions of the “curvy” jeans at the Gap (LisaC and an email).

So I decided to try one of the NYDJ’s from Nordstrom’s, one of the curvy’s from the Gap, and one of Lands End’s custom jeans.  Much to my horror, my measurements plopped me into a size 14, since you’re supposed to be ordering by the hip size mostly.  Aaaaccccckkkkk!  I halfway expect them to arrive and fit perfectly through the hips and–as usual–gape like crazy at the waist.  Or maybe just not fit at all–either being too tight or being too loose.  We shall see.

Why am I doing all this?  Well, to be honest, I just hate trying on clothes.  I can handle about an hour, and then I go batshit crazy, start foaming at the mouth, chewing the walls in the dressing room, feeling like ants are crawling all over my skin, and turning into Uber Bitch.  What’s worse is when I do that and there’s no payoff:  Nothing fits, I don’t like any of the jeans I’ve tried on, or there’s a great pair of jeans that just happens to be half an inch too tight, and none of that model in my size.

It’s just an exercise in frustration and aggravation to me.  So I am seeking out the Holy Grail on the intertubes.

(Waving “Hi!” to Wendy and Anne, who delurked.)

As for readership, as one of my long-time readers noted in an email, my RSS feed shows the whole post, and I’d get more hits if I switched to a partial feed.  Now is when we edge close to an ethical question:  Do I provide convenience for my readers (whole-post feed) or do I provide a much-needed ego-boo (partial-post feed prompting click-throughs)?  And the fact that my ego-boo would also provide views on my BlogHer ads is additional ethical fodder.  I happen to know of some people who claim that as soon as a blogger they read switches to partial posting, they immediately drop their subscription as a matter of principle.

The whole readership question is pure narcissism anyway.  It’s a revealing chink in my oh-so-bluff self-confident armor that the drop has made me stick out my lower lip and whimper, “Why is everyone going away?!  Don’t they like me any more?!”  At these times, I have to sit myself down and talk sternly:

“Self.  Quit being a whiner.  You know damned well why your hits have dropped, and it’s called ‘not updating your blogging software and pissing off Google’.”

::sniff::  “But I’m not suuuure!  Maybe it’s not that!  Maybe it’s because I’m getting boring in my old age!  Maybe what I think is good writing, or fun stuff, just plain isn’t, and it’s all been ‘pity’ reading, and they’re just clicking through because they’re sorry for me, and I know they’re all talking behind my back and laughing at me!“ 

Segue into my Self curling up in a quivering heap in the corner of the bedroom and having serious flashbacks to the anguishing angst that is “being a nerd in high school”.  I begin speaking even more sternly:

“Girl, get a grip!  You know that Google blacklisted oodles of blogs who hadn’t upgraded, because Teh Hackers were siphoning off Google search results and gaming the system with invisible SEO terms.  Your Google hits are beginning to pick up again, slowly but surely.”

Self just rocks and moans and nervously curls hair around a finger.  This is difficult, because I have short hair, but Self does it somehow.  This is also a flashback to high school, when I had hair halfway down my back, but the hair beside my face was always filled with split ends and half of it was broken off around chin length because of the constant hair twisting.

BUT!  There is always a “but”:  I’ve read about three or four other bloggers whimpering about readership lately, and they seem like hawt, trendy, interesting gals to me, so maybe it’s all a function of summertime.

At which, Self pops open a suspicious eye, peers at me, and decides that possibly–just possibly–I might be right and Self can come out of the semi-catatonic state and focus on more important things, like the fact that Crayola 24-pack crayons were a smokin’ 49 cents each at the local store, along with other good deals, so the back-to-school shopping was not as frenzy-making as it could have been…

There are currently 8 responses to “Forever in blue jeans”

  1. 1 On August 17th, 2008, noreen said:

    I’m the person who thinks you should be writing a column for a main stream publication, so, I’ll keep reading anywhere, anyway. And,I don’t understand any of that computer stuff you were talking about anyway. As long as you don’t disappear from my list of favorites, I’ll be here. And, even if you do disappear, I’ve gotten really good at finding sites,even though I’m computer illiterate.

  2. 2 On August 17th, 2008, Katie B. said:

    I had no idea readers got upset about a click through; at least half, if not more, of the blogs I read do that and it’s never bothered me. I think of it as kind of a trailer to get you sucked in since you just see the first couple of sentences.

  3. 3 On August 17th, 2008, Karyn said:

    Thanks for the eye-opener about the click-through; I’m sometimes too lazy to leave google reader. I’ll try to click-through now to help with stats.

    I’m interested to hear about the results of the great-Alaskan-jean-search….finding pants is a nightmare and has always been one.

    K

  4. 4 On August 17th, 2008, Z said:

    I must admit to being one of those people reading you through a reader and not clicking over… Sorry! Usually I try to come over for people to get hits, but the past little while (aka the summer) has been crazy and I haven’t had the time. So perhaps it IS a seasonal thing? I don’t know…

  5. 5 On August 17th, 2008, Lisa said:

    Hehe, I really enjoyed this post. I don’t mind if you switch to click-through at all. If it helps with the ads, all the better. It’s the least we as readers can do when you’re providing us with your writing. And I really like the fact that you update so frequently, so I don’t mind at all.

  6. 6 On August 17th, 2008, Blog Antagonist said:

    I use bloglines. It’s convenient, but yes, if a post is available in whole, I might just be too lazy to click over and comment.

    Then again, if it’s only partially present, and the first few lines don’t grab me, I might decide not to. I think it’s really a crap shoot either way.

    But readership is down. I’m not an A-lister by any means, and I’m not even one of the more popular bloggers, but I used to get between 20 and 30 comments regularly. Now I’m down to half that, usually.

    Granted, I’ve been really busy and haven’t really been able to create the kind of content that I think brings readers in as much as I used to, but still, I think it’s a blogosphere wide phenomenon. Sometimes I wonder if the blog thing has just run it’s course. I did predict that, with my inaugural post. ;?)

    That said, I’ll try to comment more often. Everybody likes comments and there’s nothing shameful about that. It just sucks to feel like nobody is listening.

  7. 7 On August 17th, 2008, Lisa C said:

    I find partial feeds frustrating. I put all of them in one category on my google reader so that at least I know that I’ll have to take time to click through in order to read them. I read them last and I often wait until there are several posts waiting before I click through, and then only if the “teaser” is interesting. :::shrug::: Your mileage may vary.

  8. 8 On August 18th, 2008, Carol Anne said:

    This is the fifth blog I’ve read in the last week that has mentioned their readership dropping off. I ask, “so what?” It’s not a popularity contest. It’s you, writing. I think I have two people reading my blog (when I get a minute to write), and one of them is my cousin. ;^)

    Write for you. The rest will either come along or not.

    I want to know your secret for getting something written every day!

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