Blissdom Travel in Pictures

My one-line review of Blissdom: I didn’t love it.

I enjoyed it, mostly, but I didn’t come away feeling totally inspired the way I did after BlogHer last year. Judging by the tweets on the #Blissdom hash tag, I was one of the few who felt that way.

I think it was a combination of things – it turned out to be a bad time to travel for all sorts of reasons, which made it hard to enjoy the conference. But I didn’t love the speakers. And I just didn’t get the same vibe. Maybe that’s the difference between an event with 700 people and one with 4,000. Or maybe it’s because I went into BlogHer totally ready to be fired up and feeling alive because of what I was doing in this space at the time, which I don’t feel at all right now. In any case, I’m glad I went but I’m not sure it will be on my list for next year.

Things I did love:

  • Rooming with Mama Track and Baby Track. Natalie was awesome and that baby is just so unbelievably, squishily cute. I could hardly stand it.
  • Meeting some bloggers I really wanted to meet. Angela was an absolute dream and someone I’m really glad I got a chance to meet. Mary Lauren was awesome – way more outgoing than I expected from her blog and we had a great time talking (and wondering why the heck Joe Jonas was performing at an event full of women in their 30s and 40s) at the party on the first night. I met lots of others too – Dana, Kimberly, Carri, Doc G, Amber, Greta, Shell, and was really, really glad to see Jessica and Frelle and Katherine and Shannon again. I didn’t spend nearly enough time talking to some of them, but it was great to see those faces and get hugs again.
  • The hotel. Just, wow. It’s incredible. Seriously – check out their photo gallery.
One thing I didn’t do is take pictures of people or the hotel, both of which I intended to do. But I did take pictures from the air on the flight down. (I know, I’m a travel geek.)
So I’ll leave you with these, which are better than whatever words I have right now.

 

Heading out – Alberta from the air

Alberta-from-the-air

Over the border. I see blue!

blue-landscape-from-the-air

Utah red

red-landscape-Utah

The Grand Canyon

grand-canyon-from-the-air

Landing in Phoenix

Phoenix-from-the-air

After that I lost my window seat, but I did make it down to Nashville.

Opening morning of Blissdom

Blissdom-sign

One shot from inside the hotel

Opryland-hotel-interior

And that’s all, folks.

Blissdom Bound

I’m all set. Packed. As ready as I’m ever going to be. (Which is not very, but I’m all about winging things these days.)

A few months ago I bought a ticket to Blissdom. This is a conference I’ve known of for a while and I always thought it sounded like a fun one to go to, especially because of the name. Bliss? Count me in.

But then I realized a bunch of my blog friends—some I have already met and love dearly and some I’m dying to hug—will be there, and I jumped. A big motivating factor is that Natalie (aka Mama Track) is going to be there with her new baby girl (aka Baby Track). And Jessica and Angela are trying to fight me for who gets to hold Baby Track first. (I’m going to win.) And Kimberly and her pregnant belly are going to be there. And there are so many others.

So I bought a ticket and hoped it would work out. And then of course we moved and I got a new job and I started to wonder if perhaps it wasn’t meant to be. But my new boss is great and doesn’t seem to care that the newest member of the team is taking a couple of days off and my husband doesn’t seem to mind that I’m ditching him, so here I go.

This feels much different than when I was leaving for BlogHer last year. I’m still excited, but less nervous. It feels less life-altering, though it could be equally so. Mostly I’m just tired and dreading the travel, just a little bit.

But I’m going anyway, for how else to pursue the life I want than to take the opportunities that come my way? I just ask that if you spot a sleeping blogger in the Phoenix airport that you give her a nudge and send her on her way to Nashville.

I'm Going, Y'all! - Blissdom

While I’m travelling on Thursday, I leave you with a post at Just.Be.Enough. It’s about being a working mom with a stay-at-home-dad husband, an arrangement I’m grateful for, but one that has included some unexpected perspective on what that means for my own mom identity. Please come and visit

Unexpectedly English

An hour and a half north, this highway I know so well – having travelled it countless times – brings us to a turn-off. A road never noticed, never before taken. Green. Everything is green – trees, leaves, lawns, and fields – lush with the full blush of summer. Twists and turns take us past cottages, farms, and artist’s studios waiting for someone to come in and love their wares.

A home, clearly occupied, displays a row of brightly coloured, eclectic things – bicycles, I think, and various household items painted in bold, primary colours. Each more a statement than a decoration.

Outside another property, a very old, very rusty piece of farm equipment stands sentry, its presence an indication of history as well as a welcome.

We continue driving, father than I would have thought possible without coming to the ocean, my mother remembering directions from a previous visit. Another turn and we find the road, and then the sign. We’ve arrived.

After settling in to the condo at the beach resort – owned by my mother’s friend – we go looking for the pub recommended as a place for dinner. It sounds casual, and therefore perfect.

Back down the winding road we go until suddenly it’s there. The Crow and Gate Pub. I turn into the drive and suddenly it’s as though we’ve crossed not an island but an ocean.

It’s like we’re in England.

The sign outside the pub

This sign looks like it's been here for a hundred years

A perfectly-themed lantern

The jolly old English interior

We eat pub food and sit in the garden. It’s an unexpected, but welcome, departure from what I had pictured as a beachside weekend away. Inside the line is long, full of others eagerly anticipating an evening meal. The server at the bar is enthusiastic and and friendly to all, leaving no hint as to whether her customers are well-loved locals or tourists just in for the day.

Outside the garden is full, but quiet. Small groups of people find corners to eat at tables and benches.

As the sun starts to set the birds flit around, watching. For crumbs, mostly, but anticipating nightfall too, and quiet, and sleep.

A little piece of England, just hours away. Who would have thought?

I can’t wait to go back.

***

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Coming Alive at BlogHer ’11

On the first day of BlogHer ’11, I stood up in front of a room full of bloggers and cried. If you know me, this won’t surprise you.

I went into the conference with high expectations. So high, I managed to work myself into a 4-day-long anxiety attack and by the time I left my neck and shoulders were so tight I could hardly turn my head.

I had decided I wasn’t going to fret about things I couldn’t really control or that ultimately don’t matter (to me, anyway). And I didn’t. I didn’t worry about what I was going to wear, whether I would have to sit by myself sometimes, or if people would like me. The clothes I wore reflected the real me, which was sometimes jeans and flip-flops. I went to some sessions with friends and others on my own. On those occasions I sat by myself, but I met someone new each time. And I don’t really care if some of the people I met didn’t like me, because I met many who did and I’ll forever be grateful I got to meet them and spend time with them in person.

No, I was worried about bigger things. Life altering things.

I went to BlogHer looking for reassurance, direction, and inspiration. I wanted to know that the message I’m trying to deliver matters. I wanted someone to point me in the right direction in my search to figure out how to do it. And I wanted to sit there, in a room full of strong, smart, sassy women, and feel alive.

I wanted big things. And that’s what I got.

It was Jess Weiner who made me cry. She’s an author and self-esteem expert and an absolutely bloody fantastic speaker. Over lunch on Pathfinder day, before the main conference started, she talked about self-esteem and criticism and how we treat each other, and I may have gotten a little worked up. When she invited comments I worked up the nerve to go up to the mic.

I care about this stuff, people. We’ve got to stop treating each other badly because of our own insecurities. There was definitely some nastiness going on at the conference, which I suppose is inevitable when you get 3,500 women together, but I ignored it. I don’t have time for that. It’s dumb. I’d rather be respectful and supportive and, yes, even open to the possibility that someone I haven’t met yet, or someone who’s not in the cool crowd, might be the next person I’m supposed to meet.

So yeah, I listened to her speak passionately about something I care about and I got up to share my perspective and I cried.

But you know what? Others did too. In several of the sessions I was in other women got up and asked a question about how to address something in their lives or shared how they have overcome their own hard stuff and there were tears.

San Diego marina at sunriseThat’s why I went to BlogHer. Because we all have a story. Because we all have something we care about. Because we’re all trying to find a place in a world with a million competing voices.

I am just one person. Just one out of billions on this Earth, and just one out of millions in the blog world. But I have a voice. And I got reassurance, direction and inspiration in how to use it.

I got to hear Gretchen Rubin observe that people craft stories others want to hear instead of telling the real truth.

I sat close to the front and listened to Brené Brown suggest writing that’s in control, that’s cool, is an emotional straight jacket. It’s boring. If something’s not uncomfortable for her to write about, she shared, it’s not worth sharing.

I crossed an item off my mental list of blogging anxieties when Shauna Ahearn asserted that we should write for community, for service, and for connections, and that doing so is better than writing for SEO or hits. I could do more to write for SEO, but it would kill part of my spirit – online and off.

I spent a whole day in a session with Karen Walrond, my blogging idol – my life idol, actually – and got to hear her story in person. I also got to ask her advice on how to get where I want to be, which she gave freely and in such simple terms that I came away feeling as though the one thing I wanted out of this conference – a vision – had crystallized.

I might have – just maybe, possibly – cried again when talking to her.

When asked to provide tips at the end of a session, Brené paraphrased a quote from Harold Thurman: “Don’t ask what your readers need. Ask what makes you come alive, and go do it.”

In other words – like those from my tagline above – “Live the life you’re meant to.”

It was a great conference.

***

I have other things to say, like the total awesomeness of meeting people I’ve interacted with online and how fun and funny and totally beautiful that was, but that will have to be another post. In the meantime, know this: I loved you all.

The Beginning of BlogHer ’11 in Photos

I have arrived in San Diego.


I have been greeted by sunshine and palm trees.


I have been greeted by friends.


Elena and I spent the afternoon wandering around. We took the ferry to Coronado and had ice cream, and it felt like we were in a little seaside town somewhere very far away.

I am far away.

Far away from my boys and my family and my friends – the ones who know me in the flesh rather than the written word.

But I’m also closer to something I didn’t know existed – in the world or in me.

For five days I’m where I think I need to be.

Let BlogHer ’11 begin.