The scene inside my blog |
This particular blog is about a mystery – which I’ll
share with you. A while back, I added a tracker to my own blog. It puts little
red dots over the world map and shows how I’m progressively colonising North
America, the UK , bits of
Europe and tiny pockets of land in Asia and Australasia .
But it also has a real-time option, which tells me more about my visitors, what
drew them to me and how long they spent in my company. As most writers will
tell you, they welcome anything which is merely a displacement activity but
gives you the impression that it’s time well spent. And this is where the
mystery lies.
Forgive me
now giving you a list of places but it’s part of the enigma. In the period I’m sampling for this posting,
I had 2 visits from Scotland
(Airdrie and Johnstone) and 12 from England (Manchester ,
Preston, Keighley, Kidlington (4 visits) and London (5)). The 12 English visits were
balanced by 12 from the USA
(Bronson (3) and the wonderfully named Nacogdoches
(2) – both in Texas , Brooklyn (New York ) Hayward and San Francisco (California ),
Missoula and Plains (Montana ),
Seattle and Tampa . There were 4 from Australia (Hunters Hill and Greenwich
– both in New South Wales – and 2 visits from Elwood , Victoria , which I mistook first
of all for a name and wondered whether I’d ever met a Victoria Elwood. And
last, but definitely not least, came people from Bombay
(Maharashtra), Makati (Manila )
and 4 visits from the truly exotic Minnertsga, Friesland .
OK,
you say, so what? Well, to begin with, rather than being drawn there by my
magnetic personality, infinite charm and quiet desperation, many came simply in
search of an answer to the question ‘What makes a good novel?’ which
was the title of one posting. But that’s merely an aside
because it’s the 5 visitors I haven’t yet mentioned whose details hint at the central
mystery.
The
first came from Birmingham (UK) and stayed for a mere 26 seconds. The next
was from the City of London and stayed slightly
longer (42 seconds) and the third, from Riverton (Wyoming ) was here for 51 seconds. If I ever
meet the final two, I owe them a drink because they stayed long enough to read
something. The one from Amsterdam, Noord-Holland lingered a whole 3 minutes 11
seconds but the champion came from Englewood, Colorado and wasted an enormous 6
minutes 37 seconds of his/her life in my company.
Again, so what? Well,
this is where my crime writer’s curiosity comes into play. I know the time and date the last 5 arrived,
and when they left. But what about all the others? The ones in the first list?
There’s no indication that any of them left.
SO THEY MUST STILL BE THERE.
But where? What are
they doing? Some have been there for days. What are they eating? How are they
surviving? Are their bosses and families
missing them? It’s a huge responsibility for me to know that my wit and wisdom
have ensnared so many. I’ll have to start leaving plates of biscuits there and
cans of some sort of beverage. And what if the influx continues? We’re all
aware of the dangers of overpopulation. What if Oxfam and the Red Cross start
sending food parcels and medical supplies? Can Médecins sans Frontières operate
inside a blog?
Don’t get me wrong. My
blog welcomes immigrants but, for their own safety they need to be led towards
the more seemly locations – the jokey bits not the bits about existentialism. I
don’t want them to be hi-jacked by some rogue philosopher who’s camped there
and may force them to consider Aristotelian syllogisms day after day or read
Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason.
I must find them soon and see if they can’t be repatriated or
transferred to a blog whose sanity is uncompromised, where laughter, poetry and
common sense prevail. I wonder if there are any.
4 comments:
LOL, Bill. I don't know if I qualify but I do enjoy your posts.
Thanks Jean. A recurrent theme for me in almost everything is that we need to be silly once in a while as a counterpoint to all the awful stuff that's going on.
I don't blame folks for staying, your humor serves as a magnet.
I may have said this before, Jackie, but flattery works for me every time. Thanks.
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