Helping the helpers

I'm about to drive back home to Auckland after another few days in Taranaki with my family who are caring for my 95 year old Grandfather.

As I've mentioned before, he requires a lot of attention these days, and there are a few core family members who are providing his full time care.

It has made me think about the various levels of care we give to each other in such situations. There's usually, as there is here, a core group of people who provide the hands-on, day to day care. If you're in a situation like this, or have close friends who are and want to support them but not part of the close team of carers, and still want to help, there are still lots of things that need doing that could be really helpful:

  • laundry - picking up a basket of laundry each day/second day and returning it clean, dry and folded would be a huge help to anyone, most especially those households where the carers are busy caring
  • groceries - doing the supermarket run so the pantry and fridge supplies don't run low (don't forget the toilet paper!)
  • baking - with so many mouths to feed, and visitors who drop in, having tins of biscuits and slices is very helpful at morning/afternoon tea and supper times
  • errands - all those little things like paying bills at Post Shop, picking up parcels, running the car through for a warrent of fitness etc
  • library - dropping off and picking up library and audio books - you might even help by reading books to someone who spends a lot of time in bed - ask, it might be something they'd really enjoy
  • company - just come visit - you don't have to fill every minute with conversation - sometimes it's nice for people who can't get out much to just be able to sit with someone they know and watch tv
  • ask - there's always something that needs doing :)

Interview Notes: Sarah Wilson

Last night, I listened to the recording from Darren Rowse, of ProBlogger.net fame, interviewing Sarah Wilson

Sarah is an Australian, best known for her Sunday Life column and hosting of the first season of Masterchef. She now earns 100% of her income through blogging and the connections she has made through her blog - a major components of her income are the sales of her ebooks and requests for MC'ing functions. These requests most often contact her through, and because of, her blog.

About two years ago, Sarah became obssessed with sugar - or more to the point - learning how to live without it in her life. She wrote many posts on the subject and after a while, it was suggested that she pull all this information into one place. Sarah's ebook 8 week program and ebook How I Quit Sugar sold more than she could imagine, and she learned a lot about self-publishing along the way.

eBooks:

  • Decide on format - there is a different skill set required getting a book ready for ePup/eMobi compared to publishing to PDF. Seek and pay for expertise - it's worth it in the long run.
  • Write in chunk-sized pieces with more graphic/images you would use in a blog post. 
  • Cut the guff! get to the point quickly.
  • Use heading and sub-headings to organise your thoughts.
  • Value yourself and your ebook: don't be greedy when pricing, but don't undervalue yourself either.

One lovely part of Sarah's writing process is to "draw" out her ebook. She grabs a pen and paper, draws out sections, comments, speech bubbles, arrows etc to get the shape of what she will write and when. Loved this idea - creating a map for the writing is really appealing to me. 

Marketing Tips:

  1. Read Shayne Tilley's book on marketing - it's dense but has all the information you need.
  2. Make marketing your primary job after release (of your ebook or product)
  3. Network with other bloggers - offer your book or product for them as 'give-aways'
  4. Be generous - it works!

Each time I find out more about how other bloggers work, the same stories come through:

  • heart and passion
  • routine
  • work hard

Recorded Webinar over at ProBlogger.net

Did you like that? you can check out my previous notes from Darren's interview with the amazing Ana White too.

Shit my developer says...

 

  • FUCKING USELESS PIECE IF SHIT!!
  • FUCKING PIECE OF COMPUTER CRAP!
  • No fucking documentation! WHY ISN'T THERE ANY FUCKING DOCUMENTATION??!?
  • Why doesn't this fucking WORK??!
  • Why? WHY? WHY???
  • Don't touch the core. STAY OUT OF THE FUCKING CORE!!
  • That's it. I GIVE UP!!

 

Taken from a running list of exasperations leveled at vavious computer hardware, software, code and peers over a 6 month period.