Notice Anything Different About My Blog Today?

“I don’t like to doze by the fire,” says Jo Marsh in Lousia May Alcott’s Little Women. “I like adventures, and I’m going to find some.”

Tattered copy of Little Women /

I was ten when I read those words, and I’ve been doing my best to live up to Jo’s philosophy ever since. Mostly, it’s been grand. However, as you’ve no doubt discovered, you don’t always get to choose your adventures. Some reach out of nowhere, grab you by the ankle, refuse to let go, and — like Jacob’s angel in the Book of Genesis — force you to wrestle with them until light dawns.

I’ve been tussling with one such adventure lately: the angel/demon of modern technology. Three months ago, the company hosting my website and blog casually mentioned they’d decided to shut down that side of their business. Just a quick heads-up that at an unspecified but horrifyingly close date, they would be erasing everything I’ve posted on their site since 2011: 612 blog posts, countless snippets of travel advice, my readers’ insightful and entertaining comments, the whole kit and caboodle.

Don’t panic, I told myself. Breathe! Cope!

“When thinking about having to speed-transfer your life’s work to a new website, would you describe your anxiety level as mild concern, moderately unsettled, intensely worried, heart-stopping panic, paralyzed with terror, or consumed by an overwhelming sense of impending doom?”

I consulted savvy humans and chatbots Claude and Gemini. The prevailing wisdom suggested hiring a specialist to manage the migration, which would cost thousands. Transferring and reformatting the blog posts might run $200 apiece. Did I mention there were 612 of them?

“That would have cost …” tapping of keys “… $122,400,” said Amrit, the gifted techie who, for a modest hourly rate, has been helping me transfer my text and photos to their new home.

“A tad more than I’d hoped to spend,” I replied.

Amrit, the hero of this tale

Amrit works out of a neighborhood tech support shop and seems to find my emergency rescue operation an entertaining little challenge. For weeks he’s been saying things like, “Sure, we can make that happen. All we need to do is <!DOCTYPE html> <html><body> <h2>Demo JavaScript in Body</h2> <p id=”demo”>A Paragraph.</p> <button type=”button” onclick=”myFunction()”>Try it</button> <script> function myFunction() { document.getElementById(“demo”).innerHTML = “Paragraph changed.”;}</script></body></html>.”

I always nod as if I understand completely and then go back to doing my part: fixing formatting discombobulated by the transfer. Each post arrived with the photos clustered together at the top like worried sheep and sporadic line breaks disrupting the text like a drunk falling down a flight of stairs. So far I’ve untangled the posts going back to October 2025. So only 584 left to go.

You can tell which posts are recombobulated; they’re the ones with a picture above the headline. Those without pictures are awaiting reconstruction. They’re messy. You have been warned!

I’ve revamped the content and graphics on every page of the website — a crash course in navigating my new host’s very different technology. Basically I’ve been devoting every spare minute to the project for months. This week, with light finally appearing at the end of the tunnel, I suggested to Rich that we take a short getaway to the nearby city of Santa Rosa, with stops along the way to check off a few things on our to-do list.

We drove north Wednesday morning, taking a brief detour to turn in our primary ballots at the Civic Center. Voting always makes me think of my grandmother and the thrill she felt stepping into a polling place for the first time in 1920, thanks to 72 years of hard work by uppity women. As Thomas Jefferson said, “We do not have a government by the majority. We have a government by the majority who participate.”

A vintage suffragette poster.

These days I’m doing my best to be a good citizen — and a good senior citizen. I don’t want to stumble heedlessly into the future, reeling with surprise at each untoward event that overtakes me. To the greatest extent possible, I want to stroll through the years ahead with grace and a twinkle in my eye. And that’s going to take some planning. Rich has been researching useful support services that will let us age in place, and this month he discovered something called a daily money manager.

Now, you may be blessed with family members living nearby who have good sense, kind hearts, sophisticated financial skills, and plenty of extra time each week to spend untangling your muddled paperwork. We are not. So we were intrigued by the idea that a daily money manager might someday step in to make sure our automatic bill payments go through, library fines get cleared, and suspicious activities on our credit cards are investigated. But who do you trust to do that? And who is going to keep an eye on them?

ChatGPT, why is my electric bill so high?”

When Rich found the American Association of Daily Money Managers we started checking out local members. One had an office along our route, and we’d made an appointment to drop in for a chat.

She explained they provide financial services for those incapable of managing their own affairs or sensible enough to prefer offloading pesky chores to free up time for other pursuits. She outlined the vast array of financial services and heartwarming personal attention she was prepared to provide at a rate of $225/hour. There was more, but I got distracted by this coaster sitting on her desk.

And they say mortality humor is a dying art. This was right up there with Oscar Wilde’s last words: “My wallpaper and I are fighting a duel to the death. One or other of us has to go.” And comedian Bob Monkhouse’s line, “I want to die like my father, peacefully in his sleep, not screaming and terrified, like his passengers.” These days, as Ellie remarks in the video game The Last of Us, “People are making apocalypse jokes like there’s no tomorrow.”

Paranormal fiction author Rose Pressey wrote, “If you’ve got it, haunt it.” Which brings us to my favorite ghost-ridden building — and our next stop — Hotel La Rose in Santa Rosa’s Railroad Square.

Picture

Built in 1907 of brooding grey stone, decorated in period gloom, La Rose is rife with legends about a family’s grisly massacre in Room 42, or possibly Room 24, depending on who’s telling the tale. (We suspect the ghosts may be dyslexic.)

This was our fourth stay, but disappointingly, we’ve never seen the woman in white passing through doors or Daniel, the little boy said to haunt the elevator. Checking in, I asked the clerk if she’d experienced anything … strange.

“No,” she said. “But I’ve only been here a year. The night clerk has been here 20 years, and she sees the ghosts. And talks to them.” Yes, the legends live on.

Rich and I spent the evening at a street fair, dined at our favorite Italian taverna, enjoyed a phantom-free night at La Rose, and spent the morning treasure-hunting in antique stores. I returned home rested, refreshed, and ready to launch this new website.

(Drumroll, please.) Welcome to my blog 2.0.

You’ll notice differences in style and navigation. It’s a work in progress, and I hope you’ll share feedback in the comments section below. The first time you comment, be prepared to enter your email. (Don’t want to leave it? Make one up! It’s just meant to show you’re human, so I can avoid being flooded with spam that’s a time-consuming nuisance to remove.) After that, you’re automatically cleared to go directly to writing your comments.

Whew! I still can’t believe we pulled it off. Today Amrit is basking in the glow of achieving a tech miracle. I’m overjoyed at preserving fifteen years of work. And Rich is ecstatic that we saved more than $122,000 on the blog section alone. How sweet it is.


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17 responses to “Notice Anything Different About My Blog Today?”

  1. Dorothy Valerian

    Change is hard but you have accomplished it with grace and grit. Congratulations!

    1. Karen McCann

      Thanks, Dorothy! After the epic struggle it’s such a relief to have a manageable new website at last. Whew!

  2. Nancy L Solak

    The jokes/cartoons are fantastic. I need them right now since I’m in a similar predicament/nightmare. The newsletter software I’ve been using for years will stop support in September. I can’t find anything like it and have been practicing on a myriad of programs. Congratulations on getting through that plus getting all your blogs transferred! And you didn’t even break any windows throwing your computer out of one. It is quite a feat, isn’t it?

    1. Karen McCann

      Nancy, I feel your pain! How can they abandon us after all these years of loyalty? And why is nothing simple any more? I think I learned my 2011 web software in about 15 minutes; the 2026 version has so many options it is making me nuts. You’re right, it’s a miracle I haven’t broken any windows or computers (so far). But have faith: somehow you WILL find the right program and you WILL make your transfer before September. Good luck, and keep me posted!

  3. Avatar
    Milton Strauss

    How fortunate to find him! Love the cartoons, the coaster, and the statements about death you quoted. I would have liked to use one as my epitaph, but why a headstone for cremains? 😉

    1. Karen McCann

      Yes, I bless Amrit’s name every day. A saving grace when needed most. As for the epitaphs, you can have them for your cremains. Yes, you can! I’m planning on writing something witty that can be inscribed — or possibly just scrawled on a post-it note — and displayed on whatever container they put my ashes in before they go into the sea. You will have the last word, Milt!

  4. Avatar
    Glynda Christian

    Nicely accomplished Karen & Rich! A piece of good news for me is that two anthologies have chosen two different parts of my forthcoming novel THE FIX: A SHATTERING to publish. Glad you got through the trauma of this week’s technology surprise–onward!

    1. Karen McCann

      Glynda, what thrilling news about the anthologies picking up your work. Congratulations! A marvelous success story indeed. And well deserved.

  5. Denise San Antonio Zeman

    I’ve been wondering where you have been! So happy to see that you’re back to publishing your blog. I love it! And the new format is great.

  6. Avatar
    Tracy Cambron West

    Karen,
    Congrats on a major achievement!!! it pained me to even read about what you had to do to preserve all your work! Yay Amin!!!
    Tracy

    1. Karen McCann

      Thanks, Tracy! Yes, it’s been traumatic, and if it wasn’t for Rich, Amrit, and our local dive bar I don’t know how I would have survived these past months. The website is still a work in progress, but the worst is (I hope and pray) behind me at last. Yay indeed!

  7. Avatar
    Linda Denard

    No comment but….you are a joy to read and I adore the calmness of your Sikh. I always look forward to the next blog.

    1. Karen McCann

      That’s so kind of you to say, Linda! Thanks!

  8. Avatar

    Congratulations, Karen! You have survived, and thrived, through a tough experience! And while I expect all that white space around will eventually fill up, I like it! Kinda like Craig’s List… clean and open.

    1. Karen McCann

      Glad you like the look, Paul. I wanted something fresh. I suspect over time I will learn how to clutter it up with little add-ons and sidebars, but for now clean and open suits me fine.

  9. Ginnie

    Love your story, especially all those good jokes. Leaving now to go to our library to get some tech help!

    1. Karen McCann

      Yes, the jokes and cartoons are my favorite parts. Writing about all my trauma, I felt I needed something to lighten the mood. Good luck with your tech issue; hope the library comes through for you. If not, I’ll be happy to introduce you to Amrit.

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CELEBRATING GOOD NEIGHBORS
These days I’m writing about Good Neighbors, exploring how the people around me are working to help each other get through these challenging times. My weekly posts appear on Tuesday or Wednesday, depending on my travel and research schedule.

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