My 100th Blog Post



  1. My 100th Blog Poster
  2. My 100th Blog Posts
My 100th Blog Post

My 100th blog, Pondering the Ponds of Nags Head Woods Again, was posted on December 6th, 2016, and my first story, Mt. Kenya and Lewa Wildlife Conservancy, was posted on September 6th 2011, soon after my website was set up. I’ve posted stories at the rate of one about every three weeks for five years. This is my 100th Blog post! It really doesn’t seem like I could have written a 100 post, but here I am. I think this is cause for celebration. Many blogs get started, but how many actually get to 100 posts? I’ll be honest, I started blogging as bit of a hobby. I knew it was something I enjoyed doing, but had no idea how much it would take over my life. My blog is like my third.

Against my better judgment, Biscuit returns this week to celebrate the 100th post of this blog and address the worst ideas in COVID-19 medicine and science. In a week where science and medicine were overshadowed by remarkable social and political events, there was still no lack of bad medical ideas, poor science. and out and out fraud to choose from. We should acknowledge these remarkable misdeeds!

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1) Picking vaccine winners and losers.Project “warp speed” chooses five different vaccines to support while abandoning several vaccines that had previously received large amounts of federal funding. If the vaccines had good enough ideas to receive hundreds of millions of dollars in federal funding, why shouldn’t they at least be tried in humans before they are abandoned?

2) Make believe research organizations.A private practice surgeon makes up a “big data” research organization with three employees and a science fiction author as its chief scientist. He gets publications in some of the most respected medical journals in the world. When the data is questioned, he refuses to provide access and the papers are withdrawn after causing significant changes in COVID-19 medical care. What the hell is a “Surgisphere” anyway?

3) Disbanding the COVID-19 taskforce. Not surprisingly, it is hard to tell whether this is a good or bad idea! First meetings become less frequent, then Brent Giroir “stands down” and goes back to his old job. If a taskforce falls in the woods without a daily press conference will anyone notice?

4) People still injuring themselves from misusing and ingesting disinfectants.An online survey CDC in May showed 39% had misused cleaning products, and 25% reported “an adverse health effect that they believed was a result” of the products. These included: 19% said they had used bleach on food; 18% said they had applied household cleaners to their skin; 10% said they had misted themselves with disinfectant sprays; 6% had inhaled vapors from cleaning products; and 4% had drunk or gargled diluted bleach solutions, soapy water, or other disinfectants. Please, try reading the bottle first!

5) WHO today finally suggests wearing masks in coronavirus “transmission” areas. What took them so long? Haven’t they been to Costco lately?

6) CDC failures. Aged information technology, inward culture, and an absent leader all led to a CDC failure when the agency was needed the most.

7) False scientific publications. It is bad enough that non-reviewed science gets passed around. Now articles in prestigious journal are based on fabricated data. Patients are treated with drugs that may harm them because of these papers. The authors of these publications who apparently did not even look at the actual data have to explain themselves, as do the Journal editors.

Journals, their editors and the article authors owe everyone, especially COVID-19 patients, an explanation.

8) Worst idea of the week: not protecting the elderly from COVID-19. Europe has had 50% of its COVID-19 deaths in nursing homes, Canada may have over 80%. We don’t have to rehash the NYC nursing home fiasco. Didn’t someone get the message that these people were at risk?!

Welcome to my 100th blog post celebration!
Hello all!

I’m so excited about today. Blogging has been a crazy journey for me, and I can hardly believe that as of today I’ve actually written 100 posts. WHAT?!?!? If you figure each post averages roughly 900 words(ish) , that’s around 90,000 words I’ve send out into the Internet void.

To celebrate, I want to share with you a bit of my journey, and some fun facts about me as a person and about my blog.

My Blogging Journey:

I have had a personal blog for years. I’ve always loved writing (there’s a reason I was an English teacher), and back in 2008 I started a little blog to share the happenings of my life with my family and friends, and to have a place to share my random musings about life, the universe and everything. And that’s about how it stayed for the next eight years. I wrote a couple times a month, and that was it. I never planned to make blogging into anything more than that until last fall.

What changed everything

What changed it all for me was that a friend of mine asked me if I would be interested in periodically contributing articles to the parenting website, Smarter Parenting, that she works with. As a stay at home mom who sometimes felt like my world was a little small, I leaped at the opportunity to write for a real audience a few times a month and connect with people (adults even!) outside the walls of my home in a professional manner. Still, I had no intention of launching my OWN blogging endeavor…until Smarter Parenting asked if I would like them to include a link to my blog at the bottom of the articles I wrote for them. I didn’t really want to make my personal blog public, but it got me thinking…it would be nice to have an online presence where people could find me if they happened to like what I wrote. That was the first time I thought…maybe I could start a blog of my own.

My 100th blog posts

I had NO idea the snowball effect that would come from that little decision.

Such a simple, little thought, but it sparked something within me that I didn’t realize was there. It gave me the courage to write, to put myself out there, and to believe that what I would say might make a difference to somebody.

I spent days trying to come up with a name, and I finally settled on The Many Little Joys after my sister pointed out the phrase in one of my own emails to her. As soon as I said the words out loud, I knew it was perfect. My two crazy kids are my biggest little joys, and beyond that, my days are filled with simple and amazing blessings…when I remember to look for them. I wanted my corner of the blogosphere to be a place where moms could come to be reminded of all the good that exists in the day-to-day life of mothering. The crafts, the games, the food, the chores; it’s not all glamorous, and it’s not all fun, but it can be filled with joy and purpose.

Once I had the name and the concept, I put myself through an intense crash course on blogging. I googled things constantly, combed through countless Pinterest boards looking for helpful articles, and read a few books that I found particularly helpful. There was a seriously steep learning curve, and I felt like an idiot much of the time. I can write, I can take pictures that look pretty good, but the technical and marketing side of things? Whoa, Nelly. I had no idea.

Taking the leap

I posted my first ever post on October 21, 2015. It’s not perfect. It didn’t have a vertical, pin-worthy image. It didn’t have links to other relevant content. It didn’t have a lot of things. But it was a start. And that’s all I needed at the time.

Now, ten months later, I know about plugins, gravatars, favicons, SEO, CSS, smart pins, and so much more. I’m still no Ree Drummond or Ruth Soukup, but I’m starting to gain a little traction, and I’m seeing some real progress. I still have an infinite amount to learn, but I’ve come a long way.

The best part

That’s one of the most amazing things to me about looking back on the past 100 posts. I can see that I’m learning, growing, and stretching beyond the bounds of what I once thought was possible.

My 100th Blog Poster

Blogging has been such a huge challenge, but I love how it makes me constantly learn new skills, keeps me writing, and connects me with a whole world of other women who are championing the cause of motherhood. In so many ways, we are more isolated than our ancestors in our mothering, but blogging has helped me find a virtual village of moms to help me raise my children.

What’s next?

I have way too many ideas, and too little time to write them all (my main focus is still being a mom), but I have some great things in the works. I’m currently working on a spreadsheet with a year’s worth of weekly preschool themes with skills and resources attached. I’m also working on a “journaling for preschoolers” kit, which I can’t wait to try out with my own kiddos and eventually share with you all.

On the nuts and bolts side of things, I’m researching blog themes and working to redesign the site with a more professional-looking design that has some improved functionality (if you have recommendations for a great WordPress theme…please…save me from the vast sea of WAY too many choices).

The Best of the Best

Now, just for kicks and giggles, here are some of the best posts that have come out of The Many Little Joys so far. Enjoy!

Top 5 Most Popular Posts (based on page views)

#1 Silly Songs your Preschooler will Love

#2 The Best Campfire Dessert EVER: Campfire Eclairs

#3 Chicka Chicka Boom Boom Alphabet Board Game

#4 Travel Felt Board: “Under the Sea” Play Set

#5 The Best Nest: A Literacy and STEM Preschool Lesson

My Personal Top 5 Favorite Posts

#1 How I Won the Mom Guilt Battle
#2 Practical Guide: How to Do Preschool at home with your child

#3 The Best Toy I Ever Gave My Kids

#4 Save the world and get your kids to clean…a win-win scenario

My 100th Blog Posts

My 100th blog posts

#5 It’s Okay to Be a Tortoise

And a bit ‘o randomness…

To finish things off today, here are 5 random things you may not know about me after 100 posts:

#1. I have about 70 pages of a novel written, but I don’t really have any idea how to finish it.

#2. I love the color red…I even wore bright red heels under my wedding dress.

#3. The smell of a campfire is one of my favorite smells in the world (it may have something to do with all the memories associated with this recipe)

#4. I’ve had the same best friend since I was 4 years old. (Love ya, Steph!)

#5. I have a serious love of Skittles, and I eat them in reverse rainbow order (yep…purple, green, yellow, orange, red…every time).

That’s a wrap!

Thank you to all of you who have supported me along this crazy journey. Your comments, your ideas, your “shares”, your “likes”, and all your love (especially that of my husband who has seriously been the best cheerleader a wife could EVER ask for) means the world to me. I look forward to sharing many more little joys from my home to yours!

What would you like to see in the future here on The Many Little Joys? More recipes, preschool activities, random musings on motherhood, crazy stories about my boys’ antics, or something else altogether?

Please tell me in the comments!

I regularly link up here.





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