Loved this video from Doner for its beauty and storytelling: poignant and resonant.
Wisdom of Trees – An Eternal Optimist Waits for Better Times
In a difficult year, trees may increase their mass by less than one gram! During this time, the tree devotes its limited resources to maintaining the status quo. Like an eternal optimist, the tree concentrates on keeping itself alive until such time that conditions improve.
Peter E. Kelly and Douglas W. Larson, The Last Stand: A Journey through the Ancient Cliff-Face Forest of the Niagara Escarpment p. 75
This eternal optimist tree is the eastern white cedar, Thuja occidentalis. On the cliff-faces of the Bruce Peninsula and the Niagara Escarpment, some white cedars survive hundreds of years. There, these ancient trees form a scraggly and gnarled old-growth “forest.”
Challenged by gravity, root-limited, and exposed to weather, the cliff-face cedars escape competition from other trees. While they grow exceptionally slowly under these challenging conditions, other trees cannot survive at all.
For me, this shelter-in-place is not the time for productivity. I’ll take my cue from the cedars: persist, wait, and remain optimistic about better times ahead.
The Last Stand: A Journey Through the Ancient Cliff-Face Forest of the Niagara Escarpment is a great guide to these fascinating trees.
Leave the window open a little…
If I limit my access to social and news apps and open the window to the outdoors, I do better.
The window lets in
- the feel and sound of the wind,
- the glint of water droplets on spruce needles,
- the brown-eyed wariness of the deer,
- the quick boldness of the robin,
- the optimism of the daffodil nodding in the breeze,
- the smell of spring emerging outside,
- and a reminder of something larger than myself and my anxiety.
Let me be as vigilant for beauty as for threats.
Posted Elsewhere
Over the last several years, I have been focused on Matterhorn by Court Innovations, so my recent posts have been elsewhere.
Here are posts I’ve written on the getMatterhorn site. [Edited: Looks like the site has changed so these are no longer available.]
Take a look at our webinars and customer testimonial videos on its YouTube channel.
I’ve also been a contributor to the following Joint Technology Committee publications, available from the National Center for State Courts:
- Marketing a Court Website: Helping the Public Find the Court Online 2018 (open in new tab)
- Social Media Marketing for Courts (open in new tab)
For more on the JTC and the NCSC, see the JTC Publications and Webinars page on NCSC.org.
Transition Time
I am excited to say that I am joining the great people of Court Innovations.
Court Innovations is an Ann Arbor software startup, the first startup out of the University of Michigan Law School. Our mission is to increase access to justice for citizens and make the daily work of court clerks, court managers and administrators, magistrates, judges, and law enforcement easier and more efficient. Read more about our online dispute resolution platform.
We recently closed our a Series A investment round. These funds allow us to invest in technology, grow the team (including hiring me), and to expand our reach nationwide from twenty-three courts in Michigan, Ohio, and Arkansas. I can’t wait to see what’s next for us as we grow.
Simplify for Ease and Clarity
On a whim, yesterday I changed the theme of this website. I did it for my own ease of use, but the simplified layout now makes fewer points more clearly. Everyone wins!
Reasons I Switched – Simplicity, Ease, and Cost
My Fancy Design Was Too Busy
Previously, I had been using a theme that had lots of bells and whistles (sliders, images that changed size on mouseovers, featured pages, lots of color and typography settings). The front page was fancy…and because the theme had so many fun widgets and things to customize, I had an awful lot of stuff on the homepage. I had so much stuff on the homepage that I suppressed the sidebar that had my calls-to-action (newest book, newsletter signup).
I am embarrassed to admit that the visual clutter was not the motivating factor for my abrupt switch.
The theme got harder to use
I had been struggling with customizing the theme. Some of the things that I wanted to change were not available within the customization panel inside the WordPress dashboard. When I wanted to adjust how the buttons looked, I tried editing a child theme’s CSS, I tried inserting custom CSS in the panel…I had to surf the theme’s support boards and found out that I had to add that the change I wanted was “important!” in the CSS, and even then the change only “took” some of the time. The theme was as complex inside as it was on the outside.
Then, in the last few weeks, the customization panel would blink out. I noticed this when I went to fix an editing error on a page—yikes a typo!. The error was in the featured pages on the homepage, and the only way to edit it was to use the customization panel…and the panel wouldn’t stay on the screen!
To troubleshoot, I
- turned off the other plugins in case there was a conflict.
- changed browsers.
- tried to click really fast before it blinked away (I tried this more times that I should admit).
- searched for the featured page snippet in the theme files, including the database. Likely it was there, just poorly labeled.
None of this worked.
Through trial and error, I discovered that I could trick the customization panel to stay on screen when the theme was in “live preview” mode. So I had to change my site’s theme to a different one and then I could make changes. Ugh. I put up with this oddness, because for me customizing a new theme was enough of a pain that I could tolerate temporary workarounds. Then, yesterday, I had enough.
They asked for more money
I got a friendly letter from the theme vendor (I had started with the free theme and upgraded to a paid theme with an annual fee). They wanted me to know that my premium support would run out at the end of February. I should make sure to reup!
It really didn’t seem like they had been maintaining the theme enough to deserve another payment. When I had tried to monkey with the theme by customizing it, I realized that the theme was doing a whole bunch of fancy stuff in its files that made it really hard for me, a mostly non-coder, to make changes to a child theme. Worst of all, when I went into the admin panel, the theme customization panel still blinked out. I would not repay for defective software. Bad timing on the theme developer’s part.
Simplify to See
I gradually fell out of love with my old theme, and then I suddenly jumped to a new one. I made the commitment yesterday afternoon and republished the site last night. This new theme has way fewer things to customize in its WYSIWYG editor/customization panel. This new theme does not have featured pages, sliders, or resize-on-hover image fun.
After removing sliders and featured pages from the homepage, I realized that the homepage copy was….weak, and I rewrote it. I had not noticed that before.
Too much stuff cluttered the sidebar on interior pages, so I simplified the sidebar. The new layout and retouched copy, although less fancy and photo-filled, better emphasize what I am seeking now – new book projects.
Under the hood, I was able to deploy Google Tag Manager directly (the old theme resisted my efforts). So now analytics tagging will also be simplified. Hooray!
The more minimal layout fits my personal style better. It’s also better suited to visitors on mobile devices. I loved the photo of the snow monkeys in the hot spring, but as cute as they are they were irrelevant to the real message. The one thing that I miss is the orange line at the very top of the page. You might see the orange line return….
What do You Think?
How do you like the new look? Clean and tidy? Or too simple/generic? Anything seem missing?