Last night

Last night

A lovely set up with great people at the treehouse for Ian’s birthday celebrations.

pc: Aerie T.

View from our Thursday yoga seshes in Utulei

Old journals

Old journals

They make me feel so many emotions. Emotions that I didn’t even realize I felt at the time of writing…

River

River

Ian rescued this super sweet pup that was stuck in a river and she’s so cute, she reminds me of baby Yodi! We temporarily called her River because of this. We almoooost thought about keeping her but we already have Yodi and Scruff, don’t have space, and don’t feel like we can take on a new responsibility this year since we’ll be traveling and won’t be able to give her our full love. So we asked around if anyone wanted a pup. On Friday, she found her fur-ever home with our friends Hanae and JB, and they named her Irie because of how chill she is.

From tumblr to wordpress

From tumblr to wordpress

I started blogging on Tumblr. I created a personal blog to post my photography and random public journals, and I later started a secondary tumblr that was more a mood board of sorts where I reblogged other peoples’ content for inspiration. Now that I’ve shifted over to a new blogging platform, it’s been interesting to notice the differences in blogging styles across these platforms because I think that bloggers on tumblr and wordpress are motivated differently. In my college days, tumblr was very much a social blogging platform driven by perception, so people (myself included) were drawn to the numbers of likes and reblogs we got. I guess you could say it gave me a sense of validation. I felt like people were on tumblr as a means to express themselves, but actually to express a version of themselves that would get the most likes, reblogs, and follows. Now that I’m using wordpress, my motivation for blogging has changed to be more lifestyle and design focused. And that’s the reason why I chose to use wordpress.org (which is same same but different than wordpress.com). I chose wordpress.org because I wanted to gain more control over my site design. It’s way more customizable than the tumblr blog templates that I probably spent over a hundred hours trying to customize. So I got on wordpress.org so I could own my site domain and be more expressive through design. Of course it has its pitfalls… like, it takes way more time for me to post on wordpress than on tumblr. On tumblr I could easily just upload a photo, write some words, and let the platform do the work. I didn’t even have to write anything actually. I could just post a photo on its own. But on wordpress, there’s so much more forethought that goes into it. I have to upload a bunch of photos, figure out where they go, write some words that are relevant, and make the whole thing look cohesive for a single post. All of this to say that I’ve had a long journey with blogging, and I want to continue doing it authentically…

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