Well, I was right. A few days of meditating and doing yoga and I’m already feeling better. I gotta stay on top of this. When I was younger it was something to do, now it seems like it’s something I HAVE to do.
My wife is starting grad school, so I gave her my Macbook and took our old Lenovo laptop. I’m not a huge fan of the Lenovo, so I picked up a cheap Zagg keyboard for my 9th Gen iPad and I’ve been using my iPad as my main device. I’m honestly a little shocked at how well it’s worked out for me. I’m not downloading torrents or doing anything technical on my iPad, but the keyboard has made it super easy to respond to emails, journal, and even write this blog.
Thanks to everyone who has tried our new feed reader Inkwell, and especially folks who have upgraded to Micro.blog Premium for the Reading Recap feature. Now that I've had a few days to evaluate how the launch is going, we're going to need to add more servers, so the upgrades help a lot.
As bloggers, we share a lot. The community, the creativity, the joy of writing, tinkering, and sharing our creations with the rest of the world.
Another thing many of us share is the struggle we go through every now and then. The doubts, the lack of ideas, the feeling that what we create isn’t good enough.
Personally, even if my mind tries to convince me otherwise, I think it all boils down to wanting too much, or expecting too much. Maybe it’s an existential thing. Expecting that blogging should provide something it can’t, instead of simply being satisfied with the pure joy of creating.
So when those impossible expectations aren’t fulfilled, I quit.
These days, I try to “write it off” instead. It helps, it really does. And the beauty of it is that it also helps others in similar situations.
We see that we’re not alone with our struggles and doubts. Just like shared joy is double joy, shared struggle is half the struggle. There’s healing in sharing. There’s cure in community.
With this in mind, I think “Our blogging struggles” deserves a spot on the Blog inspiration page. Sometimes the boost we need isn’t reading about others’ workflows and tools. Sometimes we simply need to know that we’re not alone with our struggles.
What are your challenges when it comes to blogging? Please share them, for yourself and others, and reach out if you want me to add your post to the list below.
Beto Dealmeida blogs about a human.json file and browser extension that lets other bloggers vouch for who is writing their own posts, not AI-generated:
This JSON document not only says, "all my content under https://robida.net is human-generated", but it also indicates other people who I trust are doing the same.
I wonder if we all have the same definition of human-generated now? For me, it's okay if people use an LLM as an advanced grammar checker. Human drafts a post, AI suggests how to polish it.
So, yeah, it's a point-and-click sort of day. I read a post earlier and thought I'd write a note about it, but the whole thing felt like too much work, so I didn't bother. I've been having issues with Emacs, so my Hugo workflow is wonky. The daily blog would have been suitable and easy enough, but I'm wrestling with Markdown vs Rich Text in Tinderbox. I'm here in Pure Blog writing about writing about it, which is some kind of meta nonsense. Some days I miss Ghost, tbh.
I post more frequently even on my once-in-a-while blogs than many people post on their only blogs, so where's the guilt coming from, then?
We fountain pen people are weird. Every month, around the start of the month, we do a version of the same thing: we make lists. What inks to put in what pens. Rotation schemes, seasonal palettes, elaborate spreadsheets that make a lighthearted hobby look like the desk of an air traffic controller. Not that I know what that looks like.
I tried doing all of it. And I hated it. I like four or five colors, and they are all blue. Jokes aside, throw in some gray, just black, lavender, pine green and purples — but everything with an undertone of blue. If blue was good enough for Miles Davis, it’s good enough for me.
My point is that the whole inky contortion was beyond my abilities. And then my friend Gailyn of Fountain Pendulum changed everything completely. By presenting a new way to fix this equation of pens and inks.
She announced her 2026 ink theme: tea. Every ink she uses this year would connect, in some way, to the world of tea — its colors, its moods, its quiet ceremony. Not a random rotation. A story.
I saw her video, and felt the particular feeling that only comes when someone solves a problem you didn’t quite know how to articulate.
“Color is a power which directly influences the soul.” — Wassily Kandinsky
I spend most of my time in California. I don’t have any major trips planned. At least for now.
That’s not a complaint. California contains multitudes, and more specifically it contains San Francisco, which means I have access to some of the most atmospheric light on earth roughly half the year, and the other half I’m under a fog bank so beautiful it makes my heart ache. I moved to San Francisco 23 years ago for a couple of years. Now you know why.
George Sterling, over a century ago, wrote “The Cool, Grey City of Love” and there is this one most beautiful passage that just makes me stay:
The winds of the Future wait At the iron walls of her Gate, And the western ocean breaks in thunder, And the western stars go slowly under, And her gaze is ever West In the dream of her young unrest.
Whether it is life itself. Or appreciation for a place where everyone is trying to invent the future. Or embracing the idea of all of us trying to exist in their own alternative universes. Or a combination of all those. Those are broad brushstrokes of why I have stayed.
So I asked myself: what if the city was the palette?
San Francisco sits between ocean and bay, between the Pacific and the hills, between cold water and coastal air. The colors it produces are not the bright primaries of a travel poster. They are layered. They shift. They have the quality of light that painters chase and photographers wait hours for. I have spent days, hours and now almost a lifetime waiting for my eyes to embrace the changing hues in the middle of Fogust, on Ocean Beach, or when standing on the Embarcadero, listening to roars coming from the baseball stadium that just sits there like a modern-day colosseum, dedicated to keeping us distracted from the drudgery of life.
What I didn’t realize was that my collection had already leaned this way, without me ever planning it. I have created three custom inks that in a weird way try and capture the entire palette. The good people at Kiwi Inks helped create three magical color potions I call Karl The Fog, Ocean Beach, and SF Summer. But I wanted more than just those three.
So I came up with an arbitrary number. 26, because it is 2026.
Twenty-six inks, almost entirely blue-biased. Iroshizuku Kon-peki, which is exactly the color of a clear Pacific sky. Ainezu, a storm gray-blue that looks like the marine layer coming through at speed. Montblanc’s Coal Blue, smoky and deep like the bay at dusk. J. Herbin’s Vert de Gris, that oxidized gray-copper-green that is precisely the color of tidal water where fresh meets salt.
The bottles kept piling up in the closet of my overflowing home office.
I didn’t plan it this way. I just kept buying what looked right. What looked right, it turns out, was home.
Anaïs Nin said it: we don’t see things as they are, we see them as we are. I’ve been looking at the same body of water for years. Apparently it has been looking back.
I created a simple system. And I mean actually simple. Two favorite pens that never change, always inked with the same inks that are meant to do the heavy lifting. Two vintage pens that need the safest, most forgiving formulas. And half-a-dozen rotating inks each month, shifting with the season. These inks allowed me to indulge in the pens from my collection.
January gets Colorverse’s Blue & White Porcelain and Hachimonjiya’s Gassan Blue Moon as an homage to the winter skies, cold and clear. March brings Pilot Kon-peki and Octopus Fluids’ Minze, because March in San Francisco means the first green is starting to show. August comes in with Hello Small Things’ Good Night Blue and Montblanc Great Gatsby, because August evenings here are warm and strange and go on too long in the best way. December closes the year with Pilot’s Fuyu-syogun — literally “winter general” — a gray that looks like morning’s mystical mix of mist, fog and cloud over the bay from the Embarcadero.
The calendar writes itself when you let the place do the work.
I wanted this system because I wanted it to solve an even bigger problem. The problem of too many inks. Anyone who collects anything eventually arrives at this reckoning. The collection stops being a source of pleasure and starts being a source of obligation. You feel guilty about bottles you haven’t opened. You buy something new and feel the weight of everything that came before it.
William Morris put it plainly: have nothing in your house that you do not know to be useful, or believe to be beautiful. He was talking about furniture. He was really talking about every collector who ever lived.
Twenty-six inks. A city. A year. No new purchases required. No FOMO, wondering if the new limited edition is the one that changes everything. It won’t be. It never is.
The palette is already here. I’ve been looking at it through my window for years. I just wasn’t seeing it.
Gailyn’s tea theme gave me permission to think this way — to treat a collection not as an accumulation but as a statement about what matters to you and where you are. Her year will taste like sencha. Mine will look like the view from the top of Twin Peaks on an August morning, when the fog is below you and the bridge just disappears. The fog horns sound distant. The world muted.
That seems like enough.
The sea-winds are her kiss, And the sea-gull is her dove. Cleanly and strong she is— My cool, grey city of love.
From reviews, sounds like the MacBook Neo is a great little laptop. It has been a while since I've thought an Apple product actually followed that "a thousand no's for every yes" video from WWDC a decade ago... This laptop makes the right trade-offs.
These ginger bran muffins from the Old Farmer’s Almanac are good. You could even crank up the ginger a bit if you love it like I do. It’s gotten me thinking about making my own crystallized ginger.