I’m speaking at FoodBlogSouth

 

foodblogsouth

People often ask me how I generate blog post ideas and I’m usually a bit embarrassed to answer this question. My process is really weird. Normal people will tell you to read other blogs and to delve into news and opinion pieces related to your niche and that is fine advice. I do plenty of reading to keep myself inspired. But I also have this uncanny ability to stare at an object, contemplate how I could connect it to my niche and produce a blog post idea from this process. See, I told you I’m weird.

I especially enjoy using parts of the human body for inspiration. I could stare at my big toe and come up with five blog posts ideas. (Really, I can. I tried it before I typed that sentence just to be sure I was being honest.) Weird as it is, I thought this process would come in handy when the organizers of the food blogging conference FoodBlogSouth asked me to come speak about generating blog post ideas. On Saturday, Jan. 25 I’ll be giving a presentation called America’s Next Top Blogger: How Tyra Banks Can Help You Generate Blog Post Ideas. This is a play, of course, on Tyra’s advice to the contestants on her show America’s Next Top Model. Ms. Banks always tells the young aspiring models to model head to toe or “H2T.” At FoodBlogSouth I’ll be giving a  15-minute crash course in what I call blogging H2T. I’m going to show attendees how they can generate 30 food-related blog post ideas by contemplating (or meditating on) different parts of the human body.

I hope you’ll join me at this event. There are plenty of other great reasons to attend FoodBlogSouth other than my weird talk. The conference will feature sessions on photography and food styling, how to turn your blog into a career, multimedia storytelling, and much more. You can view the full agenda online.

FoodBlogSouth 2014 will be held Jan. 24-25 at Rosewood Hall, 2850 19th Street South in Homewood, Alabama. Registration is $175 but See Jane Write Magazine readers can receive a discount by following this link.

*Originally published at SeeJaneWriteMagazine.com on Jan. 6, 2014.

How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love My Name

Last week one of my posts from my blog The Writeous Babe Project was featured on BlogHer.com. Yay! The post is titled “How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love My Name” and is about how being a journalist helped me overcome my insecurities about my name. You can read the post below.

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mynameisjavacia

Recently I launched a portfolio website to showcase my writing and public speaking and I decided to simply call this website Javacia.com. Most people would argue that I should have called it JavaciaHarrisBowser.com, since that is my byline. But I chose to go with Javacia.com as a tribute to my first name.

My first name is the only one I can rely on. Little known fact: my name has been legally changed four times even though I’ve only been married once.  Let me explain. When I was born I was named Javacia Nicole Price. Then my folks got hitched and I became Javacia Nicole Harris. But my mom lost the paper work so when I got my license I was Javacia Nicole Price again and remained that way for a year until my mom got the necessary documents to have my name changed AGAIN. Then I got married and changed my name to Javacia Nicole Bowser. Then I decided I missed my maiden name and changed my name to Javacia Harris Bowser. It’s a miracle I even know my name.

Despite its dependability, I haven’t always liked my first name. As a girl, while my friends were thinking of names for their future kids, I would sit in my room jotting down ideas for the pseudonym I would use when I became a published author. For years I hated my name. I disrespected my name calling it “ghetto.” When people had trouble pronouncing my name I apologized as if I and the syllables it took to address me had somehow offended them. When they looked at me as if I were a green girl from Mars and said, “Well, that’s different,” I felt ashamed. And when they turned to me with a furrowed brow and asked “Do you have a nickname?” I just laughed and said, “You can call me J.” 

Then I became a journalist. And I fell in love with my byline. I became a journalist and that “ghetto” name Javacia was on the pages of The Seattle Times, The Chicago Sun, USA Today, and national magazines.

I’ve been told that having a name like Javacia is a liability. Let’s be honest, as soon as you see my name you know I’m black long before you see me. I’ve been told that having a name like mine could make jobs hard to come by, that I’d be passed over by certain employers. For years I considered going by my middle name Nicole. But then I thought to myself, “Do I really want to work for someone who would discriminate against me because of my name or race?”

Don’t get me wrong. I’m in no way judging people of color who do alter their names for the sake of acceptance or a job. People do what they have to do. 

And I decided that what I had to do was learn to stop worrying and love my name. 

That same line of thinking also helped me decide to describe myself, on my new professional website, as a writer, speaker, and feminist. Yes, I used the f-word. Doing so made sense even though I recognize it was a risky move. I don’t want to do any writing or public speaking for someone who is anti-feminist. And feminism is not only a part of my work, it’s a huge part of who I am. 

 My name is Javacia and I am a feminist. Can you handle that?

 

*Originally published at The Writeous Babe Project on Dec. 31, 2013. 

We Need a Resolution

 

Image by Dan Moyle via Flickr/Creative Commons

Image by Dan Moyle via Flickr/Creative Commons

Some people hate all the hype surrounding New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day. And many people will tell you making resolutions for 2014 is a waste of time. I’m not one of those people.

New Year’s Eve is my favorite holiday. And New Year’s Day is a close second. I call them a night of hope and a day of dreams. I love spending New Year’s Eve partying with my pals, reflecting on the year we’ve had. And I kick off each New Year by having brunch (my favorite meal) and putting the finishing touches on my list of goals for the year ahead.

I understand why many people are reluctant to set goals and make resolutions at the start of the year. You’ve resolved to write a book before, but the words just wouldn’t come. You tried to exercise daily last year but failed.

But this year I invite you to view resolutions in a new way.

I’m a lady of letters so I turn to the dictionary for help with this. Yes, to resolve does me to make a firm decision about something, but it also means to find an answer or solution to something, to make something clear and understandable, and it can mean to separate something into constituent parts.

Let’s make use of this definition as we set our sights on the year ahead. Instead of simply resolving to write a book or lose weight, break down your goals into steps and helpful habits. Consider what you can do on a daily, weekly, and monthly basis to make your dreams come true.

This year I want to increase the readership for See Jane Write Magazine and my personal blog, WriteousBabe.com. I want to grow See Jane Write Birmingham and I want to promote myself more as a freelance writer and public speaker through my new website Javacia.com. Just staring at those goals can be intimidating, but breaking them down into daily, weekly, and monthly tasks makes them much more manageable.

Here are my writing resolutions for 2014:

  • Engage on social media (specifically Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and Google+) daily.
  • Comment on someone else’s blog daily.
  • Update WriteousBabe.com at least three days a week.
  • Update SeeJaneWriteMagazine.com weekly.
  • Update SeeJaneWriteBham.com weekly (with announcements about events and magazine content).
  • Share a blog post on BlogHer weekly.
  • Host a See Jane Write Birmingham event each month.
  • Pitch a story idea to one of my favorite publications every month.
  • Guest blog or be featured on a blog at least once a month.
  • In December 2014 let go of any projects that aren’t working.

WHAT HELPFUL HABITS WILL YOU ADOPT THIS YEAR?

* This post was originally published at SeeJaneWriteMgazine.com on Dec. 30, 2013.

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