According to my referral log,

21.April.2004 at 23:33 (+0000) by Robin S.

According to my referral log, the following search strings have led people to me:

“robin sizemore”

I can’t imagine why that would lead people to me, but, there you go.

What I’m having an even harder time imagining is who’s searching for “robin sizemore”? Should I be weirded out?
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Sidebar

21.April.2004 at 21:08 (+0000) by Robin S.

With nothing else of interest to talk about (because I’m not really in the mood to go reading the news), I thought I’d take a minute to talk about my links over on the right side of the page. I’m not going to do an indepth introduction of each one like some people have done, just mention everyone very briefly.

The first set of links are all people from the You Can Say Anything group at Yahoo. Despite the fact that not one of them knew me for the first year or so of the group’s existence, I was there from very nearly the beginning, lurking (as I am wont to do). I did eventually start speaking up, and I’ve got to say that the group is full of intelligent, interesting people. The topics discussed, as one might infer from the group’s name, varies wildly, and the topics of their blogs do, as well.

The next group of my links consists of a couple of blogs that I find humorous (Durhey and Little. Yellow. Different.), my webjournal (which gets a little more personal than this place does. I recommend you stay here), and a set of blogs that cover several different topics. However, I’m grouping them together now to emphasize the differences in their political leanings. There are a couple of fairly liberal leaning blogs (Peter David’s and Wil Wheaton’s, if you must know), an extremely conservative one (Mature Individuals Only), and the Libertarian blog I mentioned the other day, End the War on Freedom. It’s an eclectic mix, and it provides for wildly varying opinions on topics. That’s important to me, because I don’t want to only read blogs with which I always agree.

I think it’s essential, if you want to exercise your mind, that you get as many different opinions on things as you can, then discuss and/or debate to help sharpen and temper your mental capacity. (Obviously, I’ve not been reading enough dissenting opinions…)

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