I just got tagged by Samanatha Stacia to tell ten things about myself, and tag three other people. Well the ten things are fine, but have you any idea how many people that kind of tripling every day would involve?
Just for the heck of it (and because it’s a good example of what a regular doubling (or tripling, in this case) can do, I calculated how many bloggers would be affected if each one tagged actually tagged three others, and if those tagged posted their blogs the next day. Ready? Here’s what it does:
| day | number |
| 1 | 1 |
| 2 | 3 |
| 3 | 9 |
| 4 | 27 |
| 5 | 81 |
| 6 | 243 |
| 7 | 729 |
| 8 | 2,187 |
| 9 | 6,561 |
| 10 | 19,683 |
| 11 | 59,049 |
| 12 | 177,147 |
| 13 | 531,441 |
| 14 | 1,594,323 |
| 15 | 4,782,969 |
| 16 | 14,348,907 |
| 17 | 43,046,721 |
| 18 | 129,140,163 |
| 19 | 387,420,489 |
| 20 | 1,162,261,467 |
| 21 | 3,486,784,401 |
| 22 | 10,460,353,203 |
| 23 | 31,381,059,609 |
| 24 | 94,143,178,827 |
| 25 | 282,429,536,481 |
| 26 | 847,288,609,443 |
| 27 | 2,541,865,828,329 |
| 28 | 7,625,597,484,987 |
| 29 | 22,876,792,454,961 |
| 30 | 68,630,377,364,883 |
| 31 | 205,891,132,094,649 |
That’s over 200 trillion people in the first month! (The population of the Earth is only about 7 billion, which would be exceeded by day 22.)
Obviously many people who are tagged do not respond, people rather quickly start getting tagged twice (or more) and the whole thing breaks apart from its own weight. So I’ll play the game as a blog-publicizing exercise, but anyone I tag should not respond if they’ve already been tagged once. Regard it as advertizing for your blog.
1. I started talking before I could walk. (And I still like birthday cake.) I still also talk better than I walk.
2. I’ve loved horses ever since I can remember. (My parents claimed they had to pry me off the pony, which belonged to an itinerant photographer.
3. While still in grade school, I discovered my father’s subscription to Astounding Science Fiction, and later, his back issues to the late 30’s and read them all.
4. I’ve been telling myself stories (mostly about horses to start with) in third person past tense since grade school.
5. My first attempt at publication was in high school or thereabouts. I sent a werewolf story to John W. Campbell, editor of Astounding. He wrote back saying it was too much a fantasy story for Astounding, but I could write. (The story has since been totally rewritten at novelette length and I’m thinking of e-publishing it on Amazon.)
6. I took a poetry writing class at Harvard, even though my major was physics. (Unfortunately — or perhaps fortunately? I’ve lost those poems.)
7. I bred and showed Shetland Sheepdogs for over 25 years, and my first dog, Derry, became the first dog of any breed from north of the Alaska Range to earn an AKC tracking title. (He was also the canine telepath who inspired the pocket herders, a breed of dog that is important in my unpublished trilogy.)
8. At one time I developed and programmed scientific models in FORTRAN on punched cards, and later learned to make web pages with HTML and Netscape 1.
9. Although none of my Shelties after Derry had much herding instinct, I had three Shetland sheep and competed in herding trials with my Border Collie, Dot.
10. At one time, some 20 years ago, I was lead writer for The Alaska Science Forum, a weekly popular science column that went to media outlets all over Alaska.
And to my surprise, I find myself 70 years old.
My picks (the three latest in the WordPress group on SheWrites because quite a few I read already have been tagged) are:








Buy Homecoming from iUniverse
















Thanks Sue Ann for the opportunity to play tag. I did it and passed it on. Love your blog and the woman I see here. Thanks to She Writes. Let’s keep in touch. Jill
Awwwww, loved the pictures from your past, and especially the sheltie. I had a sheltie growing up. His name was Rajah. He had a rather unfortunate habit of chasing cars. We lived on a farm, and there was not much traffic, but what there was, he chased. One day, he managed to catch a motorcycle tire. Very sad. These days, I have Catahoula Leopard Dogs, a larger herding breed. They keep me in line pretty efficiently!
Catahoulas are really interesting from the point of view of color genetics.
I stopped by your site as part of Meg’s Blogger Ball and have really been enjoying my stay. I checked out Homecoming and wanted to read more but the font was too small for me to do so. I’m older than you are and have a little trouble with small print. Am interested int both your books…I like your style of writing and was so happy to find that you”ld been tagged and forced to tell 10 things about yourself. I was curious as to what this stellar writer was all about and couldn’t find an”about” on your site.
The biography’s on my author’s website. Was the whole blog’s print too small, or the Book Buzzer widget, or what? Amazon has look inside the book. Incidentally, most browsers allow you to zoom in or even just enlarge the text. Look under view.
Thanks Sue. I looked all over for zoom but couldn’t find it. I’ll go back and look again. The whole blog’s font size is fine for me; it’s just ythe widget. I will go to Amazon if I don’t find zoom. BTW, is there any way you could add my writer’s blog and name to your She Writes Bloggers list? I would love to be included.. Thanks http://www.amemorabletimeofmylife.blogspot.com
My comment didn’t show up
It’s there. Takes me a little while to check and moderate. And for reasons I do not understand at all, my spam filter caught 3 of your comments.
What Browser are you using? On Firefox, zoom is under view, and I’m pretty sure the same is true of Safari. And yes, I’m adding your blog.
I didn’t see a zoom. I’ll go back and look again. If I don’t find it, I’ll go to Amazon. BTW, I would love to be included on your She Writes Blogger’s list. Is that possible? My writer’s site is at: http://www.amemorabletimeofmylife.blogspot.com