There’s lots of changes chez Guiney of late. As many know, we’ve moved house after seventeen years and with that came a new neighbourhood and a very new and, actually, exciting lifestyle. There’s also my new connection with SOAS as Writer-in-Residence in its Department of SE Asian Studies. Out of that has come the move from back burner to front of my interest in using art for social change, and this has necessitated moving my work in the theatre towards the back of the hob (stove top for you Americans out there). There will also be a newly updated website which should be ready to unveil any day/week now.

So everything feels ripe for change and that includes my blog. As careful readers will remember, I thought about stopping my blog all together which led to my musing here about why we blog in the first place. Of course, after  nearly four years, I’ve become addicted to this place and so will not be stopping any time soon. But I have decided to make a subtle change which probably no one but me will notice. For years I have been regularly blogging on Thursdays and Sundays — did you notice? Well, starting later this week I’ll be blogging on Fridays and Mondays. I don’t expect it to make much of a difference to be honest, but it will suit my new schedule better. I know many bloggers write their posts in advance and schedule them for the appropriate times. I have done that sometimes as well. But my ideas are often more spontaneous than that. So my timing will be different from now on. But I have to ask, do you think it matters? Is it just important that there needs to be some sort of regularity in order to maintain your readership or do readers really expect to turn on their computers on a specific day and find a specific set of blogs waiting to be read?

In any event, I’ll next see you here on Friday instead of Thursday, and I’ll have some exciting news about me on Radio 4! And in the meantime, in the spirit of change, here’s a little music for a Sunday afternoon (ps – I have also used this song as a way to trick teenagers into writing poetry….)