Apparently, updating my computer meant I wasn’t able to get online for some time. Which meant I didn’t finish the post for today.
Wednesday’s post should appear on time.
Apparently, updating my computer meant I wasn’t able to get online for some time. Which meant I didn’t finish the post for today.
Wednesday’s post should appear on time.
Time is a little short these days, what with work and the holidays. I decided to list several posts that I found inspiring in that they actually made me do something.
This post by Angela at Tread Lightly, Retire Early about the male-centric culture of personal finance blogs, and the list of female bloggers, was one of the posts that inspired me to start this blog.
Several more posts inspired me to get a website and start Physician in Numbers in earnest: this Fincon wrap up from Miss Bonnie MD, and this post about imposter syndrome from Chief Mom Officer.
Chief Mom Officer also inspired me in a different way about one year ago: her post about making a photo book for her grandmother. I’ve given one to my father, who says he “isn’t in the accumulation stage anymore,” but who seems happy to have photos taken of and by family.
More inspiring in the mind-changing way was this post (nearly 3 years old!) by Maggie at Northern Expenditure. She wrote about the “fill-the-bucket list,” which I find a useful exercise in my own life. It helps foster gratitude rather than envy or regret.
The first post. On the first page of my first blog. So far with zero readers, until you.
Already we have lots of numbers!
As a primary care physician, I see numbers all the time: vitals, labs, ages, costs. Report cards on panel size, metrics met, satisfaction scored.
As someone interested in personal finance, I read about savings rates, investment returns, safe withdrawal rates, financial independence and “the Number.” As someone interested in travel, I hear about frequent flyer miles, airfares, countries traveled. As a woman in the USA who consumes mass media, I think about clothing sizes, calories to cut (or eat), steps logged, items to buy, items to purge.
As a woman, I have seen fewer writers like me blogging about these subjects, but that is changing.
I hope to write about numbers, lots of numbers, but also to include some of the stories that go with them: how do real people make these numbers work, what do we do when they don’t work so neatly.
For now, I plan to remain anonymous, keeping in mind that sometimes things change. I’d like to keep things civil and professional here; somehow that always seems like a good policy.
So, let us voyage into this blogging adventure together, my #1 reader….