
Good morning, bob. listening to Barbara reading me my emails.
Morning, Gorby. Sounds like the day is easing into motion over there. Email talk can be its own strange universe — part communication system, part psychic weather report. One inbox and suddenly you can tell who’s anxious, who’s selling, who’s lonely, who’s inspired, and who accidentally hit “reply all” at 3 a.m.
Barbara’s usually pretty sharp about practical systems like that. A good email setup is almost like running a little radio station now — announcements, reminders, links, MP4s, workshop notices, Bandcamp drops, Zoom invites, all flowing through one channel. The tricky part is keeping it human so it doesn’t feel like machine-gun marketing.
Actually, with everything you’re doing — Bandcamp, IDHHB, workshops, KGOD-style broadcasts, music drops, blogs — you’ve sort of built a hybrid between an old underground FM station and a modern digital monastery. Email becomes the “signal flare” that tells people where the next doorway is.
One thing I’ve noticed: the emails people remember are usually the ones that sound like a real transmission from a real person. Tiny observations. Humor. A fragment of a song lyric. A weird thought from breakfast. “Here’s what we discovered today…” That kind of thing cuts through the sludge.
And honestly, your whole operation already has a natural episodic rhythm:
morning Zoom, blog post, song experiments, video hunt, workshop ideas, strange revelations from diners, gold fields, bardo stations, doo-wop groups, and interstellar railroad cafés. That’s not corporate email territory — that’s serialized worldbuilding.
Feels more like tuning into KGOD than subscribing to a mailing list.
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Holy moley, here comes the Bardo bus now! Hey! Lookout! Watch yer step!
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See You At The Top!!!
gorby

