#DigiLitSunday: Digital Writing
Check out additional #DigiLit Sunday posts with Margaret Simon here.
How does a post come to fruition?
Here’s an inside look at the content and the process for today’s post.
What’s the focus?
Where did my idea come from?
My idea was to tell how a post originated from one idea/ one tour during my recent trip to Rome. It was a topic that I briefly addressed two weeks ago (while in Rome) under the topic of Motivation here.
Source?
My “S-Notes” on my phone which I used frequently on this trip.
But WHAT am I going to write about the catacombs?
This is the stage where I pour a cup a coffee, add categories and tags, go for a walk with Mya, because sometimes the “ideas” actually work themselves out in my head. I draft in my head multiple times before I begin to put fingers to the keyboard.
I briefly addressed this topic in an earlier post. I thought I was done writing about it. But my brain won’t let go. I bought books at the gift shop. Books . . . books that I am currently reading . . . curious about the “bits and pieces” that I learned while traveling and now want to add to my knowledge.
Does that ever happen to you?
Google’s response to the word “catacomb” was that they were present in London, Paris and Rome. Many locations, many purposes, but my connection to “world civilizations” was in Rome. “Rome Catacombs” led me to some interesting sources including National Geographic and the Vatican. The Vatican source seemed the most promising as the National Geographic source had already pointed out that the Vatican owned all of the Christian Catacombs (numbering 40 known ones at this time).
(Yes, I went to google first with “Catacombs”, then “Roman Catacombs” and then “Calixtus Catacombs”.)
What specific information was I looking for?
I wanted to know more about “deacon Calixtus, who would later become pope (217-222), the task of supervising the cemetery of the Appian Way, where the most important pontiffs of the third century would be buried.” (Source: Vatican)
Our tour began with story boards and I was hooked.

Picture taken of tour guide and story board. 09.01.16 fgmcveigh
Our guide was amazing. The stories were riveting. And now I’m embroiled in learning more about the catacombs. Sixteen different popes were buried in this set of catacombs along with 50 martyrs. But this was also the burial place for the common persons during the second through fourth centuries. The oldest tombs are those in the top levels as later tombs were dug below those previously interred.
What was the most interesting story for me?
The story of St. Cecilia, the patron saint of music, who was martyred and who is also revered as an “incorrupt” saint. Incorruptibility is a Roman Catholic belief that divine intervention allows some human bodies (specifically saints) to avoid the normal process of decomposition after death as a sign of their holiness.
PROCESS REFLECTION:
Today, once I had settled on my topic, The Catacombs of Callisto, I drafted. I did not revise. I did do some minor editing – especially checking my quotation marks. I also used the spell check embedded in WordPress.
What’s your digital writing process?
Is it EXACTLY like your handwritten process?
Draft to publication: 1 hour and 42 minutes (I was lost in pictures for a bit.)
#SOL16: Travel Trivia
Where have we been?
What have we seen?
This morning sitting at the Leonardo DaVinci Airport I was literally counting my blessings.
This was Mom five years ago on her “0” birthday when she went on a Mediterranean cruise with my younger sister. The idea of returning to Rome has been a recurring topic.
And last evening we celebrated sisters in our tour group in this picture.
How many sets of sisters?
And without a picture . . . How many sets of brothers were on our trip?
What was our location?
How many hills in this city?
How many obelisks?
What US city is at the same latitude as Rome?
How many attended the canonization on Sunday?
How many in the audience at the canonization needed medical treatment due to the heat and the numerous hours in the sun?
How many were within five feet of the Pope on Saturday?
We set off on a journey to Rome, yes a religious trip, but also a trip to the heart of civilization. This is a city of 300 churches with 200 more in the suburbs. It’s a city of many diverse nationalities and personalities. It was a pleasure to be in a group of seven . . .
Mom
Brother
Sister
Brother
Uncle
Aunt
within a community of 52 pilgrims from an Iowa sponsored tour (plus folks from IL, WI, MO, and FL).
Today’s Slice of Life . . . Treasuring the “arrivederci”!
Thank you, Betsy, Beth, Dana, Deb, Kathleen, Lisa, Melanie, and Stacey for this weekly forum. Check out the writers, readers and teachers here.
Questions and Answers from above:
How many sets of sisters? 4
And without a picture . . . How many sets of brothers were on our trip? 1
What was our location? Rome, Italy
How many hills in this city? 7
How many obelisks? 11
What US city is at the same latitude as Rome? Chicago
How many attended the canonization on Sunday? 120,000
How many in the audience at the canonization needed medical treatment due to the heat and the numerous hours in the sun? 1,000
How many were within five feet of the Pope on Saturday? ALL 52 of us!!!!
(6 of 9 answers were included in earlier Tweets from Rome! – Just another reason to be on Twitter!)
#SOL16: ROME!
Where does writing inspiration come from? Today it came from this quote in my inbox from my sister via the priest leading our trip to Rome at the end of August for the canonization of Mother Teresa. To learn more about Mother Teresa, you can check out this link.
What does this quote mean to you?
If you are reading closely you do notice the difference between the bold words and the italics. I have a couple weeks YET to learn more about Mother Teresa before joining about two million friends at the Vatican for the celebration!
What should we plan to see besides our tours?
My research is starting with these top 10 FREE things to do and see in Rome. I’m not buying a book – a real paper book at this stage. I’m sure that I will download something about Vatican City and the churches in Rome. Our guides will be amazing but I also like to have some background information to fully appreciate the historical significance!
And in the meantime,
it’s back to packing
for a trip to Rome
with:
Mom,
Two younger brothers,
One younger sister,
An aunt and uncle (Mom’s brother!)
A trip of a lifetime!
Thanks, Mom!
As she returns for her second visit, five years later!
What family travel story do you have? (or will you have)?
Thank you, Betsy, Beth, Dana, Deb, Kathleen, Lisa, Melanie, and Stacey for this weekly forum. Check out the writers, readers and teachers here.