I had a lunch hour think about my doubts yesterday; the ones that plague me about the history of my struggle with this illness.

I should mention that this is not the first time I’ve had a good long think about my accepting my diagnosis. I should mention that the thoughts are uncomfortable and confusing. I should mention that I have a history of swinging back and forth with my conclusions, and with my approach to managing my symptoms. I usually end up assigning my conclusions to either “I don’t have bipolar disorder, I just have a low character”, or “blame everything on bipolar disorder”.
4103090566_5a35203875_o

As I sat in my car, eating my Quarter Pounder With Cheese, considering the either-or questions about my diagnosis, I felt an uncomfortable tension in my torso. It almost felt like fear, and I could practically hear my own subconscious warning me that I was coming dangerously close to a conclusion about myself that could lead to stopping my medication again. I remembered the horrible withdrawal symptoms I’ve experienced in the past when I’ve suddenly decided that I just have a low character. I remembered the frustration of malfunctioning reason and judgement, the utter inability to focus on anything for more than an hour or two at a time – and the reverse, the hyper-focus on a wonderful intention, and getting pretty far down the road toward accomplishing some goal, and then suddenly becoming totally unable to complete the project.

If I had done nothing more than listen to that internal voice I wouldn’t have given the questions in my mind much more thought, but I ignored it while I ate my lunch. I thought about that first Paxil pill I took back in 1996 and wondered, regretfully, if all of the problems I went through were 100% caused by the medications I used, off and on, throughout all the worst years. I wondered if I took that medication, went on and off the medication, because I needed an excuse for the destructive, self-indulgent decisions I was making right and left. I even wondered if the mental health professionals I consulted during those years led me in to a lake of fire. I wondered if the medications I’ve been taking all these years have permanently damaged my brain, rendering me unable to function without them.

In other words, I spent a lot of time thinking about personal responsibility, yesterday. The very phrase was like a light from a distant source, shining down on the ground somewhere in front of me. A light I wanted to follow.

And so I took a deep breath, and here’s what I decided to consider as I move through the next few days:

  1. I think a lot better, and feel a lot better, on the medications I’m taking right now
  2. There’s no need for me to think about my medications, right now
  3. Ruminating about a period in my life that was awful won’t help me move forward
  4. I don’t practice much personal responsibility in my life – but that doesn’t really have anything to do with my character

Funny, but once I’d reached this point in my thinking I felt better, not worse. Taking as much personal responsibility as I can for my decisions big and small is something that is within my control every moment of every day. Personal responsibility is the opposite of helpless, and taking personal responsibility for the choices I make about my life feels good.

Taking charge of the choices I make about my ability to live a full and happy life despite having bipolar disorder means, to me, right now, doing exactly what I’m doing with this blog. It means stepping out of the shadows of my past, my fears, and my assumptions. It means not accepting the isolation I’ve surrounded myself with for so long, or my unwillingness to expose myself to rejection or failure because I’m different.

It means thinking well of myself.

Popularity: 1%

 

A tribute to dial-up AOL Instant Messenger, my Mom – and to the year 2000: The year I shaved my head, finally lost my mind, and got my dream job (all at the same time).



MOMgood grief!~ I couldn't get on!WACO Hi, Mom!
MOMhowdy! :)WACOI am bald!
MOMI have a big bandaid on my left stickit toem finger so watch out. Why are you bald?!!WACO
MOMYou did it again?WACODid what?????
MOMCut your hair short?
MOMVery short?WACO Hold on, let me splain...
MOMk
MOMso
MOM?WACOI cleaned house all day Sunday & was VERY tired by 8:30. So I decided to go to bed early ...
MOMyes...WACOI took 2 Ambien and waited for them to take affect...
MOM yes, and they didn't, right? you got bored & cut your hair?WACO Two hours later, I was wide awake and beginning to panic... too tired to finish my work that was due the next day and yet unable to sleep...
WACOSo I made myself a margarita...
MOMArg
MOMagin
MOMarghhhhWACOI woke up the next morning bald
MOM?WACO No, it's better. I mean bald, literally. Bald. BALD.
MOMWhat happened?WACOI have a hazy memory of happily chopping off all of my hair. I think it had something to do with cleaning house. Cleaning up my head. Something like that.
WACOI joyfully shaved my head and then went to bed.
MOMMy gosh! Have you called a doctor? Did you get a wig...
MOMDammitWACO I woke up at 4:30 the next morning. I knew it wasn't a dream when I had to peel my head, which was neatly velcro'd to the pillow, off the bed.
WACOI saw the doctor today.
MOMAnd whay was determined?WACO Of course, the first thing I did was to throw away all of the Ambien and liquor.
MOMGood. Then?WACOThe doctor told me that it's one thing to have a drink before you take the Ambien... quiet another to take a drink afterwards...
MOMSo what's next?WACO She told me I'm fine. I'm not depressed - wasn't depressed at the time. Doesn't have anything to do with depression. As I mentioned, it was a happy, fun, joyful experience until I woke up.
MOMNot at all manic or in any kind of altered reality or anything? HA!WACO I showered, put on my makeup, wrapped a red bandana around my head, stuck a cute straw hat on top of that and went to bed
WACO Ooops - make that, went to work...
MOMMy gosh. Do you still have a job?WACO Sure I still have a job. Everybody got a good laugh out of it, not the least of whom was me (actually, I didn't laugh until today).
MOM Well, get it fixed, darn it. Well, maybe I'll laugh tomorrow. That scares the pewaddle out of me. WACO First of all, the wig market seems to cater to the black population.
WACOBlack people at wig stores are very nice.
MOMDid you find anything decent?WACO Well, I found one that looks just like my natural hair when it's short.
WACO Unfotunately, it is not made out of real hair.
MOMDid you get it?WACO Yes, I got it.
WACOBut people stare a whole lot more when I'm wearing it than when I'm just wearing a bandana.
MOM Well, maybe you won't shave it off...it won't grow back, you know. :)WACOHahahaha.
MOM Well, check with some beauty shops. I now they still make real wigs for real people. Check with some cancer figgit places.WACO I wore it to work and Jennifer, my co-worker, said right off, "I think you should go someplace that has a better selection."
MOMYup.WACO Also, I didn't realize that my left ear was half-way tucked under the wig.
WACOThat might be one reason people stared when I wore it.
WACO Lots of funny, funny stories out of this little incident, let me tell you.
MOMDo you recall anything besides joy when dyou were doing the deed? LIke...WHY?WACO Anything besides joy? No. I was bored. I thought there was a little white dog with brown and black spots sitting next to me (kind of like a kid playing make-believe), and I was talking to it the whole time.
MOM Please, please PLEASE wear eye makeup. :)WACOLots and lots of eye makeup!!!!!!!!!
MOMI think JL and Amy are planning on living together.
MOMShe's looking for work down here.
MOMShe is bipolar and takes neurontin and welbutrin. sigh.
MOM She has a great personality, though, and is a lot of fun.
MOMAdn she has hair.WACOHairly a good reason for living with someone.
MOMI'm thinking.
MOMShe was hair Sunday but gone Monday. Won't be hair again for a couple of weeks.WACO I think I'm probably safe now. After all, if I had a wild hair, it's certainly gone now!
MOM Cep fer the hair on yer chinny, chin, chin!WACOI threw it all away.
WACOLike throwing a dead body in to the dumpster to hide the evidence.
MOMI wonder how long it will take to grow back.WACOI don't know. But at least it solves the question of what to do about my hair color!
WACO I think I'll probably end up enjoying the experience, over all.
WACO Not something I would EVER repeat, though.
WACOA shaved head is an ugly head.
WACO And my head is not round. It's pointy in the back and I have a big face. Cute ears, though. Kind of makes me look like an alien. A nice, cute, friendly alient
WACOI have an interview with 6 six people at Tivoli Friday afternoon. I just found out today.
WACOIt's a sitcom type of a situation.
MOMSitcom as in they applaud when you say the right thing? Over the phone?WACO Sitcom as in I finally get an interview with Tivoli, but only after I've shaved my head!
WACOIn person interview.
WACONo applause.
MOM Waco, get a weal wig. A good one.WACOI can't afford a weal wig. Wouldn't know where to get one. And I can't tell you the kind of stares I got when I was wearing this one. People KNOW.
MOMThey don't know if you're wearing the right kind. Weally.WACOThe one I got was $89!!!!!!!
MOMYou'll look weird without a weal wig Waco. I'll call around here and see what I can find out.WACOI refuse to invest hundreds of dollars in this mistake. Especially since it's grow out so soon.
WACO Keep in mind, Mom, that Austin is full of wierd people, and many of them work for Tivoli.
MOM:{WACO But I don't have a left curly bracket. As a matter of fact, I don't have anything curly at all!
MOMWhat would you be doing for Tivoli?
MOMweal work wifout a weal wig Waco?WACOI'd be doing Notes programming for them.
MOMWeal work. Weally!WACOI am keeping my head covered at all times. Even in the car.
MOMSoon you will be able to brush your hair into a large curl on top of your head like all the other little babes.
MOM Good for you. Now, if you get a veil, and wear lots of eye makeup, you can be mysterious! And HOT.WACO Part of the beauty of the bald head is the pale, blueish-white background of scalp against dark stubble. I wouldn't want to ruin the affect
WACOI'll tell you what's hot. A WIG is hot. And what REALLY bad is when you've just shaved your head and you're in a wig store and you put on a wig and the sales lady sprays your head with wig conditioner. STING!!!!!!!
MOMYeah! I can't believe you did this.WACO I look constantly surprised, sort of shocked. My eyes look huge.
WACOI'm sure everyone who sees me understands that I can't believe I did this either.
WACO The 23 year old who sits across from me at work really didn't get why I thought it was a big deal. "Why are you wearing a bandana?" he asked, "I don't get it." He's the guy who's part owner of a dance club down on sixth street.
WACO Jennifer said, "You've got to get some other bandanas. You can't just wear the same one every day!"
MOMHow long do you think it will be before you can go sans scarf?WACOI think probably just a few more days before I lose the scarf.
WACOWhen my scalp isn't showing anymore.
MOM Well, you can but a good, holy wig for the cost of a few scarves.
MOMGet one that's red or something.WACOFUN.
MOMOr platinumWACOI could strap a pony-tail to the back of my head (tie it under my chin).
MOMArg.
MOMMy baby.WACO The black people's wig store had really neat wigs. Mom, they were so nice! It reminded me of when I used to go to the beauty shop with Granny or Neta.
WACO Jennifer said that black women wear a lot of wigs, and I think she's right!
MOMTry a white people's wig place. ...
MOM I know I never mentioned it to you, but you are basically caucasian.
MOMA little redskin thrown in...WACO
MOM Although your dad is Black Irish, whatever that is.WACOMe? Caucasian? Is that why my scalp is blue?
MOMOr so he says.
MOM Your scalp is blue because your brain floated away and left a shadow in its place, dear. WACOI think black women are much more church-oriented than white women.
MOM And where is this staement goin? Church wigs, or what?WACOI'm ignoring the brain remark.
WACO Oh - the church thing. Well, I say that because ...
MOMYes
MOM?
MOMyes?WACO When I was at the wig store, the ladies often said things like, "well, that's all in the Lord's hands" or, well, stuff like that a lot when they were talking to each other. They talked about God as if he were a very present parent that was someplace in the back of the store, managing the accounts. Like, when they weren't certain about something, the guy in the back would figure it out.
WACOAnd they mixed it with stuff like, "So, who you sleep with? Just kidden'!"
WACOThey lady who helped me called me 'sister'. That was so neat.
MOM Well, I hope they are right. Somebody needs to be thinking things out.....she called YOU sister? Neato.WACOYep!
WACO When I walked in the store she said, "Can I help you?" and I said, "Yes mam, I'd like to look at a wig." And she said, "Well, imagine that. A wig. I can't believe you'd walk in this door lookin' for a wig!"
MOM Did you talk your regular talk, then? :)WACO Yes, I talked my regular middle-class white girl talk. I don't know any other kind of talk.
MOM She probably was thinking, "I can't believe you'd walk in this door, period! "WACOI don't know. But all the ladies who were there trying on wigs were very sweet and very helpful.
WACOMost of them were elderly women.
MOMThen she saw what was supposed to be your shiny white pate and noted that it was blue instead.WACO She asked me if I wanted to try it on in the bathroom. I just about died when she said, "Here, try this on," and held it out to me like it was a hat or something.
WACO It's growing darker every minute, though. I guess it probably grows sort of like a beard.
MOM Probably. And you have very thick hair. Remember that the flattops are popular now, and those stick in every direction dos too.WACO
MOMIt won't be too bad.
MOMI hope.WACO You know, I could have learned a lot of life lessons a lot sooner if every time I insisted on continuing to do something stupid I woke up the next morning with a bald head!
WACOThinking about dropping out of high school or college? Here ya go... Rather not pay your bills? ZAP.
MOM Well, honey, you'd probably get used to that,too.WACOI don't think so.

Popularity: 1%

Tagged with:
 

Episodes associated with mental illness are traumatic. It isn’t a topic that gets discussed, much, but I wonder if our current approach to treating mental illness – the medication, the therapy – lacks an important focus. I wonder if we should place an equal emphasis on rehabilitation, in much the same way we focus on rehabilitation for patients who have experienced head trauma.

I am too often a flower that refuses to bloom for fear of the sun, or for fear of a freeze. It doesn’t matter that’s it’s partly cloudy and warm outside; I remain resolutely closed. And why is that? When I was younger I tended to open with abandon. Every episode, when I was young, was going to be the last episode. It wasn’t until the episode that seemed it would never end that I lost my nerve.

It began the summer I turned 30. The Austin of that year was all thrumming heat, tropical flowers, vivid greens and blues and saturated, woody browns. Everything was the most everything anything had ever been in my life. The most beautiful. The most in control. The smartest. The fastest. The most successful. The richest. The busiest. The most in demand. Under the circumstances, I was convinced that this, finally, was what it meant to be a grownup; that everything that had come before had come because of a lack of skill.

It didn’t last, of course. The summer turned into a desperate fall, which led to rapid cycles of hard-edged mania and soggy depression, until all time turned into a mixed episode. I became a sobbing bag of fury, obsession, self-hatred, psychosis, impulsiveness, and suicidal ideation.

It lasted for 4 years.

I remember feeling so angry. I couldn’t seem to go all the way crazy, and I couldn’t seem to get better. My perceptions were skewed all over the place and so was my judgement, and that was overwhelmingly frustrating to me because it meant that nothing ever turned out the way I thought it would. I was hearing and seeing things all the time, things I could never find, and I didn’t know that they were hallucinations. Sounds of every kind were intensely irritating to me. I didn’t trust anyone. At all. I had lost any friends I might have made the summer I turned 30, and although I couldn’t stop thinking about killing myself I couldn’t seem to do that, either. And there was this intense agony in my body all the time, a kind of odd, terrible, horrible need to stretch out and run that stretching out and running did absolutely nothing to sooth. And I was paranoid — oh but I was paranoid. It wasn’t just that I believed everybody hated me. I believed everybody hated me for no other reason than that everybody was cruel and mean and awful and that they would hurt me if they could.

Interspersed throughout those 4 years of hell were hours, even days, when all of my symptoms were at bay. These respites were spent recovering in a kind of useless way because I knew the next onslaught would appear shortly. I was exhausted.

One night I walked outside and stood in the middle of my parent’s driveway. I was crying, and my fists were clenched tight, and I felt full of rage towards the idea that the rest of my life would be eaten by this affliction. “I will be better than this, I WILL BE BETTER THAN THIS” I said out loud (though softly). It was an incredibly histrionic moment for me, and I knew it was, which is why I had chosen to experience it in the middle of my parent’s driveway, sometime after midnight, with no one to judge me but me and what may or may not have been an imaginary angel hovering a few feet over my head, all bronze feathers and sympathy.

It wasn’t as if no one had ever prescribed medication for me before; I had simply never followed anyone’s instructions because I didn’t trust anybody. And yet my absolute determination to “BE BETTER THAN THIS” somehow gave me the idea that I didn’t have to trust somebody to try what they suggested. I didn’t have to trust a doctor to follow doctor’s orders, in other words. So I picked a doctor – somebody who at least looked like I thought a doctor was supposed to look – and for once I did as I was told. Because of the medication, I was able to build a bunker in my very own bed out of pillows, stuffed animals, and the complete works of JRR Tolkien and (eventually) spend entire weekends in my own apartment. One thing led to another, which led to another, and another, and eventually I found myself in what passed quite nicely as the place you actually do get to when you’re mentally ill and you’ve learned a few coping skills.

The problematic thing about what I think of as bipolar trauma is that it keeps recurring, though the period between episodes may change from hours to months, and the ferocity of the symptoms may vary unpredictably. I may not have visited with my big, bronze angel since then, but neither has that period turned out to be an anomaly. In fact, my life went out of control again quite slowly this last time, but no less emphatically.

By process of elimination, and by forcing myself to get back out into the world again, I have been forced to accept that there are some things I can no longer clearly differentiate between. I honestly don’t know the difference between, for instance, who means me harm and who is simply standing there, not giving me a second thought. I honestly don’t know how I am perceived by the world around me, and I’m not sure of my place in the world. I can pretend that I have my bearings for long periods of time, but I don’t have any idea if I am successful in that pretense. Therapy might give me some insight into my fears, but I am not aware of a therapy that might help me to train my brain to bypass the pathways damaged by my experiences.

I am forced to admit that I can’t simply choose to bloom again. When should I bend to the shade? When to turn to the sun? Without answers I’m afraid I will remain at the mercy of my own determination and the sympathies of angels, wherever they may be.

Popularity: 1%

 

Episodes associated with mental illness are traumatic. It isn’t a topic that gets discussed, much, but I wonder if our current approach to treating mental illness – the medication, the therapy – lacks an important focus. I wonder if we should place an equal emphasis on rehabilitation, in much the same way we focus on rehabilitation for patients who have experienced head trauma.

I am too often a flower that refuses to bloom for fear of the sun, or for fear of a freeze. It doesn’t matter that’s it’s partly cloudy and warm outside; I remain resolutely closed. And why is that? When I was younger I tended to open with abandon. Every episode, when I was young, was going to be the last episode. It wasn’t until the episode that seemed it would never end that I lost my nerve.

It began the summer I turned 30. The Austin of that year was all thrumming heat, tropical flowers, vivid greens and blues and saturated, woody browns. Everything was the most everything anything had ever been in my life. The most beautiful. The most in control. The smartest. The fastest. The most successful. The richest. The busiest. The most in demand. Under the circumstances, I was convinced that this, finally, was what it meant to be a grownup; that everything that had come before had come because of a lack of skill.

It didn’t last, of course. The summer turned into a desperate fall, which led to rapid cycles of hard-edged mania and soggy depression, until all time turned into a mixed episode. I became a sobbing bag of fury, obsession, self-hatred, psychosis, impulsiveness, and suicidal ideation.

It lasted for 4 years.

I remember feeling so angry. I couldn’t seem to go all the way crazy, and I couldn’t seem to get better. My perceptions were skewed all over the place and so was my judgement, and that was overwhelmingly frustrating to me because it meant that nothing ever turned out the way I thought it would. I was hearing and seeing things all the time, things I could never find, and I didn’t know that they were hallucinations. Sounds of every kind were intensely irritating to me. I didn’t trust anyone. At all. I had lost any friends I might have made the summer I turned 30, and although I couldn’t stop thinking about killing myself I couldn’t seem to do that, either. And there was this intense agony in my body all the time, a kind of odd, terrible, horrible need to stretch out and run that stretching out and running did absolutely nothing to sooth. And I was paranoid — oh but I was paranoid. It wasn’t just that I believed everybody hated me. I believed everybody hated me for no other reason than that everybody was cruel and mean and awful and that they would hurt me if they could.

Interspersed throughout those 4 years of hell were hours, even days, when all of my symptoms were at bay. These respites were spent recovering in a kind of useless way because I knew the next onslaught would appear shortly. I was exhausted.

One night I walked outside and stood in the middle of my parent’s driveway. I was crying, and my fists were clenched tight, and I felt full of rage towards the idea that the rest of my life would be eaten by this affliction. “I will be better than this, I WILL BE BETTER THAN THIS” I said out loud (though softly). It was an incredibly histrionic moment for me, and I knew it was, which is why I had chosen to experience it in the middle of my parent’s driveway, sometime after midnight, with no one to judge me but me and what may or may not have been an imaginary angel hovering a few feet over my head, all bronze feathers and sympathy.

It wasn’t as if no one had ever prescribed medication for me before; I had simply never followed anyone’s instructions because I didn’t trust anybody. And yet my absolute determination to “BE BETTER THAN THIS” somehow gave me the idea that I didn’t have to trust somebody to try what they suggested. I didn’t have to trust a doctor to follow doctor’s orders, in other words. So I picked a doctor – somebody who at least looked like I thought a doctor was supposed to look – and for once I did as I was told. Because of the medication, I was able to build a bunker in my very own bed out of pillows, stuffed animals, and the complete works of JRR Tolkien and (eventually) spend entire weekends in my own apartment. One thing led to another, which led to another, and another, and eventually I found myself in what passed quite nicely as the place you actually do get to when you’re mentally ill and you’ve learned a few coping skills.

The problematic thing about what I think of as bipolar trauma is that it keeps recurring, though the period between episodes may change from hours to months, and the ferocity of the symptoms may vary unpredictably. I may not have visited with my big, bronze angel since then, but neither has that period turned out to be an anomaly. In fact, my life went out of control again quite slowly this last time, but no less emphatically.

By process of elimination, and by forcing myself to get back out into the world again, I have been forced to accept that there are some things I can no longer clearly differentiate between. I honestly don’t know the difference between, for instance, who means me harm and who is simply standing there, not giving me a second thought. I honestly don’t know how I am perceived by the world around me, and I’m not sure of my place in the world. I can pretend that I have my bearings for long periods of time, but I don’t have any idea if I am successful in that pretense. Therapy might give me some insight into my fears, but I am not aware of a therapy that might help me to train my brain to bypass the pathways damaged by my experiences.

I am forced to admit that I can’t simply choose to bloom again. When should I bend to the shade? When to turn to the sun? Without answers I’m afraid I will remain at the mercy of my own determination and the sympathies of angels, wherever they may be.

Popularity: 1%

 

Creating a WordPress theme can seem overwhelming to the casual (or even rusty, speaking for myself) web developer.  It requires PHP, for one thing.  And you have to read a few instructions to get started, for another (something I’ve never been keen on doing).  It would have helped me a lot to find some kind of really simple, really straight-forward documentation somewhere about creating my own theme, and that’s the purpose of this series of posts.  Expect edits and updates as I proceed.

Prerequisites

  1. Basic understanding of HTML, CSS, and PHP
  2. Your own private WordPress installation – preferably something not currently in production use (messing around with your site’s current theme can tick off your user’s – and you’ll want to switch themes often as you work through these steps).Note:  if you don’t have a hosted WordPress installation, let alone a web server or PHP setup on your personal computer, check out MAMP (if you’re a Windows user) or LAMP (if you’re a Mac user).  These are idiot-proof (and free!!) programs that will install Apache (a web server), PHP (a server-side scripting language), and MySQL (a free relational database) for you.  This is the standard setup for a WordPress install.  Then mosey on over to http://www.wordpress.org to get the latest version of WordPress.  Yes, you’ll have to follow the instructions included in the readme.html file – but there are only 2 or 3 of them, and they’re really, really, REALLY easy (they don’t call it the 5 minute install for nothing).
  3. Administrative rights to the wp_content/themes directory, as well as to the WordPress installation itself.
  4. A text file editor.  If you want WYSIWYG, check out any of the many web development software environments (I use Dreamweaver).  But a text file editor is all that’s required.

Step 1 – Create Your Theme

A theme requires at least 2 documents:  a style sheet called ‘style.css’, and a PHP document called ‘index.php’.  We’re going to create the very simplest version of each:

  1. Create a directory under wp_content/themes.  For purposes of this exercise, let’s call it “my_theme” (i.e., wp_content/themes/my_theme).
  2. Create a style sheet.  Don’t worry – you don’t have to put a single style in this document.  What we’re going to do in this first step is simply add a commented heading that WordPress will use to get a little information about your theme, so copy the following in to a new text file and save it as “style.css” in your “my_theme” directory:
    /*
    Theme Name: My Theme
    Theme URI: http://mytheme.com
    Description: My first WordPress theme.
    Version: .01
    Author: Me
    Author URI: http://mytheme.com
    Tags: some tags describing my theme go here
    
    	My Theme
    
    http://myurl.com
    
    	This theme was designed and built by Me.
    
    	The CSS, XHTML and design is released under GPL:
    
    http://www.opensource.org/licenses/gpl-license.php
    
    */
  3. Create an index page.  This is just a text file, saved in your “my_theme” directory as index.php.  The file needs to contain a hook back in to the main WordPress system, and should also display your posts.  We aren’t going to bother with anything else at all in this step – we’re just getting started.  So paste the following in to your index.php text file, and save it:
    <?php get_header(); //This is the hook back in to WordPress ?>
    
    <?php
    //This is The Loop (read more about it out on
    //http://codex.wordpress.org/The_Loop).
    //It uses have_posts, the_post, and the_content (also known as
    //'Template Tags') to display the posts in your blog.
        if (have_posts()) : while (have_posts()) : the_post();
            the_content();
        endwhile; endif;
    ?>

Step 4 – Switch To And View Your Theme

Let’s pretend like this is a brand-spanking new WordPress installation, and that you decided to call it “My Blog”.  Have you ever visited your site’s Dashboard?  Well, it’s certainly beyond the scope of this post.  We’re just going to focus on switching to your new theme so you can see what we hath wrought…

  1. Go to your WordPress Dashboard.  If you’re as shiny-new as we’re assuming, you can get there by logging in to your site and then clicking on the ‘Admin’ link in the ‘Meta’ section of your blog’s sidebar.  Or you can just go out to your blog’s wp-admin URL (i.e., http://www.myblog.com/wp_admin).
  2. Click on Design
  3. Click on Themes
  4. Scroll down and look for the theme you just created.  Click on it.  Activate it by clicking on the “Activate” link in the upper right corner.
  5. Click on the ‘Visit Site’ button.
  6. Your browser should display the name of your blog and your posts.  Of course, the number of posts will vary depending on how many (if any) you’ve created.

Summary

In summary, creating your own theme can be as simple – or as complex – as you want it to be.  Check back in for Part II in this series of posts.

Popularity: 1%

Tagged with:
 
Page 1 of 11