All posts by Mary Jordan

Happiness in the Library: Set Down The Phone and Talk To Someone

logo for happiness in the library series

It’s a tough time for libraries, and people in customer service. And while we don’t want to veer into any toxic positivity, it is good to spend a little time focused on building your happiness level. We are not going to solve people’s serious mental issues here. But bringing some happiness skills to your week can be helpful to everyone!

Mondays can be a little hard, even when things are going fine. Use this small injection of a happiness skill to your week. We are here to support you, and to help you to be a little happier in the library.

You know this: being on social media makes you depressed. It makes you anxious. You generally feel worse the more time you spend on it. To a lesser extent, this is true of all technology. You will often be happier if you watch movies in a theater with others than if you watch it alone at home on a laptop screen. You will be happier if you do exercise in a class than if you watch another exercise video. You will be happier talking about books with a nice person in the library than you will be talking about the book on Goodreads.

You know this. It’s not news. But maybe today is the day you choose to set down your phone (only for a short time!), and affirmatively decide to go talk to someone instead of doom-scrolling yet again.

Check out this excerpt from the article Harvard Study Reveals the One Thing That Makes Humans Happy. Why Are You Doing the Complete Opposite?

“Humans are an intensely social species. It’s literally a matter of life and death. In our ancestral past, if we suddenly became isolated and pushed out by the tribe, it would have meant our inevitable death. So, the behaviors responsible for ensuring social connection — and therefore success in life — would have had a strong selective pressure. They still do. 

Technology, and modern life more generally, “gets written down as the progress of man”, to quote my favorite folk singer, John Prine. But consider the unintended consequence of this futuristic world we live in: We are spending more time alone than we have in all of human history. And it’s making us terribly unhappy. 

I hope the irony isn’t lost on you. We carry near infinite knowledge on a machine that fits in our front pocket, we fly into space, we enter into alternative realities … but we do all this with an increasing frown and furrowed brow. We’ve never been more advanced. We’ve never been more miserable. 

We need to look to the future and be intentional about the societies and cultures we want to build. We need to facilitate the natural urge to connect, belong, and socialize. Our technologies, city infrastructures, governmental and corporate organizations, and the way we do business should always take into account the fact that we humans can survive only by connecting with each other. Our “metrics for success” should capture that. Otherwise, we’ll end up with an incredibly advanced society — with little happiness and humanity left.”

CMLE can be part of your support network; we are here for you, and support you in your library work. Take a nice deep breath in, and whoosh it out; it’s going to be okay today.

Learnabout Webinar Series: Podcasting!

Reading With Libraries season ten logo

We have shared information about the webinar series our colleagues at Metronet have established – and it’s just wonderful! They have a series of speakers, talking about all sorts of different topics that are relevant to library staff of all type. Do yourself the favor of registering for all of their programs!

And next week, I’m slightly biased, because the speaker is me! As you know, we run two weekly podcasts here at CMLE: Reading With Libraries (a book group discussion of different genres) and Linking Our Libraries (with skills training for library staff). When one of these longer content podcasts drops on Thursdays, the other drops a short book recommendation on Tuesdays.

We have run these podcast for several years now, and have hundreds of episodes – all freely available to anyone. Subscribe to both today, in your favorite podcast app!

Check out next week’s Learnabout, and join me to talk about podcasting in your library!

Learnabout Webinar Series

Learnabouts are a series of virtual informational webinars, to help you learn a new skill, tool, or resource. Each Learnabout will focus on one topic and last one hour or less. These sessions are open to everyone.

If you have a suggestion for a future learnabout topic, please drop Olivia a line at olivia@metronet.lib.mn.us

Learnabout Podcasts

This Learnabout is designed for individuals or organizations who have an interest in starting their own podcast. The course will cover the basics of podcasting, including equipment and software needs, creating engaging content, and distribution strategies. Participants will learn how to plan, record, and edit their podcast episodes, as well as how to promote their show and build a loyal audience. Whether you are a beginner or have some experience in audio production, this program will provide valuable insights and hands-on training to help you launch your podcast with confidence. This special session will feature Mary Jordan, Director of Central Minnesota Libraries Exchange (CMLE) as the expert presenter.

Who? Beginner Podcasters

When? Monday, March 13 @ 4pm

Where? Zoom

Register for Learnabout: Podcasts

Future Learnabouts

(all Learnabouts are on Mondays at 4pm)

April 10 – Google Voice

May 8 – Virtual Reality Kits

We want to see your photos!

person holding book from shelf
Photo by Element5 Digital on Pexels.com

CMLE is one of seven multitype library systems, from across the state of Minnesota. Our mission is to help every library to serve their community members.

We want to celebrate all of our members! We have over 300 library members, across twelve counties in Central Minnesota: school media centers, academic, public, and special libraries (those located in and serving other home institutions).

I have been in libraries across the country, writing them up and sharing their information – so I can say this with absolutely certainty: Every single library has something interesting, something special, or something unique. Sometimes it’s easy to forget that, because you see it every day. But your library, the specific one where you personally work, has at least one or two things that everyone else will want to see.

We invite you now to share some pictures of your library! No need to be fancy – all my photos of libraries have been taken on my cell phone, haphazardly aimed at whatever it I’m looking at.

Take a little tour of your library – and bring the rest of us along! Take a picture of your doorway, then walk inside and take a few more pictures. Shelves! Art! Displays! Circ desk! Study areas! A cool book or two! It doesn’t matter – we will all love to see whatever you have.

Take four, five, ten pictures – whatever works for you. Send them to me in an email (mary@cmle.org), and tell me a little bit about what is in the picture. (“A book our patrons enjoy” or “Student created art” or other description.) Again: no need to be fancy or detailed – just give a ballpark and I’ll take it from there.

Why are we doing this?

  • Because we want to celebrate your library! You are doing some great things, and we love it.
  • Because everyone else wants to see your library! By far, the most read articles we share are from our members, sharing info about their library. Everyone wants to admire what you are doing, and maybe to share some of your good ideas too.
  • Because people love libraries, and it’s good to get that word out there! Knowing more about even a small interesting or good thing in your library can be good publicity for us all.

Do you have questions? Send me an email!

Not sure I actually mean YOU and YOUR LIBRARY? I very, very much want to see a couple of pictures from your library!

It would help me out a lot if you could do this for me. It’s important for us to share this kind of information, and if you can take five or ten minutes to snap some pictures, that will really be helpful in getting this done.

Thank you! And I’m looking forward to hearing from you soon.

Episode 10-02: A book by a first-time author

Reading With Libraries season ten logo

Thank you for joining us again on our book group and Reader’s advisory podcast! 

Our organization is the Central Minnesota Libraries Exchange, and we work with all types of libraries. We are here to talk about books and share library ideas!

This season we are exploring all new ideas for books and book suggestions, so you can expand your reading horizons, and share more information with your library community. We are looking at prompts from the 2023 PopSugar reading challenge this season. You can read along with their challenge, linked in our show notes, or just enjoy some different books. 

This week we are exploring some first-time authors! Of course, everyone is a first-time at some point. And whether they go on from there, or decide they are one and done – those first books are special.

Check out our show notes page for links to our beverages, our resources, and the books we share today.

Elementary, My Dear Media Specialists: Vendors

books on brown wooden shelf
Photo by Polina Zimmerman on Pexels.com

There is another meetup for school library staff – hosted by our colleagues at Metronet multitype library system! This month, the group is going to talk about vendors. Even with a very small budget, every school needs to buy some new books – and this is a great opportunity to get together and talk about some ideas with other people in similar libraries.

Even if you don’t have vendor questions, this is a good group to check in with, so you can talk with people who do what you do. We can all use support, and this is a good place to make that happen!

Register for March Elementary Meetup

Elementary Media Meetup
Media Specialists serving elementary schools, join this group to discuss topics and generate ideas to support and encourage your work.

Laura Gingras, Media and Digital Learning Coordinator at Laketown Elementary School in the Waconia School District is hosting the event. Olivia Moris, Program Manager from Metronet, is facilitating.

During this meeting we will discuss book vendors. Who do you work with? What do you look for in a vendor? Bring your guidelines and your questions. Thursday, March 16 3:30-4:30pm

This event will be held on Zoom, select the button below to register. Future dates follow; registrations to be sent prior to each date.
Here are the upcoming dates for the Elementary Media Meetup: (registration will be sent one week prior, register for one or all!)
  • April 20 – TBD
  • May 18 – School Year Review

Register for March Elementary Meetup