Still Here — A May 2026 Update
Things went quiet here for a while. Life got full — a loss in the family, day jobs, music in the margins. The studio is still here, the work is intact, and the plan from here is simple: weekly updates, no gaps.
Things went quiet here for a while. That is worth acknowledging before anything else. The studio did not disappear — but life got full in the way it sometimes does, and consistent updates were the first thing to slip.
Here is where things actually stood.
Life in the Gap
My great uncle passed away recently. He was distant from the family — we did not talk much, and honestly not enough while we had the chance. That kind of loss has a particular weight to it. Not the sharp grief of someone you saw every week, but something slower: the regret of a relationship that never quite got started. I have been sitting with that.
In the quieter moments I found myself coming back to music. My co-writer Grace and I had written some songs together a while back, and I have been pulling those out — not performing, not producing, just playing. Getting reacquainted with them. It is not much, but it has been grounding.
In the meantime I have been working at my restaurant job and picking up DoorDash shifts to keep things steady. I went to the library recently to meet up with a friend. Nothing remarkable — just the ordinary texture of keeping life moving when the big work is paused.
What Stays True
Graveyard Jokes Studios is still here. The portfolio is intact. The codebases are clean. The documentation, the monitoring, the zero-error builds — all of that work from March and April did not go anywhere. The foundation is solid, which means coming back to it is not starting over. It is picking up where things left off.
That matters. The slow periods are easier to recover from when the underlying work is actually in good shape.
What Is Next
The plan from here is simple: weekly updates, no gaps.
I am also shifting some focus toward growth. That means advertising more actively and reaching out directly to potential clients. The studio has the services, the portfolio, and the pricing structure in place — now it is about getting in front of the right people. If you are looking for web development, web design, or digital marketing support, reach out.
More next week.
— Joshua, Graveyard Jokes Studios