The Trouble With Blogging
September 1, 2011
Ok, here’s the thing. I’ve been conscientiously and dutifully writing here at the Life of Wry since January 1. I’d set this goal for myself to write daily, and I have. Every. Single. Day. There was purpose in the madness: As it says over there in the right margin, daily blogging was intended to provide a platform for experimentation. Committing to a daily practice was supposed to help me develop some kind of writer’s muscle memory, or discipline, or focus.. really, all of that. Of course it would. I mean, obviously.
So, with the exception of the time back in April, when I was deep in the remote mountains of the Himalayas, I have not missed a day. And those 24 missing April days? I’m backfilling them; they comprise my Nepal trip blog. Day by day, as time allows, I’m writing these very long and detailed accounts of one of the more spectacular three weeks of my life. So, yeah, it’s taking a little while, but it is coming along.
The point is, I’m doing what I’ve been wanting to do for a long, long time… I’m writing. And by the end of the year, I’ll have accomplished the goal I set out to accomplish: blog every day for a year.
But here’s the problem. As of today, I’ve been at it for eight months.. two thirds of the year… and I have to say, I’m not that pleased with the result. It was supposed to be a creative process, but hasn’t become that. Because I’ve chosen to post a daily photo, and to use that as a writing prompt, my writing’s become more commentary-like. I end up writing about how I spend my days, which, you know, is really just a glorified journal. **
Writing daily is training. But it’s also easy and pretty unchallenging the way I’m doing it. I wanted my blog to be a creative canvas. But… not to diss myself.. it’s not that creative.
Another issue: my audience. It’s small (if you can believe the stats, it’s no more than a few dozen a day, if that) and varied. I think I have a good handle on who reads it, and it’s quite a mix–people from very different parts of my life, some close, some not. Certainly a mixed political bag. So… I filter. I censor myself. I dumb myself down or smart myself up, depending. I find myself staying in my tactful place, careful, making an effort not to offend.
All of that is so dumb I can’t bear it. It’s like the person who goes to a therapist and doesn’t open up because they don’t want to look bad.
I wanted to find my voice, but instead, I’m keeping it safe, not taking any risks.
Jim asks, who are you writing it for?
I say for me. But if it were just for me, I’d be swearing like a sailor and be far less concerned about what others think. In real life, I do swear like a sailor, but I am also concerned about what others think. I’m not sure I want people to know how foul a mouth I have, or how intolerant I am of stupid people. I can be very judgmental. And angry. Oh, and unwise.
And see?… just copping to that has me teetering over the delete key. (Yeah, like you don’t already know that about me, right?) To the extent I’m working to improve my human skills in real life (right? good?), so goes my writing down a boring path. It’s been declawed.
It’s not entirely a fear of revealing my authentic self (as they say in this modern world full of bloggers ready to let it rip).. I can be convinced that it’s ok to be real. After all, didn’t I recently say, somewhere, how much I love this Dr. Seuss quote?
Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don’t matter, and those who matter don’t mind.
But, I’m also not challenging myself, and instead just doing what comes easily. I think part of that is time. It takes time to write. It’s easy to do what I’m doing here… but harder to find the time to really dig deep and craft something. My world is pretty simple these days, intentionally so, with real time allocated to write, but there are many other things, equally important (or, you know, more important), that take up time. I wrote about that here.
I want to, I want to work it out, no matter how ugly, risky, or hard. I mean, if you want to be a writer, what else matters?
Anyway.
It’s ok. I’ll pat myself on the back for sticking with it this long.. 240 days so far. Maybe I do rock! And maybe this is part of the lesson…perhaps this is what daily writing teaches–that it’s not enough to write. You have to WRITE.
Sooo… for the last third of the year, I’ll probably continue to do more of the same, but maybe commit to cranking it up on at least a few occasions.
We’ll see.
** I chose a picture that doesn’t lend itself to a little daily ramble of my activities. It’s a bench. That’s it.

September 2, 2011 at 8:55 pm
Well…llet me speak to this entry here. Why did I start blogging 12 years ago? I wanted to be Erma Bombeck. I wanted to find out if I was capable of producing a newspaper length column *every day* just in case they needed an Erma Bombeck at the Enterprise (I’m still waiting).
With very few exceptions, I have written an entry that is between 700-900 words daily for almost12 years, searching out computers in unlikely places like a coin operated machine at the back of a coffee shop in a teeny town in Orkney, Scotland and carrying my laptop with me everywhere so as to never miss a day.
I see my journal as all the things you question. Some days it’s a real “column” that I try to make literate. Some days it’s an attempt to be Erma (it’s harder than it looks), some days I write it just for me. Some days there are hidden messages to people in my life that I’m sure nobody can figure out. Some days it’s just the wail of a downhearted frail. But always, at its core, it’s for ME, whether anybody reads it or not. It has become my diary of the last 12 years of my life–and I keep an extensive database so I can look back and find that certain entry.
You want readers? You gotta work at it. You have to find like-minded blogs and leave comments in their guestbooks, and if your comments are interesting enough, they might check back to find out what you’re about. You also put in a blog roll, listing other blogs you are reading and then those guys will put a link to your blog. That’s if you want to court readers. They ain’t gonna come if they don’t know you are there.
So Jim’s right. You have to figure out what is important to you about this blog. That you write well is a given. That you have interesting things to say is obvious. But there are literally millions (if not billions) of blogs on the internet, the vast majority of them young people who probably aren’t going to be searching out the likes of you and me.
I often find blogs that are pure crap. Yet they have hundreds of followers. I have some 300 on Funny the World and have, over the past 3 years, built up to a regular 60 on Airy Persiflage (the two are the same on different platforms). I used to care about the numbers, but I really don’t any more. I’m just writing for ME and I am flattered that *anybody* reads it. I’m always surprised when I get a guestbook entry from an unfamiliar name and she (it’s almost always a “she”) tells me that she has been reading me for years.
Heck, my KIDS don’t read me any more. I’ve dialed back the kid news because I’ve had some problems in that regard and i guess they figure they don’t need to keep tabs on me any more.
So. blogs. They are what you want and what you choose to make them. The day I lose interest in crafting a piece that satisfies ME, whether it satisfies anybody else or not, I will stop blogging. It won’t be any time soon.
(And *I* read you!)
September 3, 2011 at 6:49 am
(argggh… i was in the middle of a response to this, hit the wrong key, and poof, it was gone…. will reconstruct at least part of it… )
Yesterday, for the first time, I had the thought, maybe I don’t want to be a writer. It was thoroughly unexpected, as I’d presumed all along that I did. I began to think of the time I’d gain if I didn’t write and what I’d spend time doing. No conclusions yet, but it’s important, I realized, to put that on the table. It caught me totally by surprise.
And i think you’re dead on, that part of the consideration is to figure out who and what you’re writing for.
You are the wisest and most experienced of bloggers in the entire kingdom, no question. I will love to pick your blogger/writer brain.. let’s go out for coffee again… I will email you.
And bev, I need to get your blog via email.. we gotta figure that out. I have too many bloggers I follow through my reader, so i tend not to go there. it’s got to come to my inbox. b/c i DO want to read your stuff! (I’ve been appreciating the FB notes… that’s a good way to do it… )
September 3, 2011 at 10:46 pm
Next time we have coffee, I’ll bring my laptop and maybe together we can figure it out.