- cross-posted to:
- discuss@discuss.online
- hackernews@derp.foo
- cross-posted to:
- discuss@discuss.online
- hackernews@derp.foo
cross-posted from: https://beehaw.org/post/3628322
The author started a blog but has considered stopping due to lack of readership. Though few may read the blog, writing it can serve as notes for the future, help release and clarify ideas, and give a sense of freedom. Even if the ideas are not original, sharing one’s personal view can enrich them. Ultimately, the author decides to publish the post regardless of who may read it.
Do you maintain a blog? Are you getting value out of the practice?
I loved having a personal web site when I was a teenager… but then the internet became all about commerce and I sorta jumped on that bandwagon. I got fed up a few months back and needed a creative outlet so I launched a new personal web site, part of that being a blog.
I love writing for it! It’s different from journaling because someone else could find it. I know the feeling of discovering someone else’s personal blog, and it’s incredible. I love knowing that I’m writing and creating things that could do that for others.
I have no idea if anyone else is reading and, if so, how many people are reading. I don’t have any analytics set up, and that’s intentional. I don’t want to track people, and I don’t ever want to make a decision about my web site based on that data.
The old web was magical. There was something special about discovering a new web site and knowing that it only existed because someone’s passion was too much to contain and had to spill out onto the internet. That’s what I’m trying to recreate with my site.