I apologize for not keeping up with the blog tips posts. All the stars have to align *just so* in order for me to be able to write them. I have to be in the mood to sit down and write about blogging and I’m not usually in the mood. These posts take far longer to compile and write than my typical posts, which usually take no more than 20 minutes to throw together. I also realize that there are a few of you out there that actually think that I know what I’m talking about, so I feel like it’s important to make sure that whatever I say is accurate and makes sense.
Here’s the thing, I actually do know what I’m talking about when it comes to these blog tips. I know! I’m so conceited! (Actually, no I’m not.) It’s just that having blogged for over THREE WHOLE YEARS practically makes me a shawl-wearing, bespectacled, rocking chair sitting wise blog-grandmother. There are definitely bloggers out there who’ve been at this whole online writing thing for far longer than me, but there are FAR MORE bloggers who haven’t made it beyond the first year (or even just a few months.)
I’ve considered quitting so many times for a good reasons and for immature, huffy, jealous reasons. The writing, the commenting, the social media interaction all take up a lot of time and it’s easy to get overwhelmed, I’ve come *this close* to quitting because I felt overwhelmed and guilty when I couldn’t keep up with it all. After three years, I do occasionally think that the most recent post I’ve written will probably be the last because there is no possible way to come up with another unique topic, yet somehow I always come up with something to say.
And then there’s the whole jealousy issue. I know that I’m often jealous of others writing talents. There have been times that I’ve felt bitter about the same people getting invited to all the fun things or other’s subscriber and comment numbers. I know there are a handful of people who claim to be immune to the jealously, but I also know that I’m not the only one who has felt this way.
I have a super secret, super special way that I’ve been able to overcome all of this and still continue to blog.
IT’S ALL ABOUT YOUR PERSPECTIVE.
The end.
Okay, fine, I’ll elaborate. (Consider yourself warned! You may need to grab a snack. I’ll wait.)
1. Blogging and all related activities DO take time. The key is finding the time to do what will most benefit you and your blog.
Unless your blog IS your job, and even then, YOUR LIFE OUTSIDE OF THE COMPUTER SHOULD COME FIRST. Don’t worry about it if you haven’t replied to every comment or visited every unread blog in your Google Reader. There’s no need to fret if you haven’t written anything on your blog in several days, your loyal readers will still be there when you get back.
If your online, blog related time is limited, then be sure that you’re spending your time wisely. Commenting on other’s blogs is time consuming but it is the one of THE BEST WAYS to gain readers for your own site. Leave comments on “popular” blogs AND blogs you’ve never heard of, this is an activity very worthy of your time. (Hint: The popular bloggers probably aren’t trying to be jerks when they don’t reciprocate comments, they are busy JUST LIKE YOU!)
If you see no traffic from posting your links on Twitter, then don’t spend ALL of your time tweeting. I know that I have spoken at length about StumbleUpon and what a great source of traffic it can be, however if it’s not working for you? Then it’s a waste of your time! Don’t bother!
Here is some more detailed information about managing your time in the blogosphere. (I’ll be updating that post soon-ish!)
2. You will be stricken with all sorts of writing ailments including (but not limited to) writer’s block, fear of being too open and honest, super self-consciousness due to overexposure, and jealously of other’s superior writing talents
In any given week, I’ll suffer from one or ALL of these things. EVERY BLOGGER feels this way at some point.
Whenever I feel like I’m suffering from writer’s block, I sit down at my computer and just start writing. I write whatever is on my mind. Occasionally I can mold a post from the words, sometimes there’s nothing to salvage, but at least I was writing. The cure for writer’s block, for me, is NOT not writing. Another trick that I use is to look at photos I’ve recently taken and write a post based on one of the shots. There are also lots of sites that offer weekly memes or writing prompts that can help you get over the hump.
As your readership grows (and it WILL grow), your concerns about what and who you blog about will become a concern. The more people that read you, the more you may become self-conscious about what you should and shouldn’t reveal. BUT WHAT ABOUT AUTHENTICITY!?! It seems to be a buzz word these days around blogging. My personal ever developing philosophy about this is that I never write something that would intentionally hurt another person. I don’t share EVERY detail of my life, but I also don’t only write smooshy, feel good posts. I also include my mistakes and heartaches.
While at Blissdom, I attended a writer’s workshop led by Megan from Velveteen Mind, Arianne from To Think is to Create, Deb from Deb on the Rocks, and Amber from The Run A Muck. In the session, Megan mentioned that she was listening to the audiobook, Writing Down the Bones: Freeing the Writer Within (Disclosure: Affiliate link). The point that Megan explained that most struck me was that if there’s a writer whose work makes you crazy envious, instead of being jealous, begin to look at that writer as a teacher from whom you can learn. Another thing that this workshop spurred within me was that in order for me to be a better writer, I have to start thinking of myself as a REAL writer, not just some pretend wanna-be that has no talent.
I realize that my style of writing isn’t everybody’s cup of tea. My writing isn’t eloquent prose, expertly crafted with $20 words and perfect grammar. I think that my strength is my ability to craft a story in such a way that others can relate. It’s taken YEARS for me to recognize this strength and for me to OWN this strength. Each one of has a writing strength. Find it! Not to be cliche, but find your voice and hone it. Your writing may not be for everyone, but don’t try to write in a way that isn’t truly you.
3. We ALL get jealous of other bloggers.
I love this tweet from @MindiCherry (Moms Need to Know)
It seems like every week there’s another top blogger list published, the same eleven bloggers have been invited on yet another fabulous trip, and you hear that another blogger has a book deal. Maybe you wrote your heart out on your latest post and only received a few comments, you lost 100 subscribers overnight, or you don’t have as many followers as you’d like to have on Twitter. It is HARD not to let these things get you down. But hear this!
YOU CANNOT LET OTHER PEOPLE’S SUCCESS GET YOU DOWN!
DON’T LET YOUR STATS DEFINE YOU! (comment numbers, page views, @replies, subscriber numbers)
Sorry to shout like that, but I really need you to hear those things. In fact, I’m going to shout them again.
YOU CANNOT LET OTHER PEOPLE’S SUCCESS GET YOU DOWN!
Most of the bloggers that seem to have what you want, whether it’s their comment numbers, perceived stats, or free trips didn’t start blogging a week ago. They’ve been working hard for what they’ve received. They are engaging writers, great at building their community, excellent at networking and have developed relationships with the “right” people. Guess what? YOU can also do those things! It just takes time, patience, skill, and networking.
I was recently named as on of Babble’s Top 50 Mommy Bloggers. To me it was a HUGE honor, I’d never been named to a list like this one before. But what does it really mean for me? I’m not thinner, my boobs aren’t perkier, I’m not suddenly recognized in the grocery store by adoring fans, and I haven’t been offered a job as an Editor for a major publishing company. I didn’t even get a trophy! What I do get, is at least 100 more product review requests in my inbox per week now, not exactly something that makes me jump with joy.
DON’T LET YOUR STATS DEFINE YOU! (comment numbers, page views, @replies, subscriber numbers)
I’ve said before that the size of your blogging community is only as important as YOU make it. If you have 10 loyal readers, that is AWESOME! If you have 1,000 loyal readers, that’s AWESOME, too…not awesome-er. The thing about stats is that there may never a number that truly satisfies you. I’m not saying that you won’t one day have 500 or 2000 or 10,000 subscribers (or whatever your goal may be), but I am saying that even when you get to that magical number, it won’t feel as great as you thought it would. The quest for MORE, in terms of blogging, is insatiable.
Instead of focusing on THE NUMBER, focus on your community. Come to truly appreciate those who DO read your blog and interact with you on Twitter. Remember your original reasons for blogging and what makes blogging fun. I know that logging into StatCounter is NOT usually fun, but emailing back and forth with a reader can totally make your day.
Here’s a post by Megan from Velveteen Mind that speaks to not allowing your stats to define you, go read it! I also suggest reading this post from PhD in Parenting that discusses reasons to check your stats, none of which say anything about your stats defining who YOU are.
4. Unless you are a robot, your feelings will probably get hurt at some point.
I am honored and humbled that so many of you comment and subscribe to my blog. Unfortunately since there are more than 25 of you, I’m just not able to read every one of your blogs. I used to have time for reciprocating every comment, I also used to have only one child who napped twice a day and gave me four whole hours of complete, unadulterated commenting time. These days, I’m lucky to get four hours A WEEK to devote to blogging. It gives me the nervous tummy to think that I may have hurt someone’s feelings because they’ve been a loyal commenter and I’ve barely acknowledged their existence.
People seem to get hung up is on the perception that “popular” bloggers don’t make any time for other, smaller bloggers, that they appear to only interact with the other elite. Perhaps this is true for some, not every blogger out there is interested in expanding their already ginormous community. I’m not immune to the feelings of rejection by other bloggers, but I’ve stopped interacting (and even reading) many of the people that I know have little to no interest in getting to know me. However, I suspect that most “popular” bloggers are interested in interacting with their readers, but are limited by time.
My feelings have been hurt too many times to count since I started blogging. My most favorite blogger of all time (formerly) absolutely crushed me when, the day after I first began this Blog Tip Sharing series, she wrote about how ridiculous it was to tell other people how to blog and she just couldn’t understand why anyone cared about making their blog better. I’ve had my feelings hurt over emails I’ve sent that have gone unanswered. It hurts my feelings when I’ve replied a ridiculous amount of times to someone on Twitter and they’ve NEVER responded. Sometimes when I see that someone isn’t following me back on Twitter that I think should be following me, I’ll do the quick unfollow-refollow because SURELY the fact that they aren’t following me is a mistake!
Trolls can also show up uninvited to your blog and wreak havoc. I’ve had my fair share of trolls, they are particularly fond of my posts about Alabama. I could shoot off indignant replies or post their IP addresses on my blog, but I’m a firm believer that if you ignore them, you take away their fuel. There is only so much room in my brain, I simply do not have the space available to allow people full of negativity take up that space.
*********
I hope that this post has served as some sort of blog induced frustration therapy. However you’re feeling, both the positive AND the negative feelings, have been felt by all of us. It’s not easy to pour your heart out online or write sometime brilliantly funny and feel like you’re not getting noticed. We’re bloggers! We’re narcissistic! If we didn’t care at all about getting some sort of accolades, we’d all be writing in a private forum.
Make the decision in your mind that you’re okay with how much time you devote to blogging, your writing abilities, and make peace with your stats and popularity status.
(I’d been working on this post for two weeks when I noticed that Loralee‘s post about blogging and jealousy had been syndicated at BlogHer. I decided to go ahead and post this, even though the subject matter is so similar, I think there’s room for two parallel viewpoints.)
Previously in this series: Writing Tips, Blog Promotion and Social Networking, StumbleUpon School, Blog Design, Sidebars and Pages, Building your Community, Developing your Brand











Jennifer,
I adore you.
I really don’t know what else to say.
It doesn’t matter if you post infrequently because when you do post, like this… damn girl. ;0)
Brilliance, intelligence and meaning.. it’s worth waiting for.
.-= Rachel (A Southern Fairytale)´s last blog ..Marinated Steak Sandwiches with Basil and Red Pepper Mayonnaise =-.
Thanks Rachel! Also thanks for the tweet!
Blogging is not as easy as people think… But I think it’s easier, for me, without readership!
Great post!
.-= Lindsaydianne´s last blog ..Sexually Transmitted Infections =-.
Brava! I loved this post. It should be mandatory reading for anyone who wants to start up a blog.
(Side note: Where was this kind of advice when I started blogging FOUR years ago. No wonder I hobbled about with a cane at Blissdom…wink.)
.-= Redneck Mommy´s last blog ..Who Is Redneck Mommy? =-.
But it was such a PRETTY cane!
\m/ and <3
.-= Lotus / Sarcastic Mom´s last blog ..i happen to think he’s brilliant =-.
I just found you through a tweet from Rachel. Nice job! I have been having a rough day and this helped a little. Disclosure: I also read the other piece on jealousy mentioned above. As a new blogger I can relate to both.
.-= Janis @ Sneak Peek At Me´s last blog ..CPR Saves Lives =-.
Thanks for doing the blog tips posts even though they take longer.
.-= Rebecca at Toothwhale´s last blog ..Who she is, rethought =-.
“It hurts my feelings when I’ve replied a ridiculous amount of times to someone on Twitter and they’ve NEVER responded.”
Ugh, so true. I’ve been blogging for a while and have a decent readership but I’ve pretty much kept to myself – not venturing out into the general blogging community much, never going to conferences, never really trying to make opportunities for myself. I’m trying to change that now, to GET OUT there more, to meet other bloggers and do the whole awkward networking/blog conference thing, and I’m finding out some pretty uncomfortable things about myself.
It turns out I’m a little overly invested in my stats and maybe have a little too much of a blog-ego.
It really smarts to try to comment/tweet/talk to other bloggers who I think (in my head) should sort of be peers (maybe/kinda/sorta) and be greeted over and over again with a collective yawn and shrug. I find myself wanting to say really uncomfortably horrible things in the comments, like casually finding a way to mention my subscriber count or something. (And a couple of times I DID. {facepalm})
I keep fixating on a few bloggers in particular (who have lower stats but are more community-famous, if that makes sense) who are just ignoring the living daylights out of me (which I GET, because I have to do it out of necessity too, on MY blog, but COME ON, it’s ME so it should be DIFFERENT), and the cognitive dissonance makes my head hurt.
(SEE? HORRIBLE. I AM A HORRIBLE PERSON. LASH ME WITH NOODLES.)
And I know we aren’t supposed to care about stats or use them as a measurement of self-worth or whatever whatever tra la la whatever, but I DO. Not other people’s but MINE. I can’t help it. When I read that post at Velveteen Mind, I thought “You only think that because your hits are low.” And then I immediately smacked my head into the wall because WAY NOT TO GET IT, SUE. AGH.
HORRIBLE.
(And how sad is it that when I read the follow/unfollow Twitter thing I thought OOOOOH, I’M TOTALLY DOING THAT. (So see? YOU ACTUALLY HELPED SOMEONE WITH THIS POST.))
Somebody stop me.
.-= TheOneTrueSue´s last blog ..Giveaway: Compaq CQ10 Mini Netbook & Targus Crave Laptop Backpack =-.
OH GOOD. You can’t delete poorly thought out comments after posting them.
HELLO WORLD – WELCOME TO MY DAMAGE.
.-= TheOneTrueSue´s last blog ..Giveaway: Compaq CQ10 Mini Netbook & Targus Crave Laptop Backpack =-.
If it makes you feel better, the lash me with noodles bit has me giggling away, lots.
I know I’ve sometimes steered a conversation towards my blog. I guess I just sometimes need for someone to be impressed with something I’ve done. Nobody high fives me when I’ve wiped a butt or not beat my children into submission. When I worked, I got rewarded with compliments, professional courtesies, and MONEY! Now the only thing I have to brag about is my blog…so I totally understood your comment!
I’m so embarrassed to admit this, but I sometimes want to shake people when they don’t reply to my tweets. I want to say, but I’M JENNIFER FROM PLAYGROUPS ARE NO PLACE FOR CHILDREN. SURELY YOU’VE HEARD OF ME. Hoo boy am I a narcissist.
Always reminding myself to keep it in check, yo. There’s not a one of us that’s all that.
Oh dear. Um. Sorry about that. Apparently I have A LOT OF FEELINGS about this.
.-= TheOneTrueSue´s last blog ..Giveaway: Compaq CQ10 Mini Netbook & Targus Crave Laptop Backpack =-.
Wait, making Top 50 Mommy Bloggers doesn’t make you thinner?
I’M OUT.
OMG! YOU LINKED TO ME!!!!!!!!!!! And I wasn’t even coming here for that!!!!!!!!
Seriously, you have made me pass out with happy,
I freaking love you.
And yes. You ABSOLUTELY know what you are talking about.
xo
.-= Loralee´s last blog ..Just in case you wondered what hanging with me for the day would be like. (Hint: It apparently includes lots of bed head, cleavage, a sickeningly cute baby and freaking AMAZING photographs.) =-.
I can totally hear your voice the entire time I read you, roomie.
So many things I want to respond to, oh my word, my fingers hurt already.
You’ve said it, so well. Everyone is looking up to someone bigger, admiring something that someone else does better and wishing they were the one being asked.
As for the elite thing – bloggers tend to hang around with the bloggers who were small when they were. They band together in the first months and grow together (some faster than others). There are people who read me regularly, who comment all the time and who I really like and look forward to their comments, but I never seem to be able to find time to make it back to their blog. And that is sad and frustrating.
And I should add, I’m not even a big blogger!
EXACTLY! I tend to hang around the bloggers that started when I started, the ones I’ve known for over 3 years. It’s almost like there are “classes” of bloggers (not high vs. low class, but Seniors vs. Freshman.)
I really like this post. I read Loralee’s post on Blogher a few days ago and I totally agree that there’s room for another post on this topic!
I’m a babe in the blog-sense compared to you (since Aug.09) and even I’ve wondered if I should hang it up. Blogging is a strange mix of work and play. I find the networking stuff can bring me up on a good day or just slap me right back into my high-school outsider-skin on a bad day.
Thanks for this.
.-= Marilyn @ A Lot of Loves´s last blog ..An Excess of Questions (or I Got, Got, Got, Got No Time) =-.
I love it all. I struggled so much with it all at first. I really love how you write, my boobs arent getting any perkier either, gosh that was the best….I cant wait to catch up on the Alabama posts!
.-= Jana´s last blog ..The Love Story Title Winner! =-.
Fab pos.. I was nodding along the whole time.
My number one tip is that I try to remember that I am doing this for fun….if it isn’t mostly fun then I need to reassess and do something differently!
Now I need to go sub to your blog…
Yes, if you’re not having fun, then why continue!? Blogging shouldn’t be another chore on your to do list.
There is just never enough time, is there? I love discovering new blogs but often feel that I should be tending my own first and then those who are faithful to me and only THEN can I seek new and inspiring reading! It’s tiring just thinking about it!
.-= Christie´s last blog ..Learning to Listen =-.
Love love love your blog tips! Thanks so much.
.-= mrs.notouching´s last blog ..Because… =-.
Thanks for all these honest tips (and the time it took to put them together). I hope you rewarded yourself with a big honkin’ spoonful of Nutella. =>
.-= Stacia´s last blog ..Haiku Friday =-.
Sadly, we’re all out.
So my resolution is to stop lurking and actually start commenting, but now everyone has said it and said it so well. But I’ve filled in the easy bits and I’d better write something in the big box too.
Thankyou. I think I need to make a big poster of ‘You are not defined by your stats’ and hang it on the wall in front of me. Right after I stop being jealous about all the comments here.
.-= Deb´s last blog ..Launching “Young Scientists” =-.
I need the poster, too. I’m constantly reminding myself.
Very, very good advice! Great post.
I can really associate with so much of this.
I get really down somedays over the blog… for all of those reasons you’ve written about.
Except for the stats.
I don’t understand them and it’s probably better that way.
.-= tiff´s last blog ..He. =-.
It IS better that way!
I have been blogging for 2 years longer than the Pioneer Woman, and yet I find her success so TOTALLY inspiring. Honestly, no jealousy at all, I sat down one day, looked at her blog, and RIGHT THERE I decided I could get my own domain and take it from there. So while I’m not featured on Good Morning America (and am unlikely to ever be, given that I dont even live on the same continent) and I don’t have 4 million hits a month, I’ve taken my blogging to *my* next level, and heck, it’s paid for my education, and launched a whole new career for me.
So for me, it’s not about being jealous of anothers success, it’s about embracing the abundance mentality, that ‘there is more than enough for everyone’ and just plugging away at ‘whatever blows my hair back’. I only have to look as far as my own extended family to know that there are people in the world who could benefit from my little bit of knowledge (or a lot) that I have learned from blogging/technology etc.
.-= Ness at Drovers Run´s last blog ..What Music Gets You All Riled Up? =-.
Thanks for this! It helps me keep perspective and remember why I started blogging over three years ago. With family spread out all over the place (and inlaws in Spain) I wanted them to be able to share in the daily life of my kids and their milestones. This is still my primary goal so readership and stats and comments are great, but secondary.
Thankful I met you at BlissDom and looking forward to going back through all of your tips!
.-= Shab´s last blog ..Make-up, make-down =-.
I think blogging can do a number on the ego if you continually compare yourself to other bloggers. But, what I’ve come to realize after 3 1/2 years of doing this (I can’t believe it’s been so long), is that most of the really popular bloggers WORK HARD at it. They network like crazy, they write a lot (every day or at least a few times a week) and they have found their ‘niche’ and gone after it. For some, it is their “job”, from which they earn income, so it obviously is going to have a different spot in their lives than those of us who do this just for the fun of it.
Also, as the kids get older, I’ve had to really think about the purpose of my blog. Sharing what funny thing my toddler said is one thing. Telling people something private about my 9yo doesn’t feel right, especially when she says, “don’t blog this!” Traffic is great, but as my kids get older, it isn’t just “my” story anymore. And, so, the blogging thing is constantly changing for me, every year.
.-= Fairly Odd Mother´s last blog ..Wordless Wednesday: The Art Show =-.
Oh, and I didn’t write this above but THANK YOU for continuing this series. I love your insight on this topic (even if I still don’t “get” StumbleUpon, lol!) and really, really appreciate you doing it.
.-= Fairly Odd Mother´s last blog ..Wordless Wednesday: The Art Show =-.
Thank you!
I sure hope I’ll get to meet you this year at BlogHer. I didn’t get to last year and that made me sad.
This should be mandatory reading for every blogger. SO, so true.
.-= Scary Mommy´s last blog ..Childbirth: The grossest thing ever =-.
you always nail it sista! xo
.-= amyt´s last blog ..and here is that gorgeous lady who made art from my words =-.
Your blog tip series is one of the highlights of blogging for me. The other is the piles of cash, of course.
I think it’s important to acknowledge the time constraints, envy, etc. and then just keep on blogging.
.-= Marinka´s last blog ..Friday! =-.
Jennifer, I love the way you write these posts. So relative and understandable. Thank you!
.-= Secret Agent {Mishi}´s last blog ..Hope in a Necklace =-.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
OMG… yes. Nodding my head throughout the entire post.
I want to quit blogging at least twice a month. Sometimes more.
.-= OHmommy´s last blog ..I can’t make this stuff up. #worstmomoftheyear =-.
Great, great thoughts on a topic about which enough positive, encouraging words can never be said. I also find that when the “I’ll never live up to {her}, {them}, {these expectations}” bug bites it helps to just take some time away from the whole scene. Social media (particularly Twitter, for me) has a way of parading the success, brilliance, wit and ingenuity of others past us at breakneck speeds, and like anything that moves VERY FAST, it makes the one looking at it feel like he/she is at a virtual standstill (or at least moving VERY slowly). When I get stymied by all of that and wonder if I can ever keep up, I just have to turn my eyes away from it and then I can see, again, that I’m moving, too, and sometimes EVEN IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION! Hee hee.
I think there’s also a tendency to plateau in this arena, almost exactly like the inevitable plateaus of a weight loss program. And those are the times to step out of one’s blogging/social media comfort zone and try switching things up a bit. Try vlogging, take a class, offer to guest post for somebody else, just anything to nudge you out of that cozy little rut into which you may have settled. Better yourself in some writerly, thinkerly way, and the mill churns faster. (Me, I could get better at carrying ONE metaphor through an entire thought. Do they have classes for that?)
.-= Megan (FriedOkra)´s last blog ..Like the Energizer Bunny, But with a Bad Case of Vertigo =-.
I love that you mention plateauing. For me, I think I’ve reached my peak and while that COULD get me down, I’m just not going to let it.
Great suggestions about switching things up a bit, too…I think I’ll take your advice!
Perfectly said, Jennifer. Perfectly said.
All new (and old) bloggers should bookmark this for the days they forget.
.-= Angella´s last blog ..My Arch Nemesis =-.
This is all SUCH fantastic advice.
.-= Maria´s last blog ..momentum =-.
I read your post yesterday about your Mom 2.0 experience…I’ve been working on a post about going to blog conferences and I’m definitely going to link to it.
Loved your honesty.
(And yes, I should totally have left this as a comment on your post.)
Remind me to bow down to you at BlogHer this time, okay?
.-= Maria´s last blog ..Hitting Women. =-.
As a brand-new blogger (just launched my site on Monday) I can’t tell you how great it was for me to read this. Thank you so much. I will be back here many times this week, as my “real life” allows, to read all the links. I can imagine how much time it took to craft this great piece….thank you.
http://www.closeenoughblog.com (sorry, having trouble with my feed)
GREAT post.
And I would add you have to write what is authentic to you, and appreciate that the creativity is flowing at all.
Sometimes my posts have wide appeal, but often they are kind of esoteric. The other night I was thinking I should write more strategically–write more for the main stream.
Then I remembered…but that isn’t what I write!
Thanks for the insight. I really appreciate it. I agree 1000 percent that this is all about attitude–finding a way to stay positive. Whenever I feel overcome with jealousy, that means I need to step away from the computer and go engage in real life.
Also, the way I deal with nagging envy is to produce, produce, produce (in my case keep writing for submission).
Thanks for the reminder–I need to read new blogs more often. I am so grateful for people who read mine.
Best,
Ann
.-= Ann’s Rants´s last blog ..Signs it is Purim and not Halloween in DiasporaExtreme, USA =-.
It does seem like producing, producing, producing helps with the envy because you’re not allowing yourself time to wallow in it.
This speaks to me SO PERFECTLY right now!! It’s all excellent advice… keeping perspective can be tricky business. It’s nice not to feel alone. I love everything you said here – great post, lady. Thank you.
.-= Grumble Girl´s last blog ..The Five-Alarm Bitch =-.
Oh, good, it’s not just me. I’m definitely guilty of worrying what others think of my writing, or whether or not they’re “better” bloggers than I am. I have my own style and do my thing, and they can do theirs. Your post offers some great advice that most of us tend to forget. Thanks for the smile and wake-up call – I’m not alone.
I could NOT be happier that I found this series of posts. I’ve been at this for just over a year and I’ve been struggling HARD lately to find direction and a sense of purpose from this. All of your tips have been so helpful, I can’t wait to really dig into all the other posts in this series and put everything to use. THANKS!!!
Thanks for the sound advice! I enjoyed it very much…from one narcisistic nervous tummy blogger to another
I love reading posts by bloggers about bloggers blogging about blogging. Hee! I really do love it. We can talk about this topic so much, and the new wave of bloggers will need to hear it all over again next year.
This was fabulous, I absolutely love your voice. It makes me always look forward to new posts.
Heart you.
.-= To Think Is To Create´s last blog ..Thank You Mom =-.
I do love talking about blogging with other bloggers! (Usually, anyway.)
Heart you, too!
I love the blog tips series. Great points.
For me time is the biggest issue I struggle with. Community and building relationships is the part of blogging I love most and I hate that I truly don’t have the time I used to read and comment on others blogs. I have a “tribe” of bloggers I love reading and recipriocate commenting so I hit those first and read the others only when I have time. Hubby always reminds me to develop new content for my blog first, then read, and comment on others blogs. I don’t have tons of followers but I love blogging and I always remember I blog for me. I think if you can keep that perspective instead of always trying to please others it retains its original draw and enjoyablity.
This is a fantastic post. There were so many points in here that I think were spot on. Too many for me to comment on here. Great job. This should be recommended reading for all new bloggers.
.-= Stimey´s last blog ..Well, It’s Official. =-.
Such a great post! I’m a relatively new(ish) blogger (8 months) and often feel both entirely gob-smacked and smacked down by the amount of things I realize I know nothing about, but as you point out, there’s only so much time in a day… I’m also one month in to Twitter, which is where your “Tweet” caught my eye. Thanks so much for a fab post in which you shared your honest and extremely constructive thoughts. I really enjoyed so many of your followers comments on this post.
Most importantly, you are funny- the best calling card of all! I’m happy I found your tweet/blog
Cheers,
Slim Paley
There truly are so many hours in a day…it takes months, years to really get a grasp of how to handle all the time commitments. Then it takes reminding yourself over and over again!
Jennifer, you are simply the swellest thing since, well, since Nutella. Would it be unseemly to say I love you? I guess I could say “I lurve you” like Fonzie did because he was embarrassed.
I have been blogging for one month. One month!! But you’ve helped me so much I can’t begin to thank you. Your tips are fabu, but the best thing about you is just… you. Your writing is so genuine, so funny and even though I don’t know you, I have to think your writing is just very you. Thanks for heading off a lot of my fears at the pass with this post.
I hope someday I can treat you to a plate of nachos.
.-= dusty earth mother´s last blog ..I’m just like Pa Ingalls =-.
Mmm, nachos!!
I heart you!!!
I’m going through old archives on my blog, and I found some comments from you signed, Jennifer aka Binky Bitch. That made me laugh a little, ok a lot.
I don’t think people realize how long some people have been blogging.
I think Twitter really exposed people to a new group of bloggers, etc. I know tons of people who have been blogging just within the past year.
My #1 reason for this blog is a family history or a story of my life. I forget so many things that go on daily in my life. I know now that I can just read old posts that I’ve written and remember these times.
There is a ton of jealousy right now. I think it’s mostly caused by money and greed.
But alas I see soooo many great writers within these blogs. I could never write like some of them, so I will be that nice gal who comments and takes pictures of random things like palm trees, Disneyland, and cupcakes.
.-= Julie @ Angry Julie Monday´s last blog ..Spotlight Saturday 2.21 to 2.26.10 =-.
Ahh, the good old days of Binky Bitch. Boy am I glad THAT’s over!
I kind of just want to applaud you at this point. Love this. So well said.
Thanks for taking the time to write this! I’m VERY new to blogging (2 weeks now) and have been having a blast. However, I’ve already been hit by insecurities…Why don’t I have more subscribers? Why am I doing this if I only got 5 hits today (sitemeter is EVIL!). I keep telling myself that over time, I’ll get about 20 hits a day! LOL! I am enjoying it and find it therapeutic. I’m also beginning to read other people’s blogs and have been really impressed. Jealousy hasn’t hit yet, although I’m sure it will!
Sitemeter IS evil, if you let it, it can make or break your day! Try not to check it everyday!!
Oh, so checking it 20+ times a day isn’t good?
.-= Cheryl D.´s last blog ..Silly Statements =-.
oh dear holy crap. This is awkward. I saw the other day that you were following me on Twitter, and I thought, Hmm wow I didn’t think she knew me. Maybe she saw me following her and was bored and checked through her twitter list and decided to follow me too.
then I realized: I was not following you on Twitter.
I HAVE NO IDEA WHY THAT WAS. BRAIN FART.
So, anyway, sorry ’bout that. now following. The only thing I have to say in my defense is that, I don’t really pay too much attention to Twitter because I just simply can NOT stay plugged in all day or else I get nothing done. And twitter requires full-day-plugged-innedness. (I do not have internetz on my phone).
But now I’m sure that will all change because I am confident your tweets will be the stuff presidential speeches are gleaned from.
.-= Texan Mama´s last blog ..Don’t Leave Me Hangin’ =-.
It’s very easy to overlook people on Twitter! I’m sure I do it all the time. I didn’t even realize you hadn’t been following me until I saw that you were following me. No biggie.
Jennifer, I love it. As a pretty new blogger (just started in December ’09) I have already felt some of these things and thought it was just me. I had also read Loralee’s post and both are great – there is certainly room for both!
The advice to produce, produce, produce is great, too. All kinds of good tips in this series – someone actually thought it would not be worthwhile? Seriously? It SO is. This series has helped me tremendously so THANK YOU!
.-= Natalie´s last blog ..A Day of Gratitude =-.