state of the blog

Nearly three years ago I started blogging. I’m not done, but I feel differently about it, by far, than I did the day I first typed a sentence into the little window on MySpace.

Back then I wanted exposure as a writer. Maybe as a person, too. I don’t suppose I minded the thought of finding friends, old or new, on the Internet. Mainly, I’ve always gotten jazzed by the idea of people reading my words.

Ten years ago, a lady from Florida called me after reading my Runner’s World essay about jogging with my dog. She’d related to my description of my pup’s unfettered joy on the trail and simply wanted to connect, to tell me about her doggies. Other RW readers sent in comments that the magazine printed. The buzz from that experience stayed with me – I hoped blogging would bring it again and often (and, I should add, instantly after I pressed the Publish button).

Well…Blogging has rarely provided that kind of fun. For a long time I felt very off-kilter and ambivalent about it. Now I can articulate the unsettledness: I was learning that words, paragraphs, and even essays don’t automatically translate into meaningful for anyone but me. No matter what the medium of delivery, my words, anyway, are not by themselves golden or sought-after. Duh.

The better way for my writing to strike a chord somewhere will continue to be when I can serve in some collaborative effort. I’m so grateful, as a direct result of blogging, to have found Relief Journal. And now this year blogging led me to the Internet Writing Workshop. Have I mentioned the group is fantastic? It bears repeating. Besides providing serious feedback, the IWW email list hums with ideas, questions, and possibilities for writers. Whereas six months ago I wondered if I might scrape the bottom of my idea barrel sometime soon, today I can’t keep up with possibilities simmering in this authorly brain.

I’m still seeking places, projects, and endeavors where my words can serve a purpose and become relateable. Whether I find more of them or not, I’m doing my homework, enjoying this space in life between the children’s graduations and grandkids, or parents needing me, or whatever might present itself tomorrow.

This entry was posted in blogging, newsy, practice, writing. Bookmark the permalink.