Tag Archives: Audience
Just Unsubscribe
Hello Subscribers,
I wanted to take a moment and thank you for subscribing to my blog and following me for over a year now.
I haven’t been as active as I would like to be, however, I am committed to my blog and putting out the best material I can for you.
Of recent, there have been those subscribing and then unsubscribing which motivated me to write this post.
I would like to make a humble request which will mean a lot to me. I would like to request that for those of you who are not really interested in my work or in reading my posts, that you unsubscribe.
I know this goes counter to what all the experts say. But my true desire is to keep faithful readers; even if it translates to ten readers. I’d rather have ten true readers and supporters than not.
So today, I decided to ask those of you who are subscribed, but are really not interested in my blog, writing or work, to just unsubscribe.
I will have no hard feelings, as I said, I only desire to have true readers and subscribers who value what I write, resonate with it, and are with me for the long haul.
Thank you for following me as long as you have, I appreciated your generosity, but you have my express permission to unsubscribe.
For those of you who decide to stay with me, on my writing journey. I want to thank you and let you know I have some exciting things ahead, so stay tuned.
Posted in blogging, writing
Also tagged followers, Platform, readers, Subscribing to blogs, supporters, Unsubscribing from blogs
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Why Do You Write?
I enjoy reading interviews of writers and their creative process.
In the past few days, I have been reading interviews of great authors, such as Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, William Faulkner and Gustave Flaubert.
I noticed a common thread in these authors is narcissism.
There seems to be a correlation between creative genius and mental illness.
Ernest Hemingway shot himself. F. Scott Fitzgerald was depressed. William Faulkner was an alcoholic. Actually, all three were alcoholics. Gustave Flaubert’s personal life was a bit ‘out there’.
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I’ve been lurking behind the scenes and observing writers lately.
Writers seem to be plagued by insecurities, much like great authors were.
Writers want to be known. They want their writing to be read and heard. They want to know their writing matters to others and is making a difference in someone’s life.
Personally, I don’t get many comments or traffic on my blog. Nor do I have a large following, audience or platform.
I have had to come to terms that it may always stay this way.
Occasionally, I’ll get a reader who tells me they enjoy my posts and likes my writing. But, not very many.
Truthfully, the more I write and share what God puts on my heart, the less people seem to like it and thus, I get less traffic.
Which is why I had to ask myself the following questions:
1) Am I writing for God, myself or others?
2) Why do I write in the first place?
3) Will I continue to write even if no one reads it and/or my audience never grows?
My answers:
1) I write for God and myself.
2) I write because I love to write. I love words. I love the artistic expression and creative process. I love reading books and writing.
3) Now this one was a hard one to answer, because as I mentioned above, all writers want to be heard and appreciated. But I’ve come to the conclusion, that I do not want my writing to be about someone else liking or accepting it. I want God’s approval. I want to write what I’m passionate about whether anyone else agrees with it or likes it or not. Other people liking my writing is just the icing on the cake.
I’ve discovered that to continue writing, the ‘why’ has to be bigger than the ‘obstacle’.
If your why isn’t bigger than your obstacle, then you won’t keep at it.
If you are only writing for man’s applause or recognition, you will eventually be disappointed and give up.
Writing for others is the wrong focus and motivation.
Writers have to be comfortable and content for art’s sake.
Even if no one reads your writing, you should still want to write anyway.
Writing should never be about other people, but about God and you.
This is the reason why I write.
Now it’s your turn, why do you write?
Posted in blogging, writing
Also tagged Alcholism, Creativity, Depression, Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Following, Gustave Flaubert, Insecurity, Mental Illness, Narcissism, Platform, Suicide, The Guardian, The Paris Review, William Faulkner
2 Comments