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November 06, 2004

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Dylan

Chuck and I talked about this a while back on his blog. I think the audience aspect of the blogging experience helps give a blog its character. If you go back and read the first few weeks of my blog, it doesn't have the cohesion (I don't think I spelled that right, but I don't have the energy to spell check it. How sad is that?) that my posting now has. Once I began to aquire a regular audience, I found my writing changed a bit to suit the audience. And that is the beauty of the blog for me. It isn't so much that I desire a huge audience, but rather the sort of instant feedback that having an audience gives me. It helps me hone my writing and, while I certainly write what I want to write about, it helps me learn what I write about that is interesting to others.

Jarrett


Dylan's right. I started out with intentions/pretenses similar to yours ... "I just need a forum/motivation to write every day" etc ...

But I know I wouldn't do it if nobody were reading. I could do that in my word processor. And I didn't, much.

So welcome to the hall of mirrors. It the only place that any of us can see ourselves anymore.

Peace, Jarrett

Beth

But neither of you has kids, right?

I think I might still write in the blog b/c I want to record what my kids are doing. I did keep a paper journal for that purpose before I started blogging. But the paper journal seemed too labor-intensive--all that handwriting on those tiny pages--and it was tough to include photos (I spent a fortune on scrapbook supplies but scrapbooking is even more labor intensive than a journal.)

I also used notepad/word to note what my kids were doing, but those documents are now scattered around various hard drives and I'm not sure what I'll do with them. Print them out, I guess, and stick them with the bound journals.

On the other hand, I concede that having an audience is what makes me *want* to write more often. And having an audience, I'm sure, makes a difference in how I write, or at least, how carefully I write.

Plus, even when I was writing via private technologies, I did have an audience in mind. I figured my kids would someday read what I wrote. According to Thomas Mallon (in A Book of One's Own), no one writes more than a grocery list without expecting an audience eventually.

Plus, to not have an audience when you COULD have an audience (blog) would be much more discouraging than not having an audience when it's impossible to have one (paper).

So . . . I guess you both have convinced me. I would need at least a potential audience to continue writing/blogging, and perhaps I would choose a different technology if I had no audience besides myself.

Thanks for helping me to think further about this.

Dylan

I don't have kids. I think blogging is the PERFECT technology for keeping track of goings on with the kids as you they are growing up.

By the way, I gotta tell ya, if my mom or dad had been blogging about me as a kid, when I became an adult, I'd be just as interested in what me being in their lives meant to them and their lives as much as just what I was doing.

I used to journal some, but I could never get myself to do it regularly. I had the same journal for 5 years, and it is about 3/4 of the way full. What blogging allowed me to do was to not take myself so seriously. I think I always did write for an audience (as you suggested) even in private mediums. I was always thinking "that day when I become famous, people are going to find this interesting, so I'd better, in fact, be interesting." Now, because I have an immediate audience, It forces me to ACTUALLY be interesting instead of attempting to be uber-interesting.

Beth

"By the way, I gotta tell ya, if my mom or dad had been blogging about me as a kid, when I became an adult, I'd be just as interested in what me being in their lives meant to them and their lives as much as just what I was doing."

What an inspiring comment! Thanks, Dylan! I'll be thinking about how I can do more of this.

madeline

I have also noticed that with me, as my stats grow (ie, as I gain new, unknown-ish readers, like you), the "responsiblity" factor as author is ramped up considerably.

By ramped up, I mean in frequency AND in quality. My original posts were heinously scattershot; my voice was scizoid.

I believe that as readership grows (and I *learn* my readership through reading their blogs) I have evolved as a blogger to retain those readers.

Also, RE the blog to track your kids: many bloggers keep mulitple blogs to carve out audiences more cleanly. One blog for family/friends/future, one blog for matters of work, one blog for their fantasy football league, etc. My personal take on public/private blogging begins with my 19 Oct 2004 post (it won't let me link here), mostly in the comments.

My point, I think, is that people who, like us, are insanely busy, cannot afford to make such distinctions, but also that such distinctions are ultimately artificial and rhetorical anyway. Not that rhetorical+artficial=bad, but is simply a result of choice and lifestyle.

Like now, I would continue if I could, but a crying toddler at my knees (and an H still enjoying his Sunday morning sleep in--its nearly 11--prevent me from going any further).

I'm getting ready to organize a time-space geographic study on moms who blog. Interested in helping out?

Dylan

I agree with Madeline... Once my readership began to grow, I found myself writing for the audience, and not as much for myself. And as the people who read my blog began to become known (I began to understand their personalities) I found myself writing things with them in mind. The audience/ego factor of blogging is not to be underestimated...

Also... I have low self-esteem, so that might explain it...

Beth

I really don't think I could keep more than one blog. It's hard enough to justify the time spent doing this one!

However, I do see the value, since apparently a bunch of my relatives refuse to look at my blog to see news about my kids because I have also written pro-Kerry stuff in here. (! So much for families loving you no matter what.)

And I think it would be easier to write more if I had a more narrowly defined subject/audience because while finding ideas for writing is easy, finding appropriate ideas is tough.

From what everyone is saying, it seems there is little difference between "finding a voice" and "finding an audience." True?

Dylan

I guess that is one way to say it, Beth. For me I found that it was more like finding an audience helped me find a voice and finding a voice helped me find an audience. They help refine each other...

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