This
month I am striving to publish a meaningful blog post every day for 30 days. I’ve
never been able to pull this off in the past so I must admit that I’m a bit
nervous, especially since I’m leading this #bloglikecrazy challenge.
But
then I look at bloggers like Jen West of The Jen West Quest and I’m reminded
that anything is possible.
Jen
West blogged every day not just for a month and not just for a season, but for
nearly two years!
She
started her blog simply as an accountability tool to lose weight. “I was
in desperate need to find motivation and excitement in the process of such a
mundane task,” West said.
But
in the process of losing weight, West gained an intense love for blogging, which she discussed with me recently and offered great advice for those of us ready to #bloglikecrazy.
Jen West Photo by Angela Karen |
You blogged every day for over a year. Was this something you
set out to do or did it just happen?
When
I first started my blog, I committed 100% to blogging every single day until I
lost every pound that I wanted to lose. Four and a half months later when
I achieved my goal of losing 47 pounds, I decided that I still loved to write
on a daily basis. I continued on to blog every day for almost 650 days.
How did you manage to do this? How did you find time to blog daily? Did you
have a certain time of day in which you would write?
I
found that with a daily commitment, writing in the mornings made it much easier
to knock out. My brain is at its best when I first wake up. Plus,
it's a great feeling to know that you've finished it as you go on throughout
your day instead of rushing through it later on. I also gave myself an
hour a day to write, edit and post. Having a time cap made me concentrate
better.
Did you ever face writer’s block?
Yes,
I faced writer's block often. I would have really "on" weeks where
I could write with ease, then others I would really struggle with content.
I found that the days I struggled, though, were the days I had the best posts. I forced myself to
dig deep, because it wasn't an option to skip. When I get stuck I ask
myself questions like, how am I feeling right now and why? What are my current
goals and dreams? What are my plans? Where am I in life and
what's in the future? What do I love? You can always find things to write
about when you have passion and are in touch with yourself.
I remember when you decided to stop posting daily you mentioned on your blog
that it was actually difficult for you not to post as often. Why was that?
When
I stopped writing every day it felt like a big chapter of my life was closing.
I actually still wonder what it would be like if I had continued on.
But here's the thing: I can always start it back up again. I will
never stop writing in my blog. The daily part was just an exercise in
discipline more than anything else. I write for myself, and I should do
it as much as I want to. I'm at a similar place with exercise in my life,
it is no longer about a schedule, but for an experience.
And
at the end of our interview West reminded me of something that we can not only
apply to blogging but anything meaningful and healthy that we do for ourselves:
“You will never regret it once it's done. It might be a challenge in the
beginning, in the middle and in the end, but damn if you won't feel good once
you're done. Blogging is a confidence booster, and most importantly a reminder
that you are worth the time and effort!”
I made that commitment Jan 1 2012 with the Blog 365 challenge over at wordpress, then in April I committed to the Blogging from A-Z with the alphabet as my daily prompt which oddly got me into poetry and more specifically haiku.
ReplyDeleteWhen I shifted to poetry, an odd thing happened, I started having readers, likes, and omg, followers.
I'm ready for a change, but I don't want to lose my fellow poets in the process.
Maybe you can write about various aspects of writing and poetry. That way you can make a change but still keep your readers.
Deleteps: I was determined to leave a comment, so jumped thru all those hoops of id (i don't require them) to do so. When people have to work that hard to leave a comment on your blog, they usually don't bother. It will cut down your numbers and eventually readers thru plain old frustration. Just a thought.
ReplyDeleteThanks for leaving a comment despite all the trouble. I've been looking into a different commenting system. I require ID because before I was getting A LOT of spam bots. I tried Disqus but something went wrong and the comments stopped showing up. I hope to find something else soon. Thanks again.
DeleteI commend ANYONE who can blog continuously for thirty days. But for two years.. two years straight? That's just simply remarkable. I tried my hardest to create a blogging schedule to be consistent with my blog but I always seem to stray away from the plan. Being a mom, a student, and an employee pretty much takes precedence over a lot of things that I enjoy doing. I'm still trying to create an equilibrium. I think I'm pretty close. (:
ReplyDelete