Three years of blogging — who’da thunk it?

JISHOU, HUNAN — While poking around my own posts recently, I discovered that the third anniversary of my blog had completely slipped past me. Hard to believe it’s been that long.

In the past 37 months, I have written 472 posts, or about 13 blog entries (posts in WordPress lingo) a month — roughly 3 a week. My active readership seems kind of small, with roughly one comment for each post, but my ClustrMap‘s little Mercator projection is covered with red blobs over North and South America, Europe, China, Australia and the Middle East. So somebody must be reading me, even if they leave no comments behind. According to ClustrMap, SiteMeter and my own stats application, there have at least 40,000 visits to this URL since August 2006 — a mere pittance compared to, say, ScienceBlogs superstar PZ Myers, but a helluva lot more than I ever expected.

In the beginning, the blog was just a means for me to vent my frustrations at how willfully ignorant and unscientific Americans seem to be. I also had the intention, which has yet to find its full fruition, to make the blog a place to teach physics and astronomy. As the months passed, I found myself commenting on religion, civil liberties, evolution vs. intelligent design, music, film and a host of more random issues. Since August 2008 the focus understandably switched to my new life in China. I have a wide range of interests, so I suppose the blog reflects that.

WordPress is a great platform for blogging. Rather than go with a blog hosted by WordPress, I opted to host this site on a host on which I had another, largely dormant computer information site. While it certainly would have been easier to let WordPress.com deal with all the technical issues, in the end it was a wise choice. The Great Firewall of China blocks access to all of www.wordpress.com (but not wordpress.org, the development site). Had I hosted there, I would have had to go through the Tor proxy network to access my own site! My webhosts, Planet Earth Hosting, have been reliable, helpful and friendly all these years.

There is an active open-source community centered around WordPress, too. My posts are now automagically posted on my MySpace, Facebook and now LinkedIn pages, and I can import comments to my Facebook notes back to this site. Readership is thus wider, for very little effort. Nice.

On the downside, WordPress upgrades have broken my Amazon application that enabled me to look up merchandise, add the links to each post, and thus get some pennies on the dollar added to my Amazon Associates account. The last I checked, the developer of that handy little app was no longer working on it, so any links I add have to be done manually.

Not that I expected to make any real money from blogging. Despite what the so-called experts say, to make money blogging requires a lot of effort and an overriding mission to design your site to pull in readers. That was never my goal. Hosting a website on a shared server is so damned cheap now that I could care less if I make back the $80 I paid Planet Earth Hosting for a year’s subscription. So, my readers will be spared rightwing (or leftwing, in my case) rants, juicy gossip about superstars, or even juicier photos of partially clad women. (My webhost does not allow nudity or porn, so apparently they are not in this business for big bucks, either.)

I read somewhere on the Intertubes that bloggers tend to lose their enthusiasm within the first year. Maybe their lives become busier, or the reason for the blog changes (travel, for example), or they just run out of things to say. Writing is damned hard work, even for someone like me who used to do it professionally — for pay even! I can start a post and several hours later (literally!) I can glance at the clock and wonder what time warp I fell into.

Blogging for me is therapeutic. I can inform, rant, complain, vent and/or ramble aimlessly, and if someone reads it, it’s cool. If no one does, I don’t really care too much. I’m writing for me in a way, with the hope that someone somewhere might find it useful or interesting or worth commenting on.

So onward I go, into the fourth year of Wheat-dogg’s World. I hope you stick around, too.

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2 comments to Three years of blogging — who’da thunk it?

  •  David Hochman at 1:51pm February 15
    I read ya, John, without leaving comments at Wheatdogg. And it's been a uniformly excellent blog. You may think your comparative advantage is knowing a decent amount of science, but in fact it's knowing how to think and write, and when to do so at length greater than a highlight paragraph. Your photos are pretty good, too! I agree with you completely on the mechanics of WordPress self-management (I do that, too) and on the unlikelihood of ever making one's hosting costs back without selling out some principle or other.
  • Darcy

    Heyo Daddio!

    I haven’t been as avid a reader of your blog as some, I’m sure. I generally used the news or more often Facebook or the TV to procrastinate while in college. I’ll forever be an internet junkie and sometimes it’s just easier and/or more fun to read a story you’ve compiled rather than try to interrogate you with questions about your weekend or whatever.

    It’s definitely true what some say about bloggers starting off and then dying off soon after. Jacob has been particularly entertained by reading my old LiveJournal from my late high school/early college days. He can see (as can I when looking back) how different I was then from how I am now. Then I definitely wrote what was on my mind and really looked forward to the comments people left for me there. Once I started getting really involved in work at the Hub and found some really great, close, in-person friends to hang out with, my LiveJournal died. I didn’t need to rant to the Internet world anymore. I had real friends to tell those things to in person. Plus I figured that if no one was commenting, then no one was reading, then anyone who actually cared what the hell was going on in my life would actually talk to ME directly. I guess I finally got out of my super-internet-bubble…until now haha. This is a particular exception, though. I use the internet now to talk to Jacob mostly, and even though my France LiveJournal account is still alive, it’s very slow-going. I tell everything in my day-to-day experiences to Jacob, and anyone else who’s curious normally asks me directly. I try to keep the France LJ going, though, for future reference for myself.

    Psh, rant over. Jesus, I’m long-winded…

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