That All Too Familiar Paved Road
I guess in everything we undertake, we possess some sense of accountability. If not to others, then to ourselves.
November of this year was my two year blogiversary. Since then, I’ve contemplated quitting. Several times.
Why? Loss of focus, motivation, and understanding.
The last point is where I’ll start first.
Keeping Up Is Hard To Do
I thought I knew what I wanted when I began in 2007. As I grew in knowledge and found others who enjoyed similar interests and pursuits, I found that what I wanted to accomplish morphed into something nearly 180 degrees from where I started.
I liked what other, more experienced bloggers were doing, and I wanted the same, if not better.
I was fine with that.
Until social networking, and the apparent need for it, became something that was taking up all of my time, and where I was spending most of my efforts.
Talk about a quick burn out. Between monitoring TweetDeck, my Google Reader, and Google Alerts, I soon found myself drifting away from blogging. I was watching, reading, tweeting, trying to keep up with others and stay ‘visible’. But I was hardly doing that which brought me to this place in the beginning: blogging about books and literary issues.
It was during this mess of “trying to keep up with the Joneses” I lost focus and subsequently my motivation.
Not reading mind you. Never. It is part of my genetic make-up to love books and what they have to offer.
My struggle has been with sharing this love, this vocation, with others through the medium of the internet.
To Thine Own Self Be True
I recently realized that trying to keep up with it all is an empty illusion and a waste of resources. At least in the extremes it has become. No amount of time I spend on Twitter, Google, or Facebook is going to make or break my blog.
Only its author has that ability. It is through dedication or neglect that any good or bad happens.
I am now reworking my dedication to this blog, and how I wish to develop and promote it; if it needs any kind of promotion at all.
This is not a revenue generating site and never will be. It may lead to ventures that could produce income, but I made a vow long ago this blog would not be anything more than a hobby.
This is the vision to which I need to remain true. This is, and should be, what keeps me going. Not how many comments I get and from whom. Not how many hits I get a day, a week, or a month.
Books, literacy, and commentary are where my focus should be.
I am working hard on a way to get back there. To stop juggling so much. (I wish I could say I could stop juggling period, but realistically, life doesn’t work that way.) Right now, I just need to get rid of a couple of balls. Or at least minimize their weight so they are more easily handled.
The road to anywhere is paved with good intentions. Somehow I strayed off the path. Now is the time for me to find solid ground again and continue.
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I second all you have said and would add that for myself, I seem to have a lower energy level and attention span that a lot of people in the blogosphere. For me, trying to cover all bases ends up meaning that quality suffers, and that’s important to consider.
I think we all have these crises! Wanting to quit because social networking is taking up too much time and we’re not reading. I wish you luck in getting back to where YOU want to be with blogging — I know you can do it…and I’ll still be reading even if you aren’t tweeting.
I agree. I do not do the whole Google Reader thing. Why? Because I like to read the blogs I want to read, not be forced to be social on books and blogs I have no interest in or nothing in common. We do not all read the same things. I do like being on Twitter. I am an internet person, my whole family is. Heck my 6yo has her own computer in her room with a list of websites she frequents. If it is not working for you then do not do it. This is supposed to be fun and worth while and I will not ruin that for myself to ‘keep up with the joneses’ or do what is ‘socially acceptable’.
I can feel you on the blogger burnout. That’s why I started taking a day off from the interwebz. As for GR, I’ve been kind of ignoring it….
I enjoy using Google Reader. I follow a LOT of blogs, and I like it that way; I also like letting them come to me via feed subscription vs. skipping all over the Internet. The blogs I read help feed my own blog, and I’d hate to give (most of) them up.
But I do have to limit my time on Twitter, and pretty much forget about Facebook.
I’ve seen too many blogs wither away at the expense of social-media involvement this year, and I think you’re absolutely right about this:
“No amount of time I spend on Twitter, Google, or Facebook is going to make or break my blog.
Only its author has that ability. It is through dedication or neglect that any good or bad happens.”