writing to write

This is my third blog post that I am posting here which makes it my second most active blog over the course of a decade of making blogs from pathetic Livejournals with copy-pasted themes to WordPress blogs that started with a post promising to actually write this time, I swear. I had one other blog that surpassed this – one wherein I commented on aspects of what’s now generally known as ‘geek’ culture but specifically on video games and comic books. I had this blog back in university when I was a regular reader of similar female-focused geek culture blogs like The Mary Sue and had posted about ten or so times before coming to an abrupt stop.

At the time, I had started the blog as a way of getting experience for possibly veering into a professional writing career where I wrote similar things but was paid for it. I tagged my posts carefully and made sure to post at times where I was sure people would be reading blogs and not busy on commutes, at work, or sleeping. I believe that my peak readership for that blog was fifteen people for one post.

The peak readership of this blog is five people, I think, but I don’t know well enough to confirm. I don’t tag anything and I don’t care to even edit the things that I’m writing. In effect, this is more like a journal than a blog, where my relatively uncensored thoughts come to rest.

When I had been writing on that last blog, I had not yet published any of my art writing and had not even shown any of it to anyone else besides individuals in a creative writing class that I was taking for credit. I was unconfident in my writing, among other things. Since then, I have published a number of pieces, including one in the Malahat Review which I am particularly proud of, and I have no qualms about sending my work for edits or discussing it with others. For those pieces and this very blog post, I don’t find any trepidation in sharing even the most personal of my work. I believe that the act of publishing or posting or however exactly you seek to phrase what I am doing has shifted away from being about others responding to my writing.

Simply put, I believe that for me now more than ever, the act of writing is much more important than being read. I think that this may have been because of a subconscious effort in humility. I don’t expect anything that I write to change the world or even change someone’s mind. It’s not that I’m unconfident in it but just that I don’t particularly care to think of myself any greater than I am. I think that in considering writing in this way, the act of it is more centered on myself than anyone else.

But that being said, I do like when people enjoy my writing. This is my favourite comment shared on something that I’ve written:

So, I suppose that if something that I write touches you, I’d like to know – not for my own ego or for my writing process, but because while shouting into an endless void suits me just fine, I like hearing someone shout back every now and then.

One response to “writing to write”

  1. Stuart Danker avatar

    Just stopping by to shout back at you. No matter what you do, just remember to keep going. I still feel I don’t have anything important to Fatt, but the only thing that’s helped with my blog’s growth is that I just never stopped. Wishing you all the best!

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