Today is an important day in my blogging calendar – the anniversary of my decision in 2016 to reboot everything and return to the blog after what was more than two years away.
I've written about this on a number of occasions over the years, largely saying similar things each time, but feel it's worth returning to on each anniversary to remind myself why I do this, why I always return to the blog no matter how many breaks I take or for how long.
As I remarked last year, it took nearly a year to get back into my stride and put 'the old way' of blogging behind me. In reality I went full circle and returned to the way I used to write when I first started. I had gotten into the mindset that everything had to be an essay - too much was discarded. From the post by Matt Gemmell I shared yesterday:
"Those who do blog will often sit on pieces for too long, because they're waiting until they have more to say – or they shelve pieces entirely, wrongly believing they're too brief and thus somehow trivial."
This is exactly how I used to be. The waiting meant so much went unsaid.
As I have said, I now find myself reverting: "Microposts and writing about code are all well and good but I miss the depth I used to have." There needs to be a balance and I need to ensure I don't obsess and swing too far one way or the other. Finding the right flow can be challenging, I don't know why, when it should be just writing whatever comes naturally rather than constantly overthinking it.
But I digress. Today is my own private celebration of blogging and what it means to me. I still get incredibly frustrated with the creative process (here and elsewhere) but these posts each year help to reiterate that the process is worthwhile, no matter the result.
@colinwalker Huge congrats, Colin! This post really resonated with me, along with Matt's which I recently – and ironically – reread about a week ago. Part of my lack of writing has been due to so much going in my life, but that's just it; pushing through distractions is important. However the other part is me being a perfectionist, and holding back until I have something that feels worthy.
It's so easy to give ourselves these virtual yardsticks, and then fail to measure up to our own lofty standards.
Amen to that!