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About John Shore

John is the author of I'm OK--You're Not: The Message We're Sending Nonbelievers and Why We Should Stop (NavPress); Penguins, Pain and the Whole Shebang (Seabury Books); and co-author, with Richard Lederer, of Comma Sense: A Fundamental Guide to Punctuation (St. Martin's). Both Penguins and Comma Sense won San Diego Book Awards for best books in their respective categories (Religious/Spiritual, and How To/Reference). He is also co-author, with Stephen Arterburn (Every Man's Battle) of Being Christian: Exploring Where You, God and Life Connect, Midlife Manual For Men: Finding Significance in the Second Half, and Regret-Free Living: Tools for Building Strong, Healthy Relationships.

As e-books on Scribd.com, John has made available for downloading or reading online, collections from his blog, entitled Seven Reasons Women Stay in Abusive Relationships (and How to Defeat Each One of Them),  How to Make a Living Writing, and My Funniest Stuff. He has also made available his book, I'm OK--You're Not: The Message We're Sending Nonbelievers and Why We Should Stop.

Visit John online at JohnShore.com
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John Shore

Writer, Editor, Author

Wednesday, June 03, 2009

Blogging. Flogging. What's the Diff?

This morning a reader, "urbanruralwitness," left the saddest comment on my post My Cup Runneth Over.

"At least more than 1 person looks at your blog," he or she wrote. "Unlike me. Let me ask: Was it tough to start this blog? How did other people notice you? My blog is now a bud. A dead rotting bud.

"A dead rotting bud!"! Poetic! And, like so much great poetry, it makes you want to kill yourself.

My response to urbanrural was:

"Yes, sometimes up to THREE people a day read my blog.

"Blogging is the most brutal thing since ... flogging. My Actual Honest Opinion is that if you're blogging in the hopes of attracting a readership beyond your family and friends (and even then), forget it. There are 120 million blogs out there. How in the world is any one blogger---who isn't a corporate blog, who isn't already famous, who isn't a freak expert in some tiny little informational niche---supposed to rise above that solid wall of noise?"

I've been thinking about this subject a lot lately, because I've been e-chatting with the president of the San Diego Christian Writer's Guild about maybe teaching a class at this year's SDWG conference (which I attended last year and wrote about in Humbled by Beginning Writers, doncha know) on the how's and why's of blogging.

The "How" part I can do: Wake up. Caffeinate. Write blog post. Hit "Publish" button. Try not to obsess over your viewer stats. Fail at that. Don't know what I'd talk about for the rest of the forty-five minutes, but that would do the job.

It's the "Why" part of blogging where I get a little lost.

Because you love to write? Meaning you appreciate and even relish the craft of writing? Then why start a blog, where you have to produce so much writing you can't possibly properly attend to each piece?

Because you want to be famous? Please. Talk about your one needle in 120 million haystacks.

Because ... you love to type?

If you keep a blog, tell us why. Love writing? Hope to become famous---or to at least gather some folk around your soapbox? What gets you writing and publishing the content on your blog? What inspires you to blog? Do tell! At the very least it'll help me with that class. Thanks!


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