I blogged about Emmie, my little writing buddy. |
Days one to three weren’t too bad. I just wrote about some
things that were happening in my life, somewhat tied into writing. My
background was journalism before I went into novel-writing, so it’s been fun to
go back to writing short non-fiction pieces again. I also like taking photos
so I use some of them for what amounts to photo-essays. By day four, however, I felt like I
was running out of material. Thankfully, by the end of each day, I could
usually come up with "something interesting" or “something I learned.”
My titles, so far:
-Saying yes…by saying no
-Why I didn’t write today
-My little writing buddy
-Breaking writer’s block
-A great day
-How to sprint through a manuscript
-A minimalist approach to creating
Blogging daily has blessed my life, and I wholeheartedly
recommend this to those of you who want to establish a platform and strengthen
your writing chops. Here are some things I have learned:
- It can be done.
- Not everything has to be earth-shattering, but surprisingly, my days have been more interesting than I expected.
- I became more observant so I could have material; I had more material because I was more observant.
- Once you commit the time, it is easier to maintain a daily blog than a sporadic blog.
- The daily habit of writing helped my other writing, too. It’s like priming the pump for my fiction.
- My Facebook author page followers liked or responded to my non-writing posts just as much, if not more, as my writing-related posts.
- On Facebook, I saw more engagement in terms of likes and people seeing my posts.
- I’ve had people share some of my what-I-learned writing posts.
- It’s fun to see what I can write. It’s like flash non-fiction.
- Adding photos (mine or I get free ones from pixabay.com) makes the post more appealing.
- Usually, I write in my journal (I type my entries on the computer), then use passages for my blog posts so I am not creating extra work.
Sometimes, I wonder if anyone reads my writing, or if a
couple of likes is enough to justify spilling my guts out there for everyone to
see. However, the way I see it, writing is transformative, not just for the
reader, but for the writer. I’ll take the blessings how they come.
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