• Carnival of Family Life

    The Carnival's "In the Movies" Edition can be found at All Rileyed Up! Drop by and see if you can correctly identify the movie from which each quote comes! Next week, the Summer Memories Edition of the Carnival will be hosted at The Frugal Homesteading Blog! Click here to submit your entry for next Monday, August 18, 2008's Carnival by Sunday, August 17, 2008, at 12:01 a.m. Pacific time. Would you like to host a future edition of the Carnival? Review the schedule here and drop a note using the Contact Form!

“Matt,” as he is known to his teachers and classmates, begins his high school junior year tomorrow, but we’ll be renting a larger tux for this year’s prom. He needed a completely new school wardrobe following a spring/summer growth spurt.  Chemistry, Advanced Placement U.S. History, Honors English, Algebra II, Advanced Placement Spanish, Bible, and an elective are on the agenda. We’ll see about basketball after the semester gets underway.


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“Authentic” simply means genuine, real, not phony or copied. It is a word that has, unfortunately, become a cliched “buzz word” and, along the way, one of my least favorite. Oprah tells us to live our “authentic life,” and other pop psychologists tell us to go out and look for our “authentic self.” (I wasn’t even aware that my “authentic self” was missing.)

So when I saw the headline, I nearly closed the browser window without reading the post. But I’m glad I resisted that urge and encourage you to read The Authentic Blogging Manifesto by Maria Gajewski at Never the Same River Twice.

Gajewski took a full month off blogging. She did not plan her blogging exile, but found herself having an “an existential blogging crisis” from which she emerged with new resolve. She describes how she became a “Stumbleupon Slave,” driven to blog solely for the purpose of generating traffic to her site. But as so many other bloggers have also learned, readers who found her site via the various social media outlets were merely engaging in the “equivalent of internet channel surfing.” Brief spikes in the number of visitors to her site on a particular day did not translate into a core contingent of loyal readers.

After her sabbatical, Gajewski resumed blogging, buoyed by her acceptance of the fact that “blogging malaise” can only be overcome systematically, over time, by changing one’s outlook and approach.”’

Her four-point plan is:

  • Step 1: Stop Pretending That I Know Everything
  • Step 2: Talk to People Who Know More Than Me
  • Step 3: Share What I Learn With People Who Know Less Than Me
  • Step 4: Put My Energy Into Communication, Not Traffic

Gajewski has even drafted a “Mission Statement” for herself:

Blogging is an activity done by people for other people. Blogging is a form of communication. From now on, I will blog for humans, not for search engines or social media websites. This may or may not result in any type of monetary compensation, but money will never be my primary motivation in blogging. I will market my blog by communicating with people who may share my interests.

Darren Rowse at Problogger discussed Gajewski’s article, noting two aspects of blogging that he deems imperative:

  • Balance is Important: Bloggers can become obsessed with one or more aspects of the task and lose perspective.
  • Write For People: It seems self-evident, but Rowse reminds bloggers to “keep your reader firmly in mind as you write and aim to write something meaningful (both to them and you) that really communicates to them and enhances their lives in some way. It’s a pretty simple tip and one that we all know - yet it is amazing how many of us become distracted from this truth and need to be reminded of what it’s all about.”In fact, the Daily Writing Tips article actually lists reason number four as “Your writing will improve.” Above, I paraphrased the rationale offered in the explanatory text rather than setting forth the subheading verbatim because, as phrased, it merely restates, but does not advance the argument.

In actuality, the topic is not new. It is simply cloaked in different terminology. Writers are continuously in search of — and write about — context, balance, focus, and making the best use of every spare moment. Writers are constantly revising their goals, contemplating new projects, and, hopefully, experimenting by employing new techniques, delving into different genres, etc.

But as with any other endeavor, in order to become a better writer, you should engage in an ongoing evaluation of your accomplishments to date and why you did or did not achieve the goals you set for yourself at the outset. And if, like Gajewski, you find yourself in the midst of an “an existential blogging [or writing] crisis,” a break may be the most effective way to work through it.

For me, “writing authentically” means writing honestly and with integrity. When I first began blogging in 2005, I found the single-most difficult aspect to be the unpredictability of my reading audience. It is literally impossible to know who will happen to find my site among the sixty-five million or so other blogs online. Unlike my professional endeavors in which I write for a specific audience and gauge my efforts accordingly, blogging has led to some fascinating exchanges with my readers. I have learned a great deal from the feedback received. Writing for “everyman” is challenging and, over the years, has helped me understand and fine tune my own “voice,” my unique perspective on the topics about which I write. Bluntly, nothing else succeeds.

I also tend, unlike so many other bloggers, not to write about the mundane details of my life. I have written articles about events and people that have shaped my life, influenced and educated me, and posted family photos, but I do not share many details about my day-to-day life. Yes, time is a consideration. I rarely have time during the workweek to write, so that is an important consideration. But more critically, I do not believe anyone would find discussions about the ongoing minutiae of my life the least bit interesting. I would much rather read — and write about — more important matters.

So my blogging “Mission Statement” is pretty straight-forward:

Blogging is about communicating ideas and building online relationships, but, more importantly, relaxation and stress-relief. When it is no longer fun, I will discontinue my blogging activities. I will continue to write for the people who are kind enough to stop by my site and read what I have written there because I have neither the time nor inclination — not to mention skill — to write deliberately for search engines or social media websites. I do not earn my daily living by blogging — the minuscule sum I receive each month from advertising pays only for my domain names and site hosting. I market my blog by communicating with people who share my interests and endeavor to refrain from boring them with the drab, unimportant details of my daily existence. Rather, I will write abut life’s larger issues, including the art of writing, in a forthright, veracious manner.

What does “writing authentically” or “authentic writing” mean to you? Have you ever experienced “an existential blogging [or writing] crisis” and, if so, how did you work through it? Or did you? What does your writing/blogging “Mission Statement” look like?


Also published at Write Anything.

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1. The last meal I had at a restaurant was teriyaki chicken, rice, and potstickers, accompanied by good lunchtime conversation with a colleague.

2. Shopping is something I intensely dislike.

3. The full moon always inspires me to howl just to drive my kids nuts.  Sophie usually joins in.

4. Would you like some cheese with that whine? is one of my favorite expressions.

5. Sometimes it’s best to remember your mother’s advice: “Pick your battles carefully!”  That often requires just letting it go, trusting in karma to resolve the issue . . . and moving on with your life!

6. “Sex and the City” is the best only movie I’ve seen so far this year!

7. And as for the weekend, tonight I’m looking forward to relaxing, tomorrow my plans include water aerobics, practicing my flute, and attending a good friend’s annual swim party , and Sunday, I want to sleep late, enjoy my flute lesson, and get caught up on the laundry since Matthew starts school with a three-day field trip next Thursday.


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We all seemed to have insomnia last Friday night. I snapped these about 3:00 a.m., as #1Son and Buddy were having a very serious middle-of-the-night conversation.


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Five Reasons Why Blogging Improves Your Writing” are advanced at Daily Writing Tips:

  1. You’ll get into the habit of writing regularly;
  2. Instant feedback lets you know how you’re doing;
  3. Having readers for your work is a big motivation;
  4. The more you practice, the better you will write; and
  5. Blogs are an ideal medium for experimentation.

Not so fast, according to Miss Write, who lists reasons “Why Blogging Doesn’t Necessarily Improve Your Writing,” including:

  1. Practice doesn’t always make perfect;
  2. Bloggers receive Insufficient constructive feedback; and
  3. Blogging is frequently done in an informal setting and manner, lacking standards and expectations.

Both articles assert arguments with which I agree and disagree.

Blogging regularly does provide an opportunity to practice and develop good writing skills, but the type of feedback bloggers receive generally differs greatly from the criticism provided by a writing teacher or via peer critiques. Miss Write correctly points out that readers do not highlight grammatical, punctuation, usage or other errors in blog posts: “Comments rarely contain corrections, and if they did, they’re probably the seeds of a flame war.” If you read a blog regularly, it is common to see the author make the same mistakes repeatedly. For instance, one blogger comes to mind who regularly confuses “lose” with “loose” and has written several posts about her efforts to “loose weight.” Thus far, it appears that none of her readers have stepped forward to correct her error.

In fact, the Daily Writing Tips article actually lists reason number four as “Your writing will improve.” Above, I paraphrased the rationale offered in the explanatory text rather than setting forth the subheading verbatim because, as phrased, it merely restates, but does not advance the argument.

Having an audience is a motivating factor, but keeping readers interested is just as important. Cultivating a regular readership requires that you offer a high-quality product. How many times have you visited a blog, read a couple of posts and, because of the poor writing quality exhibited, closed the browser window and never returned? I do not have time to wade through a poorly written post in search of the message the writer clumsily tried to convey. There are simply not enough hours in the day and far too many well-written blogs competing for my attention. So while practice does generally lead to improvement, I am of the opinion that anyone who seeks to be a truly great writer needs more guidance, feedback, and direction than can be derived from the readers of one’s blog.

The style of writing found in blogs is frequently extremely informal, especially in personal blogs. “Blog-speak” is common and abbreviations abound because entries are often completed an published in a hurry without being proofread or edited. “A blog post, . . . is quick to write and free to publish: if it fails, you’ve not lost much. Blogging gives you the freedom to experiment, to try out something new,” so Daily Writing Tips advocates adopting a new form or style of writing. That’s an excellent suggestion because the blogosphere is a wild, untamed frontier where writers have the freedom to find or modify their unique voice. However, even within the various genres, overarching principles of structure, form, and technique still apply. And a dieter is still on a crusade to lose, not loose, weight.

What do you think? Is blogging one way to become a better writer? If you blog, what has your experience been? Do you believe that blogging has improved your writing? If so, how?


Also published at Write Anything.

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