BACK TO BLOGGING …

“And it occurred to me that there is no such thing as blogging. There is no such thing as a blogger. Blogging is just writing — writing using a particularly efficient type of publishing technology.” Simon Dumenco, writer/blogger with Advertising Age

Well, I’m back. Short story: I’ve been “occupying” or at least boycotting my  former Internet service provider for poor customer service and for billing for services not rendered. If the proper reparations are not soon manifest, I’ll have to go on the public warpath and will probably post. Lucky you! (Sorry, but sometimes one – especially one of the 99% – has to use all the tools at hand.) Meanwhile, after much research, I found new provider that has – according to online reviews and polling of friends – a better ethic.

Most immediately, I plan to catch up with you guys and don’t plan to do that much in the way of posting my writing. First, I look forward to finding out what I missed in your blogs – your lives, your wisdom, your art – over the past month. There’s always the riches of family, friends, books, music, and shows, but there was still a vacuum created during the month I disconnected myself in protest. For your notes and comments: thank you! And now I will happily …

See you in the Blogosphere!

Jamie

SUNDAY WRITERS’ ROUNDUP #22: Happy Hobbyist Bloggers, Personality-Plus

THE GREAT FUN OF THE BLOGGING HOBBY IS IT COMBINES CREATIVITY WITH SOCIAL NETWORKING AND SELF-EDUCATION. The operative word in that statement is “fun.” So much so that …

As I write this, WordPress.com alone hosts 72,467,611 sites with over 351 million people viewing more than 2.5 billion pages each month. WordPress.com users produce about 500,000 new posts and 400,000 new comments on an average day. While not all of these are personal (hobbyist) blogs, it’s probably safe to guess that most are.  [Those stats found HERE.]

UNDER THE MICROSCOPE

professional view

Hobbyist Bloggers Are Us:  Personal blogging is a mostly American phenomenon, but it’s a recreational pastime that is gaining greater interest across the globe.

Cumulatively we are such a big chunk of humanity producing so much work and using computers for so many hours that we are the subject of disdain and admiration, debates and studies. One study by Computers in Human Behavior published in Science Direct is: Who Blogs? Personality Predictors of Bloggers*.

Using five measures of the NEO Personality Inventory, two sociological studies of American bloggers determined that individual differences based on the Big Five factors [neuroticism, extraversion, agreeableness, openness to experience, and conscientiousness] can predict who among us is likely to blog. It may not surprise you to learn that “openness to new experience” is a trait those of us who gravitate to blogging are likely to have. It might dismay you to learn that “high in neuroticism” is also one of our traits.

NONPROFESSIONAL OPINION

this would be me: I beg to differ

My best nonprofessional (I’m not a social scientist) and totally biased opinion about who blogs and why: My perception is that it is an outlet for the creative impulse, sharing information, and networking with people who have the same interests. This is an admittedly narrow view: My focus is writers and poets, amateur and professional. I don’t generally read mommy blogs or web journals or other such.

As an inveterate reader of blogs, bloggers seem to be as rich with family and friends and spiritual support as any other group with which I’m involved, but they are often solitary when it comes to an interest in poetry, reading, photography or art and so on. Even when they live in a densely populated area, there may be no access to poetry groups, writers’ groups, or book clubs. Blogs then become a meeting place for these shared interests. While we could share our poems, essays, or fiction with family and friends, this sharing may not be well-received and anyway – why?  The idea of constantly pulling out our poems or other creative efforts to show at every gathering doesn’t necessarily appeal. It feels rather like the creative version of multilevel marketing wherein you display whatever you’re selling, corner your best friends, and impose on them to buy.

It is also clear that some bloggers are using their blogs to practice their English skills, hone their writing skills, and get feedback on their work. For writers (amateur or professional) there is no better discipline than forcing oneself to produce consistently and on schedule.  Blogging provides a good structure for this. It is also an excellent place to test our more creative experiments.

VALUE ADDED

whole world living

Bloggers often engage in whole-world living. With a growing international base, what an education to visit the sites of people around the world who are just regular folks – like neighbors – and not personalities, politicians, or commercial interests. The perspective from the ground is refreshing, informative, and sometimes inspiring. There are heroes everywhere.

HONOR AMONG BLOGGERS

to paraphrase John Locke, access is not license

Just my opinion ~ Personal pride and honor as well as respect for the original creative works of others – often born of long hard hours – dictates courtesy when reblogging or otherwise introducing a work: acknowledgement, link backs, by lines, and copyrights protections are always in order regardless of circumstance.

I am proud of our blogging community where, except in very rare cases, you will find refined moral compass, personal dignity, and the rights and concerns of others are respected. Professionalism (used here in the sense of competence and conduct, not occupation) is always in order for personal bloggers like us as well as the pro-bloggers.

BALANCE

Close you computer and go for a stroll:

advice for writers from Garrison Keillor

WRITE ON – HAPPY BLOGGERS!

* Guadagno, R. E. et al., Who blogs? Personality predictors of blogging, Computers in Human Behavior (2007), doi:10.1016/j.chb.2007.09.001

·

Illustration courtesy of morgueFile.

Video uploaded to YouTube by .

TEN BLOGGERS BLOGGING …

One blogger talks to herself

Two bloggers are friendly

Three bloggers are musketeers

Four bloggers rock

Five bloggers roll

Six bloggers laugh together

Seven bloggers seriously debate

Eight bloggers start awarding

Nine bloggers advocate

Ten bloggers are a virtual community

Community: a beautiful thing, a force for change

Blog on …Pass it on …

Life is still happening and it’s been impossible to get back to my normal blogging schedule, but I have peaked in at your blogs and Facebook accounts as I can. Thank you for many smiles, memorable poems, much cherished comments, useful information, and often inspired and inspiring stories. Kudos to all. This post is for you, my valued blogger friends. Many blessings. Jamie

Photo credit ~ morgueFile