Hey, remember when we all used to blog?
Let me take you way, way back to 2007. You could still buy and sell a house for exorbitant prices, and there were still banks that would give you loans for that. You probably actually had a job, you know, working for some company that employed real live people, instead of spending all your time launching small businesses or polishing your resume and carpet-bombing employers with it. Twitter was around, but only Left Coast liberal elitists used it. Not us normal, real, working Americans! Not bloggers. We thought “what in the world would I say in only 140 characters? Give me my Blogger/WordPress/Movable Type/Other!”
Maybe that was just me?
Times changed fast, didn’t they? I picked up Twitter, became a heavy user, and then 2010 became the year that my blog died. I’m blaming Twitter, whether it’s honestly responsible or not. I have made over 11,000 tweets, but the quality of my blog posts is generally higher than my tweets. Overwhelmingly, my blog has provided more value to my readers than Twitter has. But Twitter is like information crack. Need another hit? Oh look, another 400 updates to your stream. And writing a tweet takes 1/100th the effort of penning a blog post.
It wasn’t long after I signed up that I found myself doing nothing but Twitter and ignoring my beautiful, inspiring, educational, and—above all else—humble blog. Instead of writing posts that connected resources together and shared them in a meaningful context, I tweeted links, sometimes without any context. Talk about instant gratification though. People retweet a hell of a lot more than they comment on blogs. You can watch in real time as something funny or clever spreads virally from your friends out into groups of people you never even heard of with vaguely disturbing personal profile photos. You really get the sense that people are listening on Twitter. It’s harder to know when people are reading your blog unless they are commenting on it or retweeting your announcement of the post. Nothing satisfies the need for attention quite like retweets. They’re dead easy to do, but empty of real conversation generally. They’re a medium, not a message.
It’s not just what Twitter has done to my sharing habits that disturbs me. It’s the way my thoughts themselves have changed. For a while now, I’ve felt my thoughts turning much more shallow, and I can probably only blame that partially on my heavy use of Twitter. But it doesn’t take generating real, actual content on Twitter to get that little dopamine buzz of attention. You can just share a link from your Google Reader. Or retweet someone else. I didn’t just become a consumer of information—I became a lazy syndicator, with the false feeling that I was generating content when all I have really been doing is shifting around someone else’s content (coincidentally, this also describes a bunch of internet news sites that will remain unnamed here).
I’m not going to beat myself up about it. At the same time I was spending more time on Twitter and less time on my blog, I was launching my web design company Clockpunk Studios. And Twitter has some very large positives associated with it. It has been invaluable in making business contacts. I’ve gotten more than one client from a Twitter recommendation.
So look, Twitter’s not all bad. It’s not all good. It’s just a new thing that I need to balance along with all the other things. Maybe you’re struggling with that too? Let’s talk about this. Has Twitter killed your blog too? Head to the comments! And keep it civil. If you just want to make fun of people who use Twitter, find some place else to do it. Like your own Twitter account!
I’ve sworn to myself—because I apparently enjoy making ridiculous oaths to myself—that I would relaunch my blog before the year is out. The new design is only half done. You’ll notice an absolutely lack of sidebars. But we’re gonna focus on content for a while here, and let those other features fill in with time.
I’m starting with this post (which I am writing 5 days ahead of publication, as a part of a general effort to a: spend more time on blog posts, and b: get the content log rolling ahead of me to build momentum). I’ve worked up a tentative weekly schedule, which will certainly change once I’ve gotten into it a bit and begin to understand what is working and what isn’t. When I blogged regularly, I kept a 3 day a week schedule, but that would be too easy to slip out of now after being so out of habit. Regular, daily content generation is the only thing that’s going to build up my blogging muscles again. So here it is:
My New Improved Blogging Schedule!
Monday: Personal Anecdotes
This is the day you won’t want to miss if you’re really super interested in the day to day of my life as a small business owner, aspiring midlist writer, and sometimes photographer. I’ll be digging into my past in these posts with a general goal of trying to understand how I became who I am today and how that impacts who I want to become. Of course, it will all be written in my trademark humorous style. You will laugh, you will cry, and you will wonder why you became friends with such a blatant narcissist.
Tuesday: Inspiration
This is where I’ll share the inspirational bits of things I’ve collected over the previous week. This will include snippets of cool web design, awesome quotes in writing, cool comic book panels, and so on. Stuff that inspires me to be a better artist, photographer, writer, and human being. And not only will I share them—I’ll talk about why they inspire me. The goal here is to get beyond surface level thoughts and back into that critical thinking mode that got me through liberal arts college with a solid B– average.
Wednesday: Tutorials!
I do a lot of stuff. Sometimes, other people want to know how to do that stuff too. I’ll be writing up various creative tutorials for Wednesdays. This will run the usual gamut of topics, but expect a lot of website related stuff. Your feedback will guide the direction of these posts, so if there’s something in particular you want to know about, then speak up. As a comment or on Twitter. Either way.
Thursday: The Week in Links
I have to give myself at least one easy day! I’ll run down a list of links of interest that you might enjoy that I’ve gathered up from various resources throughout the week. I’ll even go a step further than the old Delicious.com auto posts and actually provide some context to the links! And they won’t be posted daily, so you’ll probably have seen and read every single one already, but hey, who knows…
Friday: Lesson Learned
Finally, I’ll look back on the week and talk about a lesson I’ve learned, with a particular emphasis on my self-employed lifestyle and running my business. But I reserve the right to make it lessons I’ve learned in just about everything.
So that’s that. For now.
It takes remarkable ego to write a blog at all. My ego’s going to have to grow a little bit to manage 5 days a week of hopefully scintillating content. But with a little fertilizing in the form of feedback from my friends and complete strangers who clicked through from a Google search for “Yogi Bear foot fetish”, I think my ego will grow and grow until it wins 1st prize at the County Fair.
So here we grow!
Tags: blogging, blogging schedule, inspiration, personal life, twitter


















![bg15_320a[1]](http://www.jeremiahtolbert.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/bg15_320a1-210x300.jpg)
Excellent post. My thoughts have been revolving around the same issues for a while now. I don’t think I could put together 5 solid posts a week, but I’m going to try 1 or 2 for now–at least something more substantial than embedding a youtube video. That would be a start anyways.
Thanks! We used to be real content generators, but for me at least, Twitter has led me astray. It’s time we go back to our roots and write something that takes more than 140 characters. I still have you in my RSS, I think. I look forward to seeing what you write next.
I’ve kept Twitter and my blog going side-by-side. I think they can work well together. But I’ll say this, I love my blog much more than I love Twitter. Which is easy, because I don’t love Twitter. Twitter is crowd noise, and its starting to become white noise, filtered out by my consciousness. And I’ve noticed the interaction levels on Twitter dipping steeply. I think blogs are here to stay, but Twitter my disappear as quickly as it appeared.
Glad to hear you’ve kept both going, Damien.
I’ve definitely noticed the trend of decreasing interaction on Twitter as well. As more people pile on, it becomes less of a place to talk and more of a place to just broadcast. I’m not sure I agree that it’s going to go away any time soon, because it’s unprecedented, and I can’t predict what will happen there. Blogs have precedents that have stood the test of time, so I agree there. Blogs are here to stay in some form for as long as people feel the need to write on the web in a conversational style.
Good points all around. I have let my LiveJournal fall apart because I don’t think to use it, and I don’t think to read my friends posts. My ability to read for length on the web is even shorter now because most of what I do is Twitter and Facebook. Facebook is even worse that Twitter, because while there are a few truly useful things on it (for me, Unapologetically Episcopalian offers morning, noon, and evening prayer offerings on their Facebook feed, and it’s a great reminder to stop and pray), most of what I see are game updates.
I may have to try a blog schedule again. Thank you for the inspiration to do something with this social media thing we’ve been burdened with.
My pleasure. I use Facebook lightly, but I still have some good conversations there from time to time with people I don’t interact with elsewhere. One thing I did to make Facebook more useful and less noisy was to methodically turn off all the game updates. You can hide them from your stream by clicking the X in the right hand corner of each– it lets you hide the person or the app. Mostly I hide the app. Mostly.
Seems like a lot of good blogs in my reader have been lost, or at least knocked into a coma, due to Twitter. It’s a shame, but I’ve also found plenty of other new blogs to read through Twitter, so I can’t be too upset with Twitter. For all I know some of those blogs have been lost to Farmville!
I do hold out hope that Twitter, and others like Facebook, can give non-bloggers a little taste of self-publishing that leaves them wanting more. That is the effect microblogging has been having on me. There are plenty of thoughts and ideas that just don’t fit into a 140 characters and it has left me feeling cramped, so Twitter really pushed me to want to start blogging.
You’ve set an ambitious schedule for yourself, I have a hard time sticking to my own modest goal of writing one blog post a week. I’m considering a weekly schedule training to do a webcomic eventually, and it’s given me more sympathy for the troubles they have staying on schedule.
When some people return to blogging, they declare they are quitting Twitter entirely or cutting way back. Are you planning to change your tweeting habits to accommodate more blogging, or just sleep less?
Yes, definitely cutting back. I’ve already been cutting back, particularly on my reading it. I used to leave it on all day, but now I only turn it on and look at it and then shut it down again. So I’ve cut my usage entirely.
Interesting thoughts there on the progression to blogging from Twitter. I wonder if it goes twitter->tumblr->real blog. An illustrator or comic artist could get a funny strip doing one of those descent of man parodies here.
I try to restrict my reading too, and just keep those I follow pretty well pruned, even some that I really like to read that just have too high a volume of tweets.
Yeah, I could see all the new Tumblr and Posterous mini-blogs being a result of micro-blogging. I’d love to see The Oatmeal’s take on the evolution of bloggers, I wonder if he would declare spam blogs the dominate lifeforms?
I read something at one point on the American Scene that argued that we’re predisposed to be drawn Twitter, etc. in the same way that we’re predisposed to consume candy. Like fat and sugar, social contact used to be relatively scarce, so we evolved with a gorge reflex. Oops! Empty calories.
I like your oath, Jeremy. Have fun.
Sometimes it seems to be a universal law of the human experience that things are good for us in small doses are horrible for us in large doses, but we’re predisposed to want them in the most massive dose possible.
Thanks, Michael.
Yes. And then the flood of Tweets stopped me using Twitter as well. I kept my blog ticking over but it’s been languishing in need of a reboot (it doesn’t help that SFSignal and io9 are doing what I intended to and which so much content.) I tried the schedule thing for a while at the start of the year, it worked for a bit, now I’m back on “whenever I feel like it” schedule, I didn’t like the pressure.
However, very recently I’ve discovered some new blogs that has really reignited my faith in blogs. Personal blogs, with a voice and something interesting to say.
Having said that, when I started it blogging it was very definitely web-logging, just talking about other links. Which Twitter does quite well. But I’m bored with Twitter. Definitely too much noise.
It sounds like you need to reinvent Big Dumb Object to be a personal blog, focusing on what you uniquely have to say.
When I wrote this post, I didn’t realize how many people were growing dissatisfied with Twitter. I wonder if it’s just among the circles we all move in, or if the internet at large is finding it equally as difficult to use.
I think the concept of Twitter just doesn’t scale. The more your connections grow, the more the site grows, the more the whole idea falls apart.
Yes, I think you’re right about BDO, it definitely needs to contain more of me.
From my experience the people disatisfied with Twitter have been using it for a while, and quite technical usually. I’ve thought of maybe just reducing who I follow down to a few people, but if they tweet loads then you still have the timezone lag. For staying in touch with friends it’s good, for reading interesting stuff, not so great.
Anyway, good luck with the new format!
Thanks! We’ll see how it works out. This week and part of next week is already written up, so I’m off to a good start.
[…] Yesterday, I talked about how I felt as if my thoughts were growing more shallow with time. Part of this fear has been also that my reactions to the world have grown less unique. Have they really? Or have I just realized how many more people there are that react like I do? Then there’s the fearful thought that perhaps I never had unique reactions at all. […]
What the…this site has nothing to do with yogi bear’s feet. How cheap *hits the back button*
Just kidding. Interesting post. I’ve also been trying to come up with a schedule for my blog since I’ve been told readers like that. I want to make life easier on all of my threes of readers.
Also…someone had to take the obvious joke here *straightens her captain hat*