No One Tells You About the Hardest Part of Blogging

After an intentional two-week blogging hiatus to enjoy my honeymoon and try to start settling into normal – two weeks that turned mysteriously into three – I’m sitting here at my computer thinking that now I know what the hardest part of blogging really is.

It’s not coming up with enough ideas, or trying to find a creative way to cover them. It’s not building a network or forming relationships with rockstar bloggers. It’s not building authority or linking strategically or becoming the expert you truly want to be. It’s not getting major press. It’s not keeping up with your RSS reader, actively commenting on blogs, or keeping tabs on your peers. It’s not learning the programs or learning how to hack HTML code. It’s not transitioning from one blog to another, or even trying to actively write at not one or two but three blogs. It’s not navigating the ins and outs of social networks, learning how to master Digg, or becoming famously followed on Stumble Upon. It’s not jumping into new technologies like Twitter, or putting yourself out there, name and all, for the world to judge by the words you write.

Even though all those things can be hard, time-intensive, gut-wrenching, sleep-sucking, and thankless, somehow, they’re not quite the hardest thing I’ve come across blogging.

The hardest part about blogging is something that you probably wouldn’t understand if you don’t blog, like I don’t understand about children because I’m not a parent.

Here’s what it is: The hardest part of blogging that people don’t talk about is choosing not to blog. Even if you really need a break. Even if it makes you a better, more well-rounded, more insightful person to put it aside, even if it’s just for a tiny sliver of time in the grand scheme of things.

It’s hard, and not just for one reason.

Part of it is the feeling you get, sitting back down for the first time in what seems like forever, trying to figure out where to start, to remember where you left off, to believe in your words enough to put them out there to stand up against whatever may come.

Part of it is the guilt you feel, the kind of guilt I imagine you feel when you leave your child with the sitter for the first time, knowing that they’ll be fine when you get home, but paranoid the whole while about everything that could go terribly, terribly wrong.

Part of it is how much you realize you enjoy doing other things when you’re not spending hours a day writing, researching, networking, configuring, reading, commenting.

Part of it is fear, deep, immense fear, that somehow you’ll have lost all your momentum, that your readers are gone, that you’ll have to start over again.

Part of it is how the eagerness to write again overwhelms you so much that your fingers can’t type fast enough to keep up with your brain.

It’s not easy. Believe me. Or, believe him.

But just like with most things, getting through the hardest part pays off. Even if it’s just for you, just for the private moment of celebration, the satisfaction that you learned something, shared something, and are ready to move forward.

Because when it all boils down, here’s what I learned in what has probably been the hardest part of my blogging journey so far: you have to hold yourself to your own standard first, from your own courage, to fulfill your own passion, before you get anything else out of it. Because before anybody is great at blogging, they are a nobody at it. Before you write words that reach the world, you write them for yourself.

And that’s hard but beautiful. But it’s also what makes blogging unlike any other form of expression on earth.

Personal. Powerful. Worth it. Every time. 

Share and Enjoy:

9 RESPONSES TO "NO ONE TELLS YOU ABOUT THE HARDEST PART OF BLOGGING"

James Connors

Wow - I've never really thought through it like that. You're right, it is a really powerful concept.

I was semi-cut off from my podcast when I went abroad because of the production schedule and the multitude of excuses I found not to. But then I was offered an ad buy and that got me back to the mic every week.

It's been amazing. Since getting on a schedule, I've been able to reinvent my online presence. But those first few weeks were hard and draining. I hear what you're saying.

Keep up the writing, it's great!
-James

May 24, 2008 11:13 am
Tiffany Monhollon

@ Ryan,
I've had those moments, actually many lately, where time forces me to blog less and it's tough to handle, especially at first. The guilt is overwhelming. Sometimes, life just forces you to take a break, and that feels pretty weird. The second week of my break was like that.

This last week was different, though, deeper, and different than I expected; it was a conscious choice, and that was an entirely new experience to me; that's what was transformational in the process, because I already felt so out of place not blogging for two weeks, to test myself by really pushing to keep not doing it revealed something new, something that's hard to explain.

The best I can do is to say that now I feel this new the freedom coupled with passion and focus - to know that blogging's not a task to check off, not an obligation to meet, not something to do because I need to, but rather, each time I write, it's a choice that I make, to pursue my passion, to share my voice, it's a privilege, you know, which I think once you entrench yourself in it long enough is sort of a hard but absolutely refreshingly necessary thing to be aware of.

May 20, 2008 9:12 pm
Jessica

I am currently on week one of my two week vacation and I understand what you mean. I think that it can be hard to get back in the swing of anything after you stop doing it for a little while, like working out.

May 21, 2008 3:33 am
Ryan Healy

You're so right! Last week was the first full week in 15 months that I haven't blogged and it was one of the hardest things I've ever done.

Well, actually it was easy, it was me being lazy. But it was next to impossible to avoid my subconscious telling me I must blog for 5 straight days. In retrospect I think it was a good thing and a much needed break. Now I'm ready to get back in the groove writing, commenting and reading.

Thanks

Ryan

May 20, 2008 8:27 pm
Tiffany Monhollon

@ Tim, I think everyone who writes has that thought cross their mind from time to time... :)

@ Kristina, Thanks! You know, it's a complicated thing, but I really like the analogy comparing it to training for an event... lots of levels that apply there.

May 20, 2008 8:18 pm
Kristina Summers

Welcome back and congratulations!

I totally agree. I find that when I take a break I have a hard time getting started again.
It is kind of like training for an event such as the Three-day walk. No matter how tired you get, if you keep going it is much easier than if you stop and rest and then try to get going again.
That said, if you don't take those much-needed breaks you burn out real quick and what you love quickly becomes a chore.

We should all stop and take a look around outside our cyber worlds now and then. Thanks for the reminder. Great post.

May 20, 2008 7:23 pm
Tiffany Monhollon

Thanks!

---

The first week was the hardest for me, because I was so truly paranoid about feeling like I had lost my control of my own reality, since your digital reality is something you craft and create - and I was just completely tuned out. Even though it was on purpose, it was hard.

The second week was a blur, trying to wade through getting my house set up, a new reality about how I want to spend my time now that my husband’s living with me, and realizing that all the other stuff of life was still there - the youth group, the friends, work, the blog… it was overwhelming. I simply didn’t have time to blog, so it didn’t happen.

The third week was intentional. I drafted this post, actually, a week or so ago. But I realized that by posting it, I would push myself back into that mode without choosing to intentionally process or define my new life first. It was work/life balance dilemma on steroids. So I made myself stay out of the ring for one more week. And I’m glad I did.

Looking back, it was a crucial decision: I could focus on how I wanted to choose to spend my time; or, I could delve back in, let it take over, and who knows from there.

May 20, 2008 3:44 pm
Rebecca

Welcome back and congratulations! :)

For me, your point about enjoying other activities so much more is quite accurate. I struggle with where I should put and prioritize my time. Sometimes I feel like blogging is the most important thing in the world and sometimes I feel like it's the most ridiculous. Strange... thanks for the great post!

May 20, 2008 2:39 pm
Tim

ohhh, writing. Why would anyone in their right mind try to do it?

May 20, 2008 4:40 pm

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