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Comments

Brandon Satrom

"I’ll keep working to calm myself by unplugging periodically and reassuring myself that there’s far more value in time spent writing for a book over a blog post."

Great encouragement, Mick. I have tried to do the same of late, and have found that my (thrice-updated since November) blog is no burden compared to the feeling of an almost (so close I can taste it) completed draft of a novel.

Perhaps it's just me, but there really is no joy in blogging compared to the pleasure of agonizing over every word in a short story or novel and, after draft after draft and endless hours of work, watching the words on the page snap together in a way you couldn't possibly describe before seeing it. The end result it something that is both more emotive and evocative than any stream of consciousness thing I have produced in any other medium.

Social media could never top that. It's coffee shop conversation up against box seats at the Globe Theater.

Mitch

Yeah, but how long since you've played the piano? Huh? That's important too. Don't make me mention the garden. (and don't blame snow for anything)

:)

Mick

Thanks, Brandon. It's always good to reflect on the personal benefits of the practice.

Mitch, you forgot latch-hooking. I've found there isn't a worldly concern a little latch-hook can't soothe.

Tina

This is so good to hear. I am not alone! I beat myself up all the time that I don't write more thoughtful posts. In some ways blogging just makes me feel like I'm wasting creativity that I should be saving for my fiction.

Ann Voskamp @ Holy Experience

What does it mean when you revisit a post often, quietly, but its words leave you with none?

Maybe silence is best.

I've been contemplating this column in the Chronicle Review by Yale Professor, William Deresiewicz: The End of Solitude... http://chronicle.com/free/v55/i21/21b00601.htm

Though deeply stirred by his startling, compelling words, I haven't written a blog post about it, not yet... too busy working on the harder words.

And then again... maybe just silence is better.

Ann Voskamp @ Holy Experience

(And what's been sitting on your hard drive for six years? If these blog posts are but a shadow.... )

Angela Meuser

Ironic that I find this post right after sending you a friend request on Facebook.

spaghettipie

I beg to differ. Speed Racing trash talk absolutely has a positive influence on my writing . . .

Mick

Thanks for the article, Ann. Very good food for thought. It reminded me of this older one from The Atlantic: Is Google Making Us Stupid? http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200807/google

We need to grapple with these issues. Especially as writers striving for good words.

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