wongaBlog
1Oct/084

Five years of blogging

My little blog is five years old today. Ahhhh. Please excuse a brief metabloggy interlude.

This site started when a friend of mine began blogging and I thought 'that's a good idea. I'll steal it'. So I did, with a dubious design involving unicorns - really, I have no explanation for this - based around Movable Type 2.something. The name 'wongaBlog' came a few days later, based entirely on a short story I'd written in which the main character had a site called 'wonkaBlog', I think because he liked chocolate.

Since then it's become a big part of my life, and I passed 3000 posts last month. It's also, in no particular order::

  • briefly bathed in a pagerank of 5
  • been banned in libraries for swearing
  • pissed off two girlfriends - I think both eventually stopped reading entirely
  • been made fun of by the Guardian
  • regularly attacked by Russian spammers, which is quite the problem for my webhost but as close as I'm going to get to being in Spooks
  • served as a terribly cowardly way to ask someone out (not linking to this one, but it's in there somewhere)
  • become the go-to-blog for Googlers of 'wank-a-thon'.

There's lots more, but those are the ones that popped into my head while typing.

I love blogging. It gives me a chance to write, which is pretty much my favourite thing, and it's also cathartic as hell. It helps me stay in touch with far-flung friends, as well as acting as a reasonably decent diary. And the very best aspect of blogging is a cliché, although none the less true for it: it's the people you meet. I found myself in Bloggers4Labour a few years ago (not quite sure how, but I'm glad I did!), and I've met - both electronically and physically - lots of lovely people as a result. The same with various atheist / skeptical sites. It's great, and makes me happy.

I don't remember starting with a blogging goal, and I've never really developed one. Norm's Friday profilees are always asked for one piece of advice to a novice blogger, and a common reply is 'know what you want to write, and who for'. I've never done that - this blog has always been for whatever I feel like at the time, with no plan or target audience - but I can see the attraction. For me the hardest part of blogging is discovering you've been read by people you respect, but don't know personally. For a while it's nigh on impossible not to second-guess yourself and think 'oh god, what must they think of that' every time you click 'post'. I can happily research and write a long piece on the problems of organised religion, say, then follow it up with a post on why I'm scared of women, or a snapshot of a particularly fascinating twig, or something. I've never come close to stopping, but it's the thought of boring the hell out of interesting people that's given me most pause.

I know this is silly. One of the best features of blogging is that it's passive - if people don't want to read, they don't have to. It's why the occasional hate-spewing trolls are so funny. But related, and trickier, is that many, if not most, people I know are by now aware of this site, and often mention it to me. Which is great, but does sometimes complicate things. I've a few posts permanently assigned to Drafts (over 100 at last count) because I never quite had the nerve to post, knowing they'd resonate with particular people. Sometimes it's polite to spare people's feelings when there's no reason to post - I was at a really dull party this evening - but more often it's over ideological disagreements. And it's silly to worry about discussing those.

So my aim for the future is to worry less about what people will think. I shall write whatever I fancy, and if people stick around, great, if not, that's fine too. And as long as I'm not rude and feel I can reasonably back up the more contentious stuff, that'll do too - if I'm wrong, as I often am, people can tell me why.

Ok, enough wankery. I figure a five-year anniversary is an ok excuse, but I promise not to do this again for a long while. Incidentally, I was going to title this post after the appropriate anniversary material, so I hit Wikipedia for the list and discovered that four years is a 'silk' anniversary - how nice is that - while five years is 'wood'. Wood. That's crap. Plus I have no intention of ever typing 'anniversary of wood'.

Finally, just to say thank you to anyone who comments, links to me from their own site, or just drops by and reads anything I write. It's really very nice of you.

11May/062

Lack of catharsis

I've been blogging for around 2.5 years, and have reached the stage where I start composing posts without even realising. Whenever anything even slightly interesting happens (I think it's interesting, anyway) I'll find that sentences are popping into my head before it's even over. I quite like this. The disadvantage to this habit are that some things are unbloggable. There's very little I'm unwilling to share - I realised a while back that being completely open is the only way that works for me - but there's the occasional thing1 that I'm not quite ready to talk about, and thoughts or events regarding other people can also be problematic. The part of my brain that is always thinking of the next post, however, doesn't talk to the part of my brain that makes judgement calls, so I can sometimes end up with fully-formed posts floating about my head, never to be released. This is surprisingly frustrating :-) Do any other bloggers get this?

  1. I'm balking every time I type 'thing', but it's the best word I can think of right now... []
17Oct/050

How my website stands up to slightly strange design criteria

Just looking through web-guru Jakob Nielsen's Top Ten Design Mistakes for Weblogs. I don't do very well :-)

  1. No Author Biographies
    I'm ok here: the in-need-of-revamping About Me page covers that
  2. No Author Photo
    Really? That's a problem? I've added one to the bio page - there's no need to put it in plain sight :-)
  3. Nondescript Posting Titles
    Ho hum. Quite often they only make sense to me.
  4. Links Don't Say Where They Go
    Well, yes. I do that too. I should probably work on that.
  5. Classic Hits are Buried
    I.e. the best posts aren't easily accessible. I have the tagging options, but I guess this could be better.
  6. The Calendar is the Only Navigation
    Again there's the tagging, but it does need improving.
  7. Irregular Publishing Frequency
    Heh. Think I'm ok on this one.
  8. Mixing Topics
    Bit of a dodgy one if you ask me. I have no problem with mixing topics as I like the conversational style, although will separate anything that takes more than a paragraph to say. Ish. Sometimes.
  9. Forgetting That You Write for Your Future Boss
    I really don't care. Maybe I should, but I don't.
  10. Having a Domain Name Owned by a Weblog Service
    Oh, bollocks. This seems like pure snobbery to me. The argument is that other people control your website, but that only applies if they do anything that bothers you. Blogspot has no pop-up ads or other annoyances currently. If you're hosting with them and ads are introduced, you can leave if that's not what you want. This reminds me of the people I've heard complaining about the newly-resized Guardian because 'they can't take it seriously' - I'd suggest judging websites by their content rather than the domain name.