bottledworder

Easy reading is damn hard writing Blogging since 2012

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My Blog Audience

Perhaps it’s because I’m still new to blogging that I haven’t lost the sense of wonder yet. It’s summer here and things are kind of nice late at night.

I was sitting at my computer in a room with a big glass window. The city skyline was spread out in front of me glittering like a long necklace across the empty river.

I was reading a blog on a topic similar to one I’d written the previous week–Cafes and the city. I suggested to a fellow blogger (who had said he couldn’t work in cafes because he found them noisy) that he could sit in the park and write if he felt disturbed working in cafes so much.

Summer. Empty benches. Park. It all came so naturally to me.

Then his reply came. He would if he could. He was in the middle of the “deep darkness of winter”.

I had a sudden change of perspective. A snowy park. No leaves on trees. Bitter cold. Moonlight shining blue on the snow at this very moment I had my finger on the typewriter. Some winter wonderland at night.

Then he wrote again. He said he was in the library.

Shift in perspective. Library? What kind of library?

Perhaps a library in a very cold place with small windows and wooden panels and very old, ancient books and an even older librarian in monocles. People shaking the snow off their boots as they entered.

No. I didn’t seriously think that but imagination did wander. And when imagination wanders, it tends to think of the person at the other end as the opposite of everything you are. With the small adjustment of a modern computer and keyboard hidden somewhere in that scenario so it won’t jar with the image.

Yesterday, another blogger asked if I was Canadian. I can’t think why but I did go over the details I’d mentioned in my blog to check what could make him think that. His imagination also must have wandered. He’s either Canadian himself and felt some camaraderie with me or the opposite of Canadian (whatever that is) and thought I was for some reason.

Blogging. It makes the world unfold in strange ways and makes different worlds intersect.

There are others I’ve interacted with. I read a blog last week by a mommy who was writing as her kids were dangerously balancing themselves on the window sill playing a game. A commenter same day liked my blog. I found her profile said she was a reverend. A chef at a restaurant wanted some feedback on his writing in the comments section. Someone somewhere had found my blog searching for “business suits for dogs” (can’t think why anyone would look for that–they were the Google search terms on my stats page). He’d come up with my It’s a Dog’s Life.

People I would never have exchanged writing and reading with in my regular life.

It’s been a strange experience seeing the views of the blog by country unfold one by one. For me, at first it’s usually the US. Then it slowly shows the UK, then Canada and then a lot of other countries unfold. I know that all of that is not necessarily accurate since there could be many countries that use proxy servers in other locations. My technical knowledge is not strong enough to understand how but that only deepens the romance.

There’s many countries I’ve seen and many I haven’t. As I sit at my desk here, I imagine someone in a three wheeler auto rickshaw in Kolkata half sitting, half hanging out of the front seat next to the driver, deftly manoeuvring his knees and hands through the rush hour traffic so neighbouring cars don’t hit him, taking a glance at my blog on his smart phone screen. I see a high-level executive on the back seat of his car in Mumbai interrupted while reading the blog as he yells at the driver to overtake the car in front. I see a bored student in Lexington, Kentucky, looking up from his Calculus worksheet during his late night dinner at Chipotle  looking over the pictures on my blog as he waits for his study group to arrive. I see people in London, in Toronto, in innumerable other places.

Then there’s many places I’ve never seen. They are fixed in my mind like still paintings before I have to shake myself off from my reverie. A rice farmer in a paddy field in Indonesia. Folks in pointy hats next to unloading ships in Singapore (this must be from some British Victorian sketches I’d seen somewhere), a woman in traditional dress at a tea ceremony in Japan (that’s probably from the package of an expensive brand of tea I bought from an upscale grocery store), a man with a big animal standing next to a tree in Botswana. . .

Of course, rationally, I know these are not the people reading my blog. Many don’t exist at all outside my stereotypical imagination. These are only personifications of my ignorance thrust upon those statistical numbers.

But somehow I was writing for them. I was writing for the guy standing next to the loading docks in Singapore telling him what the dogs were like in New York. I was telling the guy in the auto rickshaw what cafes looked like in New York in case he liked to have a look and ever wanted to come. I knew those people who were in university libraries in the US (or the UK, or Canada) would know immediately what I was talking about when I mentioned libraries that had ceilings three stories high, escalators  and walls of glass. What study groups were. But there would be many who wouldn’t know.

I was wrong. Perhaps the guy  in Singapore has libraries with better escalators and newer glass than the ones I saw here. Perhaps the guy in Kolkata was going to his study group meeting that day. He had seen more places in the world than I ever did. Perhaps you, who are reading this now, have ridden innumerable auto rickshaws and didn’t need that scene painted so vividly and thought it was a redundant detail.

Who am I writing for? Do I even know my audience?

One day I had a comment from a woman in New York. She was fascinated by my blog on cafes. She worked in direct marketing, lived in New York, but had never been to a cafe. She was very happy with me for having painted a picture for her about life in a cafe, so to speak.

I was surprised. I never realized that people who were so near could also be far. There were many who had never dropped in ever into the realm of my experience and needed the details.

Then again, being on the internet makes one think one has the world in one’s hand. A blue ball that fits in nicely into the palm of your hand that you can speak to. That it’s patiently listening.

There are so many spots on the map on the stats page always dark for me. In my case, it’s most of Africa and South America and a big part of Asia.

I’ve been thinking of the blog as a great genre for conversation. But as far as those parts are concerned, I’ve been talking to myself while they, certainly, have been talking to themselves. In a language that’s not English. In a medium that doesn’t involve a keyboard and a screen. In a voice that does not require writing.

Or perhaps my concerns are far away from anything they are concerned about. Or ever were. Or ever should be. Or perhaps they just think I’m boring.

Even the people from the parts that are highlighted are probably mostly people like me, who can and like putting ideas in sentence, sentences into paragraphs, paragraphs into grammatically consistent wholes, putting ideas out there by being able and willing to click a box and compose a blog.

That’s a very small percentage of the world, I’m sure.

I wonder who my audience is and who isn’t. Guess I’ll never know.

English: A Sennheiser Microphone

[For those who are waiting for The Writer (Part 3) after The Writer (Part 1) and The Writer (Part 2): It’s coming. Have to get back into the funny mood before I return to that.]

371 responses to “My Blog Audience”

  1. roomaomao Avatar

    Got some awesome comments continuing on with the theme of your post. As for myself , I show up on your stats as Absecon , New Jersey but I’ve never been there. I’m sitting in a kindergarten in Shanghai passing my break time away. Gotta proxy it. The Chinese government doesn’t want the Chinese the follow the rest of the world’s blogging.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      It becomes more and more complicated, doesn’t it?

      Like

      1. roomaomao Avatar

        Thanks modern life! Haha

        Like

  2. Jean Avatar

    If we obsess too much about our potential audience and why they would be interested in our pithy blog content, we would not get very far with our blogging. But not respecting your potential audience is worse because one then fails to write well for broad readership.

    Like

  3. a beautiful mess Avatar

    Reading your words is much like discovering what romance feels like for the very first time.

    I so rarely find myself taken on a journey as I process a random blogger’s thoughts. Not to assimilate you into some stereotypical projection of the notion that since I’ve never crossed your path and you’ve never crossed mine, you classify as random, but I digress…

    It’s a lost art, I’m slowly discovering: the ability to take your audience on a trip to some unfamiliar and exciting destination through the power of words breeding themselves as they travel from your brain into space and time, through technology. I’m filled with the deepest awe, the purest wonder, when it happens. It seems that the faster we rush through the jigsaw moments of our days, the less we rely on imagery and imagination, and the more we come to depend on scheduled, spoon-fed, superficial stories that require nothing of our already over-stimulated attention span. It’s not something we even notice anymore… Until time pauses–if only for a moment–and a writer comes into our world with striking precision of insight, a novel idea (or a new take on a familiar one) that strikes a chord deep within us and registers on a compositional level and suddenly we remember that there is magic in this world… That is such an incredible feeling. You write with that kind of purity and power.

    For what it’s worth, I’m a stay-home mother of five; a wife; a philosophical mind, a passionate person, and I’m completely addicted to intelligent thinking. I’m new to blogging as well; ironically, I double majored at an Ivy League University while working full time to grow up and become an old woman in a shoe. 🙂

    I found myself completely captivated by your post. It was a perfect read; sitting on our back porch (in Tulsa, Oklahoma) next to my lovely garden, sitting beneath the brightest moonlight as the locusts buzz and the crickets chirp and it’s the kind of perfection you read about it romance novels.

    Only this time, the romance came from the words of one mind to the rest of the world.

    I dig it.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Dear “old woman in a shoe”: It was great following your stream of consciousness. I can visualize you in Tulsa now. Thanks for the great comment.

      Like

  4. quanzamme Avatar
    quanzamme

    Here I am at the office alt+tabbing my way to reading your post. Your words made all the way to Philippines.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks! So glad you read it!

      Like

  5. Manali Shah Avatar

    Enjoyed reading your post – in a media office, in Mumbai, on the computer, supposed to be working but reading blogs 😀

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      🙂 Glad I could be a distraction.

      Like

  6. Jonathan Caswell Avatar

    GOOD WRITING—WORTH READING! Maybe that is why I tend to write on a lot of different topics…to hit different parts of a potential audience…and it seems to be working with the bloggers who show up on our doorstep!

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Yes. You never know who is reading!

      Like

  7. ssrijana Avatar

    a wonderful post beautiful words and imagination ..well i am 4m Nepal right now just had my breakfast sitting in room on the floor back against the almira
    (wardrobe) with laptop on lap reading your post 😀

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      I prefer the word almira to wardrobe! Thanks!

      Like

  8. shelley Avatar

    What a captivating post! I enjoyed reading your post and went back to check out other posts on your blog. Congratulations on being Freshly Pressed! Well deserved.. 🙂

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks. Glad you read them!

      Like

  9. missionabspossible Avatar

    Wow, that was fantastic. I was imagining and envisioning right along with you. Well done!

    Like

  10. GianCarlo 。(◕‿◕)。TheDaydreamer Avatar

    You have an audience from the Philippines, inside a school library. Your’s truly! 🙂 Hmmm. Congratulations on being Freshly Pressed! Everybody is your audience! 🙂

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Hope my “thanks for the great comment” is reaching the Philippines!

      Like

  11. thesageandthecrow Avatar

    Fantastic piece. Mesmerizing writing. Thank you for sharing.

    Like

  12. thesageandthecrow Avatar

    Fantastic piece. Mesmerizing writing. Thank you so much for sharing!

    Like

  13. Huffygirl Avatar

    The blogging community is a wonderful family.

    Like

  14. samokan Avatar
    samokan

    First, congrats on being freshly pressed :).
    Your post is wonderful, I wish I could write the way you write. I also love checking my stats and knowing that there is somebody somewhere who have enjoyed reading it. I will looking out for more of your post .

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks for your wonderful comment!

      Like

  15. rinceagusgra Avatar
    rinceagusgra

    I love this post. I always get excited when I see different countries in the stats section, as I try to imagine what their life is like in a different culture, or what their interest is in something I wrote. It’s kind of cool how writing and perspectives can bring people of different backgrounds and ideas together, even though we all come from different walks of life.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      yes, that’s beautiful, isn’t it?

      Like

  16. Impybat Avatar
    Impybat

    Oh wow, I really loved this piece, bottledworder! One of the aspects about blogging that I love the most is that you never know who is going to stop by. WordPress helps connect us all 🙂

    Like

  17. jamietuohy Avatar

    Really enjoyed reading this! Great post!

    Like

  18. iRuniBreathe Avatar

    People from world’s apart, and maybe farther than you can imagine, all joined by the common connection of your words. That’s a pretty neat thought. Nice entry and congrats on the FP.
    Cheers,
    iRuniBreathe

    Like

  19. Mountain Gypsy Avatar

    To start with I’d like to say that I enjoyed your post very much. I too wonder at times who and where the people that read my blog are. Most times I’m just happy that they stopped in, happier if they ” like ” a post and even happier if they leave a comment. The human connection.
    Blogging is ~ to me ~ a world within the world. I’ve found so many beautiful postings about places people have traveled to, art they have created, photographs they have shared, humor they have written about, ideas that spark thought and so on.
    I started my blog many years ago, it has been a good outlet for me and replaces the human element I do not have daily at home.
    Oh and by the way, I’m in America, Western NY State. I live in the city but have a cute little house in an old 1950’s neighborhood.
    I hope you continue to enjoy blogging and writing. You are very good at both.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Your location sounds great! Thanks!

      Like

  20. Stephanie at Visible and Real Avatar

    This is awesome! Congratulations on the Freshly Pressed. This is a fantastic entry 🙂 I often find myself wondering who those people who show upon my blog’s stats page…

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks Stephanie! 🙂

      Like

  21. aFrankAngle Avatar

    To be devil’s advocate, some would say that if you don’t know your audience, why write. Nice post.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Yes, but then one always has at least one audience–oneself. And then, if one comes back to one’s writing from time to time, it’s possible to realize that that “oneself” can change and develop a new point of view! So maybe we ourselves are pretty interesting audiences to ourselves and we don’t know ourselves completely if that makes sense. . .

      Like

      1. aFrankAngle Avatar

        Thanks for your thoughtful answer, especially because you are dealing with the swamped factor of being FP. I can see how writing for self as an audience. Again, to be devil’s advocate, then why publish it? (No need to answer)

        Like

        1. Snailquake Avatar

          If it’s never published, how will that guy at the Singapore loading docks know what the dogs are like in New York? Could you deprive him of that?

          Like

          1. aFrankAngle Avatar

            True … but the comment originally started about writing without an audience.

            Like

  22. Snailquake Avatar

    What a joy to read! Unlike some, I didn’t find it too long. It was long, true, which might have lost me, had it not been for your talent and subject matter. You asked someone what might be a good length for an entry. My rule of thumb is to aim for about an A4 sheet’s worth of typing, and throw in at least one photo. But you are Freshly Pressed, and I am not, yet.

    This is the first blog entry I’ve seen that has inspired equally fascinating comments. I’ve really enjoyed seeing what everyone is doing as they type their replies to you. I love the little details. Typing one-fingered with a baby on her shoulder? Grand!

    I am lying in bed, in a pool of lamplight, with my laptop on my chest, working my way through a packet of brazil nuts. I’m in an 18th-century stone gatehouse right in the centre of Scotland, surrounded by fields of sheep and broon coos. It’s midnight. My boyfriend is snoring next to me. A cat is snoring on the dressing table, and a rabbit is lurking under the bed.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Lovely! Now I envy you!

      Like

      1. Snailquake Avatar

        I’ve been Freshly Pressed now too! Finally I am qualified to opine on blog entry length. :o)

        Like

  23. Kati Nelson Avatar

    I love it! Congrats on getting freshly pressed. What a huge feat!

    -Kati
    http://toughmotivation.wordpress.com/

    Like

  24. hairsprayandhemingway Avatar

    Congrats on being Freshly Pressed! You deserve it!

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks Hairspray&Hemingway!

      Like

  25. OneWeekToCrazy Avatar

    I really like this! I love the idea of being absorbed in one reality (summertime) while someone else is in a completely different reality (wintertime). What a cool way to stop for a moment and realize that life is so different for everyone.

    Cheers!

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Yes, isn’t it? Thanks!

      Like

  26. Crista Avatar
    Crista

    great post.

    Like

  27. Nicolle Avatar

    I find it interesting to imagine where my readers are as well, especially when I see Egypt, Indonesia or any of the other countries on the map. And what I love is that I’ve had some great interactions with people from many different places.

    Right now I’m sitting in my cubicle, it’s beige and red) in the tallest building in Philly.

    Congrats on freshly pressed 🙂 I think especially now, you’ll see some changes (and spikes) in your readership.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks Nicolle. Philly is lovely.

      Like

  28. mindfulacting Avatar

    Great post! I started my blog a couple of months ago and I get very excited when a new country shows up on the map. Writing in my second language is quite a challenge, but I love it!

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks. Yes, I read and write other languages too and the rhythm of those other languages show up in my English!

      Like

  29. juliebrowning18 Avatar
    juliebrowning18

    I am sitting in a corner, in an office, in my little town in Nebraska. There seems to be little to do here, even though they pay me to show up every day. I started a blog so that the boredom wouldn’t spiral into depression. I have always loved to write and read, and now, I can do both with all of these formerly empty hours. Blogs like yours keep me inspired and motivated to keep the slow drip of thoughts trickling out of my head. This was a sheer joy to read. Congratulations on being Freshly Pressed. It is well deserved.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks. You keep writing too. We’ll be reading!

      Like

  30. ellekelly Avatar

    Lovely writing, lovely & loving revery re the mysterious other and the odd invisible connectedness of author to essential reader. I’m also in awe of your ability to create community around your blog. You go!
    I hope you maintain your sense of wonder for a good long blogging time.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks. That was such a lovely comment.

      Like

  31. Kathryn McCullough Avatar

    Love your post! I’m blogging from Lexington, Kentucky but have also posted from places as far away at Vietnam and Haiti, as well.
    Happy blogging. And congrats on Freshly Pressed. I had that honor when my blog was only 3 weeks old. It was great fun! Hang on for the ride!
    Hugs,
    Kathy

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks! I was very happy when I received the email that said I’d be featured. Nice to see oneself on the front page. Will check out yours soon.

      Like

  32. intelligentandwittylady Avatar

    As an American, sitting in my now very dark apartment in Turkey with just the glare of my computer and the lights from the skyline peeking in through the curtains to light my living room, and a fellow new-ish-bie to blogging I can definitely understand your fascination with the stats page. I’ve become quite obsessed with mine as well and wish the general large geography of the “US” stat was more specific.

    As for the proxy servers, most of us are using them to show up in the US to enjoy American content and freedom of the interwebs (netflix, hulu, pandora, oh my! as well as any sites that might be blocked by various governments — Turkey not so much, but you get the idea).

    Congrats on your FP!

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks. Yes, further geographical subdivisions would be great!

      Like

  33. shejj Avatar
    shejj

    Reblogged this on Shejj's Blog – Food, Dreams, Life x and commented:
    This is exactly why I’m beginning to love blogging.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks! Will check out the page.

      Like

  34. thedharmadiva Avatar

    Beautiful. This aptly describes what I love most about blogging, and I’ve been doing it for years in one incarnation or another. As for this audience member, I’m in southern California, sandwiched between canyons and mountains, typing with one finger as a sick baby sleeps on my shoulder.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      I used to be in Northern CA. Beautiful!

      Like

  35. No Blog Intended Avatar

    I’m a Belgian girl, sitting at a desk in a house with many windows and light entering.
    If that is what you like to know. Blogging is indeed a great means to talk to people. I’m always surprised to see that someone living in South Affrica or South Korea reads my blog (or at least, somehow ended up on my blog…). After all the world is so small…

    Like

  36. Terah Van Dusen Avatar

    This was nice. Very personal. I will follow you just because of this one piece, as I have not read the others. Thanks for the Like on my page. You read about my being in a library in Eugene, Oregon, working on a memoir.

    I’m home now, shoes off, its a warm day and the sun will set in an hour or two or more. It’s quiet except for the traffic out on 6th Street, a main artery in our large town. I am alone, my cat is somewhere, I am hungry, lazy, sleepy, content. And I am reading your blog. “Bottled Worder”, that’s funny 🙂

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      That’s such a great setting to read! Can visualize it almost. I remember your piece. Will check again during the weekend.

      Like

  37. jimkane Avatar
    jimkane

    thanks for liking my blog post “tap, tap…!” Nice blog!

    Like

  38. downhousesoftware Avatar

    Excellent writing! I just stumbled upon your blog recently and have enjoyed all that I’ve read. I eagerly look forward to your future contributions.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks for your encouragement.

      Like

  39. April Yamasaki Avatar

    Thanks for stopping by and liking my post on Writing, Faith, and Spiritual Practice. I’m enjoying browsing through your blog–I’m also new to blogging and share your sense of wonder. All the best as you keep blogging….

    Like

  40. jannatwrites Avatar

    I guess we never really know our readers, but it is fun to let our imaginations wander. Some guard their locations while others have no issues with sharing where they are from. Some comment, while many others lurk in the shadows; their presence only noted in the stats.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      That’s a great way of putting it!

      Like

  41. theheartofi Avatar
    theheartofi

    The longest blog post I have read thus far! I like the Botswana part- ‘standing with an animal under a tree’. It’s not like that at all, those people in those places won’t be having cellphones or devices that would connect them to the internet and when they do Facebook and not WordPress comes to mind. But I hail from Zimbabwe, in my room, on my laptop, reading you blog and absorbing your creativity. When we blog we, most of the time have no idea who we are reaching but if we do reach them in the right way it is all that matters. Great post!

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks for reading. Glad to have reached you. 🙂

      Like

  42. Don't Quote Lily Avatar

    I like your writing style, it’s quite visual. And I love reading other people’s views on blogging. I think this is a wonderful place where so many people from all over get a chance to share their thoughts. 😉

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Yes. Isn’t it?

      Like

  43. su'eddie Avatar

    Wow! That really was looong. Oh well, it seems we all got to the end.
    Nice piece here. You write good – but phew! You just might lose some of us if it gets toooo long. Oh well, I speak for myself.
    But did I miss it? Where are you from?
    Oh well…Keep it coming and best wishes as the blogging wonder continues to word on 🙂 Cheers!

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thank you so much for the constructive comment. It’s always good to know what people are thinking. Easy to like the praises but I welcome suggestions on ways I can improve. I’m trying out different styles, voices and lengths to see what works. I did try some “list ” blogs and some very short ones earlier and now I’m writing long ones. What’s a good length do you think? Thanks.

      Like

  44. rchopman Avatar

    Thanks for stopping by my blog last week! Great thoughts on blogging!

    Like

  45. P. C. Zick Avatar

    Thanks for the inspiration to continue – I’ve been bogged down lately with writing fiction and my blog suffers. But I need that outside world connection, too. Writing is an isolated career which is ironic because we write about the world. Keep blogging and inspiring.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Yes. So true. Thanks!

      Like

  46. Pat Avatar

    Hi – as a very very new blogger, I can identify with all you say. Your way of saying it is very beautiful and you were the first blogger who replied to me and the first that I decided to follow, so you have a special place here for me.

    I read your blogs with interest and each time you write, I hear you speak. Yes, I do. I hear you. And your blogger friend who thinks you are Canadian? I get that, because I am far away, here on the East coast of England, on that bump that sticks out into the North Sea and I hear your voice as English. I hear an accent, but it is from our Midlands somewhere, a city accent perhaps, while I live somewhere very rural. I see your pictures and read what you say and know that cannot be true, you are not here in the UK, but that is still how I hear you.

    Your voice touches us because it is universal.

    I look forward to reading more.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thank you so much Pat. That was beautiful–a beautiful piece here on its own! Will read more of what you write as well soon!

      Like

      1. Pat Avatar

        Thank you bottledworder. Very kind.

        Like

  47. Nicole Avatar

    It is amazing not only to have regular readers from all over the globe, but to also build a rapport with fellow bloggers in places you’ve never been. I seem to appeal more to bloggers from Australia and India as well as the U.K.

    Don’t lose that wonder! I’ve been blogging technically for a year but regularly since March. I’m still in awe of the sense of community you can build here.

    Great post!

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks for the support!

      Like

  48. catsworld1 Avatar

    I am Canadian and I’ve found over the years I’ve posting, first on Blogger and now here, that most of my readers were in America, then Canada and, at least on Blogger, Russia for some reason. You mention that you’re new to blogging, but I think you’ll find that no matter what you write, there will be readers throughout the world who like what you’ve written.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      That’s nice to know. Thanks!

      Like

  49. bluebutterfliesandme Avatar

    You are a very enjoyable writer to read. I haven’t been on a rickshaw, I envy you for that, but thanks for painting artistic imagery with your words. I have met some of the most interesting and diverse people blogging here.

    The talent is staggering and I am very critical. lol You have inspired me to go and promote some of the most fascinating bloggers i read and follow. I actually anticipate new post from several, you included.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thank you so much for your support. Means a lot to me!

      Like

  50. valeriedavies Avatar

    we must have strted blogging at the same time – I wrote my two months roundup last week! fascinating to read other people’s viewpoints – I shall be following yours, go well!!

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks for reading this!

      Like

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I’m, Bottledworder. Always inhabiting the half-streets, catching paradoxes, thinking in greys, trapping the world in words in my bottle.

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