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. Sirrom Avatar

    Thanks so much for ‘liking’ my blog. I’m still working out the nature of blogging. Thanks again and I look forward to re-visiting your site.

    Like

  2. roughwighting1 Avatar

    Thanks for finding me, and now I’ve found you. YES, so wonderful that we connect, through our blog writing, with so many across the continents. I am writing at 6:30 a.m. on a spectacular sunny cool morning in my home office, overlooking the San Francisco Bay and then the magical city of San Francisco, which is glittering like gold in the summer sun. Cheers to you!

    Like

  3. Tarina Avatar

    Hello Bottleworder, thank you for ‘like’-ing my blog! This post is awesome. Very thoughtful and totally true. I don’t know who all my blog readers are and even how they find my blog! 😀

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      You’re welcome.

      Like

  4. My Blog Readers | bottledworder Avatar

    […] I’ve been fortunate enough to have had some people read my blogs recently. As I’ve interacted with some of them, explicitly through comments, or implicitly by observing their “likes,” or sensing their lack of interest through absence, I’ve been thinking of them as people (as I did in My Blog Audience). […]

    Like

  5. priscyn Avatar

    I don’t know about unloading ships by the port. But I am commuting to work on the MRT right now. Staring with half smiles lest the next person or people think I’ve gone a little wonky.

    Our audience Is so varied that it’s fun. I’m glad I started blogging again after what seemed like a forever hiatus, ok 5 years maybe. 🙂

    Keep writing! 🙂 cos you never know what you gonna get. You know… Strange stalker readers like me. Lol.

    Cheers
    Pris

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Welcome back to the world of blogging then!

      Like

  6. On being Freshly Pressed | bottledworder Avatar

    […] I’m always trying to improve, I’ve been paying close attention to your comments. My Blog Audience wondered who was reading me and many of you responded with very vivid descriptions of the places […]

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  7. The Water Bearer Avatar

    That was so beautifully written that I didn’t want to comment for fear of ruining the smooth flow of your perspective as it continued to spread into the corners of my mind. I’m am off now, to drift into my imagination, to picture the places where my stats show my readers are….. ‘Inspired’ seems weak and unenthusiastic in comparison to the word I need to describe how I feel in this instant…

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      🙂 Comments are always welcome

      Like

  8. Roshni Avatar
    Roshni

    “It (Blogging) makes the world unfold in strange ways and makes different worlds intersect.” So true. 🙂 And this is Roshni, saying ‘Hi’ to an awesome fellow blogger (YOU) from Kerala, India. 🙂 Loved your post. Congratulations on being Freshly Pressed!

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar
  9. Elizabeth Krall Avatar
    Elizabeth Krall

    Hey, I didn’t know there WERE map stats! (Shows what a newbie I am.) Thanks for bringing that to my notice. And I enjoyed the post, too – I think we all make mental images of our readers, though mine don’t generally stray to rickshaw drivers in Kolkata. 😉

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Auto rickshaws are diff from rickshaws. Thanks for reading!:)

      Like

  10. Rachelle Nessia Avatar
    Rachelle Nessia

    This post just inspired me. Thanks for writing this! Blogging makes the world bigger and smaller at the same time.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks.:) 🙂 🙂

      Like

  11. hiddinsight Avatar
    hiddinsight

    I wandered over to the world of “Freshly Pressed” in a moment of boredom and this post caught my attention. I still feel new to the world of blogging too, but my stuff seems to be a bit niche? I dunno…I think I need a LOT to stimulate my brain! I do get bored…but this post was nice.

    Like

  12. 521baker2011 Avatar
    521baker2011

    You know, I’ve had the same thoughts while blogging.
    One of the big realizations hit me when I was looking at my decrepit [or so I thought] old blog, The Shop [haven’t posted there in six months since I moved on to FiEP]. I noticed that the site was still getting a lot of hits, all on one article – a post I made about steam locomotives and why they fascinated me.
    I saw that all the views were the result of search engine searches. I looked at the terms:
    “Steam locomotive engines”
    “Biggest steam locomotive”
    “Steam train”
    The usual. But then I saw something that made me think. One of the search terms was “паровозы”.
    I thought, “паровозы? What does that even MEAN?!”
    It’s Russian for “locomotive”. I saw that the person had also looked at the main page and a few other articles after seeing the steam locomotive page. So, some Russian somewhere was looking for паровозы, and found it. And then he found my blog. It’s similar to the feeling I get when I look at my Youtube statistics, and see that I’ve had viewers in Germany and the Ukraine…
    The internet is awesome. Fascination in Everything.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Yes, Fascination is everything.

      Like

  13. ladywithabirthmark Avatar

    In my country, the wind no longer rage. The storm may have passed but the rain seem endless. The sound of the raindrops on the rooftop and on the pavement echoes with the sound my keyboard make while I try to depict a clear image of another one of your audience. My clock strikes three in the morning. I glance at my Yellow Labrador that sleeps soundly just a few feet away from me, and it painted a smile on my face. The same one I wore while reading your lovely post. Thank you for sharing such wonderful images! I too often wonder about the people who stumble upon my little blog. Congratulations on being Freshly Pressed! 🙂

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Great description.

      Like

  14. graynlo Avatar

    Really fantastic details there. Good writing 🙂

    Like

  15. simplycontemplating Avatar

    On my lunch break finishing up a cup of Ramen Noodles and read your lovely blog post. Isn’t it fun to imagine.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      I like Ramen noodles a lot!

      Like

  16. win Avatar

    Reblogged this on wincharles.

    Like

  17. broadsideblog Avatar

    Great post. I loved how you picture your readers…I’m writing this from a small town just north of NYC. When I blog, it’s amazing and fun to often get an immediate comment (even at 2am) from someone in Malaysia or Australia or India or Ireland. It’s so cool to know people worldwide care about some of the same things and want to enjoy that global chat. I do know who my readers are because every time someone signs up to be a follower, I go to their blog or look at their gravatar to see their age, gender, nationaliity and any other clues they’ve offered. As a journalist and author, I need to know who’s reading…but my audience now includes teens, seniors, punk rockers and ministers. Hmmmm. Congrats on being FPed.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks for the great comment. You seem to be a night owl too!

      Like

  18. emiklio Avatar
  19. mylifeisthebestlife Avatar

    I love the map on the stats page…it always makes my imagination run, too!
    Great post.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar
  20. judyjudygirl Avatar

    congrats on being Freshly Pressed ! This is what I love about the computer world, sharing experiences or maybe just ideas and seeing we really are closer than we think ! 😉

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      yes, that’s exactly how I feel

      Like

  21. Eagle-Eyed Editor Avatar

    Congratulations on being Freshly Pressed. This is a great description of the blogging experience.

    I wonder, too, about the people on the other end of that keyboard and I imagine what their daily lives are like. Sometimes I am privileged enough to get a glimpse of their real lives on their “About” pages.

    I love this wonderful sense of community among bloggers and how we all share insights and advice from all over the world. It’s amazing.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Yes, this is a great community!

      Like

    2. bottledworder Avatar

      Yes, the experience of sharing is such an important aspect to blogging.

      Like

  22. The Smile Scavenger Avatar
    The Smile Scavenger

    🙂 This is why I’ve started a project – each time someone visits my blog from a new country, I research that country and share a random fact about it with everyone.

    I do so to try to learn a bit about their perspective, but you’re right – it’s mostly just my imagination wandering, trying desperately to make sense of something completely unfamiliar.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Yes. Glad you found something common here.

      Like

  23. jenniesisler Avatar

    Congratulations on being Freshly Pressed. I don’t know how many folllowers you have in MA but I am one of them. Love the name of your blog and this post. I don’t have many followers from anywhere really, but it is an interesting thought.

    Like

  24. Ellie at Emerald Pie Avatar

    Great post. Greetings from the west coast of Ireland!!
    And congratulations on being Freshly Pressed.

    Like

  25. cochrancj Avatar

    Congratulations on the fresh press! It is an interesting thing to think people on the other side of the globe are reading what you have written (and hopefully enjoying it) – puts the world and its troubles in perspective, doesn’t it? I’m guessing from the header picture you’re close in location to me – I’m in Brooklyn – but maybe again, that’s just a projection…

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Ha! Ha! Brooklyn is great!

      Like

  26. welikethemoon Avatar

    That was a very nice entry indeed, I thoroughly enjoyed reading it. Let me now lighten up another spot on your map, right in the heart of South America – Bolivia! And yes, I also found it strange to see in what countries the people are located who stumble over my blog.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks for reading!:)

      Like

  27. Martyna Avatar

    Well… You can learn about people who comment 🙂 You can get to know at least part of their reality by looking up their (our?) blogs 😀
    Congratulations on being freshly pressed since you are new in the blogging space 😉
    /another new blogger

    Like

  28. msbeeblebrox Avatar
    msbeeblebrox

    I think narrowing down an audience is important to me as a new blogger as well. I am still searching for my voice amongst others, still searching for the topics that I am most passionate about – and it doesn’t help that I don’t yet know who I’m writing for.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      True. Sometimes writing about things you don’t care about is good practice too!

      Like

  29. mystudentstruggles Avatar

    I’ve only been blogging for a couple of months and I love getting opinions from the other side of the world, it’s a great way to discover different cultures and people. Congrats of FP 😀

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks. What you said here is so true.

      Like

  30. doyleswidow Avatar

    Great perspective! I enjoyed reading your post. Your words are inspirational.

    Like

  31. LeFaz Avatar

    I love this! I’m currently at my office desk, snowed under with work, yet procrastination has gotten the better of me. So, not quite as glamorous as the imagery mentioned above 🙂

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks for reading!

      Like

  32. creeped Avatar

    This is an amazing little perspective piece. I really enjoyed reading it.

    Like

  33. […] I am turning to face the audience and appreciate the psychology of storytelling. With these two pages I am determined to put the […]

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  34. andydbrown Avatar
    andydbrown

    Well, you could include readers from the sultanate of Oman on your list. Nice post. Congrats on being freshly pressed!

    Like

  35. Aoife Avatar

    Love this post and the vivid details you gave us from your imagination. Don’t kick your imagination for potentially being wrong, be thankful that you were born with such a fantastic sense of curiosity and wonder! Can’t wait to see what you write next. Oh, and I’m reading your blog from my smartphone as I live out of my backpack in Europe..

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      That sounds like the dream life!

      Like

  36. roxyboots Avatar

    It is magical is it not to wake up, check your inbox and see a host of comments pop up. The thought that someone, somewhere cares what you had to say when rambling on about something that matters to you. Guess to answer your question, I think write I write for me, to unwind, dissect and log my adventures. If somebody out there finds that readable then that is great but not essential. Well done on getting your post freshly pressed and thanks for a good read and eloquently voicing your thoughts on this.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      thanks for a great comment!

      Like

  37. diannegray Avatar

    You’re a month older than I am in the blogging world. I’m constantly amazed by this community and things just keep get better and better.
    What a gem this is. Well done!

    Like

  38. bekkacollins Avatar
    bekkacollins

    I can’t say that I’ve really looked at blogging in the way you just described as I don’t tend to look at my audience a great deal. Imagination is a beautiful thing however and this was extremely well written. Thoroughly enjoyed it, thanks!

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar
  39. s1ngal Avatar

    there are times when I see a “freshly pressed” blog and go “I can do that”. Just want you to know I dared not feel that way with yours. lovely lovely, i’m soooo inspired.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Of course you can!

      Like

  40. Jennifer Avventura Avatar

    Great post! I’m reading from Sardinia, Italy.

    Like

  41. Di Avatar

    Your final sentence urged me to post a little about where I am, and I see a lot of other people got the same idea.:) I’m reading your blog all the way from Bhutan (but I have no idea where you are so maybe you are not all that far away). I am sitting at my office, which is located in a very beautiful old fortress, and if I look out of the window, I will see the river, the willows and cypresses around it and on the green and blue mountains. I can hear the quiet whirring of computers, and the occasional chirruping of birds.
    Loved your post, it’s very romantic. Congratulations for being Freshly Pressed.

    Like

  42. stephanieroseishere Avatar

    My international audience increased by two this morning!!! I have now been read in seven countries!!! Your freshly pressed post matched my wonder perfectly.
    I tend to produce my blog posts in my living room but yesterday I did venture out into the garden : )

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Like

      1. stephanieroseishere Avatar

        Sometimes a smiley face says more than words : )

        Like

  43. VM Avatar
    VM

    Good stuff, bottledworder! You’ve put a steady finger on many things about blogging/writing that I’ve found hard to trap in words. “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.” I smiled at that. Keep it up! 🙂

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks for the encouragement!

      Like

  44. Pat Avatar

    This appeared on Freshly Pressed. Well done bottledworder. Brilliant stuff.That will put you on the map.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      thank you so much

      Like

  45. hellkatdesigns Avatar

    I really related to this as I’m fairly new to the blogging thing myself. I’m constantly amazed when someone from the other side of the world is interested in what I write and create! Thanks for sharing your perspective – it was a great read.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      thank you so much!

      Like

  46. Russ Roberts Avatar

    I follow this advice when it comes to blogs: I blog, therefore I am. This, is of course, a play on the famous words of the French philosopher/mathematician Rene Descartes. In my very small news niche, I have touched the lives of Hawaii Island residents who have left this beautiful place for realms unknown. Although my blog is strictly local, it seems to reach out to those who want to come back, but can’t. So, I try to paint a picture in words about the happenings of my adopted paradise…seems to work for many of my off-island followers. My blog polls and letters seem to tie the dispersed Hawaii Island population together in a daily analysis and summary of events that mean much to those who no longer live here. Continue with your quest. The fun part is seeing where your words go and how your thoughts affect others. Even in a narrowly-focused blog such as mine (Hawaii Island News), I manage to touch others in ways that still surprise me. Let your life flow through your words–you never know where your inner self will re-appear. Congrats on being a part of Freshly Pressed!

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks. Will check out your blog.

      Like

  47. walid ataya Avatar

    a word a story…

    Like

  48. perspectivesandprejudices Avatar

    Very nicely written post. And as for the question that you asked – I’m from Chennai, India. I’ve ridden in numerous autos and I have my own car now 🙂 Blogging really does bring the world closer together, doesn’t it? Congrats on being Freshly Pressed!

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks! And drive well!

      Like

  49. intuitivejuliemarie Avatar

    One good freshly pressed will certainly turbo charge your blog. Congratulations! It is not an easy task, to paint a vivid picture with words, but you’ve succeeded. Almost midnight here in the Heartland, and I have to get up early to try and keep the trees alive in this drought, so I cannot tarry long here. I was already logged out, but your FP caught my eye, so here I am. Glad I followed the impulse to ‘click’…tap, tap.Will come back for more when you are not so overloaded.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks for reading. The drought is bad!

      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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