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. larrikinbooks Avatar

    Thanks for the like over on my WordPress. I’m fairly new to the world of blogging. Any attention my blog gets is a little thrilling. It’s a gradual process remembering to thank ‘likes’ and ‘follows’ but I’m doing the best I can.

    Building an audience is hard, but sometimes being an audience is just as complicated. I read so many blog posts by many great writers – both professional and aspiring – and it’s not always easy to remind myself to leave a comment or like it.

    Great Post. I look forward to reading more.

    Like

  2. Experienced Tutors Avatar

    I’m stopping by because you ‘liked’ my blog – thank you. I’m in a bedroom where the computer lives. I look out and see a completely overcast sky and rain. It has to be rain doesn’t it because I’m in Stoke -On Trent, England. Loved your post. All the best.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks for reading!!!!

      Like

  3. Laura Krämer Avatar

    WordPress said I might like your blog…they were right. I really do.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Where did you find the suggestion? I didn’t know they suggested blogs!

      Like

      1. Laura Krämer Avatar

        I receive an email when someone comments of likes my blog. In the email they tell me which wordpress user likes it and gives 3 recent blog posts to go check out. I don’t always have time to visit every one, but if a blog title catches my eye–I click over and read. I’m sure there is an option on WordPress for this…

        Like

        1. bottledworder Avatar

          Thanks for telling me

          Like

  4. May Avatar
    May

    Your comments about Singapore amused me, indeed we could have worn pointy hats once and now, in place of colonial architecture there might be shiny buildings with escalators with all that glass… places and cities get torn down and rebuilt everyday- maybe it doesn’t matter what space people originate from, but with what hearts and minds they come with. – A Singaporean whose never lived on the ground floor, studied in musty libraries and live, at the foot of our island’s only little hill.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      I’m fascinated. I did visit Singapore once but only for the two hrs that the airport transit allowed

      Like

  5. Clarabelle Avatar

    Thank you so much for dropping by my blog and liking my poem, “The Best Is Yet To Come”, I really do appreciate it. I am also delighted it has led me to your blog, you are a captivating writer……ps I love New York 🙂

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      thanks for reading!!!

      Like

  6. Shawn Bird Avatar

    I’m reading your blog in a living room in a hillside suburb in central British Columbia. I’m lounging on my couch, typing. My husband has a friend over, and they’re chatting. The dogs are sharing the same pillow. The little one smack in the middle of two stacked pillows, actually, the big one has his chest and two legs on the pillow, but his head and back legs are on the floor. It’s dark outside now, but if it wasn’t I’d be looking at hills and pine trees out my window. Nice visiting with you! 🙂

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Ahhh. Sounds beautiful.

      Like

  7. ly Avatar
    ly

    when i hit follow, you had 1234 followers before me
    my phone number starts with 678910 and i just finished a blog post about numbers and how they can have meaning like words strange world sometimes thanks for visiting my blog! ly

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      It took me a while to get it!

      Like

  8. Gary Showalter Avatar

    Interesting blog you’ve got. Thanks for stopping by!

    Like

  9. theserenityspace Avatar

    Reading your blog transported me around the world. I understand, in my own way, what you are saying and can most certainly relate 🙂 thankyou 🙂

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar
  10. Lisa Bratby Avatar

    Hi, I’m English and living in Singapore. Yes no more pointy hats by the dock. It’s more like a tropical Manhatten but less crowded, safer, cleaner, super efficient and has a better economy right now. However, it lacks creativity and sub-culture 😦
    Singaporeans favourite pastimes are eating and shopping. It’s a great place for foodies and you can get any cuisine: French, Thai, Chinese, Japanese, Italian, Russian… Orchard Road has mall after glittering mall. There is no orchard (although I guess there once was) so the fruits they’re picking are Louis Vuitton, Armani, DKNY.
    It is fascinating how blogging can plug you into the world and you get to communicate with people you would not otherwise meet. Although I still think it’s important to not to just sit at a computer and let the world come to you but to go out there with arms open and greet it. The world is shrinking in terms of communication, but it’s a still a huge and amazing planet to explore.
    Thanks for liking my blog!

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks for that beautiful comment. You brought out the paradox of the world now–shrinking yet so different and huge!

      Like

  11. kelihasablog Avatar
    kelihasablog

    Blogging is not only a great therapy, but it gives you a chance to open up and say things you might not face to face. The anonymity makes it fun. I enjoyed reading about your thoughts in Audience, but I can see I’m much more of a newbi than you…lol. Thanks for visiting my blog the other day. I appreciate it 😀

    Like

  12. cyclingrandma Avatar

    Thanks for liking my “robots” post.

    Like

  13. Sarah Koci Scheilz Avatar
    Sarah Koci Scheilz

    Welcome to blogging — and thanks for stopping by my blog! My favorite part of what you’ve written: “People I would never have exchanged writing and reading with in my regular life.” TRUE, and that’s one of the biggest joys of blogging.

    Like

  14. Doug Bruns Avatar

    Welcome to the Blogsphere. I looking forward to reading more of your thoughts and musings.

    Like

  15. scottdavid329 Avatar

    I’m still very new to the whole blogging thing myself but I’ve had some of the same thoughts..amazing to think that people around the world can read your thoughts with just a click.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar
  16. heartlandroad Avatar

    There is something about the blog thing, isn’t there? I’m a newbie, too, and from only reading 1 or 2 humour blogs before, I’m now following at least 12 blogs, mostly on topics I never would have thought I was interested in, or never would have imagined existed! I vicariously live in Japan, on a small Scottish island, in an American home with two small children, in a kayak, on bikes in the Far East and so on. People are fascinating, they do fascinating things and they write fascinatingly about them. I spend much more time reading other blogs than writing mine!

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      That’s a fascinating comment!

      Like

  17. wisejourney Avatar
    wisejourney

    Wonderful post and chimes perfectly with me today..’wondering what it’s all about.’ I will post a picture on my blog today to show you what my world ooks like outside my window this morning…. Not only do I love words but the things my eyes see and what they say to me in turn.

    Thank you for inspiring my thinking this morning.

    London 🙂

    Like

  18. ltownsdin Avatar

    Thanks for liking my blog today. Nice commentary on how random and interesting this kind of communication is. I’ll be back!

    Like

  19. Susan LaDue Avatar

    That’s the incredible thing about the internet. You post something, and seal hunters in anoraks can read it at the same time as fishermen in shorts and tank tops. You never know!

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Yes. What a great way to put it.

      Like

  20. Freshly Pressed again and 1000 followers! | bottledworder Avatar

    […] being Freshly Pressed for Sounds of the Blogosphere (a second time in the blog’s life after My Blog Audience) as part of the Weekly Writing Challenge–The Sound of Blogging on Friday. Then, the group of […]

    Like

  21. ultimateoverload Avatar

    I think this post speaks to many if not all bloggers out there. I think we all imagine what the people that stumble upon our collection of words may be like. Definitely diggin’ the blog. Also, thanks for the “like” on my recent post 🙂

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks for the visit.

      Like

  22. dste Avatar
    dste

    This is an interesting post. I find myself wishing that I could tell you I was from Singapore or somewhere like that, instead of in the USA, although maybe it’s interesting enough to get readers from different parts of the USA. (I’m from Wisconsin.)

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Yes, it’s the romance of the unknown. That could be Wisconsin !

      Like

  23. Bridget Pitt Avatar

    It’s so funny that you talk about parts of the world being dark for you – I remember when I first started travelling, when I imagined the globe, it was as if the places I’d visited were lit up, and the rest of the world was in darkness. Hopefully you’ll visit my home (Africa) sometime and then it won’t be dark for you any more. Lovely Blog!

    Like

  24. alinesoules Avatar

    As a librarian, as well as a writer, I was particularly interested in your musings about types of libraries and your blog visitor who was in a library. As a Canadian (although now living in California), I related to the part about Canada, too. I think the wonderful aspect of blogging is that your audience is everywhere–every country, every type of environment, every corner of the globe. It’s the wonderful thing about it.

    Like

  25. Valory Avatar
    Valory

    Thanks for checking out my blog. I honestly love yours. Simple elegance.

    Like

  26. thewanderingsiren Avatar

    Thanks for checking out Vagabonds! I enjoy reading your posts and musings….good stuff.

    Like

  27. beetleypete Avatar

    Thanks for checking out my blog. Yours is well constructed, and very professional, unlike mine! Will be back to check it out. Pete.

    Like

  28. jumpingfromcliffs Avatar

    I now have to beg & implore you to tell me what you see in your mind’s eye when you read my blog! 🙂

    Many thanks for stopping by and ‘liking’ by the way, it’s very much appreciated.

    Like

  29. yepiratemanaguagunn Avatar

    Beautifully-written and so true!

    Like

  30. kristinapui Avatar
    kristinapui

    What a beautifully written blog post, thanks for leading me here. You have immersed a sixteen year old girl from a small town in New Zealand for a few moments, another of your varied audience.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      So glad you liked it!

      Like

  31. Christine Sun (@ChristineSun1) Avatar

    I am sure that people in Afirca, South America and Asia would like this article of yours and would apperciate what you are thinking, if they ever get to have it translated into their languages. All over the world, people share the same sense of wonder and awe when they think of the Internet and its numerous blogs. We all belong to the same species so we need to communicate and be communicated to, no matter where and who we are. Thank you for sharing this beautiful article.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks for the great comment.

      Like

  32. togatherparadise Avatar

    I am also new to blogging, and hadn’t really thought that much about where exactly in the world my audience is. I’ve looked at the stats and as a Canadian am always surprised that most of my views are from the US.

    I would also like to say thank you for the like on my page and I would love to chat about blogging with you.

    Like

  33. Stacie Brown Avatar
    Stacie Brown

    Hi, bottledworder,
    I’ve nominated you for the Very Inspiring Blogger Award. If you’ve never heard of this, details can be found on my recent blog post. Thanks for inspiring me to be a better writer. Keep up the great work.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      will check. thanks!

      Like

      1. Stacie Brown Avatar
        Stacie Brown

        You’re welcome! 🙂

        Like

  34. liamodell1 Avatar

    Thanks for liking my blog post! I really appreciate it! 🙂

    Like

  35. Dorinda Balchin Avatar

    Hi,
    Thanks for liking my post about Inspector Nash. I hope you will enjoy his ‘investigation’ when it begins on 28th!
    Dorinda

    Like

  36. dangarciasatx Avatar

    Thanks for checking out my blog. Cheers!

    Like

  37. compostingalife Avatar

    oh, a wordster!!!this blog is fun!!!thanks for liking my post and bringing me to this site

    Like

  38. Doug Bruns Avatar

    Nice rumination on those lurking on the backside of the screen. I like your voice and look forward to reading more.

    Like

  39. James Neal Avatar

    Reblogged this on RoosterWords and commented:
    A gentle resonance and wistful voice carry this post about wondering who is on the other side of our blogs!

    Like

  40. James Neal Avatar

    Hi! I wanted to say thank you for visiting me at RoosterWords. This entry is simply beautiful, and holds a lot of truth, I think, for many bloggers.

    Like

  41. Andrew Pelt Avatar

    So very true….Thanks for blogging this….

    Like

  42. Honie Briggs Avatar

    Sometimes it seems I have an audience of one. That usually motivates me to try harder. It was great to see that you like my post today. Stop by anytime and let me know your thoughts. 🙂

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      sure! thanks for visiting

      Like

  43. Nader Nazemi Avatar

    Cool Blog.
    I will be following this blog.
    My blog: http://www.nadernazemi.com
    Thank you 🙂

    Like

  44. restlessjo Avatar

    Interesting introspection. You must have something because I kept reading right to the end, and it’s a long post. I mainly write to amuse me- very self centred! But I like to reach out too. Off to check out your cafes.

    Like

  45. stuart654 Avatar

    I always wonder the same too. I live in Yellowknife, and I am Canadian.

    Like

  46. Malcolm R. Campbell Avatar

    I often wonder who my audience is. Every once in a while I find out.

    Like

  47. marthaspencil Avatar

    “The Opposite of Canadian” (your words) would make a great title.

    Like

  48. Andrew Pelt Avatar

    My sisiter and I were just discussing this same topic a few weeks ago…..

    Like

  49. John Avatar

    Thanks for visiting my site today. 🙂

    Like

  50. whimsicallyours Avatar

    Great post…it’s something I first thought about when I started blogging.

    Thanks for stopping by my blog 🙂

    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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