Blogging Now Good for You, Still Bad for Some 60
Several users have alerted us to a May Scientific American article that has been getting some attention more recently. Apparently, blogging is now good for you and, at least in this context, is the suggested reason for the explosion of blogging. This is quite the departure from some of the results we have seen in practice for more prolific bloggers.
Blags! (Score:2, Funny)
bad for some? (Score:4, Funny)
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That's right. Nobody reads your blog. Yes, I'm talking to you.
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Next week's news (Score:2, Funny)
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(where you can die for^H^H^Hfrom it)
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journaling yes, blogging no (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:journaling yes, blogging no (Score:5, Insightful)
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Frankly, it's not safe to disclose too much online. That people still do demonstrates only that socially,
Re:journaling yes, blogging no (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:journaling yes, blogging no (Score:4, Funny)
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The difference (Score:5, Insightful)
In contrasts, bloggers who do it to vent out their frustration and share a part of their mind with the world, find it fulfilling.
Not quite a discovery if you think of it that way.
Re:The difference (Score:5, Funny)
it's all about ego (Score:5, Interesting)
No, it's because most bloggers have the mistaken idea that like-minded souls will seek out and read their stuff, think hard about it and then post an insightful response which re-inforces their self-worth. As we all know, most blogs are a write-only medium, if they have any benefit to the writer it's purely cathartic as it lets the writer vent a bit.
> ... have long known about the therapeutic benefits of writing about personal experiences,
If that was the case, sales of diaries would be huge. They aren't. People don;'t write for themselves, they write for their (imagined) audience.
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Even worse, without the replies/mods and consequent page-hits, advertising revenue would be near to zero
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I Disagree (Score:1, Offtopic)
I often disagree with geek rant
Funny > Insigh
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Step 1: set your filter to -1. Then no matter what the mods want to throw points at, you still see all the comments.
Step 2: set your account to display oldest comments first instead of highest points first.
These two steps will effectively negate any effect from popularity contest mods.
Step 3: METAMOD. They give you points to moderate the moderation. Use them. If you think someone's moderation was not appropriate, you get to say so. If people agree that a certain mo
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"-1 Oldest First" all the way.
I have to disagree with you though. Complaining seems to exacerbate most problems. One is much better served either working on a solution to the current problem or accepting that you can't or won't do anything about it (you are free to pick either option in any situation). Seems like complaining for the sake of complaining is only a waste of time. Maybe that's just me,
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I've been working a hellish schedule for the past month, and I have to admit, the thing that really seems to make it easier is a friend of mine who frequently points out "oh wow... you've been working so many hours, poor thing." Lame, I know. but it really makes it easier to work a month
But you'r wrong (Score:2)
Be careful, though... (Score:4, Funny)
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Oblig. (Score:4, Funny)
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http://www.google.com/search?q=%22died+in+a+blogging+accident%22 [google.com]
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It's all about me, Me, ME! (Score:5, Funny)
So whining about yourself on your own blog is good for you. But writing about something of interest to others isn't.
Well, it explains the success of Myspace.
"You are not trying. You are whining." Nigel to Andrea, "The Devil Wears Prada".
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So whining about yourself on your own blog is good for you. But writing about something of interest to others isn't.
Well, it explains the success of Myspace.
I wouldn't call MySpace a blog. Technically it is, but c'mon, if you have a look at it and compare it to any other blog, can you really say they're the same? While MySpace has blogging features, its primarily a social network which completely changes the way users tend to use its blogging feature.
." 2 comments - probably self-repl
For example, lets ignore tech blogs, or anything with useful information.
Normal blog:
"Today I went on a holiday with my friends. It was rather fun, however it made me think about
And... (Score:2, Funny)
blogging may be good for you (Score:2)
the word "blogosphere" is fatal in a 10 foot radius
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Frustration, Knowledge and Reputation (Score:2, Insightful)
Written skills (Score:3, Informative)
Blogging improves your efficiency at work because you become a better communicator. Just don't bitch about the boss [cnn.com] in your blog (unless it's anonymous).
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Fixed.
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Says the person with so little of their own that they feel the need to drag others down for simply expressing themselves.
~Dan
Writing helps me deal with my mental illness (Score:3, Insightful)
Getting sick led to me making a complete wreck of my life. I lost many friends, screwed up my education and my planned career as a scientist, lost what had been a good reputation.
For many years I tried to keep my illness a secret, but it was a terrible burden to bear. I finally went public with it in 1997, by writing a page about my manic depressive aspect [geometricvisions.com]. Click the link and you'll see that it got slashdotted.
But I had a much harder time facing or admitting to the schizophrenic aspect. I finally went public with that in 2003, in my essay Living with Schizoaffective Disorder [geometricvisions.com]. I also published it at Kuro5hin, where each of its three installments was featured on the front page.
It's not real obvious to most readers, but I avoided saying much about my own experience in the section on paranoia. Again it was very hard to face it. But again I finally went public with it in 2006 in My Deepest Fear [vancouverdiaries.com].
You'll understand why I had a hard time facing it if you read the essay. I was getting ready for an ambulance ride to the nuthouse when I wrote that, but, if you'll pardon my shameless self-promotion, I think it's one of the most vivid accounts of paranoia ever written.
I've written a lot of stuff having to do with mental illness, both my own and that of others. I finally compiled an index to it all [geometricvisions.com]. I printed hardcopies of most of it, and the stack of paper was over an inch thick!
Someday I plan to publish a dead-tree book about it. What's holding me back is finding the words to explain what I've learned from it all. I want to help others avoid it, to help others who suffer to get better, and to help their loved ones and caregivers to understand it.
One lesson I have learned though, is that the worst of the stigma against mental illness is the stigma that we mentally ill have against ourselves. Our shame for being sick is the main thing that keeps us sick. It's a disease, and not our choice. It's not something to be ashamed of.
As I write this, I've been employed steadily as a software engineer for over twenty years. For eight of those years I was self-employed as a software consultant. My title at my current job is Principal Software Engineer. I've achieved this success despite all the chaos that all those symptoms put me through.
I point this out because I sometimes get the impression that those who treat the mentally ill don't expect us to ever get better. Yes, it's difficult, and progress is painfully slow - but it is quite possible for anyone to overcome the worst madness and lead a happy, fulfilling life.
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In seriousness, congratulations on managing something most of us can't even contemplate, let alone understand. I can't imagine dealing with the same thing - if my mind went, I'm not exactly getting through life on "good looks and charm." ^.^ (Depending on who you ask, I'm not getting by on just my "mind" either, but it's worth a shot!)
In jest... Slashdot is a good place to discuss this. There are a lot of mentally ill people [slashdot.org] here who could benefit from your experiences.
But in seriousness again, con
Bravo! (Score:2)
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Works for Me (Score:1, Troll)
This Just In! (Score:2)
Well THAT makes sense... (Score:1)
"The frontal and temporal lobes, which govern speech -- no dedicated writing center is hardwired in the brain -- may also figure in. For example, lesions in Wernicke's area, located in the left temporal lobe, result in excessive speech and loss of language comprehension. People with Wernicke's aphasia speak in gibberish and often write constantly. In light of these traits, Flaherty speculates that some activity in this area could foster the urge to blog."
(Emphasis
Expressive Writing /= Blogging (Score:3, Interesting)
Worse, the study had a nearly 50% drop-out rate, meaning a good minority of people didn't have any interest in expressive writing. And with a small N, the results are hardly generalizable.
Shame on SciAm.
More here:
http://psychcentral.com/blog/archives/2008/06/09/scientific-american-lets-stretch-research-to-make-it-sexy/ [psychcentral.com]