Darrell
Vesterfelt, editor of the online magazine Prodigal, has a story to tell.
And it’s his story, a story that he will tell you he was called to bear.
Darrell
is a writer. Like most writers today, he did what every publisher on the planet
will tell you to do – and that is to build a platform. What publishers mean by
that is having enough people who follow you on social media, read you blog, and
engage with you that they will buy your book and recommend it to others.
Publishers want the assurance that your book will sell, and you have to build a
platform to demonstrate that
Millions
of writers are out there, dutifully building their platforms. They do
everything they’re supposed to do – follow people on Twitter and retweet the
important ones, find the cool people on Facebook, and watch their blog
statistics like a hawk.
Vesterfelt
was one of them, until he unblogged. Having built a successful blog (and platform),
he unblogged – pulled the plug and walked away.
His
reason was simple. He felt himself in danger of losing himself for the sake of
his platform.
He
describes what he did and why in a short book (or long essay) with the title of
Unblogger:
Discovering the Power of Story in a ‘How-To’ World.
What
he did, and why, and what happened, is the story he tells. He discovered that
an unblogger is first and foremost a person, a human being. The unblogger
writes from experience, sharing good stories with people. And an unblogger “lives
a story worth telling,…a life of meaning, and then just happens to write about
it.”
And
goes on and says “we’re called to bear a story, our story.” And we are a
character, perhaps the main character in the story. And that’s the story we
bear, and the story we write.
This
idea of story and character is a post-modern one. An individual like me who is,
on an average day, decidedly modernist has to consider the ideas of story and
character carefully, that is, consider the idea that he or she is a character in
a story. It works if you write the story you live. That doesn’t mean everything
you write is demonstrably autobiographical, but is does mean you write from
your experience.
I
liked this little book (or long essay). Vesterfelt has much to say. And he’s
actually doing what he says to do, and is writing his story from experience, as
a character in his own story.
He
unblogged.
Photograph by Larisa Koshkina via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
4 comments:
This is a subject for so much discussion. I've been thinking seriously of pulling way back and only blogging occasionally. Since late 2009, I've put up 1869 posts and have another 36 scheduled and 4 in draft; plus, I have received more than 503,000 pageviews, the overwhelming majority of which have not led to sales of 'Neruda's Memoirs'. I enjoy blogging but also want a different kind of challenge (again!). And the stories inside I'm writing as poems are calling.
I think we're all hearing that, at least from time to time. I've seen some people respond by gathering themselves into a collective site, and taking turns blogging. I've been doing this blog since 2009, and it's become a significant part of what I do online, my "home base."
Just checking out your article on my new Samsung Phone , and I wanted to check if it would let me comment or if it was going to me go to a full pc to do that. Ill check back later to see if it worked.
Arcade Caving Games
I've heard this story before, and I'm compelled to ask ... Is this how most people approach blogging? With obsession and competition and self-promotion? Really? I don't think you do it that way, nor do the people on the web I admire most.
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