WHERE THE LOVE LIES
When I started blogging I used to advertise my posts by sending them to almost all my friends on my contacts list. These would then go on to share them on their socials. Heck, you reading this probably received one of my adverts. But with time I realized that I will be blogging for I don’t know how long and so continuing to share my posts would make me a bother—at least that’s how I felt.
When I shared my posts
with my friends I had a lot of views on the blogs and that was encouraging. I
felt like I was making my mark in the world with the messages I was writing,
that I was climbing mountains, using the wings that angels had given me and
that if I died I would live on—maybe that’s a stretch, but you get the point.
It was easy to keep writing when each time I looked at how many people were
reading my posts the number was huge. Now that I don’t share the blogs with my
friends the views have dropped significantly, by more than three quarters.
Initially that did not
get to me but after I saw it the second time, the third time and even the
fourth time, it started to get to me. Stewed by frustration and misguided
expectations my blog content quality started to disintegrate.
Fortunately, the moment
I thought I was losing it all my dungeon of discouragement shook and the chains
fell off. As per popular advice, I started to think about why I started writing
in the first place. I was told that if I could remember that, then I could get
my flame back on. So I did just that and here’s what I found.
I started writing
primarily because of my love for the pen—or the keyboard. I have loved writing
for as long as I can remember. Writing
is the only thing, really, I think about during short bursts of thinking about
what everyone else thinks about: sex and food and sleep and friends and money
and fame. Somewhere inside me, whether I’m at the gym or having dinner with my
friends, is always my phone, the notes app and possible blog posts floating embryonically
behind my pupils. The blog came as a result of a desire to want to put my work
in front of people, more so to inspire people to be less awful human beings.
The months when the
quality of my blog posts went down tell a story of self-doubt, the fear, of the
moments of not knowing what to write about, the anxiety, the regret, the
stress, and this is not even a sob story. Every day I tried to put this to the
side and always be in a state of positivity, happiness and creativity, but that
is not how life works. But because of the love I have for writing I stayed
heads down focused. And herein lies what I want you to take away from this
post. Read carefully now because I know what I am writing about.
Go where your love
lies. If you’ve ever wanted to start doing something or to go somewhere but
never get to because of one fear or another, just go. The fires of life could
be burning around my desk but as long as I am typing, I will stay put in my
chair. I draw fulfilment from this. Writing makes me come alive. And that is
what you are missing from that thing you keep pushing to a later date. Life is
already hard as is, chase what you love, trust me, it brings the happiness. I
know people that are in a perpetual cycle of starting new things, being
surprised and angered by initial hurdles, losing interest and hope, before
aborting, feeling depressed for a while, and then moving on to something
different. But if you do what you honestly love, even when these days come, the
love keeps you going.
The love will also get
you to chase what you are afraid to and when you do enrichment will follow.
This love will allow you to be stretched in mind and to overcome struggles, to
reap rewards with a raw energy that this world needs. The love will allow you
to face the occasional nerves, the risk-taking, and your comfort zone. It will
allow you to see them as regular and consistent necessitates for anyone who
wants to make an impact. It is the sense of aliveness that comes with all this
that makes it all worth it.
I am still trying to
figure out what I will write about next and how it will be worth the read. I
have accepted this state and I am now learning to live with it. I hope that I
do not wake up one day and say I am moving on to something different in life
because my fingers are tired of typing.
I am also still trying
to figure out how to end this; I guess this will do.
Until next month,
More life!


Wow...this is inspirational. Just the push I needed to get down and do what I have to do. Thanks Chabala.
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot Daniel.
DeleteThis is amazing man!!ππ½✨
ReplyDeleteThis post come to me at the moment I'm in need of such a motivation. Thanks fir sharing Chabalaππ½π
Thanks manππ½ππ½. Great stuff, great stuff.π
ReplyDeleteSunkutu ✨
ReplyDelete