Order Isordil with No Prescription, Before I revived my blog from its latest hiatus a bit over a month ago, I made a promise to myself: this blog will not need big numbers for me to consider it a success.
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Update on July 1st, japan, craiglist, ebay, overseas, paypal, Buy Isordil from mexico, 2010: I decided to give a try to the idea Raam suggested in his comment below and not look at stats for a month or so until August. For a couple of days now, where to buy Isordil, Isordil for sale, when I go to the blog, this is what I see:

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Awesome post. This is a really important subject when it comes to blogging. The Internet makes it so easy to lose the personal touch (and personal focus!).
I wrote an article several weeks ago about the need to Communicate with Humans not Statistics and I committed to not checking any of my stats (traffic or RSS subscribers) for a full three months.
It has had an absolutely incredible affect on my writing and I no longer feel so much anxiety over whether or not what I’m writing is worthwhile or “on topic”. Funny thing is, the stats don’t much matter anymore. I could have a million RSS readers right now, and I wouldn’t even know. And that’s a good thing! The comments and feedback I get on my posts are more valuable to both myself and the community that I create.
That’s an awesome post, Raam! Thank you for sharing the link and the idea.
Maybe, with this post, the ONE person is YOU!
Great insight that I am sure will help even more than one!
Thank you, Courtney! You are absolutely right: this post was something I had to write for myself to read. Blogging keeps teaching me lessons about life… :)
Great post! Just this morning, I read the part about shipping art in Linchpin. And somewhere else, maybe it was in Tribes, Godin said “one,” in response to the question of how many followers you need. One truly devoted fan who devours (and shares) everything you do. Once you have that, you’re rolling.
In regards to the talk of stats, I heard an interview with Leo of Zen Habits where he said he doesn’t check any stats any more, nor does he even check his subscriber numbers. I don’t know that that’s the right move for newer/smaller bloggers to whom that feedback might be valuable, but it’s an appealing idea.
Yeah, checking stats can at times be useful, but I guess I could live without checking them daily like I do now. Once per week or even month should be enough.
But, if the goal is to grow the subscriber count (I think it’s still a goal even if you focus on your readers as individuals) it can help to show the subscriber count on the blog. And then, it’s almost impossible to not see the figure if you ever go to your own blog ;)
It’s tricky, but I guess what matters most is anyway the attitude, and thinking about the readers as people rather than numbers.
Thank you, Jarkko, for that post and your blog (I just discovered). Several months ago I quitted blogging “for public” as I found “no-one isn’t anyway interested in what I blog” as I saw in stats people visiting my blog but no-one bothering to leave a comment. But your idea about “one” sounds good: for everyday life and well.. for blogging too:)
Glad you liked the idea (and the blog).
In my blogging experience so far, I have noticed that the proportion of people who leave a comment compared to all those reading is usually really low. In that sense, although comments are great, they aren’t a clear indicator of success; and not getting any doesn’t mean that you are not making difference in someone’s life. So, I suggest you keep posting, even if no one is commenting. That “one” person might still be reading :)
Hello! I’ve recently started reading your blog and enjoying it immensely. I am already employing a lot of your ideas in my on-going campaign to live a simpler, happier life. (My favorite so far has been reading more!)
This post in particular struck me as it applies to several things I am working on at the moment. So thank you for this and for all of your writing.
-Buddy
Hey Buddy, I’m cheering on your quest for a simpler, happier life!
Thanks for the comment and glad you enjoy my writing. :)