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Blogger Biographies: Writer Dad

I’m doing a special series of guest posts this week on Remarkablogger. I’ve invited several up-and-coming bloggers to describe how they got started in blogging, how it helps their business, and how blogging helped them grow as a human being.

Writer Dad is Sean Platt, and he has come from out of nowhere to occupy a place in many a feed reader and inbox. His earnestness and excellent writing are a great combo. He blogs at Writer Dad.

Three months back, I found myself deep in the middling of a great in between. I’d finished a draft of my first novel, had a few things lying on an agent’s desk awaiting judgment, and was searching for a way to sharpen my voice.

The daily exercise of maintaining a blog, I believed, would both afford me challenge and improve my writing. When we wish to lose the soft stuff which gathers around our middles, we should be prepared to put our back to the floor, for sit-ups every morning.

Before Writer Dad, most everything I wrote was penned in isolation. Few people outside my family knew I was writing at all. The idea that my thoughts might eventually reach the eyes of others was alluring. It would take a while, sure, but I was prepared for the wearying work of writing then waiting.

That, however, was not my experience at all. By my third week, the blog was averaging twenty comments per post. To me, that kind of instant feedback was unprecedented.

I fed the fire of comments. The comments, in turn, fueled everything else.

I’m a big believer in the power of praise. I make sure my children know each day how highly I think of them. It makes them want to do more, and try harder. This is human nature. It’s in our DNA to please, especially those who love us most. Part of a blog’s magic is immediate response, and I’ll be honest, dozens of digital high fives did delightful things for the writer inside me.

The more people said they liked what I was doing, the harder I worked to improve. Like a mutual fund, I made contributions, which after time, grew by their own velocity. Having a blog pushed my writing immeasurably further than it would have traveled on its own. I’m writing this post ten weeks from the starting gate; I’m far from the finish line.

When we write, we discover what’s inside us, bubbling beneath the surface, about to erupt.  By getting it down, we’re learning about ourself. E.M. Forster said, “How can I know what I think, till I see what I say?” Word.

The next few months are transition for me. At the end of the year, I’m closing the doors on my current business, and trading it for a new one, built with the clay and straw of infinite language. Things are going well, and I expect they’ll get better. I landed a guest post on Copyblogger, which I never expected in a million years, along with a handful of opportunities which will unfold into the coming calendar.

I didn’t enter blogging with pie in the sky expectations. I went in with a willingness to work hard, and learn from my mistakes (of which, there have been plenty). Writing is discovery; truly know yourself, and you should know what you want to do. After that, it’s up to you to go and do it.

Be sure to visit Writer Dad and follow him on Twitter (maybe he’ll actually tweet something).

Online Business School

14 Comments

  1. Posted October 9, 2008 at 9:24 am | Permalink

    Well i wish you the best of luck at the end of the year in your new business. I am actually a fond reader of michaelmartine.com and I’m glad I found it.

  2. Posted October 9, 2008 at 10:29 am | Permalink

    I’ve been reading Sean’s words for quite some time (at least in terms of how long he’s been around). Sean is an excellent writer, and beyond that - he takes the comments he receives very seriously. It’s a great pleasure to share in this journey with him!

    Congrats on the feature here!!

  3. Posted October 9, 2008 at 10:48 am | Permalink

    Hey Sean,

    It was just this morning that Sid Savara and I were discussing how bloggers don’t really come from “nowhere”, and that they have been writing in the shadows for many months before the masses find them.

    However, it really does seem you’re the exception to the rule. It truly seems you came out of nowhere and struck gold right away. Good for you. :)

    I’ll be honest… Your blog is one I’ve heard a lot about but I’ve never really taken the time to stop and look. (There are a lot of blogs that are in that no man’s land of my brain). However, this post has given me a good reason to head over there and have a snoop around. :)

    Jamie

  4. Posted October 9, 2008 at 11:27 am | Permalink

    Sean’s experience is unusual but not unheard of. In case, it’s also well-deserved.

  5. Posted October 9, 2008 at 1:50 pm | Permalink

    Hi everybody!

    Charles: Thanks for the well wishing, I’ve never looked forward to New Years more.

    Lance: Yes, you’ve been there since the beginning. Constant reader and commenter. Thank you for everything.

    Jamie: I hope to see you around. I haven’t struck gold quite yet, but I do have on my Levis, and I’m waist deep in the river with my pan.

    Michael: Your Tweet comment made me laugh, out loud actually. Point well taken. I’ll get on the Tweet wagon soon. I’ll install a desktop client today, and start tweeting by Monday. Any suggestions how I should use it?

  6. Posted October 9, 2008 at 1:59 pm | Permalink

    @Sean - Good to have the loyal friends come around, isn’t it?

    How to use Twitter? Oh, I might have written or recorded a thing or two. Let’s see…

    How to Use Twhirl, a Twitter Desktop Program

    How to Drive Traffic to Your Blog with StumbleUpon and Twitter (Two audio files here, 1st is for StumbleUpon and the 2nd is for Twitter)

    Enjoy! :)

  7. Posted October 9, 2008 at 3:38 pm | Permalink

    @WD: How about that, two features in the same day. How does one get so lucky?

    I know luck has nothing to do with it. I am happy for you. I can’t wait to see what is in store after the first of the new year!

  8. Posted October 9, 2008 at 3:50 pm | Permalink

    Best of luck to you Sean, though it doesn’t sound like you’ll need much in the luck department. Hard work does seem to pay off in the slickest of ways, eh? Beautiful job here. I haven’t posted a comment before, but just had to tell you how much I’ve enjoyed reading.

  9. Posted October 9, 2008 at 4:43 pm | Permalink

    First time here, but I’ll be back. Good luck with the novel.

  10. Posted October 9, 2008 at 6:07 pm | Permalink

    Michael: Thanks! For the last three weekends, I’ve said I would put attention into StumbleUpon and Twitter. Last weekend I actually did, though it was just getting the buttons up, it sure was a start. This weekend, I will look at all your resources and I thank you in advance.

    Sal: 2009 will start out as my most difficult year ever, and end as the best one yet. I can’t wait.

    Matt: Thanks for commenting. I do believe, at least in measure, that we each build our own luck.

    MBRE: Thanks.

  11. Posted October 11, 2008 at 12:42 am | Permalink

    @Sean (WD) - I found your site from here! I don’t know, a few weeks ago. I have to say your blog and maybe 3 others are the only ones I enjoy reading. A lot of blogs are tutorials and other knowledge advancement things so I can scan them for the ones I want to read. I wait until the evening to read them so I am always late to the conversation, but still I try to be involved. Congratulation on your emerging success and great new look on your site.

  12. Posted October 11, 2008 at 3:08 pm | Permalink

    Sean’s writing has a unique crispness and depth that immediately drew me in. I love his site (and Daisy’s, too. His posts are brain food for creativity. He truly is inspirational, even when he’s not trying.

    Now, that’s a good writer.

  13. Posted October 11, 2008 at 3:35 pm | Permalink

    I am scared to DEATH of Twitter and the time it will suck form my schedule. Call me a wimp, it’s ok.

    FYI the link for “How to Drive Traffic to Your Blog with StumbleUpon and Twitter ” crapped out on ‘ya.

  14. Posted October 11, 2008 at 7:20 pm | Permalink

    Jim: Thanks, I appreciate that. I can take no credit for the site. That’s all the marvelous work of Eric Hamm at Motivate Thyself. I didn’t even ask him, he’s just a super nice guy.

    Jamie: You could not be nicer, and I’m with you on Twitter. I’m kind of afraid it will eat me.

One Trackback

  1. By Weekly Wrap Up: Take Three : Blue Duck Copy on October 18, 2008 at 10:37 am

    [...] “When we write, we discover what’s inside us, bubbling beneath the surface, about to erupt. By getting it down, we’re learning about ourself. E.M. Forster said, “How can I know what I think, till I see what I say?” Word. When we write, we discover what’s inside us, bubbling beneath the surface, about to erupt. By getting it down, we’re learning about ourself. E.M. Forster said, “How can I know what I think, till I see what I say?” Word.” Writer Dad’s guest appearance at Remakablogger. http://michaelmartine.com/2008/10/09/blogger-biographies-writer-dad/ [...]

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