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I've hit upon an incredible writing idea. It's partly thanks to nostr and being present there most days.
After some introspection, I found I am tired of switching platforms, playing to certain identities, and aiming for writerly 'success'.
The rules of the game are now changing much faster than one man can keep up with.
I've been writing for nearly 20 years, professionally for 10, and the world of words only gets more complicated. I get closer to burnout every day.
Whether readers find this valuable or not remains to be seen. And at the end of this all, I'll focus on wherever my ideas resonate most.
I vow to publish a weekly post or article outlining one epoch or era of my writing career.
That might sound pompous, like I've won two Pulitzers or the Booker. I haven't, but my writing has spanned blogs, magazines, hand-crafted books, self-publishing, indie publishing, coaching writers, winning competitions, workshops, podcasts, ghostwriting, copy and content, the rise of AI, social media stardom, new platforms, editing, working as a publisher, and marketing clients' books.
As an experiment, I'll publish everywhere - Facebook, X, LinkedIn, Substack, Nostr, Stacker News, and anywhere else I'm already plugged in.
This will be a retrospective of my first burst of creativity and work (2010-2025). As well as helping others discover my work, it'll help me to remember and cherish my journey.
If my words help new writers, that's grand. Really, the results of this social media experiment may be more interesting than the stories themselves.
My posts will be unplanned and unfiltered (aka poorly edited).
Who will notice? What will they think? What conversations will arise? Will the results of this experiment be book-worthy?
Anyway, this is Part One of my writing life (more like a prologue, really).
Expect one edition each week.
And wherever you are reading this, drop by and say 'hello'.
P.S. My name is Phil, hence the title.
this territory is moderated
21 sats \ 1 reply \ @billytheked 8h
Godspeed to you. Writing on the self may be closer akin to self-immolation than self-aggrandization. But perhaps yours will be neither. In any case, this reader will be following along.
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Thanks.
I genuinely never have written about my writitng career until recently. I really will be treating it as an experiment to see what happens.
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21 sats \ 1 reply \ @Scoresby 10h
I'm very curious to see where you find your readers.
I'm also quite interested to see a little more of your writing.
Writing is changing. As is finding readers. Of love to hear some more about how you are thinking on writing as a profession and how that has changed for you. Especially since you've been doing it professionally for a good while.
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At one post per week, I already have the best part if a 1 year mapped out. Strap in!
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21 sats \ 0 replies \ @Fenix 7h
spread your words and be mentioned over the internet by many ppl in many platforms is more important than any Pulitzer because is legit attention about what you want to say. Keep writing and welcome.
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21 sats \ 1 reply \ @plebpoet 13h
Hi Phil! good to know your name, and looking forward to reading about your writing life. It is one of those endlessly interesting (however self-aggrandizing it may appear) subjects to write about. In the past when I have been open about my writing life, it has been received very warmly here and has done everything to make my footing more solid when it comes to sharing stuff online. I think you're making a good choice, and I applaud your resolve. I hope we get to know you well, Phil the writer
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Thanks for the support. I can't promise any how-tos and answers, but I can promise honesty.
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Thanks for trusting us enough to reveal your name.
I am an aspiring writer and an English teacher. Looking forward to stealing insights from you heh
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