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Ask HN: Why Do You Blog?
22 points by onesandofgrain 28 days ago | hide | past | favorite | 13 comments


I started because I wanted to think about transportation policy but my work as a Data Scientist wouldn't let me. I continued because a colleague convinced me it could help position me as a thought leader and get me a new job or engagements. More recently it's been a way to complain about the absurdities of mega corp life, awful past coworkers and jobs, etc. without being too obvious about it (hopefully).

But also I have always enjoyed writing and producing. Just passively consuming the internet leaves me feeling a little empty. Also I hate the short, singular point of view, short attention span, social media, everything we say and write getting neutered and just made worse by communications and legal departments world.

blog: https://kennethswindow.com/


Related:

Ask HN: Is maintaining a personal blog still worth it?

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42685534

Why I still blog after 15 years

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41646531

Write the post you wish you'd found

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43154666

Blogging in 2025: Screaming into the Void

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46156379


I mostly write to do postmortems of the issues i faced while solving some problem. It helps because i tend to forget how i did something or what was the reasoning behind it.Sometimes i just write stories for the sake of writing they are not very good but they amuse me luckily it has 0 viewership (except me) so i am safe in venting whatever i want.


It's a creative outlet where I can try out silly/unusual writing. Its a way to record useful how-tos so that I can refer to the steps in the future & help others. And it lowers the "activation enery" on getting curious/exploring: I am more likely to indulge in a deep-dive on a topic if I know at the end I'll "surface" from the dive with useful insights for others to read.


It forces me to rotate the shapes of ideas; my beliefs become more durable when I'm willing to explore differing views through the act of writing (or it exposes how weak my initial take is)


I used to think that blogging was a way to help me build a platform, get my name out there. Nowadays ... I don't know. Sometimes I have thoughts that interest me - but probably nobody else - so I'll craft a post around them and put the results online. Sharing my creations makes me feel happy. I'll spam a link to the post on Facebook in case any of my friends might be interested in reading it. Lately I've been spamming links to HN, Bluesky, etc because: why not?


I'm just getting started blogging despite having run sites since the late 00s.

I mostly want to blog to sharpen my writing skills, produce something useful that I can point to as mine (and isn't at the whims of a platform), and to have fun on the sysadmin side of running the VPS, domain, traffic, etc.


In short: For myself.

The question can be broken down as:

1. Why do you write?

> To collect my thoughts into a organized stream. So that I can forget the stream of thoughts and still have a place to recollect if needed.

2. Why write publically?

> Openness helps clean and calm the head further.

Better outside than inside...


I like to share my ideas/projects with the world. Also, it helps me learn to express ideas and concepts. Bonus: sometimes you meet cool people interested in the niche you're exploring!


Just for myself. Helps me consolidate my own thoughts and learnings. Sometimes I google something and my own blog comes up. That gives me a bit of a laugh (and is sometimes useful).


I write to deepen my own understanding. Explaining concepts to others forces me to organize my thoughts and fill in gaps I didn't realize I had.


Two reasons: - It got me my last job, so I figured it might get me my next - I have fun doing it


I blog to think more clearly.

It’s utterly pointless to outsource this to ChatGPT. I need to muddle through with my slow dumb human words trying to explain my thinking against the social pressure of not looking stupid in public. Only then do I truly battle-test an idea.




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