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The beauty of blogging is that if someone doesn’t like what you’re writing about, they don’t have to read it. So, own your material, whether boring<\/a>, hilarious, informative<\/a> or crazy<\/a>, it is yours and you created it. No matter how your blog evolves, and it should be allowed to evolve<\/strong>, it needs to always be yours. I started this blog as a mostly personal blog and it has evolved into a conglomeration of medical school, personal stories and general information. Write about what you want and be open to your blog growing and changing along the way.<\/p>\n
If you are happy with what you’re writing, that<\/em> is all that matters. Always write posts that are worth reading, but remember that a post worth reading is one that you<\/em> think is worth reading. This is your space and you get to decide what does or does not belong, what is or is not worth reading. You may not think reading about my crazy<\/a> dogs<\/a> or life timeline<\/a> is interesting, but I love those posts and having them recorded here is more than worth it to me.<\/p>\n
So often I see people not write for three days…or three weeks…or three months…and come back apologizing. Unless you are Frank of PostSecret<\/a>, it’s highly unlikely people are sitting around fretting over the fact that you took a blogging break…in fact they may have not even noticed you went on hiatus. Sometimes life (or a surgery rotation) happens and you can’t write. It’s okay…don’t come back apologizing, just come back<\/em>. Pick up where you left off – you have nothing to apologize for. In that same vein, take some time off for crying out loud! The internet isn’t going anywhere, we’ll all be here when you come back.
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Post a link to your blog on your Twitter<\/a> or Facebook if it seems appropriate, but don’t only <\/em>post links to your blog. Nobody likes a spammer. If the only thing you ever tweet is “HEY CHECK OUT MY NEW BLOG” your only followers are going to be that naked girl who tweets links to diet pills and her friend who has the miracle acne cure.<\/p>\n
The Golden Rule of blogging –\u00a0link<\/strong> your references. If you reference an article or another blog or a person or a tweet – link it! It’s common courtesy, you’d want your work linked back. And please don’t steal photos<\/strong>, use a creative commons<\/a>-type source for your pictures and link back to their photographer. Don’t Google Image search and include those pics in your post, this is not only basic courtesy…it’s avoidance of plagiarism, which we all learned about in 2nd grade. Cut & Copy = Plagiarism. \u00a0<\/em>Sometimes you simply can’t remember where you read something you reference\u00a0and that’s fine, but\u00a0cite your sources if at all<\/strong> possible.<\/em><\/p>\n
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- Own your space & teach it about Darwinian Theory.<\/li>\n
- Be proud<\/em> of work you create and create<\/em> work you are proud of.<\/li>\n
- Never apologize for time off<\/strong>, nobody even noticed you were gone.<\/li>\n
- Set goals<\/strong> for yourself, especially in the beginning.<\/li>\n
- Interact with readers and embrace opposing opinions as opportunities to grow<\/strong>.<\/li>\n
- Don’t be an annoying\u00a0spambot\u00a0or annoying<\/em> spambots will be your only followers.<\/li>\n
- Follow the Golden Rule: Link back to others as you’d want others to link back to you.<\/li>\n
- Don’t\u00a0flood\u00a0your readers…nobody can write 5 great posts every day, not even you<\/em>.<\/li>\n
- Make posts easy to read,\u00a0formatting<\/strong>\u00a0can make or break your writing.<\/li>\n
- Fluff\u00a0is for Build-A-Bears, Moon Pies and school essays<\/em>, not blogs.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<\/blockquote>\n
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What rules do blog authors that you appreciate and look up to consistently follow? What would you add or subtract from my list?<\/strong><\/p>\n
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Image:<\/strong> Michal Marcol | FreeDigitalPhotos.net<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"