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How to Recognize a Bad Blog Entry

Around 11 p.m. on Tuesday night, I realized that the entry I was planning to post for this morning was pretty awful. Out of my desire to add value and because of my respect for you, my audience, I got up early this morning to scrap that entry to write about the above-cited topic instead. You’re welcome.

What makes a blog entry bad?

The symptoms crept up on me early:

I can countenance a few literary sins on this blog, from terrible puns to occasional crudity to sugar-coating the truth once in a while, but I’ve done my level best never to lie to you. But my conscience is a funny animal. Several years ago, I didn’t mind when my job was downsized in a large corporation, partly because I’d had nightmares that I was vomiting chains. I realized that not only did I not believe in what I was saying/writing, but the things I was saying were actually chaining people’s freedom of thought. So I’m weird that way. I’ll tell you a long, silly tale about a customer asking for a rock because there’s some truth behind the yarn, but I won’t share the latest pop-culture theory about how you should write or behave about X in the workplace because, to return to a previous message from my subconscious, I couldn’t swallow it.

What to do with a bad entry

Notice you are NOT reading a post about introverts in the workplace today. Instead, I sat down to write about something I believe in and can share with a certain amount of passion. This not to say you will not see me talking about introversion in the future–that is still possible. However, before I take on that topic again, I will need to have something constructive, specific, useful to say.

So if you’ve got the time to realize that your topic is garbage–preferably not one minute before it’s due–scrap it and try something else. At a loss for what to write about instead? Here’s one example of how to tackle the problem.

Stay true to yourselves, folks. Usually, you won’t regret it.

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