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Perspective:My blog, my self 
At the risk of ticking off my editors, I'm going to let you in on a little secret: Editingtech stories all day, every day, can get--well--monotonous.
 So it was that last year I decided to flex my writerly muscles and try something new: acolumn for this Web site. It would break up the routine, I'd get a byline, maybe I'd getsome entertaining e-mail from readers, and then I'd go quietly about my business again, behind the scenes, where I belong. Not quite. I did get the byline, and I did get the e-mail, but I did not simply fade back intothe world of grammar and style. Instead--and forgive me if this sounds like a pulp-fiction book title--I was seduced by bloggers.A blogger is a publisher of a Web log, or "blog." But what's a Web log? As one of myfellow editors recently put it, Web logging sounds like some form of virtualendangerment of the spotted owl. Not so, my friends.Web logs give voice to people whom just a decade ago, you never would have heardfrom. There are war blogs, peace blogs, food blogs, crude blogs, humor blogs, culture blogs to occupy your day. Geek blogs, freak blogs, teen blogs, mean blogs, fanaticals andradicals who like to rant away. Worker bees and histories, punditry and poetry, diversity,adversity and spicy verbal play. Optimists, pessimists, enthusiasts and hobbyists, journalists and journal-ists with something big to say.Among the bloggers who contacted me via e-mail were a couple of tech journalists. After writing back and forth with me and posting comments from those "conversations" ontheir Web logs, they ultimately suggested, How about starting a blog yourself?
 
Within two days of having the blog gauntlet thrown down, I had set up a Web site for freeonBlogger.com. It would be an exercise in discipline, to force myself to publishsomething every day, and a test of my stick-to-itiveness: How long could I keep it up?The project is still in progress, but here's what I've discovered so far:• Blogging can be a catharsis. It's an outlet on so many levels, for the frustrated, thedisenchanted, the amateur or professional writer, the wildly prolific, the grieving andsuffering, the idealist, the outrageously creative, the bored, or the royally pissed off.• Blogging is a window on the world--at least for those of us with Web access. After  publishing to my blog, I've had e-mail conversations with people in my own back yard, aswell as with those as far away as Toronto, Greece, South Africa and Romania.• Blogging has not changed my life. But spend some time blog surfing, and you'll see thatit has certainly changed the lives of some--whether it has inspired earth-shatteringrevelations or given people a profound sense of belonging.• Blogging can be a heady experience for journalists. When "capital-J Journalists"--as bloggers like to call people like me--come online with a blog, the community often getsterrifically excited. There's a flurry of cross-linking, a virtual cheer: "Yes! Another 
 Journalist 
has endorsed our medium!"Then comes the capital-P Pressure.• Blogging can be stressful. There are no nagging editors, and there are no real deadlines, but blog for a while, and eventually you gain an audience that has
expectations
that you'regoing to have something witty, profound, helpful or humorous to say on a regular basis.If you don't update your blog, the e-mail starts trickling in: "What happened? Are youdead?"Then you encounter the people who take blogging
way
too seriously. When I first signedon to blog, I was amazed at the civility and open-mindedness that seemingly pervaded the blogging community. Could it be? A place on the Internet--a whole subculture, even--where people have learned manners?It went smoothly for a couple of months. Then I posted something that challenged some people's ideas about good vs. evil, and I was flamed-mailed from here to Timbuktu. No,the blogging community isn't quite a universal outpost of transcendent thinkers, althoughit can come close in many places.• Blogs are not merely vanity sites, despite what some journalists have written. Most people don't have the requisite energy or ego to be pursuing that potential audience of millions. There are those, however, who argue that blogging may signal the death of  journalism as we know it.
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