Today marks 3 years of blogging.
I have enjoyed it, absolutely, and am glad I started.
Benefits?
1 It has taught me to write easily, confidently and rapidly, which will be a blessing as I return to “real” writing. My memoir Up to the Hills, will be published next April by Prodigal Press.
2 It’s enlarged my world. I have met several bloggers and blog readers, some of whom have become good friends. And my cyber-friendships with commentators and blog readers has enriched and broadened my life. Blogging is a tremendous vehicle of growth.
3 Reading other blogs has changed me. I have been stretched by the can-do attitude and practical suggestions of Michael Hyatt.
From Donald Miller, I have learned about inciting incidents, and have created one of my own, an 11 mile a day pilgrimage in Tuscany.
From Jeff Goins, I have learned that writing every day makes it effortless. From Leo Babuata, that the way to major life changes is to make minuscule changes. And from Ann Voskamp that thanking God through the day changes everything. Reading beautifully written blogs, Sarah Bessey’s among them, enriches my life.
4 Blogging has taught me the pleasures of thinking deeply, and thinking things through. I have become braver and more confident about expressing my opinion, even when pushback is certain.
This has helped me grow as a person, and become more reflective. Reflective considered living and blogging has immense psychological benefits.
5 I definitely feel more alive and happy when I am blogging. When we take the kids to a cathedral, museum, botanical garden or a mountain hike, we suggest that they take cameras. Photographing beauty slows them down and they see it better.
For me, writing about my travels, my life, my ideas, my spiritual journey has the same function.
Blogging has slowed me down in good ways, and made me more reflective. The spiritual life begins when we slow down.
I am calmer, and have a more settled faith having worked out questions, querulousness, anger, and disagreements with my faith community on my blog over the last few years. I am far less likely now to write controversial posts!
6 A spiritual blog flows out of a spiritual life. When I am dry and have nothing much to write about I know it is time to repent and return.
7 If you blog with an open mind, reading other faith bloggers, and considering what they write, you will become more liberal. Without thinking too much about it, I assumed homosexuality was a sin around the time I started blogging in 2010. I have evolved. I have moved from a rather loosely held belief in inerrancy to a belief in the divine inspiration of scripture (though it is deeply precious to me, either way). Interrogating my faith, ironically, has led to it becoming deeper and more joy-giving
8 Self-confidence and stability—Blogging every day for three years has had a stabilizing influence on my life. Persisting in blogging every day has brought about confidence in my ability to write quickly (and, sometimes well). The confidence and discipline has spilled over into other areas. My house is tidier; I wake earlier; I have adopted a daily exercise habit of a 4-5 mile walk, and am losing weight—11 pounds since November!
9 Blogging frees me from the fear of criticism and the desire for approval. Some posts you know will evoke pushback or hostility and it’s freeing to write them anyway, and blow off the criticism. My own rule of thumb is I blow off all ad hominem comments, and delete them. Disagreement with ideas is fine, but when I realize both my views and my interlocuter’s are entrenched, I agree to disagree and “fade” –stop engaging.
10 Gratitude—Every year of blogging is better than the year before. You have more readers so what you write gets leveraged. Blog friendships increase in number and depth. As thinking “blogly” becomes a habit, you see blog ideas everywhere.
My blog has more than doubled since last year, largely due to being more active on Twitter.
I am grateful for my archive. I often return to it, and rethink, refine and reshare a post.
New Directions
1) I needed a metric to gauge whether my blog is healthy and growing. I had used page views, on the philosophy that whatever is alive grows.
However, this intriguing article in the New York Times suggests that when we are helping other people, we are far more motivated to work, and work hard.
So I may try summarizing particularly helpful books, articles and blogs on my blog, and choose topics to explore depending on how useful they might be to my readers.
2 I read blogs widely, mainly on my facebook or my iPhone, but rarely comment (laziness and rushing and because I read blogs when I am procrastinating writing). I am trying to comment more.
3 I have got into the habit of thinking in 800-1000 words. I would LOVE to get into the habit of thinking in 400-500 words to conserve time and energy.
4 I would love to do more Scripture blogging—and in fact, my Scripture posts land up being evergreen posts, thanks to Google.
5 Other evergreen posts are those I post on my travels. I am growing increasingly interested in doing more travel writing on my blog.
6 I tend to write about subjects I know (or think I know). I would like to use my blog to explore things I do not know, ask questions, think through new subjects, and use my blog as a vehicle of growth.
7 “Love is little. Love is low. Love will make my spirit grow,” goes the Shaker spiritual.
When stuck, I would like to blog “little” and “low.” Be real, not even think about “killer” posts (in any sense of the word), but just blog about the new things I’ve learned, the little thoughts, the little insights, the little experiences of my life. “If your daily life seems poor, do not blame it; blame yourself, tell yourself that you are not poet enough to call forth its riches; for to the creator there is no poverty and no poor indifferent place.”
― Rainer Maria Rilke, Letters to a Young Poet
I don’t feel my blog has fully grown up, fully decided what it’s going to be and do once it’s all grown up, but it is enjoying growing up, and I am enjoying growing with it!
And thank you for reading and commenting!
And here are my most read posts of all time:
1 When Christian leaders stumble, the proper response is mourning.
2 The Parable of the Bridge, or when to say no to insistent people.
3 On Vaughan Roberts’ interview, and the case for gay Christian marriage.
4 In which angels sing and diamonds materialize: The Revival Alliance in Birmingham
5 Simon Ponsonby’s Butcher Sermon
6 Christians, quit being so oppositional
7 Why I am no longer a Catholic
8 When your theology makes you cry, your theology is too small
9 Why God is Profoundly Egalitarian and Why we Need More Female Clergy
10 So, is God to be found at the bottom of a laundry basket?
11 In which I trace my evolving views on gay Christians
12 Blogocracy—100 Influential Christian bloggers, as measured by Facebook followers
Do you blog? What do you love/hate about it? If you don’t, would you like to start?
Read my new memoir: Rosaries, Reading, Secrets: A Catholic Childhood in India (US) or UK.
Connect on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/anitamathiaswriter/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/anita.mathias/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/AnitaMathias1
My book of essays: Wandering Between Two Worlds (US) or UK


Happy Blogversary Day! In moving from a reading-a-whole-book life into blogging, yours has been the only one I’ve consistently read. Reading blogs has fit my currently over busy lifestyle of late and while most would frown on halting of more “deep” reading, I challenge that by saying that blogging fills a need for us in our fast-paced lives. I think of it as “reading by chapters”…each day I have a new chapter to read from Anita’s blog-book. Thank you!
Thank you, LA. You are the reader who consistently challenges me to think the most–and I am very grateful to you for that. I too read a couple of blogs like a page a day from someone’s life–but without realizing that that is what I was doing. One of them is Sarah Bessey’s sarahbessey.com.
Happy Blogoversary! I always enjoy learning from you 🙂
Thanks, Tanya:-) You’re powering away in blogland! I am struggling to keep up with mine, now that my book manuscript is due on Dec. 31!
Happy 3rd Blogoversary, Anita! I love your blog and have been so encouraged, informed, enlightened and entertained by reading it – sometimes in the same post! You are a great example for newbies like me and I admire your ability to write daily. Even in the relatively short time that I have participated in reading blogs and writing my own, I have had many of my preconceptions shaken, much encouragement to believe I have a voice and a word to share, and an ever-increasing circle of friendship and support. It’s a world I feel privileged to be a tiny part of. May you continue to enjoy it too. Blessings :)xx
Thanks Joy. I haven’t been good at investing in blog friendships for the last year or two–and so am missing on one of the great pleasures of blogging. Oh well, not too late to reverse course.
Blesisng to you!
Congratulations. I’ve always loved writing. Blogging is a new adventure for me. I’m finding your blog very interesting and inspiring.
Marilyn, thank you for your comment. Look forward to visiting your blog. Blessings, A.
Congratulations and happy birthday, I am more than impressed that you have maintained daily blogging for 3 years – I’d love to do it for 3 days! I must confess that I only dip in when I have the time, but I’d like to come here more often, so to aid that I have added your blog to my feed reader on my tablet. I have so many posts buzzing about my head, but I rarely have the time to get them out, and when I do have an evening to myself I just flop as I’m always on the go. I’m sure it’ll come with perserverance. God bless and long my you continue growing.
Hi Bill, I failed in my first 3 attempts at blogging. Was only able to persist once I clearly heard that it was God’s will for me.
Perhaps start small and sloppy, with posts of a few sentences when you want to flop–and you may well find it relaxing and therapeutic!