A fellow site writer for the About.com company forwarded to me this article from our parent company, the New York Times. It was of such import that I feel compelled to share it with all my BIAB readers.

In the article, the growing problem of bloggers’ unhealthy working conditions and lives is explored, especially in the context of two recent high-profile deaths:

Two weeks ago in North Lauderdale, Fla., funeral services were held for Russell Shaw, a prolific blogger on technology subjects who died at 60 of a heart attack. In December, another tech blogger, Marc Orchant, died at 50 of a massive coronary. A third, Om Malik, 41, survived a heart attack in December.

Other bloggers complain of weight loss or gain, sleep disorders, exhaustion and other maladies born of the nonstop strain of producing for a news and information cycle that is as always-on as the Internet.

While blawggers are obviously approaching their blog tasks quite differently from those tech-oriented and political bloggers, we’re all still susceptible to the same stresses. No, we’re not blogging at 2 in the morning or (hopefully) falling asleep in front of the screen. But we have this whole other professional life to boot as lawyers, and for many of us, as business owners, too.

My readers mean too much to me. Please make sure you’re:

  • Blogging productively. Use software and common sense to organize your posts and adhere to a schedule that will help you save time and keep repetitive tasks to a minimum.
  • Getting sufficient rest. Not at your desk, mind you — in a real bed, with a pillow and everything, for at least 6 to 8 hours a night.
  • Eating well. Forget diets and supplements (except a good multivitamin) — just aim for a balanced diet as full of low-on-the-food-chain foodstuffs as possible.
  • Exercising regularly. Take a daily walk at lunch or before bed or when you get up in the morning — whatever works best for you.

When stress starts eating away at your psyche and your well-being, go into what I call “emergency maintenance mode” and practice extreme self care. All non-essential projects and tasks are put on hold or delegated. No new tasks are accepted. Daily meditation and a general attitude of forgiveness towards oneself for all the myriad things you’re not doing are requisite. Gentle, easy mind-body practices like yoga and tai chi are especially good, but only if you’re not going to beat yourself up over how you’re doing it, or how frequently.

Bottom line:: Don’t become another sad statistic. Be proactive and recognize the danger that lurks inside — our own perfectionism and need to excel.

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If you’re sitting there thinking “What the heck is NaBloPoMo? Sounds like a dread disease . . . ” let me assure you first that you’re in no danger of needing a trip to the E.R. NaBloPoMo is short for National Blog Posting Month, and it’s an interesting way to harness the power of peer pressure to light a fire under your blogging.

NaBloPoMo was inspired by a much more intimidating group project (well, more intimidating to me, at any rate) - NaNoWriMo. Can you guess what that stands for, now that I’ve deciphered NaBloPoMo? It’s National Novel Writing Month, and it always happens in November, as does NaBloPoMo. (OK, this is getting old, really quickly.)

The idea basically is to sign up for the project (or not - you don’t have to publicly declare your intention to play along at home or the office), and then to start a blog and post daily. Every single day, for an entire month. (Of course, you should be doing that anyway, if you’re just starting off - so they say. You’ll note I don’t follow that advice consistently myself. Erp.)

Unlike NaNoWriMo, the proof that you’ve complied with NaBloPoMo is in the blog - folks can tell right away if you’ve done as you said you would. We’re not as likely to be able to see that you finished your novel, right? But whether you sign up for public admiration (or flogging, as the case may be) or not, you can still use the impetus provided by the project to stoke your own motivation.

And remember why daily (or at the very least frequent) posting is important: each post is another drop of Google juice for your blog. Also: the more frequently you update your blog (with substantive posts, mind you - not 30 days of two-line “quotes and links” to other blogs or even worse yet, apologies for not having more to say), the greater your standing in the blog-world grows. Blog readers reward consistent and prolific bloggers.

BloPo away!

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Posted in Productive Blawgging, The Blawgosphere at November 2nd, 2007. No Comments.
Note: This post was originally published at The Inspired Solo, and is reprinted here for your convenience. 

Quick link: I just ran across this article from Michael Stelzner writing for Copyblogger offering “Five Tips for Finding Writing Time.” I highly encourage busy blawggers to take a look at Michael’s tips and see how many can be imported into your blogging schedules. Personally, I have always encouraged my clients to follow my paraphrase of Michael’s #1 tip (”Identify your productivity zone”) - Don’t work against type!

The other tips will help you find the flow you need to make blawgging a natural part of your law practice day. Check it out!

Copyblogger: Five Tips for Finding Writing Time (Michael Stelzner)

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Posted in Productive Blawgging at August 31st, 2007. No Comments.