Writing

Quote of the Day

Posted on Feb 12, 2008 in Quote of the Day |


Knowledge may give weight, but accomplishments give luster, and many more people see than weigh.

– Lord Chesterfield



Food for thought there… would you rather have a laundry list of accomplishments to show for your actions or just know that you’re good?

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Quote of the Day

Posted on Feb 11, 2008 in Quote of the Day |

Millions long for immortality who don’t know what to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon.

-Susan Ertz

I wish it were still Sunday… another week ahead!

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Quote of the Day

Posted on Feb 9, 2008 in Quote of the Day |

I had reasoned this out in my mind, there were two things I had a right to: liberty and death. If I could not have one, I would have the other, for no man should take me alive.

-Harriet Tubman

What do you have a right to?

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Quote of the Day

Posted on Feb 8, 2008 in Quote of the Day |

New Feature Alert! Quote of the Day!

Some of the world’s greatest feats were accomplished by people not smart enough to know they were impossible.

-Doug Larson

Have you ever found this to be true?

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I KNEW IT – Genius Level Ain’t Bad

Posted on Jan 9, 2008 in Writing | 3 comments

Seth Godin understands me, without knowing it. He recently made a post about dumbing down to reach the average.

The thing is, when you dumb stuff down, you know what you get?

Dumb customers.

Too true! I recently made a post myself about my blog ranking at a Genius Level reading ability. I pondered whether or not it was a good thing, since the Melissa Donovan’s post (where I first saw the quiz) was proposing that it was good to rank lower so more people could understand you.

But that’s not how I write. It’s not the type of people who appreciate my writing. So why should I “dumb down” what I write in order to reach the average middleman? That was my stance, and I don’t mind saying that I feel justified that a major blogger like Seth sees things my way.

One of the comments on my previous blog noted that you should write the way you speak when blogging. That opens up the conversation. I completely agree with that, and the thing is… I do speak this way. Which is why I write this way. I need not apologize for my love of grammar and syntax!

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Genius Level… Is it such a bad thing?

Posted on Dec 20, 2007 in Writing | 4 comments

In catching up with my Google Reader subscriptions I see a post on Writing Forward about the reading level of one’s blog. This little widget allows for a nice bridge into writing for the broadest audience possible. In my infinite curiosity, I went and had this blog analyzed.

Is this really a bad thing? Blog author Melissa Donovan seems to think so:

Writers who use big words and fancy phrases will not reach the broadest audience possible, and in fact, will turn many potential readers away. Who wants to expend a whole lot of energy to decipher a short story or understand a blog post? When a writer tries to come off as brilliant by using complex language, the effort usually outshines the material.

Personally I’m not so sure it’s a bad thing to exhibit my intelligence. I wouldn’t say that I write in a manner that excludes people… I’m pretty sure that anyone I know could chime in and join the conversation. And I don’t know many geniuses. So what is it about a post that makes the reading a genius level read? I’m very curious what standards this particular website is using on making that assessment.

Thoughts? Do I need to dumb this down, so to speak?

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