Romance novels have been around for a long time. Some of the most ancient of texts have romance as the basis of their story. But why do people feel drawn to them?

There are different schools of thought on this. Some people say that people are looking for a happy ending, while others say that people are looking for a strong person to take care of them. Still others say that people are looking for an escape from reality.

I would say that no one really knows for sure what it is that draws people to romance novels because each person has a different reason for being drawn to the genre. Our reasons for reading, and writing, romance novels are our own.

Some think that romance novels provide people with fantasies that they can’t find in their own lives. People may be looking for someone to rescue them, or they may simply enjoy the feeling of being swept off their feet. Romance novels often have a happy ending, which is something that many people crave.

In fact, many people enjoy reading romance novels as a form of escapism. They can imagine themselves in the story, living out the romantic fantasies that they may not be able to experience in their own lives.

Romance novels can also help people to learn about relationships and how to navigate them. They can provide tips on how to be a successful partner, how to handle conflict, and how to create a lasting, happy relationship. So it’s no surprise that romance novels are one of the most popular genres of fiction. People can’t seem to get enough of them!

Whatever the reason, it’s clear that romance novels are popular among people of all ages. And they show no signs of going away any time soon.

What do you think draws people to romance novels?

When I started reading romance novels at around 12 years old, I wasn’t quite prepared for the adult situations, but the books I read helped me to understand a lot and prepared me for a future that many expect to have. I learned quite a few things.

1. Sex was not a bad thing, even if it was considered dirty and naughty outside of marriage back in the day. The novels I read reinforced this idea that sex outside of marriage was thrilling because it was wrong, however. It seemed that once the marriage took place, having a family and baking cookies seemed to replace the joy of consensual sex. Which kind of made me wonder what all the fuss was about, if married sex was boring, why bother? It wasn’t a factual takeaway, I know, but yeah, the point got muddled along the way for me.

2. I didn’t exactly want to be the typical woman, and definitely not the antagonistic characters in these novels. Sex was only for when you were married (unless you broke the mold and hid the fact that you actually enjoyed sex before marriage), family and contentment was the goal of these novels, but it seemed so…boring. Don’t come at me for that, it’s just my opinion for myself. There are other people that take away something different and that’s fine, but this was my understanding of these novels. You get married, have sex, make babies with your super-hot husband, and then buy a house and work until you die. Um, why? Why can’t you still have super-awesome sex with your partner, be childless, and do something different with your life?

3. I started to write my own little stories. I followed the guidelines set out in those stories, and continued to do so, up until my latest book. As I concluded that book, **Spoiler Alert** I thought, not all women want white gowns and to be a princess for a day. Not all women want to have families and all of that. And with the future that’s set out for my latest female main character, marriage doesn’t guarantee future happiness.

I took a break from publishing my own stories for a while. A little over a year to be exact. I was quite ill for a while, in pain for most of that break, and lost as to what direction I wanted to head in. Some of the latter came from the fact that I was tired of following guidelines. Once I decided to take a chance and let go of some of those restrictions I’d placed on myself, my creativity came back. We’ll soon see if that chance was just me shooting myself in the foot or not.

This is my latest and possibly my favorite book. It was released in August, so I’m late catching up, but I think we’ve all had one of those two years, haven’t we? Or has it been a decade? I’m not sure about much anymore. I do know that this is book two of the Wolves of Lupine Falls series and is full of magic, love, adventure, and romance. Click the picture to see the full page and to buy it now. Book three is in the works now. On top of that, I changed the covers for one or two of my books. I may change them again at some point but I really love this one. This series is complete and I doubt I’ll go back to it anytime soon, but you can get book one and book two by clicking on the picture above and going to the Amazon page for it. As always, my books are usually on Kindle Unlimited, so you can read it for free on there.

The rest of the time, I’ve been keeping my head down, plotting how I’ll take over the world, or at least my living room, and trying to avoid illnesses of any kind. It’s been a tough 9 months, but I will always hope that things will get better. I have a lot in store, if I can ever get some peace and quiet, and I’m planning on branching out in a new direction later this year/early next year. Wish me luck and, as always, I hope you have a beautiful day! 

Image by ImaArtist from Pixabay

This may not be the last time you see that title. In fact, I highly doubt it’s the last time. I get asked that question…a lot. I don’t mind, usually. I have knowledge, people want it, and I’m there in front of them. I also get asked if I mind talking to a friend that’s a writer but has no idea how to publish a book.

I feel as if I’ve already written this post a thousand times, but I’m going to do it again, because it’s the one thing I’m asked over and over…can I pick your brain? Of course, you may.

I’m often asked several questions after I give my permission to have my brain picked. I’ll try to address some of them below.

Where Do I Publish?

It seems like a simple question, but it’s not. It leads me to my answer, in the form of a question. Do you want to find a publisher or publish it yourself? I know nothing about agents or finding publishers. I have no answers for you there other than to avoid those that ask you for money and those that promise you the moon but have very super-fine print in their contracts. I do, however, know a ton about self-publishing which is also called indie publishing. That’s what I’m focusing on.

Where do you publish? This depends on how many books you have, whether you want to be tied to a 90-day commitment with the obvious choice or publish to a wider audience. My personal choice is to go with Amazon’s Kindle Direct Publishing, hereafter known as KDP.

If you only have one book, I’d say look at KDP. Try their Kindle Select Program program for 90 days, (be sure to uncheck the automatically renew button or you’ll be tied in for another 90 days without even realizing it). When you enroll in the Kindle Select Program you make your book available to their Kindle Unlimited program. The Kindle Unlimited program allows people to borrow your book when they enroll monthly for whatever they charge in your country, and you get paid a certain amount of money for each page read. This gets complicated and I’m not going to answer questions about it because even I don’t know all the answers to how Amazon decide what we’ll get paid or what exactly is a page read. I recommend the program if you have a large catalog of books or can market your books well.

If you want to publish your manuscript to more than one outlet at a time I’ll discuss that later in this post.

KDP can be explored here. Here you can find information about publishing ebooks as well as paperback copies of your book.

If you want to save yourself some hassle I would advise at least uploading and exporting your manuscript on Reedsy, found here before you even look at publishing. That is my invite link and I might get some kind of credit if you use that link, but that’s not why I use them. I use them because they provide me with .mobi, .epub, and pdf copies of my manuscript. These are the file versions you’ll need to publish your book. There’s also a built-in editing tool which I find useful. Your work will still need an editor but it definitely helps to catch a lot of errors. You’ll need at least one of these file types to publish your book.

Reedsy also allows you to create custom PDF versions of your manuscript to use in print publishing. They have pre-designed and custom sizes if you should want a print version of your book. I use them for every one of my books now because it’s simple to use and I’ve never had a manuscript rejected for problems by Amazon since I started using them. **A NOTE: You will need a book cover that is designed for your manuscript dimensions to make print copies of your book. This is a separate file from your manuscript file. Of course, the same goes for your ebook version but print anything is far more complicated to upload and get approved.

Then there’s Draft2Digital. You can find them here. Again, that is an affiliate link and I may benefit in some way from you using that link. With Draft2Digital you can create whatever file version of your book is needed to publish such as a .mobi file. I do NOT recommend using a PDF file or sending one to readers. It’s easily pirated. All files are easily pirated these days but PDF versions all but beg to be pirated from what I’ve seen over the years.

With Draft2Digital you can publish your book ‘wide’. Wide means you aren’t tied to one outlet, or exclusive to a program such as the Kindle Select Program which enrolls your book in Kindle Unlimited. You can publish your book with Apple, Google Play, Nook, and many other outlets, including libraries.

If you want to have hardback or paperback copies of your book look into IngramSpark. I don’t know a lot about them as I’ve never used them, but everyone I’ve talked to says they’re good. They also do ebooks now, I see.

How Do I Publish?

I’ve touched on this briefly so far but I’ll try to explain it better now.

  1. You need a manuscript. Edit the manuscript, the best you can. I can tell you a book with no editing, with no proofreading, and that hasn’t been formatted properly will not only get you bad reviews, it may get your book pulled from the outlet you choose. Once you’ve got the book edited, however you manage to have it edited, you need to turn it into a file that your outlet can use. The manuscript needs to be turned into a .mobi or .epub file, in other words.
  2. Find a book cover. If you are not a graphic artist with experience in creating book covers I’d suggest finding a pro. It will be worth it in the end. You might not think that book cover is important but it is. Readers want to know what you are selling, not what your vacation pictures look like, what kind of puppy you have, or how beautiful your kids are. They want to know what is in the book. If you have to save up to hire a pro or buy a premade cover from a pro, then do so. There are some great artists out there that will be happy to work with you. I promise. Look them up on Facebook. There are thousands.
  3. Do NOT go to Fiver and buy whatever you see first without checking out the artist to ensure they’re using images that have been licensed for that use and that they aren’t recycling images they paid for once and are using over and over or images they’ve outright stolen. (This can be its own post really and applies even to artists you might find on Facebook or elsewhere.)
  4. Do not use ‘free for commercial use’ or copyright free images. That will come back to bite you too.
  5. Even the font on your cover can be a problem. Some fonts that you can install have to be licensed for use. And use is determined by the artist, not you.
  6. Once you have a cover and a file, you need a description/blurb. These are hard. Look at your genre, look at other blurbs in that genre (the same can be said for cover images), rewrite it, study how to write blurbs, and when you’ve got something that entices the reader without giving too much away, proceed to the next step.
  7. Open the site for the outlet you’ve chosen.
  8. Follow their instructions.
  9. Once everything is done, you’ve chosen what price your book will be and agreed to the terms and conditions, you sit and wait for a link to your brand new book-baby.
  10. Once you have a link, you have to market. You can’t just sit there staring at your link wondering why your book is still sitting there with no buys or page reads. Nobody knows about it at this point. As for marketing? That’s not my area of expertise but I’ll have some basic tips in my next post. Stay tuned for that.

A Few Last Words of Advice

Publishing is a minefield with no red flags to point out where you shouldn’t step. My number one piece of advice is: use the Internet. It’s a tool. Use whatever search engine you use and search out answers. I’m not an expert, by any means, but when it comes to publishing I know this much: I don’t know enough. I never will because publishing evolves, changing into something totally different than it was 10 years ago. You have to find the right fit for you and it’s okay to ask questions every now and then.

Do not assume something, seriously. Someone has done that before you and paid the price for it. If the phrase “well, I just assumed…” is about to pass your thoughts or your lips, stop. Use your biggest tool, your Internet, and read or watch videos. Find the answer and save yourself some grief. Do not step on the mine. You don’t have to.

Writing tips come and go, much like the rules of writing. I learned how to write by the Chicago Manual of Style (CMS) while in high school, because that’s what my English teacher insisted would be used when we all went off to our future universities and colleges. By the time I graduated, I knew exactly what I needed to know.

Only, I didn’t.

There was this new device of torture presented to me called the American Psychological Association of Style (APA) that was, to put it nicely, pure living hell. I had to pay a fortune for the book for my very first class and it was just…hell. That’s the only way I can describe it.

I’ve since learned that psychologists are sick, twisted individuals when it comes to preparing writings style guides. They enjoy torturing the brains of students, and I think they might even be zombies, looking to mash up our brains for easy extraction later.

I think my brain still gets confused about which style I’m using, especially for fiction. I’m not writing academic papers for class anymore, but my brain still says…you need a citation for that. At which point I cringe and give my brain the finger. Mentally.

There are two examples of when I give both styles the finger.

When I’m reading dialogue my brain hates seeing:

“But you will forever remain the only boy I ever love, you sweet, chaotic blue-eyed devil.” she said with her heart in her eyes and dripping softly onto him from her sleeve.

The sentence has ended, as far as I’m concerned, and where’s the Oxford comma? A. Oxford commas are not optional as far as I’m concerned and the first ‘she’ should be capitalized. B. It’s a new sentence, I don’t care what the rules are. My brain saw a period, it wants a capital letter afterwards.

I’ve also come to the conclusion that I like to break the rules when it comes to writing styles. I’ll follow most of them, but there are some things that just bug me and I’m not such a fidgety grammar-nazi that I’ll wonder if I should put that comma before but or leave it alone.

Microsoft Word has come to amuse me greatly lately, as well. “This comma doesn’t belong here,” it tells me, so I take the comma out. “Oh, hold your horses now sweet-cheeks, you need a comma there.”

What? Why can’t you make up your mind?

So you move it over to Grammarly, which tells you something completely different.

Then, you try Reedsy, and guess what? They have their own rules on writing, too.

So, I’ve learned to say stuff them. If somebody wants to nitpick my writing so badly that the placement of a comma tweaks their melon into spasmodic agony then have at it. But I warn you now, I really won’t care.

And neither should you, not really. Writing is an art, poetry alone tells us that. We can be creative, we can all have our irks and loves, we can all capitalize words that shouldn’t be capitalized, all knowing that somewhere out there, someone’s brain just cramped up into a pre-meltdown fit of bad review leaving.

And that’s my writing tip: no matter how many rules you follow, somewhere out there, someone believes you’re wrong for what you chose to do. They can all go jump off a cliff. It’s not like they wrote your words for you.

Where will the road lead you?

I don’t have a lot to say right now, not really. I’m too full of other things that need to be written. Stories, outlines, ideas that I need to get out of my head. Instead, I give you a picture to study, to think on. Where does the road go? What choices had to be made to take this picture? Where will you end up if you keep walking? And if you stay still? What happens then?

One of my lovely readers, and a very special lady she is, asked me about making masks this morning. I’ve made a fair few now and I have a bit of knowledge about making and wearing them. I thought I’d share part of the email I sent back to her here on my blog too. It’s knowledge and I love to share knowledge. I will say, I’m no expert, and others might have different opinions but this is what I’ve learned after a brutal summer making and wearing face-masks.

This is probably the easiest (once you’ve measured) and lightest mask I’ve made. I can actually breathe in it, despite the heat. I still sweat like I’m a waterfall, but it’s easy to breathe in. Click this for link.

This is another one I use for pleated masks. Click this for link.

I like the pleated masks most and have found that an 8 by 8 inch square will fit most people, but may be a little big on those with smaller faces. I like to have most of my lower face covered so it’s the size I prefer the most. Adjust the size of the elastic to make it fit better.


A few things I’ve learned about cloth and patterns: 

  1. You can trace the patterns off of your screen, most of the time. There will be a box in most PDF patterns that says to adjust the size of the PDF file to match your screen to make sure it’s 1 inch square or something along those lines. I’ve made several patterns that way. Our printer is out of ink and the new cartridges have skyrocketed in cost so nope on new ink. To clarify, when you open a PDF file you can make it bigger or smaller to make it easier to read. There’s usually a magnifying glass with a plus or minus sign on it. You click those until that square matches the measurements you need. 
  2. We don’t have guidelines for what masks can be made from. I have some that are definitely better for winter and some that are more appropriate for summer. Simon’s favorite is this cloth I found online
    “Unique hand block pattern from Jaipur. A pinky red. 100% summer weight cotton. 110cm wide.

    Traditional hand block and dye techniques are used to make this wonderful rural cloth. Part of the Rajasthan Express collection, developed and exclusive to Merchant & Mills. This fabric is hand dyed. For the first wash, place the fabric in the washing machine drum at 30 or 40 degrees with a handful of table salt. This will fix the dye to prevent it running.”
  3. I am mainly using muslin for the back, although it is diaper muslin, and is better than most other muslin I’ve seen. 
  4. Some patterns instruct you to use one single piece of fabric for the front and back. I use two different pieces because I just prefer to use a piece of muslin as the backing. 
  5. Avoid cheap elastic if you can. Some of it will melt when you place an iron anywhere near it. I’ve bought some from local shops that have ruined entire masks because the black elastic melted without me realizing it until I pulled the iron away from the mask. 
  6. I’m not sure silk would be good to use without putting cotton as a backing and maybe even a third piece in the middle. I think it would also be hard to breathe in, especially during warm weather. I’m sure they’d be pretty but I’m not sure it’s ideal for masks. 

Something I hadn’t thought about, but did once I made my first mask, was that some patterns will be better for warm weather while some will be better for cold weather. The ones that you make from more than one pattern piece will be great in the winter. Summer? Not so much. It’s like wearing a quilt on your face.

Some of the heavier cotton fabric is also hard to wear during hot weather. Face masks are meant to prevent the spread of Covid 19 and should be made with that in mind, but if you’re passing out from being overheated, you’re not doing anybody any good.

Whatever you choose to use, and however you choose to make your face-masks is ultimately up to you. There are hundreds of tutorials online, I prefer to use YouTube, but there may be other platforms. I’ve linked to the ones I’ve used and can say I have experience with. I’m not promoting them for any other reason than that.

Please comment if you have questions or need further clarification. When I can get time I’ll answer them. I hope this helps somehow and

It’s the only “real” picture we’ve put up. There are paintings I’ve done, things I’ve painted that Simon adores, but it’s the picture of my grandfather that I find myself looking at.

He was the story-teller in my family, the one that brought the past to life for his grandchildren. It wasn’t until I was much older that I realized Uncle Dan Christian wasn’t alive in my papaw’s lifetime. That’s what my sister and I called him, that’s what he stayed with once the other grandchildren came along. Papaw told us stories about Dan and Mose (Moses) Christian, about his father, his own lifetime growing up in West Virginia during the Great Depression, and later about his time in Korea.

He was the one that brought the world to life with words and taught me that a good story will keep everyone entertained. He also taught me how to be a good person and that being a good person didn’t mean sitting in a church pew every Sunday, although it wouldn’t hurt you if you did.

Now, I look up at a picture of a man that made mistakes in his life, but learned from them, and miss him dearly. All I have left of him are my memories and pictures. It’s the memories that comfort me on the days when I want nothing more than to sit down at a table with him and eat pinto beans and cornbread. Even if he frowned at the way I ate them: cornbread broken up into a bowl with the beans, and maybe some spinach mixed in, liberally covered in ketchup.

And it’s his picture that reminds me of where I came from, who I came from, and why I can’t give up and wallow in depression or anxiety. Because I can wallow in both like I invented it. He’s the one that taught me that stories can make you smile, make you laugh, or make you cry. I miss the man that everyone called John L., but he lives in my heart and always will. And maybe, he’ll live in my stories one day, too. I’m just not sure I can capture all that he was with a few words. I’ll see what I can do.

It’s hard to be positive all the time. It really is.

I’ve been very ill for far too long and it’s taking a toll on everything. Luckily, I didn’t need a doctor to tell me the one thing I needed to do the most…stop eating dairy. I’ve experimented with it before and when it felt like I had snakes in my intestines that had been soaked in gasoline and set on fire to go with their squirming, I tried the one thing I should have tried first.

No cheese, no butter, no milk that isn’t lactose free, nothing. It’s showing in more ways than one. I’m not losing weight because I’m constantly being ill now, I’m losing weight because I overloaded on cheese and bread all the time. That’s a good thing, right?

I baked yesterday, no dairy anywhere, and ended up with a rather strange but totally edible apple and pecan pie sort of thing and a pork pie that was better than I thought it would be. Some cheese or sour cream on the pork pie would have been nice, but I’m coming to value not being ill over my cravings for cheese.

I am a writer. That means I’m sedentary more often than not. I do get up and walk around outside of the apartment, but I don’t go out into the world often at all anymore. It’s not just Covid I have to worry about, it’s getting pneumonia or the flu again. My poor little lungs can’t take anymore abuse.

And yes, today, my thoughts are still whirling around, but I feel calm.

I’ll be adding to my book today, poking at what I’ve already written, and maybe rearranging or adding to it. That’s what I do.

I can sit down and write a novel in two weeks, less if I push myself. A novel being 50,000 words according to Nanowrimo.

I like to sit and ponder over them though. When I first started writing, I was pushing myself to get out what I could, to establish myself, and all I saw were publishers and people with far more money than me taking the top spots. Some of that was down to book stuffing and other gimmicks, sure, but most of it was down to how much money you give to various advertisers.

I was working to support my loved ones, and trying to invest what I could into my own brand, but that wasn’t much. I finally decided this year that I’d write at least four books this year for myself and that would be it. Four.

If it took me all year to write them, that’s fine. If it took me longer, that was fine too. I also decided to work less. Not because I was rich but because it’s taking a toll on my health. I’m still not rich in money, but in health? I’m getting better. Things are improving. I think.

I forgot that idea about writing only four books and spending less time working for a while. Covid started, I was sick, and panic set in, though I did it quietly. That’s what I do when I’m emotionally drained, I go quiet.

I was overwhelmed, not sure of what direction to head in, and floundering. Yep, that was me, a big ole giant flounder just floating around, watching the world go by. It took me a few months to realize what a mess I’d knotted myself into, but I finally did. That’s when I started to look out at the world again.

Maybe it’s not so scary out there?

Well, it is.

Covid isn’t the only thing that can turn you into a hermit in this world, but I know how to deal with most of those things. And the things I can’t control? Well, I can’t control them, can I?

This time, I decided to come out of that quiet with a little more strength and with my positive attitude back on top. It’s not all hopeless and I can deal with life a little better now. I can get back to living again and focusing on the good things there are in life.

Let’s see what I can write today, shall we?

You can see a huge but ugly apple, or you can see one apple that can make an entire pie. It’s all perspective.

I have no idea what’s just happened with this posting stuff. We’re going to call this another attempt at getting ahead in blogging. Of learning what it’s about. It’s been a long time since I actually sat down and tried to write in a journal or create an archive of things that have happened in my life. 

Yesterday, my mother said I needed to be writing everything down in a journal because Covid 19 will be the 1918-1919 flu of our time. She’s right about that in many respects and I may write it all down at some point. Who knew fiction would turn into fact and we’d all be scrambling to live our lives in a time when something we can’t see could kill us?

That’s not supposed to be happening in our lifetimes. Sure, flu can kill, but it’s only the weak and elderly, right? Small children and the sick? Not anymore. Maybe never again. Covid 19 is revealing its secrets as time passes and we’re learning about the horrible effects it will have, long after we’ve shed the last virus cell from our bodies. Have you heard of MIS-C?

Multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) is a terrifying result of having been infected with Covid 19 and as its name suggests can be found in children and adolescents. It is life-threatening if left untreated. Then there’s the news that the disease is causing heart and lung damage, damage to the cardiovascular system, which on a sidenote makes me wonder about past flu viruses and the impact they have on the cardiovascular system.

I have Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD), a disease that means my blood doesn’t flow very well, especially to my hands and feet. Since the first time my toes turned purple and stayed that way, leaving me in utter agony for quite a long time, I’ve learned that it’s not just a disease that latches on to the elderly to make their lives even harder. People in their 20s and 30s get it, and when I looked back in my medical records, I was surprised to find it was actually diagnosed in my 30s. I’m no scientist, but I do wonder because now people are developing Covid toes and other circulatory problems.

We obliterated so many diseases in the last few generations, we’ve created vaccines that have saved lives, and yet, here we are. I believe that’s mainly because people wanted to ignore the fact that we live in a world where we’re surrounded by nature, even in ventilated, climate-controlled environments. We removed ourselves from nature, but nature didn’t remove itself from us.

I write romance novels and horror novels, but that isn’t all of who I am. I also write research papers that I never publish, mainly because I don’t think anyone would be interested so I don’t make them spiffy and awesome, I just write what I need to know to satisfy my curiosity. I also search out news about viruses and emerging illnesses.

I am a student of history, it’s what I majored in during my university days, and the one thing that fascinated me most, even more than my adoration of geology and plate tectonics, was the rise and fall of plagues. It was the enemy we couldn’t fight, the enemy we could not see. I learned that no matter what battles we take part in amongst ourselves, who we declare our enemy, there is a “great leveler” and it is not violence or the threat of violence, it is nature.

Which brings me to the second person that told me I need to blog. She’s a good friend, one I absolutely adore, and she wants the best for me. I asked her what I should write about. Anything. That’s not very helpful, I thought with amusement.

The one thing that is on all our minds right now is Covid. When will it go away? When will life get back to normal? Should a romance writer be writing about such a depressing topic? Maybe I should, when that topic creates problems, fears for us all, until we can’t escape the truth of it.

I don’t want to write about my writing process, it’s strange and everyone else writes about it. I don’t want to tell other people how to write either. If someone asks me about publishing, editing, anything else, I can tell them, but I don’t want to assume I’m an authority on anything. I know what I know and that is all I know, right?

Life doesn’t always give us happy endings. And no, I don’t mean those kind of happy endings. I mean the kind we can live. Sometimes, life is brutal, it’s hard, and then it gets worse. And many people are in that situation right now. Knowing you aren’t alone isn’t very helpful, but it can be helpful when you talk about it, try to find solutions to the problems together, and are able to say…I’m drowning. Sometimes, just knowing someone heard you makes a difference and I’m here to say…I hear you.

This is me, right now, trying to find a new path in a world that doesn’t make sense anymore. This post may not make a lot of sense to anyone, but it does to me. It’s as chaotic as my thoughts are at the moment. It’s a real expression of something that you cannot see and for now it’s what I need to say. So, have a good day and yes, Mom, if you read this, I put so in a sentence. She hates when I do that. But, we’re back to reality and Covid 19, so (ha, I did it again), here I am. This is me, right now, living in the time of Covid 19.

During the pandemic, you may do things like sit in a hammock and take pictures of your toes. Live the dream…

That’s been a question I’ve typed into search engines a million times. Some other questions include:
1. What are the most popular blogs?

This one comes with lots of head scratching. Like the title question, it leaves a lot to be desired. You end up with thousands of pages on how to create a blog on a variety of blogging services, which ones are best, and which ones you should give money to. If you’re like me, that’s not what you want to know.

You also don’t want to know which celebrities have the most popular blogs, mainly because they’re all on Tik Tok or Instagram anyway, and you may not care about that particular celebrity. I’m not looking for any of that.

When I’m online, I’m either researching something for a project or looking for recipes. If it’s not either of those, you might find me researching my ancestors or reading about some obscure topic that nobody cares about. Which leads me to another question I’ve searched for.

2. What do people want to read about?

That’s a tough one because we don’t all have the same interests. We don’t all have the same passions. I don’t have one single passion that guides me through life so the results I get, which generally revolve around answers that are addressed to question one tend to infuriate me.

I have titled this post what I have because the question remains unanswered, mainly. I have no idea how to write a blog post that gets page views but I do know that the post should be engaging. But that’s a given and heads the top of every article I’ve read.

You see, I’m not a fussy woman, in most things. What to write about, however, stumps me. I could write about the art of writing, but the stories I write are from my imagination. I’m not writing about SEO tools or SEO analysis, I couldn’t tell you what any of that means or if it’s even relevant in post-Covid 19 world. Do people care about search engine optimization now? I kind of think a world left to do nothing but surf the internet probably does care about SEO now, but at the same time, it’s not my passion.

I also don’t want to join the ranks of thousands of others talking about how they’ve made 6-figures this year by doing this one single thing. Or sell tutorials of how to write the steamiest sex scenes you could ever conjure in your steamy, adventure-starved brain as you clothes the door on the real world of politics and, well, reality. Oh, and I haven’t made six figures this year, so that’s a non-starter anyway.

So, how do you write a blog that gets a lot of page views? Might I suggest things from what I’ve learned people are doing now that social-isolation is a global thing.

A. Anything to do with ancestry. It’s becoming popular to get your DNA taken and analyzed for ancestry registration. While people are trying to ignore their boss’s 10th email of the day or trying not to hear their kids having their 150th argument of the day, they’re looking up who they are, where they come from, and the people that came together to make them who they are. I have read quite a lot of blogs about my ancestors and perhaps you’d have an interesting ancestor or two?

B. Anything to do with pets. People have questions, so many questions! Especially about chickens, which I find odd, because I grew up with chickens, with a garden, turkeys, pigs, goats, and everything else.

C. Sewing and crocheting, although most of these seems to be moving to YouTube. I’m camera shy, so you’re not likely to find me hosting a video, unless I don’t actually appear in it. Maybe my hands?

D. Sports. Your team, your passion, your own experience, or lack of. People love it.

E. Politics. But this I mention only for the truly brave. It’s not an area I want to go into, because I’m just tired of arguing, avoid confrontation when I can, and have become a super-hermit. What’s a super-hermit? Someone like me that just wants to be left alone, for the most part, haha. I don’t want to discuss politics with people, but others do. Maybe create a blog where you can argue with people, if that’s your thing?

F. Vacation destinations, places you’re knowledgeable about, all sorts of things that have to do with travel. I’m from West Virginia and the one thing people all over the world know is a song by John Denver. There’s even versions of said song in different languages, and I’ve heard them all. Once people get finished singing those versus at me, they want to know about the area I come from. A lot don’t even know West Virginia exists. They think it’s part of Virginia, and some still insist on saying I’m from Virginia when I’m not. I’ve learned to go with it, though. Anyway, yeah, you’d be surprised what people want to know. Especially writers looking for knowledge about areas they can’t travel to right now. You’d be doing those writers a service!

G. Anything that isn’t in the top results when you ask any of the questions above. I think a lot of the times some of the results we get when we search a question is because people are trying to sell selling ideas. I look up top SEO results and get results on how to optimize SEO. Not what those results are, which tells me that simply writing about SEO is the top result. And if everyone is doing it, how are you going to get your result seen? It’ll be a tag, that’s for sure.

Overall, I think the top way to write a blog post that gets page views is to write about something you know, write it well, and then post it. This post, for example, will probably get very few page reads even with tags, because it’s not about Search Engine Optimization, about how to earn a 6-figure income from home or from writing, and it’s not about writing the same content that everyone else is. It is the start, I hope, to me exploring what I can write that might be of interest to others. We’ll see what tomorrow brings.