Comment by littlekey
7 months ago
>My life was totally changed around the time I had 100 readers
If I may ask, in what way do you mean changed? In a personal fulfillment sense or more like financial/networking/etc.?
7 months ago
>My life was totally changed around the time I had 100 readers
If I may ask, in what way do you mean changed? In a personal fulfillment sense or more like financial/networking/etc.?
Ludicity has blogged about his journey from having a shitty job to running his own company in the past. Writing played a big role there (see e.g. https://ludic.mataroa.blog/blog/merry-christmas-ya-filthy-an...).
Now I am the one that provides the shitty jobs! Back to work, peasants! And don't let me ever catch you not maximizing Jira velocity, or time with your family is being moved to the backlog!
It isn't bad financially, but I make much less money than I did two years ago. If I had taken any of the jobs I was offered, I think it would have been a 30K to 100K raise. Also the number is slowly going up, and unlike a day job, no one will tell me I'm earning "enough". If I hit enough to salary myself 500K one day, there will be no social norms preventing HR from giving me that.
I am way, way happier. I've met some really amazing people from all over the world. I also have access to a level of technical mentorship that has totally changed the way I engineer -- but you get other people too. I've spent a lot of time with the mythical thoughtful CEO (can confirm that they are an outlier and the median CEO is as bullheaded as they appear), gotten the inside scoop on a lot of stuff that used to confuse the hell out of me, and last week got invited to a group of writers in Melbourne that are helping me get a book out! And it's also, for me, a special kind of awe-inspiring to meet people that have produced truly great literature. I'd never had had the opportunity before that.
That's like, roughly what you'll get at 100 to 200 people if you write things that repel the energy you don't like. At a few thousand subscribers it gets a bit hairier because you don't have time to talk to everyone. I'm also definitely someone that leans hard enough into the parasociality that it becomes regular sociality, which might not be for everyone, and perhaps I'll run into a real sicko one day and regret it.
Ahhh I didn't realize it was you I was responding to, I'm familiar with your blog and you definitely deserve your success.
>It was the end of the "stand up", which Valera had graciously been invited to. They did it sitting down, which was her first clue that one of the Chaos Gods was involved.
I still think about this line, it's just too good.