The Great Blog Comment Debate (Why I’ve Turned Mine Off And Back On Again)

I spent the first few years of my blog being on the “For” side of the Great Blog Comment Debate: adamantly for blog comments on blogs. To not have comments seemed pointless (among other things) and I was a little judgmental about it.

Then I spent the last year growing my business and a multitude of reasons shifted my ideas. I’ve now had blog comments turned off on all posts for about 5 months.

Until today when I turned them back on.

I’m going to speak in this post both as a blogger, a reader and an authentic business owner on my experience and experimentation.

Hmm...
Yes. It’s called “fear”.

 

The Blog Comment Debate Will Vary

Bloggers will adamantly (and sometimes rudely) insist that to have a blog means you “should” have comments allowed, that those comments should go live instantly so no one has to be “approved” (after perhaps a captcha feature to prevent spam) and that every self-respecting blogger should moderate and answer each and every comment themselves.

This leaves other bloggers – the ones who feel drained or uncertain or pulled – by comments feeling as though they are obligated by some unwritten Blog Code of Conduct to overextend themselves, to make others happy, to be accused of “censorship” (really people?) and maybe even give up their blog because it’s become something they didn’t intend – an outlet for others instead of an outlet for themselves.

Business owners with blogs will often (and sometimes rudely) insist that comments are a waste of time, rarely add anything of value to the conversation, are a breeding ground for trolls, and that no self-respecting business owner would waste their energy on it.

This leaves new, growing and even established entrepreneurs that are still building their traffic to feel as though they are cutting off a means of connection and growth, to question whether they are playing small, and to start thinking more about the marketing rules than their personal style and doubt their own intuition.

After doing it both ways (and even advising each way), here’s what I’ve found:

Opinions are like butt cracks. Everyone has one and is sure their own doesn’t stink. ;)

But “rules” suck.

There is no right or wrong way.

There is only your needs, and your personal experiences, and what works for you.

Judgment, snark and self-righteousness need not apply.

This is my personal experience, why I’ve turned blog comments off and why I’m turning them back on. Your personal milage will vary.

Why I Turned Comments Off

  • Time Management: The more my coaching business expanded the more I needed to find ways to balance my time between work, self and family. That meant finding the things that allowed me to spend less time online and more time on the things that made the biggest impact on my life and the life of others.
  • Reactions vs Reflections: I love reflective comments, questions, conversations…especially the ones where we’re not afraid to ask the questions that may not have a simple answer or that may stretch us. But reactive comments (and I’m specifically talking about the judgmental, snarky, self-righteous ones) aren’t serving anyone (except maybe giving that person a space to vent their own triggers). It’s not my job to answer every rude person; it’s not my job to filter trolls; it’s not my job to host negativity in my (online) home; it’s not my job to spend my energy on energy vampires. It’s my job to connect on a deep level with the people whom I may be able to support, not the ones who just want to argue.
  • Simplifying: With comments spread between several social media sites, the forums, and email my work time was getting overwhelming. I needed to simplify where it was possible, and blog comments were one of those places.
  • Deepening Connections: A funny thing happened when I turned off comments. I got more of the most incredible, beautiful emails…deep, authentic, powerful emails for women sharing their Aha moments and thoughts and stories of the amazing things they are doing in the world. Maybe without that immediate ability to leave a simple (public) comment others could sit with their own thoughts longer and therefore share more? Maybe when a personal email was the primary means of connecting it created a safer space to really connect. I don’t know, but it was awesome.
  • Writing For Me, Not Stats: I found myself writing with what others might say in the comments (or how many comments I might get), instead of writing from my heart and soul. And that’s bullshit. I’m glad I turned my comments off for the last many months to allow me to get back to writing for myself: releasing the fear of making waves (or making friends) and pouring my real heart and soul into my words without worrying about how popular any of it is. I needed to remember that I’m not going for popularity. I’m going for resonance. And turning off comments helped me get back there.

Why I’m Turning Comments Back On

  • Central Hub: It’s not totally central. Comments will still be found on Twitter and Facebook, but at least with the blog there is a somewhat more central hub for sharing reflections and thoughts, and deepening a conversation between more of us. After all, it’s about Tribes and those connections are part of it.
  • I Miss The Convo: If there is no immediate place to comment many readers won’t email or comment elsewhere. And I’m missing those connections and the wonderful things such thoughtful comments would inspire in me, or the Wisdom they could share (or the ways they could say it) that add so much more than my words alone.
  • Simplifying: Don’t you love how this is in both lists? I can do that because their my lists. ;) Comments make it simple and quick to share in that convo. It may not simplify my job, but it simplifies the process of connecting.
  • Readers Miss the Convo: I hear you. Being able to write out your reflections is often more powerful than just thinking to yourself. Reading something impactful and beneficial without the simple ability to join the convo sometimes means less time to really absorb before we click off to our busy days. I’m glad to be in the space to open up comments for those who miss them.
  • Making Connections: Knowing the other names, faces and messages of the people reading opens my life up to more ideas, more connections, more possibilities. Those things I love. I’ve missed those connections over the past several months.
  • Better Time Management Now: When I turned the comments off my plate was freaking FULL and I was working out kinks in my rhythm and systems of support. Now that I have better rhythms, more systems and the wonderful Jennie as my Organic Support Specialist to help me with many admin tasks, including moderating for trolls, I can still focus on my most important tasks: my personal care, my family and personal life, my clients, my creative work within my businesses and connecting with real women sharing real Wisdom with real heart and soul.
  • Resonance over Reputation: Like I mentioned above, I was writing for comments, and not for me. This isn’t an uncommon reason to turn comments off, although on the inverse: the fear of “too few comments” and how that looks to others. Fear of what others think has held a pretty prominent place in my past (meaning it still pokes it’s head in from time to time), but it’s the fear of my inner Little Girl. And even though I don’t quite feel grownup yet (when does one finally feel like a Grown Up?), me and that Little Girl feel pretty damn comfortable with the fact that that fear is no longer serving our own greatest good or the world. Zero comments don’t freak me out. They don’t make nervous someone will judge me. And what others do in their busy lives is only a reflection of me when I’m making it all about me. My job isn’t to put thoughts into someone else’s mind. It’s to share the intention and thoughts in mine.

Like I said, there is NO “right” way. There is only your personal needs as a blogger or entrepreneur and how you might meet those needs. Yes, your readers have needs too, but your own needs come first (think: oxygen mask).

So my advice: Experiment. Evolve. Do what works for you. Maintain the right to change your mind. Keep authenticity and self-care as your touchstones. Examine your fears and ideas of “should” or “have to”. Then release them.

Do you have comments on or off on your blog? How is (or isn’t) that right for you?

I have a whole new LOOK!


I do! I do! And I couldn’t be more excited….see —>

It’s been months in the brainstorming and almost months in the making, but it’s heeeeeere!

New colors, new photos, new pages, new organization…almost new EVERYTHING!

If you’re reading this in an RSS feed, click here to see my gorgeous thriving tree on the homepage.

If you’re on the blog, click that same link to see the new homepage!

Please poke around…and let me know what you think on Facebook or Twitter!

(I still have tweaks to make and a few banners and badges I’m waiting on, so some things might seem bare or mismatched – because they are. ;) )

Meet My Designer

Big, giant THANK YOU to the wonderful Courtney Kirkland who did this design.

I had NO IDEA what I wanted when I found her, other than a handful of words to match my brand (me being a word nerd and all), she helped me start from scratch in fleshing out an idea and a framework that she then created.

The first time I saw what she created I literally GASPED. And I still smile each time I see it. ♥ Thankyouthankyouthankyou, Courtney!

Why Am I Choosing “Productive” Over Actually PRODUCING? (How Digging Deep, Deep Breaths and One Simple Question Changes Everything)

Love note from Zeb on the window

Love notes from Zeb on the window where I work…totally feed my soul. ♥

I’ve made some very important changes in my life and work recently, with more on the way.

Actually, they don’t seem all that serious after having made them. But before I made them they were scary and paralyzing and So! Freaking! Life-Threatening!

(That would be those funny beliefs of mine talking.)

Yes, I spent some timing Digging Deep with them (thank you for that, public accountability), peeling back the layers, clearing and healing as I went.

But let me go back a bit…

You see, it started when I realized that I was actually being ridiculously UNproductive.

I have a very full and beautiful life with a full-time coaching practice, a green living website, an amazing family that I thoroughly enjoy spending as much time as possible with and a life of travel.

We do a lot, yo!

But when I looked at my days I was seeing that I spent so much time on things that were NOT productive to my two main purposes in life: feeding my soul and helping others.

I would rationalize with myself that checking emails is important. And of course it is!

But 9874938562 times a day?

I would rationalize that Facebook and Twitter are important to my business. And of course they are!

But do I need to spend several hours a day there?

I would rationalize that fine-tuning and tweaking a project or blog post until it’s “just perfect” was important.

Um, no it isn’t. :)

I would rationalize that if I just got “these couple things off my to-do list” then I could focus on my next Big, Beautiful Project.

Biggest. Bullshit. Ever.

Wakeup call! I knew that last one wasn’t true!

I know that little things will always be there and putting off the big things for some “ideal” time or for when things are a little less busy or for when I could just take a couple things off my plate is NEVER going to work!

It’s just an excuse, a bad reason to allow the symptoms, distraction and lack of clarity, to be “reasons”.

So I got to ask myself…why?

Why do I spend time on the things that are not actually serving anyone? Why am I choosing to do my second-best, instead of throw myself into my personal best? Why am I fretting over the minute details instead of wholeheartedly moving in the direction my heart is pulling me?

Why am I choosing “productive” over actually PRODUCING?

How is that even productive?

And So I Sat

At this point I was feeling that uncomfortable feeling in my body…where I start tapping my foot or shivering as my subconscious mind says “It’s time to run away from here!” and my body responds with any erratic movement it’s got.

This is ALWAYS my sign that I’m onto something good, something my mind and heart might be afraid to let go.

And fear is always a sign of a lie. (When I’m in Truth, I have no fear.)

So I sat with it in meditation.

I leaned into it, still focusing on my breath and brought the whole feeling and all the thoughts about it in front of my closed eyes.

And I allowed myself to sink in and hold that space.

And I breathed.

And tried not to run away.

There were parts I resisted, that felt too much to bring my awareness to, so I gave them my love and turned back to my breath, opening myself to hearing my own Organic Wisdom.

Then I heard it, in the form of the question Goddess Leonie had heard right before she cut her long mermaid hair…

What would I do if I felt free?

Free of what?” I asked

Free of fear, of “shoulds” (oh that dirty, dirty word), of the things I assume about what others will think.”

(Oh you again.)

And then another question…

What would I do if my only priority were feeding my soul and then feeding the souls of others?

And I heard my heart whisper very clearly a litany of things she was ready to shift or release or bring into alignment with what actually feeds my soul…

And almost all of them had to do with the internet. (Go fig.)

I would make the choice to check emails only once or twice in a workday.
And not on the weekends.
I would make the choice to close the Facebook and Twitter tabs on my browser.
I would turn off the notifications on my phone and make off-work hours, disruption-free.
I would choose to call a friend for a long chat instead of send an email.
I would close comments on my blog so that I could write with my heart and not with my ear to the response.
I would conduct the Organic Tribe in a way that feels so congruent with Who I Am and not what is “professional”. (Pffffft.)
I would lean deeper into my own healing gifts and bring those into my coaching sessions with total Trust that my intuition and theirs will always guide us.

I would stop putting limitations on what I can do and just move toward what feels right.

And most importantly, I would ask myself:

Is this:

  1. Feeding my soul,
  2. Feeding my greater vision and purpose in this world, or
  3. Feeding the souls of others?

And truly what I found is that when I can answer yes to the first one, I can answer yes to all of them. ♥

It’s taken some practice.

It’s triggered some fear (in me and in others).

I still have layers to DIG IN to and peel away to fully heal why I hold back so often.

But everytime I feel myself allowing distractions to keep me off-task or excuses to keep me from completion or fear keeping me from total passion and love, I’m guiding myself gently back to my Truth with reminders of that question…

Is this:

  1. Feeding my soul,
  2. feeding my greater vision and purpose in this world or
  3. feeding the souls of others?

And then I make the simple choice to move back to what says “Yes” to that question.

It’s as simple (and as challenging) as that.

Psst!

In my move toward producing from my soul and that which feeds my soul, rather than “being productive”, I have a very special new product I’m creating and hope to be releasing in about a week.

IT’S HERE!

It’s a guided meditation for mindfulness that I first created for myself when I was struggling to feel grounded through my busiest, most stressful days (’tis the season!).

Aaaaand, for a short time it will be available with two additional audios just for your holiday survival season. :)

Click here for details about the Holiday Thriving Kit AND the Guided Mindfulness Meditation!

11 Permissions for 2011

I'm all for an upper viewpoint

I can feel it already. 2010 changed my life. But 2011 is going to rock my world.

Two words have begun to hang over my head: Abundance and Gratitude. And I can feel them both churning and stirring up the mental dust.

In preparation for the mind-altering, life-inspiring, beautiful madness to commence, I’m starting the New Year with a new viewpoint.

I hereby give myself full, unapologetic permission to….

  1. Only take and keep the photos I love.
  2. Feel shy or walk away.
  3. Slow the hell down.
  4. Love me how no one else can.
  5. Be selfish with my self-care.
  6. Surround myself with inspiration and beauty.
  7. Say goodbye to my wedding dress.
  8. Say hello to clothes that make me feel amazing.
  9. Have a piece of life that belongs only to me.
  10. Fearlessly live up to my full potential.
  11. Take an entire month off from blogging.

Yes, an entire month. January, actually.

It will mark my longest hiatus from blogging since I started almost four years ago. It will be strange and probably disjointed for me. And I’m looking forward to it. :)

It comes with a reason, of course. We have less than five weeks to wrap up our business here in Las Vegas, purchase and prepare a new rig and hit the road again by February 1st. We will be slammed with things to do and people to see and moments to relish while we can.

But that’s not all, because my time off from blogging is not really time away from my blog at all.

Coinciding with the relaunch of our travels, The Organic Sister will be “relaunching” in February!

I’m going to be spending the month revamping this little space of mine, adding some new awesomeness,  and aligning every part of it with what feels true and authentic and beautiful to me.

I can’t wait to show you what’s in my head! :D

In the meantime, you can continue to connect with me on Facebook (here or here), Twitter or by email. And I’m still available for coaching and other services.

Until next time, I’ll leave you with some things to think about…

What are you giving yourself permission for?
What will you be creating in the New Year?
And are you living according to your own organic nature?

Benny’s Big Reveal!

The RV remodeling/renovations are complete! Four months of time, countless trips to the hardware and auto parts store and more work than we anticipated (when is it ever less?) and the only thing left to do is convert Benny the Brave to run on waste veggie oil (WVO) and move a few things in. :D

Kitchen Table and Second Bed

All Before and After shots here

It’s still a little stark, but I’m seeing it as a wide open canvas, to be filled with memories along the way. I’m thinking of embroidering the shower curtain and front window curtains, hanging photos and finding unique items to decorate the walls all while on the road.

Interior:

  • Removed vinyl wallpaper from ceiling
  • Refinished ceiling
  • Replaced broken paneling on walls
  • Cleaned more smoke residue off the walls than I thought possible
  • Removed old carpet
  • Removed microwave
  • Built doors for cupboard where microwave was
  • Painted bright white to open space
  • Painted and hung new curtain rods (made from dowels)
  • Replaced vinyl shower walls with panels
  • Replaced peeling countertops and tabletop
  • Installed secondhand flooring
  • Replaced vinyl backing on seats
  • Sewed new seat cushion covers
  • Hung new curtains
  • Shampooed carpets and seats in front cab
  • Deep, deep, deep cleaning

Body/Engine/Technical:

  • New blackwater tank
  • Resealed the roof
  • Resealed and repaired drafts
  • New tires
  • Numerous engine leaks fixed
  • New shocks
  • New power steering pump
  • Glow plugs
  • Tuneup
  • New deep cycle batteries
  • Two 80 watt solar panels (will supply all electrical needs)
  • Lots of small misc things

Things soon to be added:

  • Rocket stove
  • Water filter
  • Hand-cranked blender
  • Waste veggie oil conversion
  • Our things! (clothing, pillows, blankets, games, etc)

We’re hoping to be in my mid- to late-February, with a few more weeks to adjust to the smaller spaces before we hit the road.

My favorite thing (other than the whole get-outta-dodge aspect)?

Our new home blessing hung over the door:

Our RV Blessing
With our tiny RV and everyone we’re hoping to meet on the road,
I don’t think this will be a problem. :)

And because it just didn’t feel right not to, I updated my blog layout and header to reflect our new transition. If you’re in a Reader, be sure to come check it out!