PoliticsMy Thoughts On Typos In Blog Posts

My Thoughts On Typos In Blog Posts


Earlier today, I wrote a post about whether a minor typo in a clerkship application should disqualify the candidate. Fittingly, my post had typos. I think I’ve fixed them, but maybe there are others.

I thought it might be useful to give my own thoughts on proofreading. Blogging is for me a form of release. I have lots of thoughts in my head, and writing them down helps me to make sense of things. My primary audience when I write is not you (sorry) but is me. Longtime readers may recall that while clerking for Judge Boggs, I was not allowed to blog. So I made my blog private, and continued writing blog posts that no one would see. (Well, a few friends had the password, but the site was not for public consumption.) When my clerkship finished, all of the posts were made public. To be sure, some posts I write are intended to influence public discourse, but most of my blogging is introspective.

To that end, typos don’t bother me. I want to make sure my writing is clear and understandable, but my goal is not perfection. Each subsequent round of review takes time that I could be using to do something else. If I were to ensure that each post was flawless, I would end up writing far less. That is not a tradeoff I find worthwhile.

There is another aspect of my writing process that may not be obvious. I often have very discrete blocks of time to write, and I do not wish the project to extend beyond that block. Maybe I have 30 minutes before class starts to pump something out. Or it is late at night, I’m getting tired, and I need to wrap up a post before I call it a night. Today, for example, I had about 30 minutes on the elliptical, in which I conceived, wrote, and published the clerkship post. (I keep my laptop on a music stand adjacent to the elliptical so I can type while working out.)

You might ask, why don’t I just pause the project when the time block finishes, and resume later. I’m sure I could fix errors after some sleep. But that wait is agonizing for me. My goal is to sort through my thoughts as quickly as possible, and move onto the next topic. To leave a post unpublished would make me keep coming back to it over and over again. I doubt I would be able to fall asleep if a project was still not fully developed. Once I hit the “Publish” button I can sign off and move on to the next project.

There are a few regular readers who email me typos. I will usually fix these promptly. I promise, I will respond pleasantly. Comments about typos will not be read.

For those curious, I wrote this post in a single five-minute block, after having thought about it for the past hour or so. I proof-read it once.



Original Source Link

Latest News

Trump Mental Collapse Worsens As He Claims High Gas Prices Are Good

Donald Trump started a war based on his own feelings. Three days ago, during a press conference, Trump...

Exceptionally rare sighting of planets colliding may shed light on the crash that formed the moon

Astronomers think they've glimpsed one of the rarest sights in space: two planets smashing into each other around...

17 Features That Make a Home Easier to Rent Out

Successfully renting out a home often comes down to having the right features—ones that make the space functional,...

Who Is the Shooter at ODU? Old Dominion University Shooting Updates – Hollywood Life

Old Dominion University (ODU) in Virginia announced an active shooter situation on the morning of March 12, 2026....

Exxon, Chevron and other US oil and gas producers and refiners hit all-time highs amid Iran war

The stock prices of the American Big Oil giants are up about 30% this year as global oil...

Must Read

Exotic prime numbers could be hiding inside black holes

Like physics, math has its own set of...

Bitcoin Enters ‘Most Frustrating Phase,’ CryptoQuant Says: A Look At What’s To Come

Bitcoin (BTC) is currently navigating a trading range...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you