Recently, I gave this blog a bit of a design makeover, and moved to a much more minimal look and feel.
In fairness, my previous theme – Myth, from MeanThemes – had a pretty stripped back look, with a simple hero image for the header area, and single column design for the content.
But, while I was more than happy with the design (it lasted almost a year before my recent makeover, which is a record around here!), I still got a little restless.
Hence the makeover.
As you can see, it’s a really bare and stripped down approach.
No navigation menu (unless you click on the “hamburger menu” at the top right). No featured image. No sidebar. In fact, pretty much nothing except the content, and my introduction on what I hope to achieve here.
Because, at the end of the day, do we really need anything else that distracts attention from what we’re trying to achieve?
I don’t believe so. Not here on the blog, nor in life.
The Focus of Needing to Be Focused
Since starting this blog back in 2008, it’s gone through many iterations, both in the style of presentation, and the theme of the content within.
It’s gone from having about a dozen or so categories, to only having one (which is the bigger picture of this thing called life and where we sit in it, personally and professionally).
It’s gone from having multiple sidebars to zero; from having affiliate ads and posts trying to sell something to zero ads and zero selling (at least, not the hard sell).
And it’s gone from using a socially-driven comment system like Livefyre to a more personal and thoughtful comment solution like Postmatic.
The reason for all of these changes is simple – to meet the goals I have, the focus has to be on the paths to get there.
My goal is to make this blog a destination for folks that prefer “pure blogging”, where a more personal experience is enjoyed, and the content isn’t driven by the desire for social proof and vacuous clicks.
To do that means the content has to be focused. Hence the stripped down look and feel of the blog, where the only thing in front of you are the words.
It’s a little worrying, if I’m honest – because now the content truly does have to stand on its own, as opposed to being supported by a nice flashy sidebar with a colourful sticker or two.
But it’s also a good exercise, as it makes you more aware of the words you’re putting down and the message you want to create.
It’s not too different from life, really, if you think about it.
Pulling Back the Covers on a Life Lived in Shadows
Oftentimes in life, when asked by people what others might thing of us, we reply with something like,
I’m an open book. If you want to know me, just look at me or be around me for an hour or two.
While that’s an admirable – and mostly honest – statement, it’s not quite a true one. Think about it.
- When you share something on Facebook, is it a picture/update of how awesome your kids/husband/wife are, or is it “Shouted at the kids, felt like a shitty parent for doing so, and don’t get me started on what my other half did yesterday!”?
- When you upload a picture to Instagram, is it the first one you take or is it the fortieth attempt at getting a smile just right, a background just so, a pet just in the right contortion to be cute?
- When you leave a comment on a blog, do you really say what you want to say, or is it a sanitized version of what you believe, because you don’t know the make-up of the other commenters?
These are just online examples. Offline, it’s the same.
How we present ourselves to our colleagues. How we approach a social setting. How we act in the privacy of our own homes versus how we behave under the gaze of the public.
While we might think that’s natural defense mechanism, the truth of the matter is it’s anything but natural.
Instead of being the open book we say we are, we’re an edited version of the story we want to tell.
We do this because we tell ourselves this is how people will like us. This is how people will gravitate towards us. This is how people will become our friends.
And they might – for a while. Until the covers are pulled back, and the shadows of your real life are on display for everyone to see,
Some may stick around. Others may not. But the choice is no longer yours to make. Now the story decides which characters are left to take part.
The irony is, if we don’t live in the shadows to begin with, we’ll attract the people we truly deserve. The people who’ll be there when we need them.
The people we can truly call friends.
It’s not easy. You have to be focused, and brave, and ready to throw the covers back, even when it’s cold and dark outside.
But the reward and validation are worth it.
Try it sometime. You might just pleasantly surprise yourself.
When You Strip Everything Away originally appeared on Danny Brown – – all rights reserved.
When You Strip Everything Away
from Danny Brown http://ift.tt/1m8nLVt
from The Income Club http://ift.tt/1QTMpGa
via Here is another post I did not have to post that makes me money
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