When I launched this site three years ago today, the intended audience was only one person. Everything was written for her — in the hopes that she would find it and come back into my life. My hopes were rewarded. Sort of.
She came back into my life — in and out, back and forth — for most of the past three years. She was an avid reader of the site almost from the beginning. Then she became a regular commenter, first using a pseudonym and then using her real name (and a goofy picture with a wig).
She’s no longer a reader here and no longer part of my life. The details don’t really matter that much at this point. The psychology of what happened is actually very interesting, but it’s not in her best interest that the full story be told, so I won’t.
The only reason I tell you this story is to say that I started writing here with a surface-level purpose — which was quite real and honest — but always with a deeper and more important underlying purpose. Now that underlying purpose is completely gone, and I’m not sure anymore what my goals here are.
I haven’t been writing very much for months now. For nearly two years of the site’s existence, I wrote at least one article almost every day. For a long stretch of time, I also had a second article each day — written by the “staff monkeys” — with links of the day. I went through a lot of changes as a result of this experience, and it’s affected what I’m willing to write.

Real-life ‘ghost story’: The tale of a house that didn’t want me there
Would you share your thoughts about this website in a survey?
If you can’t change your life story, that narrative will become destiny
Money is a tool, and it’s useless without motivation and vision
My endorsement goes to the man who can make coercive state work
We’re happier if we learn to ‘sell’ ourselves to people who want us
My friends stepped up in a big way when I needed their help for Bessie
No matter how admired you are, your work won’t make you special