Almost every day, I find myself disappointed about things I wrote four or five years ago — but I think that’s a good thing.
Even though I don’t publish many new articles anymore, my old ones are read hundreds and hundreds of times each day. The software I use tells me which articles are most popular each day and how many times each was read. The idea is that writers can see which things are attracting an audience and write more things like that.
In my case, though, I feel as though the numbers — and the old headlines — mostly serve to mock me. I certainly don’t shape my writing by what people want to read. Instead, the old titles serve as a roadmap showing how my ideas and my priorities have shifted radically since I started writing here.
The old things I wrote remind me how shallow my priorities once were.
Old articles frequently become popular again for reasons I’ll never know. Someone presumably finds something through an online search and then shares it on social media, where it will sometimes be shared enough to attracts tens of thousands of readers in a brief period.
There are times when it’s not so bad. Other times, the title jumps out at me and makes something inside me ask in an accusing voice, “Why did you ever bother to write that?”

Best years of our lives? For me, teen years were start of feeling like alien
When you can’t call one you love, silent phone just taunts your need
Sudden realization of hunger for taste of kindred soul is killing me
It can take a lifetime of work to overcome abusive ‘programming’
The ‘man in the mirror’ always turns out to be our worst enemy
Has it really been so long since I’ve been ‘real’ with someone?
She says she’ll always love me, but she didn’t say who she was
What if we’re more talented than our inner fears allow us to admit?