Hey Teens, Let"s Get Blogging
People of all ages create blogs each and every day.
It does not matter which walk of life you come from or your social skills, when it comes to starting a blog, every one who can write has a great chance.
In today's world even teen writers are truly on the cutting edge of the movement.
Because the teenagers of today are perhaps,the first generation of people to have grown up using the internet at every stage of their life's development.
Many of today's teens have a seemingly innate sense of how to use this complicated web technology to express their innermost thoughts, feeling and ideas.
People who are not teens, older writers often experience a kind of learning curve when they begin to blog, perhaps this is because we were not taught to relate top this computer society.
We often ask the younger people to help get us started because many of the young people find that using a word processor or computer and blogging software feels more natural.
Teens are using this computer as a direct mode of communication with one another.
Ask any teen and they will tell you, they don't talk as much as the text.
These teens also use blogging as an daily online journal.
Perhaps blogs are so awesome in the teen age because the provide a unique and unforgettable mixture of visibility and anonymity.
A teenager can invite his or her friends and peers to read his or her blog platform with a simple small two line email, which wins attention or possibly even praise.
The down side of this is with visibility usually comes the possibility of embarrassment.
I am sure that many of the blogging teens lives in fear that a parent or guardian will discover his or her blog, but by publishing under an alias a teenager can spill his or her secrets without fear of being traced by family and friends.
Removed form this world of blogging, teen writers often would have very limited opportunities to be ever published.
Magazines and journals often never take the time to see the talent of these teens.
Blogging allows the young people to start to gain a following of readers at their age level and beyond, without first having to win the attention and support of an editor or publisher who may or may not be very interested in teenage authors.