Lessons Learned from Writing My First 72 Blog Posts
When I published my first blog post, I wasn’t thinking about reaching 72 articles.
I wasn’t thinking about traffic, search engine rankings, personal branding, or becoming a better writer. I simply wanted a place to share my thoughts, document what I was learning, and build something that belonged to me.
Like many developers, I started blogging because I was learning new things every day and wanted to keep track of my progress. At the time, I had no idea how much writing would teach me—not just about technology, but about consistency, communication, patience, and personal growth.
Now, after publishing my first 72 blog posts, I’ve learned lessons that extend far beyond blogging itself. Some lessons came from successes, while others came from mistakes and moments of frustration.
In this article, I want to share the most important lessons I’ve learned from publishing my first 72 blog posts.
1. Consistency Beats Perfection
One of the biggest mistakes I made early on was trying to make every article perfect.
I would spend hours tweaking sentences, rewriting paragraphs, and overthinking every detail. Sometimes I delayed publishing because I felt an article wasn’t “good enough.”
Over time, I realized that perfection is the enemy of progress.
The articles that helped me grow weren’t necessarily my best articles. They were simply the articles I published.
Consistency creates momentum.
Publishing one article every week for a year is far more valuable than spending months trying to create a single masterpiece.
The biggest breakthrough came when I stopped chasing perfection and started focusing on showing up consistently.
2. Writing Clarifies Thinking
Many times, I thought I understood a topic until I tried to explain it in writing.
That’s when the gaps in my knowledge became obvious.
Writing forced me to organize my thoughts, simplify complex ideas, and identify areas where my understanding was incomplete.
The process taught me that learning and explaining are not the same thing.
If I couldn’t explain a concept clearly, I probably didn’t understand it as well as I thought.
This lesson made me a better learner and a better developer.
3. Nobody Reads Your First Posts—And That’s Okay
One of the hardest realities for new bloggers is that almost nobody reads your early content.
I remember publishing articles and checking analytics repeatedly, hoping to see visitors.
Most of the time, there were very few.
At first, that felt discouraging.
But eventually I realized something important:
The purpose of your first blog posts isn’t to attract thousands of readers.
The purpose is to learn how to write.
Your first posts are practice.
Every article improves your skills, your confidence, and your ability to communicate.
The audience comes later.
4. The Habit Matters More Than Motivation
Motivation is unreliable.
Some days you’ll feel inspired.
Other days you’ll have no desire to write.
If blogging depends entirely on motivation, consistency becomes impossible.
One of the most valuable lessons I learned is that habits outperform motivation.
The writers who succeed aren’t necessarily the most talented.
They’re the ones who continue writing even when they don’t feel like it.
Creating a writing habit transformed blogging from an occasional activity into a regular part of my routine.
5. Every Post Doesn’t Need to Be Revolutionary
Early in my blogging journey, I believed every article needed a unique insight or groundbreaking idea.
I was wrong.
Many of my most useful posts covered topics that had already been discussed countless times.
The difference was that I shared my own perspective and experience.
Your value doesn’t come from inventing entirely new ideas.
It comes from explaining ideas through your own lens.
There’s always someone who needs the explanation that only you can provide.
6. Writing Builds Confidence
Publishing online can feel intimidating.
You’re sharing your thoughts with strangers.
You’re exposing your ideas to criticism.
You’re putting your work in public.
At first, this can be uncomfortable.
But over time, each article builds confidence.
You become more comfortable expressing your opinions.
You stop worrying about being perfect.
You gain confidence in your ability to communicate and contribute valuable ideas.
That confidence eventually extends beyond blogging into other areas of life and work.
7. Blogging Is a Long-Term Game
One of the most important lessons I learned is that blogging rewards patience.
Results rarely happen overnight.
Traffic grows slowly.
Authority builds gradually.
Opportunities emerge unexpectedly.
Many people quit because they expect immediate results.
The reality is that blogging is similar to investing.
Small contributions made consistently over time eventually compound into significant outcomes.
The key is staying committed long enough to experience those benefits.
8. Publishing Teaches More Than Consuming
Before I started blogging, I spent most of my time consuming content.
I watched tutorials.
I read articles.
I followed courses.
While these activities were helpful, publishing taught me far more.
Creating content forces you to think deeply, research thoroughly, and communicate clearly.
It transforms you from a consumer into a creator.
That shift changed the way I learn forever.
9. Your Blog Becomes a Personal Archive
One unexpected benefit of blogging is having a permanent record of your journey.
Looking back at my older articles shows how much I’ve grown.
I can see:
- How my thinking evolved.
- What I was learning.
- Problems I was solving.
- Mistakes I made.
The blog becomes more than a collection of articles.
It becomes a timeline of personal growth.
10. Small Efforts Compound Over Time
When I published my first article, it felt insignificant.
The same was true for my second, third, and tenth article.
But by the time I reached fifty posts, those small efforts had accumulated into something meaningful.
Fifty articles represent:
- Hundreds of hours of learning.
- Hundreds of hours of writing.
- Dozens of lessons learned.
- A growing body of work.
This reminded me that success is rarely the result of a single big action.
It’s usually the result of many small actions repeated consistently over time.
11. The Real Reward Isn’t Traffic
When people think about blogging success, they often think about page views, followers, and analytics.
Those metrics matter, but they’re not the greatest reward.
The greatest reward is who you become during the process.
Blogging made me:
- A better writer.
- A better learner.
- A better communicator.
- A more disciplined creator.
- A more thoughtful developer.
Those benefits are far more valuable than any traffic number.
Looking Ahead
Reaching 72 blog posts feels like an important milestone, but it also feels like the beginning.
There’s still so much to learn.
So many topics to explore.
So many experiences to share.
The goal isn’t simply to publish more articles.
The goal is to continue learning, improving, and documenting the journey.
If the first 72 posts taught me anything, it’s that growth comes from consistency, curiosity, and the willingness to keep showing up.
Conclusion
Publishing my first 72 blog posts taught me lessons that extend far beyond writing.
It taught me patience when growth was slow.
It taught me discipline when motivation disappeared.
It taught me confidence when self-doubt appeared.
Most importantly, it taught me that meaningful progress is often the result of small actions repeated consistently over time.
If you’re thinking about starting a blog, my advice is simple:
Start now.
Don’t wait until you’re an expert.
Don’t wait until everything is perfect.
Write your first post.
Then write your second.
Then your third.
One day, you’ll look back and realize those small steps created something much bigger than you ever imagined.
I did an article about importance of writing for developers which you can check out.
