It is up to the user to seek out great quality content sources, and it is clear
readers of your blog believe you are one of them.
Most
readers of this blog believe this and can see it in your charts.
Not exact matches
Frequent
readers of this
blog know that I
believe that all vocabularies are intrinsically sectarian, and that value - free reasoning is a myth.
I
believe the primary reason that the
blog is ranking well is because
of you... the
readers.
However, since I don't have an audience (other than the few
readers of this
blog), and so that I don't have to write «with the publisher in mind,» I am going a different route, a route I
believe is the publishing wave
of the future.
Following the attempts by some
of the commenters (from both sides
of the debate) to get simple «yes» and «no» answers from each other to theological questions, I have a REAL LIFE situation to pose to the
readers of this
blog, and I want you to state with a simple «Yes» or «No» whether you
believe the following woman is saved or not.
I
believe Deb's
blog is mature enough to have different classes
of readers who reacts in their own way, positively or negatively.
A further danger lies in these bad translations, because, to judge by the comments, many if not most
of the
readers of this
blog do not live in Paris (or France), but simply visit, and so could be misled into
believing that «tant pis» is not polite language.
I often share personal stuff on my Instagram account and not so much on my
blog because I
believe most
of my
readers only want to check my recipe and then «bye»... But adding this personal note to a
blog is so important in my opinion because only then our
blog is unique and not one
of a million other food
blogs.
Cant
believe they did not give you a copy to review given your
blogs focus (and that
of your
readers!!
Dear friends, We Rookie Moms try not to
blog about blogging because we
believe that our
readers are more likely to be fellow mamas, not fellow bloggers, but since there are definitely a handful
of savvy bloggers reading our site, I want to address an issue some
of us may be facing this week.
Long time
readers of this
blog know that I
believe the relationship between these two disorders is much more complicated than regular doctors and medicine would have us
believe.
Since my site is running WordPress.org and not hosted on WordPress.com, I don't get that normal Follow button that you usually see on WordPress.com
blogs: / A lot
of people just Like my FB page or follow me on Twitter to get updates, but I JUST installed a Follow Plugin at the bottom right
of the screen so that it shows up on your
reader (I
believe...) Hope that helps!
Today on The Everygirl, she offers
readers a detailed account
of what she
believes it takes to run a successful
blog as well as tips to aspiring interior designers on starting out, working for yourself, and the industry as a whole.
I'm not sure I necessarily
believe this — I think it's more that people are seeing something that's common with books that become more popular: with most titles, you'll see fewer rave 5 - star reviews once reviewers have no connection, however loose, to you (i.e. friends
of friends,
readers of a
blog where you were interviewed, acquaintances from Twitter, etc.).
Though I still
believe the concision
of a Seth Godin
blog appeals to many in our harried world, blogger buddy Andrew Butters at Potato Chip Math makes some interesting arguments and observations about book length,
blog length and
reader appeal at the link.
As
readers of this
blog know, I've always been heretical enough to
believe that the people who created the work should profit the most from it.
You'll note that the name
of the course is not How To Find The Time To Write, because, as regular
readers of this
blog will know, I firmly
believe that you have to make the time to write.
Now, if someone had told me when I started this
blog that more than one - third
of my
readers would be outside the US, I would not have
believed it.
I
believe that one
of the strengths
of this
blog is the number
of smart, sophisticated
readers who leave insightful comments and engage in intelligent debates.
The name
of this
blog is Fidose
of Reality, so we
believe in transparency and only recommend to our
readers what we ourselves would use or give to those we love.
As an avid
reader of your
blog since it started, and many other sources
of information, I do not
believe that what various people have written support all the conclusions you espouse.
Also from experience, I know that quite a few
readers of this
blog are unwilling to
believe that (i) can be right.
But anything published in the main text
of the
blog, under the blogger's name, can't be ghostwritten — it amounts to a fraud on the
reader, who
believe he's reading what this specific person thinks.
If you are a regular
reader of this
blog, you probably can't
believe I have you considering not fighting every ticket you receive, but I felt it important to qualify my mantra
of ALWAYS FIGHT YOUR TICKETS with a small «almost» in front
of the «always.»