🌿 budding developing

Why a Digital Garden

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#meta #digital-garden #learning-in-public

A blog is a stream β€” chronologically ordered posts that flow past and disappear into the archive. A garden is a landscape β€” ideas that grow, connect, and deepen over time.

The problem with blogs

Blogs encourage a mindset of finished, polished pieces. You write a post, hit publish, and move on. The post sits there, frozen in time, slowly becoming outdated. The pressure to be β€œdone” before publishing is enormous.

What a garden does differently

In a garden, notes are living documents. A seedling might grow into an evergreen over months or years. Rough ideas can be planted early and tended publicly. Connections between notes create topography β€” a landscape of thought you can wander through.

The ethos

Maggie Appleton writes about this beautifully in A Brief History & Ethos of the Digital Garden. The key principles that resonate with me:

  1. Topography over timelines β€” organize by relationship, not by date
  2. Continuous growth β€” nothing is ever truly finished
  3. Imperfection in public β€” publish half-baked thoughts without shame
  4. Independent ownership β€” own your space on the web

This site is my garden. It will always be a work in progress β€” and that’s the point.