![]() ![]() And mommy blogging is becoming, much more mainstream than it used to be. First of all I think that privacy and the notion of privacy and information on the Internet is rapidly changing, especially this generation and next generation. My critics bring up this question all the time, saying that I’m violating my daughter’s privacy, saying that I’m giving all of her potential enemies this fuel to use against her in the future. It’s a really layered answer to this question. The response was that one needs to be comfortable with whatever it is they’re writing at the time, and to be sure they’ll be comfortable reading in five or ten years. One of the questions addressed the notion that what’s said on the blogs will live on forever. Armstrong spoke with me about, blogging boundaries, the perks of running her own business, and turning hate into charity.Ĭhris Bowman: I watched the Today Show interview from last year featuring “Mom Bloggers”. ![]() The popularity of Dooce over the years has allowed Armstrong to turn a one-time hobby into a full-time career. Armstrong has faced more than a few challenges in her past including battling a sever bout of postpartum depression and denouncing Mormonism. She is the author of three books, including the most recent It Sucked and Then I Cried. Armstrong is the creator of Dooce and is considered a pioneer of the “mommy blog” movement. ![]()
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