最後に↓をポチっとお願いします♪
にほんブログ村
Hello. I’m Yasui, the president of a one-person company mainly engaged in inspections of high-pressure gas equipment.
It seems that our company website had become inaccessible. I only realized this when I sent the website URL to an administrative staff member who was handling procedures for a new business relationship. After investigating the cause, we finally managed to restore it. Thank you very much to the office staff for your help.
One of my goals for this year was to keep updating my blog. As of today, I’ve published 149 articles. That works out to roughly one post every two or three days. For an ordinary person like me, there’s a limit to writing articles that are useful to others and continuing to do so consistently. So I decided to write more casually—about what I’m feeling at the time or books I’m reading—and once I did that, I found it much easier to keep writing.
Now that sharing information has become so easy, I think it’s really worthwhile to communicate through writing on platforms like X or note going forward. Being able to leave behind one’s struggles and joys as words for the future, almost like proof that you lived, feels like a wonderful thing. Of course, the blog site I use will probably shut down after I’m gone from this world, and no one will migrate it, so everything will disappear then. Well, until that day comes, I’ll keep writing, believing that someone somewhere in the world is reading.
I imagine that when I’m 40 and when I’m 50, my worries, lifestyle, and even physical condition will be completely different. So if I were to keep writing for ten years, it would be interesting to imagine what 50-year-old me would think when reading articles written by 40-year-old me.
Those worries might seem trivial once viewed from the future. In fact, that’s often the case, isn’t it? Still, just as teenagers have teenage worries and people in their twenties have their own, new concerns arise with marriage, having children, changing jobs, and so on. While there are differences from person to person, leaving such things behind in writing can become hints that help solve someone else’s worries.
How readers interpret my writing is entirely up to them. Words only gain meaning when someone reads them, digests them, and mixes them with their own sensibilities. I don’t have a great vocabulary and my writing isn’t particularly deep (laughs), but I believe that encountering the sensibilities and lives of others through reading is extremely important for enriching one’s life.
It can be a bestselling book with wonderful content that has been read around the world, or a blog, a note, or the writing of someone you like—any of these are fine.
By constantly refreshing ourselves in this way, our thinking doesn’t become rigid.
If you write a blog, please let me know.
I’ll come take a look!
Thank you very much for reading to the end.
See you again!
