The 100k Crossroads: Momentum, Monetization, or a Poetic Exit?



 The 100k Crossroads: Momentum, Monetization, or a Poetic Exit?

We are officially staring down the barrel of a milestone I never thought I’d see.

If current trends hold, this blog is about six days away from hitting the **100,000 lifetime views mark**. And if I keep riding this wave until January 1, 2027, the math says we’ll be looking at **160,000 views**.

To put that into perspective: **I have gotten the exact same number of views in the last six months (around 50,000) as I did in the previous six years of blogging combined.**

It is absolute lightning in a bottle. But sitting at the peak of this hill has brought me to a massive, unexpected crossroads. What do you do when a quiet, personal outlet suddenly demands that you decide whether or not you want to be a "social influencer"?

## πŸ’΅ Option A: The Modern Answer (Monetize It)

When a niche blog hits this level of traffic, the world tells you there is only one logical response: turn on the ads, build the brand, and make it pay. Even the people closest to me look at these numbers and see an incredible opportunity that shouldn't be wasted.

And part of me gets it. The hunger for that 160k milestone by the New Year is real.

But monetizing changes the math. The moment a blog becomes a business, it stops being a sanctuary. It stops being about the pure joy of documenting a walk, a day, or a thought, and starts being about managing an asset. It introduces a public noise that I’m just not sure I want in my life.

## πŸ“– Option B: The Poetic Exit (Hit 100k and Delete)

On the other side of the coin is a choice that feels increasingly loud, rebellious, and deeply satisfying: **the poetic exit.**

In a digital world where everything is stretched out, milked for profit, and kept on life support just to grab a few more clicks, there is something incredibly powerful about walking away on your own terms.

I’m not much of a "save it for later" guy. I’ve already backed up my writing for myself, so I don't need to hoard the digital clutter. Choosing to hit that glorious 100k mark, publish one final farewell, and permanently hit the delete button feels like an act of total control. It keeps the whole six-year journey pure. It means closing the book exactly when the story reaches its highest, most beautiful peak.

## πŸ”„ Moving to a New Way of Journaling

Whether I choose to run an experiment with ads until the New Year or pull the plug the second the counter ticks over to 100,000, one thing is certain: my time in the public social influencing space is drawing to a close.

I am ready to pivot. I’m ready for a new, quieter way of journaling—one that takes place away from algorithms, view counts, and public expectations.

This blog has been an incredible chapter, and gaining thousands of views from readers all over the world has been nothing short of remarkable. I appreciate every single one of you who helped build this space into what it is.

The finish line is in sight. I'm just figuring out exactly how I want to cross it.



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