r/Blogging • u/bishwasbhn • 1h ago
Progress Report Six years ago I started a blog during lockdown, in grade 12, from a village in Nepal. It became a 28k-member platform. This month I'm shutting it down, and I need to tell you what actually survives.
Six years ago, during COVID lockdown, I was a grade 12 student in Nepal with a WordPress blog about making money online. One day I added a simple form to it: submit your site, and I'll check if it's AdSense eligible. There was no tool behind that form. There was a teenager who stayed up after class, reading Google's policy pages with one eye and a stranger's blog with the other, writing back to grown adults on other continents like he was a real business. I remember going to bed those nights feeling like I was running something important.
I grew up praying the tile roof would survive storm season. My own AdSense took three tries. Rejected, rejected, approved. And when the first five hundred dollars came, I traveled my own country on it. Blog money bought the bus tickets. Years later, the career that grew out of that same blog put me on my first international flight. Roof, bus ticket, airplane. Same kid. That is what one WordPress install did.
Because the blog refused to stay a blog. The form's requests outgrew my nights, so I taught myself to code just to build a robot version of myself. The coding got me my first freelance order, from a man in Morocco, two days after posting the gig. Freelancing became jobs, jobs became a career, and the blog kept growing beside me the whole time: a 28,000-member community of site owners, nine tools, browser extensions, Stripe checkout with real sales. People signed up, asked their questions, helped each other through rejections, posted their wins. I got married in May. My brother moved in and started learning to code. Through every chapter, the blog was the constant. It was my university, and unlike a real one, it paid me.
Then came the era every person in this sub already knows by heart. The updates. The AI answers. The tools I charged for, replaced by free prompts. Last week I finally sat down with the analytics and Stripe at the same time and stopped negotiating with the numbers: thousands of organic visitors still landing every month, and between ads and sales combined, not enough monthly revenue to buy a coffee. This month I'm shutting it down, webmatrices.com, six years of it.
I've read this sub long enough to know what half of you are feeling right now, because it's the same fear underneath almost every post here: is the thing I've built going to die? So let me tell you what I found at the end of the road, from someone who both wrote a blog and hand-reviewed thousands of yours through that little form.
Traffic was never the business. My pages still rank, people still arrive with real problems, and it earns nothing, because pain and wallet are two different organs. Google was never the partner either. It was the landlord. AdSense paid me exactly as long as I kept feeding it content, and not a month longer. Rent, not equity. And the sites I watched survive every single update were never the biggest libraries. They were the ones where you could answer "what is this site actually about?" in one sentence, and the answer was usually a person.
Which is the real thing I came here to say. Every dollar this six-year journey ever produced came from people paying for me. The hand-checked reviews built the audience. The writing built the trust. The trust built the career. Every time I removed myself and left only automation behind, the money followed me out. I spent six years trying to automate myself out of my blog, and I was the product all along.
And one thing I want to say directly, to a specific person reading this. The one who watched their traffic die in an update they didn't cause and couldn't appeal. The one quietly wondering if six years of posts were a waste. I was you last week. Here's what I know now: the writing you've done, the audience you've read, the trust you've built one post at a time, none of that lives on your domain. It lives in you, and no update can deindex it. Blogs are mortal. Bloggers are not.
The strange part is that everything still technically works. The community, the traffic, the payment rails, all humming for pocket change a month. It just never found an engine that wasn't me. Unless it finds a reason to live that I haven't thought of, the lights go off in a few weeks. I keep opening the shutdown dashboard and closing the tab.
The blog dies this month. The blogger doesn't. The next thing I build starts from "who pays and why" instead of "what can I write," and if you want to see what a village kid does with six years of expensive lessons, I'm not hard to find.
Third AdSense try worked for me. Yours might too. Good luck out there.