Another Lesson Learned

This morning I reposted a piece from 2017, A Lesson Learned, about my first case of Anaplasmosis, as a link in a new post about this disease and Lyme disease today according to the Maine CDC’s most recent report. I made reference to the fact that I had just posted the 2017 piece on my Substack, which I made my primary blog when WordPress no longer supported the theme (template) I have used here since I started this blog in 2008. Within a month or two of my migration, my old theme here started working again, but then I was already enamored with my growing viewer numbers on Substack.

I have found that Substack is a more immediate medium than my WordPress blog. If I go a couple of days without posting anything, almost nobody visits my Substack, whereas on WordPress, there’s always a trickle of people reading both the latest and prior posts. So even though I have half-neglected my WordPress blog, many of its readers have remained loyal, quickly reading my less frequent posts on this platform.

The lesson I have learned is not to put all my eggs in one basket. Some people have commented that they don’t like Substack and will only follow me here on WordPress. Therefore, I will put new material here when I put it on Substack and if I repost something old from here on Substack, I will only put it here if I have something new to say about that topic or perhaps the back story to that piece. In a way, this platform will be for my old friends who may have followed me since the beginning or at least longer than I have been on Substack.

If you are one of my old friends, I thank you for your patience while I figured this out and learned my lesson.

1 Response to “Another Lesson Learned”



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I just realized none of the posts show on an iPad or a computer, but they do show on an iPhone. WordPress is working on this. In the meantime, please visit my Substack.

 

 

Osler said “Listen to your patient, he is telling you the diagnosis”. Duvefelt says “Listen to your patient, he is telling you what kind of doctor he needs you to be”.

 

BOOKS BY HANS DUVEFELT, MD

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