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Thank you for commenting on my post. However, I think I'm going to cease these heavily-researched high effort posts.

I have a deeply personal, epic post in development about the night I almost died at sea. I'm going to shelve it, as I'm perplexed at what makes these "posts of the week" lists.

Travel posts of pretty pictures taken by the water are what they seem to like. I've written good articles about domestic violence, psychopaths and now fire safety that never make these lists. I even follow the @curie curation trail, to no avail. I remain astonished that I had to come here to get comments on my post.

When I published it, I really thought it would spark a discussion about the widespread use of this flammable foam in the home.

Two days later, nothing. So I went over and viewed the pretty vacation pictures posts that do get featured, with many comments.

So, while I intend to remain engaged, I'm going to dial it way back and produce much shorter posts without all of the research effort as before, since I don't live in a picturesque area where I can take pictures of the beach. I live in PA in a gritty city that is not what anyone would call photogenic. Thanks again for your support! :)

I think that a large part of engagement happens when you are actively engaging on others posts. Then when you find good ways to tag people within the post to make ginabot notify them of the mention. I watch those that are the best at getting engagement and many found ways to tag others in the post drawing them into discussion.

It's an art for sure. I do feel long form posts are worthy of the effort, but as a mix with mainly shorter form posts designed for quick engagement with people. Attention spans seem to be short these days.

BTW, I am the person behind @pifc's comments.