Tag, You’re It: Blog Questions 2025 The author started blogging to share resources they created while teaching new web developers, particularly addressing gaps in existing documentation. They currently use the Eleventy static site generator, having switched from Gatsby due to its unnecessary complexity, and write all posts in Markdown within their site’s repository using VS Code and Git. A few weeks ago, Ava started a tagging game for Bearbloggers, challenging them to answer some questions about how and why they blog. Then Kev adapted Ava’s questions for non-Bearblog users. Since then, these questions have been making the rounds from blog to blog. Recently, Eric tagged me in his answers. I’m tagging in Evan, Aleksandr, and Ashlee. If y’all are comfortable with it, I’d love to learn how you got your start with blogging. Why did you start blogging in the first place? Broadly, I enjoy writing. Essays, for instance, were a schooltime forte of mine. I cut my teeth on technical writing during my internship at USAA, where I wrote wikis that were among the company’s earliest internal documentation for React and Redux, the web stack the company had recently pivoted to. My time at USAA also led to my public-facing writing here on the blog in a few ways. The first was an assignment my manager gave my team to try our hands at writing whitepapers, topics of our choice. I decided to read up on U.S. case law surrounding digital accessibility. I later adapted parts of that whitepaper into my first post, as well as my first meetup talk. One of my favorite parts of my USAA tenure was getting to be one of the instructors for USAA’s season-long new-hire web development training. There, I re- encountered the questions, challenges, and misconceptions that new web developers face… and occasionally, I found established resources unhelpful or unsatisfactory. I ended up writing the resources I wish I had been able to find. That training program followed a React video course that today boasts hundreds of thousands of participants. I’d taken that course myself during my internship, and it was interesting to revisit with more experience while the students took the course fresh. To my surprise, the course was riddled with a pattern I’d since unlearned: using