Yesterday I posted a post on admin5 called " A Grassroots Webmaster's Helplessness in Running a Website" . It was originally intended to be a bit of a vent, but I didn't expect to log on to my website at 20:00 this evening and took a look at the number of visits. Wow! I thought I was wrong, but more than 80 friends have come to my "one-third of an acre".
Don't blame me, I reacted like this when I was over 80 years old. To tell the truth that makes everyone laugh, since my website was launched, the traffic has never exceeded 10, and several of them were supported by my friends. How could I not be surprised.
To be honest, if you did not buy a ready-made website from others, but started it from scratch step by step, I believe that many grassroots webmasters have experienced surprises like mine. Just like what Chen Peisi said in the sketch: "I have never seen so much money in my life!", and what I want to say is: "I have never seen so much traffic in my life!".
Whether friends who visit my website do so out of curiosity, sympathy, or sympathy to help a brother, I am grateful. The encouragement this brings me is beyond imagination. No matter how well my website does and how it develops in the future, I will always remember my friends on the Internet who gave me such great comfort when I was most helpless. Although the competition on the Internet is becoming increasingly fierce, with so many friends, even the ruthless struggle has become a little warmer.
When I first saw the traffic of more than 80, I was inexplicably excited. Really! That feeling is indescribable! My wife said that when I screamed, my eyes were the biggest they had ever opened since they met me. She thought I was a winner. I won the grand prize! But I told her that this feels better than winning the grand prize. It gives me a sense of accomplishment.
I am also particularly grateful to the admin5 webmaster network for giving us grassroots webmasters a platform for communication, so that we can fully and equally communicate and appreciate the hardships, fatigue, happiness and excitement of grassroots webmasters. Just like a home for grassroots webmasters, I found warmth here.
This post has nothing to do with experience, I just posted it to express my gratitude to everyone, and helped me when my brother was depressed. Bow down!