The Day I Put My Own Domain on My Writing — and Slapped Ads on It
I didn’t write a single post today. Instead I connected my domain to this blog and added ads. And then a strange feeling set in. “Is this where it really starts?” — followed quickly by, “But what exactly started?”
The moment my name lands in the address bar
Up to now this blog had been running on the long auto-generated address the platform gives you. Functionally there was nothing wrong with it. Posts opened fine, search picked them up. But it felt off to show that address to anyone. The “temporary” vibe just wouldn’t go away.
So I connected a short domain. The process itself was quicker than I expected. Buy the domain, line up a few DNS records, wait for it to verify. When the name I’d chosen actually popped up in the address bar, honestly, I got a little giddy.
Technically it was a 30-minute job — but in my head I’d been putting it off for about a month.
What now serves the name
I added ads, and earning $0 is apparently normal
Since I was at it, I applied for ads too. It’s just dropping a one-line ad script onto each page, and that part wasn’t hard either. The problem was what happened in my head afterward. I spent about an hour refreshing the dashboard. Naturally, it was zero.
Turns out that’s exactly how it’s supposed to be. For ads to add up to a meaningful number, first people have to show up, then those people have to come back more than once, and that has to build up steadily. Adding ads isn’t the start of revenue — it’s just setting down an empty bowl.
Adding the ads was easy. Making the people who’d see them was the real work.
The infra is just a supporting act
If I sum up what I did today, it was all “shell.” Domain, ads, verification. All of it stuff you can finish in half a day, all of it a quick search away. But fiddling with these shells brought the real question I’d kept deferring into sharp focus.
“Is there enough here actually worth reading?”
A great domain, a clean ad slot — if there’s nothing worth reading inside, nothing happens. Today’s work just made that fact more vivid. Once I’d polished the bowl up nice and shiny, it got that much clearer there was nothing to put in it.
The setup takes a day. Filling what’s inside is something you have to do every day.
So today’s conclusion is a bit of a letdown. I connected the domain and added the ads, but the thing I have to do starting tomorrow is the same as yesterday. Write one more post.
How a post reaches a reader
The domain and the ads weren’t a “start button” — they were an “empty bowl.” Filling it comes down to one post a day, every day.