— A 66-year-old Japanese retiree’s honest blogging journey
- The Change I Noticed When I Learned What “Impressions” Meant
- The Silent Period
- A Strange Pattern
- “What Are Impressions?” — It Took Me Two Months to Understand
- What I Saw in the Data
- Something Shifted in Late February
- Did 200 Posts Matter?
- Honestly, I Don’t Know What It Means
- What I Tell Myself Now
- What I’ve Learned from Writing 200 Posts
- The Weight of a Single Click
- One Last Thing
The Change I Noticed When I Learned What “Impressions” Meant
I launched this blog on May 10, 2025, and posted every single day after that.
By mid-November — about 7 months in — I had reached 200 posts.
Honestly, I thought, “Surely something will happen after this much effort.” But reality was different. For most of that time, there was no visible change at all.
The Silent Period
One particular article I posted on October 15, 2025 had zero reaction at first. But about a week later, it started getting a handful of page views each day.
Here’s how the traffic grew over time:
1 month after posting: ~130 PV
2 months: ~160 PV
3 months: ~190 PV
4 months: ~200 PV
5 months: ~280 PV
It never exploded. But it never stopped either. It kept building, little by little.
A Strange Pattern
After the first month’s jump to 130 PV, traffic plateaued for months 2 through 4. Then at month 5, it suddenly jumped again to 280.
I have no idea why. It didn’t grow steadily — it stalled, then moved again. That pattern was puzzling.
“What Are Impressions?” — It Took Me Two Months to Understand
When I looked at WordPress Site Kit, I saw numbers labeled “impressions” and “clicks.” At first, I had no idea what they meant. I researched, I asked, and it took me a full two months to understand.
Impressions = the number of times your page appeared in search results.
Clicks = the number of times someone actually clicked on it.
In my own words: impressions are “the number of times Google decided to show your page.” Clicks are “the number of times someone chose yours.”
What I Saw in the Data
Here’s what the numbers looked like over time for that one article:
Late January: 54 impressions, 1 click
Early February: 90 impressions, 3 clicks
Mid-February: 107 impressions, 6 clicks
Late February: 154 impressions, 7 clicks
Early March: 233 impressions, 10 clicks
Mid-March: 664 impressions, 23 clicks
Late March: 981 impressions, 30 clicks
The key insight: it wasn’t clicks that moved first — it was impressions. Google started showing the page more, and clicks followed.
Something Shifted in Late February
Around late February, impressions jumped dramatically. It wasn’t a gradual increase — it felt like the page moved up a level. From about 135 impressions to over 850 in a matter of weeks.
I can’t explain why. But looking back, this timing coincides with when PV started growing again too. Some kind of evaluation change may have happened — but I honestly don’t know.
Did 200 Posts Matter?
This is what I keep wondering. The traffic didn’t come right after posting — it came after the articles had accumulated.
Maybe the site started being recognized as a “real site” by Google. Maybe 200 posts crossed some invisible threshold. But I have no proof. I’m just guessing.
Honestly, I Don’t Know What It Means
Even looking at these numbers, I don’t know what to do differently. Should I optimize? Should I just keep going? I don’t know what Google is looking at.
But one thing I feel is this: sometimes a single article can change the flow. One post gets discovered, and it opens the door for others.
What I Tell Myself Now
I want results fast. I know that about myself. But the people who succeed at blogging are the ones who keep going for one year, two years, quietly and consistently.
I have no revenue yet. No authority. No reputation.
That’s exactly why I believe there’s only one thing to do: keep putting out content that might help someone, one post at a time.
Trust and credibility build slowly. I’m okay with that.
What I’ve Learned from Writing 200 Posts
Traffic can come later, not immediately. Your site may start being seen as a whole, not just individual posts. I’ve started understanding numbers I never knew existed. My writing has gotten a little better. And most importantly — it’s no longer zero.
The Weight of a Single Click
Getting impressions isn’t easy. But getting that first click? That’s even harder than I imagined.
That’s why that “1” means something. I’ve come to believe that.
One Last Thing
I don’t know what happens next. Maybe it grows. Maybe it stops.
But one thing is certain: it didn’t end at zero.
For now, I’ll keep watching these numbers — and keep writing.


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