We editors at WordPress.com are stunned by what we read on your blogs every day: the range of topics. The candor and emotion. The beauty of the writing. Every moment, in everything you publish, you share parts of yourselves — which is both brave and important.
On Tuesday, we highlighted some of the current events-focused posts that moved us this year. Today, we celebrate the breadth and depth of your other writing in 14 of our most popular topics, from food to sports to fiction to parenting and beyond.

Pets
They can’t blog for themselves, but we love reading when you do it on their behalves — more often than not, we all end up learning a little something about ourselves. “The Invisible Leash,” by Ivan Kreilkamp in Avidly, is a sweet, thoughtful meditation on the nature of pet ownership, while The Ripening Joy‘s “Seamus” celebrates the life of a beloved Basset Hound who eased his new owner’s final days.
Academia
Published on her eponymous blog, Tiffany Martínez’s “Academia, Love Me Back” was shared across social networks over 10,000 times.Her enraging story about a professor’s racist feedback was a stark reminder of the deep, insidious role race plays not just in politics and policing, but also in education.
Blogging
Community-favorite blogger Ra at Rarasaur gave her readers a scare and something to think about with August’s “oh nothing”:
I almost deleted my blog yesterday, on a whim,
but the whim sputtered under the weight of me,
and thankfully the buttons I pressed were just matches
not mines.
Part stream of consciousness, part prose poetry, all honest — a deeply relatable read for anyone who’s struggled with disillusionment or loss (i.e., everyone).
Sports
Tim Struby, writing in Victory Journal, brought us “The Alternates”: the stories of those unsung Olympic heroes, the team alternates who train and travel with the US Olympic team, but don’t actually get to compete. His piece shines a light on these oft-forgotten — but incredibly skilled — athletes, and deftly illustrates the uncomfortable Olympic limbo of being there-but-not.
Food
From Tangerine Drawings, “similes / empanadas” isn’t your normal food blog post — there’s no recipe, no close-up photo of a glistening drop of sauce about to drip off a fork — but it drew us in. It’s a beautiful meditation on food, family, and tradition, and a lesson on how to describe and talk about food in a way that grabs readers and makes them part of the story. The loose, colorful sketches accompanying it are the egg wash on the empanada.

LGBTQ Issues
The Pulse nightclub massacre in Orlando, Florida, shocked the world — but many people didn’t fully appreciate the importance of the location, or how bringing this violence to a gay club was in itself a violation over and above the physical violence. The blogger behind Gukira responded with “refuge,” the story of their personal experience finding community in clubs. “In the club, I found some air. Tainted, thin, even toxic, but it was breathable.”
The Internet
Sam Kriss wrote “Why you’re not quitting Twitter” on the social network we love to hate and our seemingly bottomless need for expression and validation. It’s not for the faint of heart, and his words are best left to speak for themselves.
You can’t quit Twitter: you, writer; you, comedian; you, journalist; you, early adopter; you, self-confessed nerd and unapologetic brunch snob. You created it, with your earnest musings and your boiling self-regard; you summoned the demon, and while its name might change the beast will never be able to relent. You bring Twitter with you wherever you go, because you are Twitter. And it’s dying, because you’re already dead.
Loss
For many of us writing can be a form of therapy, helping us to process our own thoughts or life’s challenges. Losing a parent or grandparent can be one of the hardest griefs to work through, as Chanyado’s Aleya Kassam now knows. Five months after losing her grandmother, she published “And full stop,” giving voice to the longing and profundity of her loss.
Women
In the face of sexism and oppressive beauty standards, humor and anger are two common responses. Anne Theriault of The Belle Jar takes the first tack in “A List Of Things In Literature, Music and Art That Are Actually Metaphors For Women;” Alice Isak at Coffee and a Blank Page takes the second with “fcuk pretty.” “It’s funny because it’s true” is a cliché for a reason, as Anne well knows, and anyone who’s ever chafed under the pressure to lose weight will find camaraderie and release in Alice’s piece.
Beyoncé
(She had a big year and generated a lot of commentary, so yes, she gets her own topic.)
There was no line from Beyoncé’s Lemonade that got a bigger reaction than “He better call Becky with the good hair.” For anyone not sure what’s significant about Becky and her hair, Alexis Chateau offered “Translating ‘Becky with the Good Hair’” to unpack the historical significance of “good hair” and its meaning to women of color.
Short Fiction
Entire worlds created and lives begun and ended, all with an impressive economy of words: short fiction takes us on amazing and unexpected five-minute journeys. Trent Lewin’s “Pickle” broke our hearts with the story of a bittersweet birth tempered by a terrible loss, while N.K. Jesmin’s “The City Born Great” takes us into a slightly altered universe to contemplate a different kind of birth — the birth of a city.
I raise my arms and avenues leap. (It’s real but it’s not. The ground jolts and people think, Huh, subway’s really shaky today.) I brace my feet and they are girders, anchors, bedrock. The beast of the deeps shrieks and I laugh, giddy with postpartum endorphins. Bring it. And when it comes at me I hip-check it with the BQE, backhand it with Inwood Park, drop the South Bronx on it like an elbow.
– From The City Born Great
Listicles (and Writing)
Never underestimate the power of a list to explain and amuse. In “34 Reasons to Stop Writing Forever,” Nathaniel Tower at Juggling Writer hit just about every raw nerve a writer ever nursed as an excuse to give up — even those we’d rather not admit to — and negates their power by taking them out of the shadows of our psyches and into the light of his listicle.
Parenting
Parenting is one of life’s biggest joys and challenges, generating endless fodder for writing. These two bloggers captured both the sublime and the terrible: “Radiant (or how not to give a spider a bath),” from Bye-Bye Beer, is a lovely vignette of the mundane-yet-transcendent daily moments that blogging is so well suited for chronicling. And on pryvate parts, Lisa Shaw lays bare a painful realization about love and jealousy in “My Ugly Truth About Parenting a Difficult Child.”
Photography
We’ll be sharing our favorite images of 2016 is an upcoming post; “The Photograph I Did Not Take,” from Mary Turner, is about what photography means — and what it means, as a photographer, to remove yourself from a moment in order to capture an image of it.
But in that moment in Piraeus, part of me knew that if I got up and raised my trigger finger to the shutter I would be stealing part of Abohane’s soul and chipping away at my own. I haven’t seen a man so crippled with grief like that for a while and I just couldn’t do it to him. Maybe my hardwired photographer’s brain didn’t know it but my legs did, the dead weight in my stomach did. And they would not let me get up.
As always, there is far more excellent writing than we’re able to shine a spotlight on here. We hope you’ll share some of your favorite reads in the comments, and you can recommend posts to us at any time on Twitter — we’re @WPDiscover.
Look for our favorite images, artwork, and poetry of 2016 in posts next week.
LOVE these end of year round-ups…it’s like the best of the best. Thank you!
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Our pleasure! Glad you enjoy them.
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WordPress is becoming the most interesting media on stories that touch the hearts. Information that touch the souls, redefined writings that touch the life’s of the people. It has become a motivating and souls touching media.
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Sometimes words can make us smile..that’s what here your work does.
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Hi, my name is Patty, and I especially loved, A City Born Great. That was great. I’m a blogger, and one day I hope to write something that great. I began writing nonfiction with the publishing of a book in 2014 then decided in late 2015 I wanted to begin a blog, and with the help of a friend I am over coming the challenges of accessibility issues due to blindness and am blogging. One day I’d love to blog something for folks like yall. I love getting the various posts and look forward to reading them every day.
I also enjoy reading posts from GrannyMoons Morning Feast, her stuff is way good. Anyhow everyone keep up the most awesome work.
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Nice research and selection, it’s time to overview the year, you’ve done great! Thanks so much, happy 2016!
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Agreed! Thanks for the round-up! Always great to discover new blogs!
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I found a new medium where I can express all my thoughts freely!
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It’s really true that no matter how hard it may sound, quitting twitter is like life without God.
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Your ‘blogging’ example is excellent: https://rarasaur.com/2016/08/30/oh-nothing/
The momentary (momentous?) consideration given to deleting a whole blog. Like that. One fell swoop.
“Are you sure?”
The only sentence to stop some of us bloggers in our tracks.
Love it!
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Great post! Very inspiring 🙂
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Happiness is when i discover stunning blogs and bliss is when i post mine…… All thanks to WordPress.com 🙂
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It was a year that turned lots of things on their head. I blogged and got lots of love and hate in equal measure.
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Loved the “listicle” (also love the word listicle in general). I am an aspiring writer so it’s fun to see what the writing life is like for other people.
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I don’t know why it took me so long to write. Pure delight and freedom when I submitted my very first blog.
Toast to all the writers – keep on writing and inspiring.
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Best thing I started doing- a hobby that I really love.
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HEY! HEY! I am honored you chose my personal essay in the parenting category! THANKS! 😀
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For starters like me, thanks for established writers who share their stories. I bet we learn alot and thanks wordpress for the forum. Being on my teen age, blogging keeps me busy, either reading, thinking or writing.
Bravo
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True..Thanks a ton wordpress for providing loads of reading stuff and inspiring me to write:)
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You’re so welcome!
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I am a new puppy woof in a blooging world.
And I love these posts. It makes me feel fluffy inside. Me and mom would really spend a good hour everyday to just read thru many entries. It is inspiring and serves as a reminder for us to keep on improving… and maybe one day I could write something that could help other puppy trippers out there! Woof!
Thank you! Merry Christmas everyone!
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Wow. Mindblown that I made this list. Thank you!
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Thank *you* for writing the piece!
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😊
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loved the list! i wish i had posted more this year hahaha
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Nice wrap up!
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Love these!
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I write so much but never post anything… and I never read anything either. Can I be counted as a blogger, then? Great overall vision of the WordPress community.
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Bravo Michelle. I’m still an amateur blogger and really love your blog.
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Thanks for sharing these posts of 2016. Will definitely read them in order to improve my writing. I started blogging in August and the last 4 months have been amazing. Hopefully, one day my blog is listed here.
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Something different. Enjoyed it.
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Where’s humor? Surely in the name of all that is 2016 we must have humor!
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We’ve got satire! But please, share your favorite funny reads with us 🙂
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Ha! I used to use that tactic as a news editor and people complained we never wrote any *good* news. So. This probably isn’t the place for general recommendations, but I always get a kick out of Alexis David. She’s English, learning French, but her tone and style are like a French person writing English. Plus she’s funny. Here’s one:
https://alexisdavidalexisdavid.wordpress.com/2016/02/11/the-monarchy-of-ice/
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Great round-up! Lookong forward to the year ahead!
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I missed out a lot in there. Will catch up. Thanks for putting it all together. 🙂
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Happy reading!
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Love that you do this, so cool 😀 and interesting reading!
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Great post!!
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Wonderful list, will keep me going through the festive period!
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Thanks for the list ! Just read the post titled “Academia, love me back”, and it hurts so much. I’ll try to spend time to read these posts to improve my writing. Looking forward to other list !
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I found a new medium where I can freely express myself!
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