Earlier this year my website traffic reached almost 1 million unique visitors per month, which meant that 50,000 people were coming onto the site each day for healthy gluten-free recipes, lifestyle tips and my musings on the Paleo Diet.
When I started elanaspantry.com, I had not envisioned, or prepared for such large amounts of traffic. In the technology industry, building a website for heavy use is referred to as “scaling for growth.”
The site began to fail repeatedly in early February as traffic continued to climb. I spoke with technology people in Boulder and was told the site did not have enough server power. Two local website design firms advised me to migrate the site to Amazon Web Services (AWS) –that turned out to be a big mistake. By Easter weekend elanaspantry.com was down for 50 hours straight. That was when things started to fall apart. I did not handle the stress well, taking it all into my body –we’ll get to that part later.
After the Easter weekend outage, I repointed my site’s hosting from AWS back to Media Temple and still, the outages continued. I was on an 8 GB server using only 4GB of power. At this point I figured out that server power had nothing to do with my website outages.
Due to my failure from its inception to scale my website for large volumes of traffic, I had a poorly built database that could not “talk” to the servers my host provided. How did I figure this out? I spent hours online researching web development, learning the right questions to ask of the technology people that were helping me.
Funny enough, this process was similar to my health journey, which began in the early 1990’s. In order to heal myself, I had to take charge, stop abdicating my power to “authority” (i.e., doctors), and know how to interact with such health professionals so that they could be my allies. And once again, it was my job to make this power my ally, rather than listen to it blindly or alienate myself from it.
I learned a lot more than I wanted to about technology, web hosting, and scaling a site to make it operational. I also learned that taking much-needed breaks from the virtual world is a very healthy thing for me.
At first when my site failed I was so stressed I began to have a physical reaction –I seem to somaticize just about everything. However, eventually I came around to seeing the prolonged website outage as an enforced sabbatical. I grew accustomed to the long breaks and became bored. For me being bored is a fantastic thing. It means I have spaciousness, and that is where the healing happens. I used this time to reconnect with my body in a kinder and more thoughtful way. The persistent website outages allowed me to create new habits for healing that I wouldn’t have otherwise had the space to investigate.
During my “sabbatical” I also spent a lot less time working on cookie recipes. Lately, I’ve been cooking more vegetables and making desserts with even less sweetener. I’m really looking forward to sharing these ultra-healthy real foods Paleo recipes with all of you.
In the end, through the fantastic folks at WordPress VIP (a high end hosting service) I found a web development company that rewrote the database of my website and restored it to health.
So my When Things Fall Apart post is also an I’m Back post. I didn’t want to hop on the site and post some healthy sugar-free lemonade recipe and pretend that nothing happened –you know that’s not my style. As I have in the past, I want to connect with all of you, my dear readers.
Now I’d like to hear from you. Was it frustrating having my website go down several hundred times last spring? What will you make now that it’s back up and running smoothly? What are you looking for from elanaspantry.com next? And of course, what is your best healing strategy when times get a little tough? How do you create healthy new habits?
Finally, thanks for your patience and continued support, I really appreciate it, and all of you as well!





Melie says
I actually googled ‘what happened to Elana Amsterdam’ yesterday. I regularly use your site and cookbooks. (As I type this, my belly is full of primal slaw. Love that stuff!) I was actually growing concerned. Glad to hear all is well and very excited about your new recipes. Thanks for all you do!
Evalee says
Elana. It I totally understand the Somaticising thing! How does one stop that!!
Irene says
I am so glad you are OK. I would check you website as always and was beginning to worry that something seriously bad had happened to you or someone you loved. I’m relived to know that it was only some technology problem. Thanks for sharing all you do and I’m excited that you are BACK!
marci says
i was wondering what was going on. i have been following you for years. When i became sick with chronic fatigue and decided to give up gluten i found you. you taught me how to bake without gluten so i didn’t have to give up desserts. Then i went dairy free and you were there. MY request is for more vegie dishes and desserts without sugar or aagave. But sounds like that is what you have been working on. THANK YOU so much. you are the best.
Becky Winkler says
I was just thumbing through your cookbook earlier today and wondering about how long it had been since you had posted here–so glad you are fine, and sorry for the trouble you went through with your site! I did not experience any problems with it, despite visiting often to make versions of your almond flour blondies. It’s great that you found a silver lining to the whole situation!
Christine says
When a website is unavailable, I assume that either there are ‘improvements being made or there is increased traffic on the website – both good things
trishaok says
I come to you first when I need a recipe. However, I have been diagnosed with an egg allergy and so many of your recipes use eggs. Still working on my own health journey. I am grateful to have you here, but needing to find alternate sources.
Desiree says
I’m glad your website is back up. I like the variety you offer in recipes/topics.
Paula Wakefield says
I admire your honesty and your resiliance. I am glad to see you are back.
Christy Smith says
Elana: I did not experience any frustration with the website. I am so very appreciative of you and what you are willing to share with all of us. Please know that you have loyal fans that would never be mad at you for a glitch when you so freely give of yourself, your journey and your incredible recipes. Please don’t go away! I would like to see lower sugar recipes that you already mentioned. I have been trying to use yacon syrup for everything including baking and would love some more recipes with yacon, though I know you already have some here. When things fall apart I usually snuggle in bed until I feel better. I also write a lot in a journal. Reading also helps me too. Peace and love to you.