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Let us go then, you and I

@antikate

Objectively sub-par
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bettsfic
Anonymous asked:

Venting-

When I hear people give the advice that writing is never a waste of time if you’re having fun or you should never feel like a story was a waste of time, you should enjoy the process. This advice I believe is real and true and works for some writers. But at the same time, there are writers who are very stressed when writing and feel better about their work when it’s finished. Not the “I enjoy having written.” But the “I have crippling anxiety and can only tell if my time, effort, and semi-breakdowns were worth something if I complete what I set out to do.”

Not to diminish anyone who agrees or resonates with the first statement, I admire those people a lot and wish I was calm enough to feel the same.

in my years of teaching and coaching, i've noticed there are two kinds of writers: "process" writers and "product" writers. rather, there exists a spectrum from one to the other.

on the process side, you have writers who reach a flow state fairly easily, who can become immersed in a world or idea of their own invention, and they write in large part to seek that immersive state. the end of a project seems more like a tragedy than an achievement because it marks the loss of the immersive state, and it will take energy and discipline and happenstance to find the next. i've also noticed that it becomes harder rather than easier to find that state over time; the more projects you finish, the fewer ideas appeal to you in the same way.

conversely, product writers get to feel that sense of achievement upon completing a project that process writers may lack, and that pleasure is worth the pain and turmoil of the act of creating something. product writing takes a lot of strength, patience, and discipline i think, to do something hard for the reward of having done it. it's the difference between an athlete and a surgeon. a person becomes an athlete for love of the sport, the act of playing. winning is important, but they wouldn't be able to win without first finding joy in the game. a surgeon, on the other hand, probably doesn't get into the job for the fun of operating. the fulfillment is in the operation's success; it's hard work with high risk. but the reward of saving or improving lives is worth it.

admittedly as a process writer it's always been hard for me to wrap my head around product writers. not only do i not have the patience to seek a sense of achievement, i think i'm mostly incapable of relishing any reward at all unless the reward is in the pursuit itself. looking back, i can't think of any single moment i've ever felt a sense of success. but also i've always struggled with concepts like ambition and competition. i've never had any drive to win anything, but also i've never felt much when i lose or fail. sometimes i wish those things mattered more to me, because then i would be a more driven and decisive person, and i'd be more successful in my career.

i know i'm on the extreme end of the process-product divide, and that colors a lot of my perspective of teaching and mentoring. but i think writers can shift on the spectrum depending on where they're at in their writing life or even with whatever project they're working on. i've been trying to have a more product-based mentality recently to at least develop the skill of shifting to the other side when i need to, so that i can get the patience and focus to write a novel that is not just me plopping my heart onto the page and hoping somebody out there cares. product writers have an easier time convincing other people of the value of their story, because the value of the story is a big reason why they write it. a purely product writer, like the surgeon, writes something because they feel that thing needs to exist in the world. meanwhile the only way for a purely process writer to be professionally successful is to happen by sheer coincidence to find an immersive state that also crosses with the interests of the current market. like the athlete, success involves training, hard work, and being at the right place at the right time. sure, churning out 100k words in a couple months and having a blast while doing it is great, but it comes from this wild inner place that can't really be controlled; meanwhile product writers can take that wildness and intentionally shape it into something. when you're feeling jealous of the other side, though, it's important to remember that both the meadow and the garden are equally beautiful.

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adampvrrish

no matter how terrible my day is. i can always end my day in bed imagining fictional characters making out sloppy style and fucking raw. and that's beautiful. there's some good in this world mister frodo and it's worth fighting for

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crimson-rots

being a fan of a friend's ocs is actually so humiliating....... like yes my favourite character rn is tragically doomed and a pillar of humanity who i think is relevant to the current world. you can find information about them on discord dot com and sometimes in late-night conversations with this guy i know. what the fuck

up late at night thinking about a guy who exists to three people. such a desire to talk about him until my lungs give out and read every scrap of fanfiction on the internet and yet there is NOTHING!!!! and i have to pretend to be NORMAL about this. "oh yes your character is cool. have you considered writing more" meanwhile the wolves in my brain are tearing and biting

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ok I’m trying to see something here

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poll-stats

Sydney: 14,723 votes

Melbourne: 18,309 votes

Canberra: 22,003 votes

Brisbane: 3,392 votes

Perth: 3,376 votes

Adelaide: 2,593 votes

Darwin: 230 votes

Hobart: 136 votes

Wollongong: 408 votes

Newcastle: 479 votes

*22,003 people got it right (Canberra), while 43,646 people got it wrong.

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nighthawkes

I must sleep. Sleep is the mind-healer. Sleep is the big-life that brings total ability to fucking do anything. I will face my bed. I will permit the blankie to pass over me and snores to pass through me. And when sleep has gone past I will turn the outer eye to greet the new morning. When the sleep has gone there will be everything. Energy and will to live will remain.

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Anonymous asked:

i just read the synopsis of Prophet and i am....very Intrigued. if dev patel plays one of the characters, who would you want playing opposite him?

Anon!! Thank you for feeding my hyperfixation!!! And I hope you do read it and I hope you enjoy it! It’s the most fun I’ve had reading a book in so long… I’m on a one-person quest to get as many other people to read it as possible.

As for my fancast: if Dev Patel plays Rao (my other choice for Rao is Rahul Kohli, just fyi) then my pick for Adam is that hot guy from Bridgerton, Jonathan Bailey.

Now, hear me out: he’s hot, but he’s got cute ears that kind of stick out, which I like (I think the hottest people usually have cute ears or a big nose or crooked teeth, so as in all things ymmv). And I think he can play both boyish and stern, important for Adam.

Also after seeing him in Fellow Travelers, I was won over by his American accent and his ability to play a [redacted for plot reasons].

Behold: a hot guy! (Read the book and let me know what you think!!!)

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fellshish

Writers suffer from tinker bell brain they need constant applause or they start believing everything they’ve written is horseshit

Little life hack a way to trick tinker bell is by rereading old comments

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ashfae

This is why I keep writing fanfiction instead of working on my novel. My novel chapters don't have encouraging comments and kudos on them.

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antikate

I’ve kidnapped some people and forced them at gunpoint to care about my novel, otherwise I am only accountable to myself. And I am terrible at holding people accountable.

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