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ML-LarsonBeing a Writer
Published: 2010-11-30 02:18:06 +0000 UTC; Views: 15282; Favourites: 465; Downloads: 78
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Description On Why Being a Writer is Neither Glamorous nor Exciting

If you watch the blogs and various sites around the internet about writing, you've probably seen at least one list that details a few universal truths about writers, but they all pretty much boil down to several actual truths.

All writers write.
All writers procrastinate.
Writers don't actually write, because we spend all our time doing something else.

This probably explains why, in the dark hours of one of the very last days of NaNoWriMo, I'm sitting here writing this, when my NaNo is sitting in another window with a pathetic 31.8k words.

Will I finish by 11:59pm tomorrow? Probably not. Do I care? Not particularly, although I'm sure that there's probably some part of my brain, which has been hardwired in a certain way that will start seriously freaking out sometime around 5:00pm tomorrow night.

Why am I so far behind, you ask? Simple. I told myself that I was not going to do NaNo this year. I haven't written anything since February, because I haven't been able to find any inspiration. Clearly, I make a habit of lying to myself, since sometime on the 7th, I decided to do NaNo this year.

Mistake number one.

My NaNo did something this year which I generally try to avoid when I write; I got an idea, and I ran with it.

Mistake number two.

The problem with just taking an idea and running with it, at least for me, is that it tends to snowball to frightening proportions. Somewhere, my NaNo went from being a silly little thing about time travel to using concepts like hyperspace, time travel, and relativity to mercilessly make fun of the way such concepts are blatantly ignored in most science fiction. Eventually, other ideas got tacked on as well. At a friend's suggestion, I watched Survivors, a BBC drama about the last 1% of the human population after a virulent evil hyper-flu comes just short of wiping out the human race.

Some aspects of these sorts of shows and films bother me, and those bits that bothered me have now become an entire subplot about how a race whose planet was nearly devastated suffered terrible consequences when they tried to rebuild their population, owing to a monogamous lifestyle throughout the entire culture.

It wasn't until I was about 10k in that I realised that I seriously needed to do an outline for this thing, before it swallowed my soul.

There are other things that have wiggled their way in as well, like convergent evolution, and an almost obsessive need to use actual stars and constellations in the world building process.

Mistake number three.

These points are not why I am terribly behind and simply not caring. The reasons why I am terribly behind and simply not caring are because of the research, fact-checking, and general link surfing that goes into making sure I actually understand what I'm writing about before I write it.

Or so, that's what I tell myself.

I've spent a lot of this month doing hideously complicated sums, working out problems with genetics, and reverse engineering hyperspace drives. I've probably spent more time doing this than I have writing. But even this pales in comparison to everything else I've done.

Writing anything, terribly complicated or not, is not as simple as just sitting down to put digital words on a digital piece of paper, though. I know there are some people out there who can just throw words down, and consider it good. I'm quite the opposite. I'll spend sometimes several hours on one single paragraph – spirit of NaNo be damned – trying to work out the best way in which certain words fit together. Especially in fiction, I tend to believe that the cadence of the narration does everything to set the tone for the entire story.* If the narration can't construct a sentence that flows in an aurally-pleasing way, then everything else just seems to fall flat. Sometimes, I'll get a few words down, decide that I don't like them, and in fixing them will also wipe out half of the page that I'd already written in an effort to make the words fit together better. This morning, I realised that a line by one of my characters didn't quite scan as well as I'd thought it did last night. In fixing that line, I wound up changing half of the scene. Whether I lost or gained words from it, I'm not actually sure, but the scene reads so much better now than it did last night.

And it's this constant niggling with words that gets me hung up. I cannot write out of order. I don't understand how people can do it, either. If this bit is not perfect, then I simply cannot move onto the next bit.

It's this trying to move on that takes up most of my writing time. I'll be sitting here, at my computer, trying to figure out what to do next. My heroes have stolen the space ship, they're in a low orbit around the planet, and... what? I don't know. Even with my outlines, which are at best just neurotic dot point lists, I still have issues filling in the gaps between points A and B. It's not the points that get me stuck, but the details between them.

Since my computer is not near my window, looking out it is not a viable option. I have arranged my workspace like this intentionally. Since I'm usually doing most of my work after the sun goes down, I inevitably wind up staring out my window at the stars for hours if my computer is next to it. So, I'm on the complete opposite side of the room.

I'm very particular about my environment when I write. The lighting has to be perfect. The sounds around me have to be perfect. Bob Dylan is great for writing, but sometimes, I might require endless hours worth of remixes of the Doctor Who theme tune. And often times, I seem to take quite a long time to figure out just what music I need for writing.

And even then, my words still don't like to come to me. I recently had to work out the problem of getting two characters to meet up, when these two characters have already been established to be on opposite ends of the Galaxy. This, I decided, was a two tuna sandwich problem. So that's exactly what I got up and made; two tuna sandwiches, on white bread, with pickles and Miracle Whip, which I ate whilst staring at my screen saver. By the time I had actually worked out this problem, I'd had four more tuna sandwiches, three baths, a litre and a half of orange squash, had stood outside and stared up at the sky until I could no longer feel my fingers, and had gone to the shop for a bag of crisps and some more orange squash. And that was the sum total of my work that night.

If I get really stuck on something, I'll do something really drastic, like clean the kitchen or do the hoovering. You can always tell when I'm having a crisis of words, because my hair is amazing, and my flat is spotless.

Right now, I'm halfway there. My flat's kind of a disaster, but my hair has never looked better.

And that's what writers do. Writers everywhere will always be just like every other writer out there, because we're always finding new ways to not write the next bit. No matter how much we say we want to write it, that next bit just never seems to get written because we're too busy making sandwiches and having baths to actually get anything done.


*To really understand what I'm on about, read Sock by Penn Jillette. It's a murder mystery, as told from the point of view by a foul-mouthed sock monkey who is way too much into popular culture.
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Comments: 218

flamian In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 16:14:11 +0000 UTC]

Finally....I've found someone who has worded perfectly what I've been trying to articulate for years! I know exactly what you mean. I like to think of myself as a writer (I feel that I still need tons of work). My problem is that I always get a grander, bigger, "better" idea so I go with it, and next thing I know, I have three more half written stories to add to the list. Ever since I've joined dA, I think I've only ever finished one story. And even then it wasn't technically "finished".

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xXxrouxXx In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 16:13:06 +0000 UTC]

Haha, 'snowballing to frightening proportions'. That is all my stories on all levels Loved it, made me giggle

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SetsunaNoroi In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 15:54:55 +0000 UTC]

As a fellow writer, I have got to say that you hit everything that I love and both hate about being a writer right on the head. It's all so true, it's almost scary.

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raeuk666 In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 15:46:36 +0000 UTC]

Not writing is a very important part of being a writer. I think there are many writers out there who'll agree with what you've wrote and have gone through similar situations.

For me, as much as Nano means knocking out 50,000 words... even though I know the first draft won't be perfect, I want it to be the best that it can be. So, when trying to figure out the right wording, the perfect verb or piece of dialogue, or when trying to get my head around an idea or figure out just where I'm actually heading next in my story... I do spend a lot of time not writing. I spend more time walking the dogs, wandering the house, putting my Xbox on and playing a few games...

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lyingdyingwonderbody In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 15:26:53 +0000 UTC]

What is NaNoWriMo?

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Puppy-eater In reply to lyingdyingwonderbody [2011-10-26 16:06:26 +0000 UTC]

National Novel Writing Month. [link]
I'm doing it for the first time this year.

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Shenachie [2011-10-26 15:10:13 +0000 UTC]

Omg... What a relief to find out it's not just me!
I thought I was the worst procrastinator because not only do I feel like I should be doing other 'productive' activities but I will go look something up and find I've somehow navigated three topics over from what I initially wanted to know. I'll nit-pick a word/sentence/paragraph to bits until I'm satisfied that's the exact noun/verb/adjective/adverb I mean. I pore over every sentence/paragraph/scene to make certain it flows just *exactly* right. Editing one scene suddenly inspires me about another - usually completely unrelated - and I have to scribble that down before I lose the muse....
I'm an endless editor and I, too, loathe outlines so I keep all my stories and most of their baggage in my head. I don't Nano (though a friend has encouraged me) but I do Fanfiction.net and my current chapter has been like knitting with barbed wire - snag, snag, snag - and I know it's all my perfectionist fault!
I find stories are like sculpting: Get it all out on 'paper' then go back to that lump of clay and start trimming some here, adding some there, and continually shaping it until it's as close to perfection as you can stand it. Then, of course, publish it and reap the embarrassment of all the flaws you didn't catch before.
Come to think of it, the amount of proof-reading that went into this comment alone is embarrassing!
Anyway, thanks for the article and congrats on the DD!

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AutumnForAlways [2011-10-26 15:08:59 +0000 UTC]

AMAZING.
I can relate on so many levels. XD

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primordialsea [2011-10-26 14:52:48 +0000 UTC]

Thankyou for reminding me I'm not alone in the chaos.

Tuna sandwiches are a nice idea - I've eaten myself sick of bullets and chocolate coated peanuts.

'Set fire to the rain' by Adele is working like literary Drano on me at the moment, if Dylan doesn't do the job.

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OpenCagePoetry [2011-10-26 14:50:38 +0000 UTC]

I absolutly love this. I agree with the workspace positioning. I don't have a desk where I can write or draw simply because the only place to put it is infront of a window, where I easily get distracted- whether it's raining, snowing, or absolutly gorgeous outside.

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FireAgainstIce [2011-10-26 14:05:21 +0000 UTC]

"Even with my outlines, which are at best just neurotic dot point lists, I still have issues filling in the gaps between points A and B. It's not the points that get me stuck, but the details between them."

You have finally explained my entire life for me. Thank you. XD Especially the 'outlines...which are at best just neurotic dot point lists,' part. I loathe outlines.

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trixieg [2011-10-26 13:56:34 +0000 UTC]

lovely. nanowrimo is looming out there isn't it. I stressed about not having an outline on my way to sketch class last week. I did my best portraits yet. I think it was because I was running away from the writing. I am a fly caught in it's web.

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SyrenneSings [2011-10-26 13:38:57 +0000 UTC]

I can understand and agree with all of this, I have probably spent more time working out a characters family tree than I have planning my actual novel.

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Dark-Rain-Fairy [2011-10-26 13:34:39 +0000 UTC]

Ahhhhhhhhhh! Get out of my head!! -- Seriously, I know it doesn't sound like it, but that's a compliment. This describes me and my writing, perfectly! I honestly never realized anyone else had these "problems". haha. What a shame it took almost a year for this piece to be recognized! This is wonderful. Thank you for writing this and posting it. .. Just how long did you take you to write this anyway? haha.

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QuiEstInLiteris [2011-10-26 13:15:14 +0000 UTC]

Congratulations on your DD!
I can certainly sympathise with quite a lot of this. Of course, in my case, it tends to be because there are so many other things I should be doing at any given time, and I can't help feeling that taking the time to write is irresponsible.
All I can say is that writers gonna write! Good luck.

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Salvetro [2011-10-26 13:14:05 +0000 UTC]

Thanks for making me realize I'm not alone. My life seems to be a constant flow of coming up with ideas and never actually getting any of them written down, and when I do write them down they don't sound right, or there's a plot hole, or my characters start acting neurotic and disagreeing with everything I have them do. So I get up and do something else, and end up going to bed feeling massively disappointed with myself and swearing I'll do better tomorrow. It makes me wonder why I'm so compelled to write to begin with.

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JoInnovate [2011-10-26 12:45:19 +0000 UTC]

I doubt the truth in your words. Ever since im writing, may it be a sientific thesis or the novel I'm currently working on. I never was stuck in a museless time, or stopped.

I restlessly wrote on and on even if it was not perfect. My path was set. Inspiration comes out of chaos. Let chaos be and you will succeed, meet your goals.

Perfection is a thing you will never get to. But you can work on it to come close. What i mean is: write down what's in your mind, even if it seems stupid and naive to you. Then you re read it and change those parts you feel uncomfortable with. Re read it again and again change the parts you feel uncomfortable with. Then re read it again. But be careful and set a limit. a personal limit. don't let the striving for perfection ruin you.

Nobodys perfect you're just one of 7 Billion, pls don't try to put down the wishes and dreams of other potential writers by showing them "the one way of being a writer"

Other than that i like your writing style

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JoInnovate In reply to JoInnovate [2011-10-26 22:30:02 +0000 UTC]

People see and interpret things different. External and internal views differ sometimes.

I apologize if you felt offended by some of my words. Though I still have the opinion stated in my original comment.

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QuiEstInLiteris In reply to JoInnovate [2011-10-26 13:11:45 +0000 UTC]

Who's trying to put down the wishes and dreams of anyone? And where did you get anything about "the one way of being a writer"? The preponderance of the word "I" would seem to indicate that this is a personal reflection, and nowhere did I see anything suggesting that the author thinks herself the type for authors everywhere.
Writing down what's in your mind, even if it seems stupid and naive, does not work for everyone. It does not work for me, since I prefer to edit as I write. Your way is not the better way, either.

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JoInnovate In reply to QuiEstInLiteris [2011-10-26 20:34:30 +0000 UTC]

Was i talking to you or did i miss smth. ? I posted a suggestion on how to react to times when you are not able to write the next bit.

Oh and learn to read and understand pls next time!

--> "And that's what writers do. Writers everywhere will always be just like every other writer out there, because we're always finding new ways to not write the next bit."

Doesn't that sound to you like a GENERAL description of all writers. If you criticise my words do it on a profound basis. And if you don't understand what I'm saying, then you are living in Universe 1 and I'm living in Universe 2

I'm done, try to stay objective next time discussing with me.

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QuiEstInLiteris In reply to JoInnovate [2011-10-26 21:16:14 +0000 UTC]

You made an argumentative post in a public forum, which is usually an indication that you are looking for a response. I apologise for assuming that you were open to discussion.
I suppose that one passage, obviously hyperbole, must CLEARLY apply to everyone, be intended to apply to everyone, and imply that anyone who deviates is not a real writer. In addition, that single passage clearly outweighs the content of the rest of the rest of the work, and was intended to be taken literally rather than as an exemplification of the author's point.
You're one to talk about objectivity, snapping at anyone who disagrees with you.
If you don't want people to respond to you, don't post.

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JoInnovate In reply to QuiEstInLiteris [2011-10-26 21:25:52 +0000 UTC]

If you want to have a productive conversation remove the negative sub tone from your first response and I'm open for your words.

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QuiEstInLiteris In reply to JoInnovate [2011-10-26 22:20:50 +0000 UTC]

By "negative," I assume that you mean "not in line with my opinion."
There was no negative tone intended in my first response, and there was no need for you to snap at me.

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JoInnovate In reply to QuiEstInLiteris [2011-10-26 22:30:19 +0000 UTC]

People see and interpret things different. External and internal views differ sometimes.

I apologize if you felt offended by some of my words. Though I still have the opinion stated in my original comment.

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QuiEstInLiteris In reply to JoInnovate [2011-10-26 22:40:32 +0000 UTC]

Then I apologise as well. I did NOT intend any negative tone, and I regret that you perceived one.
You're certainly entitled to your original opinion. I just think that ~Mae-Jay intended her generalization to be taken as a rhetorical device rather than as a statement of absolute truth.

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JoInnovate In reply to QuiEstInLiteris [2011-10-26 22:55:30 +0000 UTC]

I grant her that for sure^^ Nice to see humanity isn't dead

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Bob-Hammilton [2011-10-26 11:37:28 +0000 UTC]

So true, so bloody true.

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haphephilia [2011-10-26 11:24:13 +0000 UTC]

Being a writer is lonely.

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DeadPeppermint [2011-10-26 11:18:43 +0000 UTC]

This is absolutley amazing. Because it's so true.
Actually i do exact the same thing. Doing hundred of other things before i write down, what i have in mind for weeks. Somehow Life is strange.

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vtas [2011-10-26 10:29:33 +0000 UTC]

Great writing; it's funny how so many of the things mentioned in here go against common advice I've seen from published authors, such as "turn off the internal editor, just keep producing words until you're done," "don't focus on making the perfect paragraph because you'll probably end up scrapping the whole chapter in the end because of a plot-related problem that you just discovered," "do research before the writing but not during it," etc. I've found those really helpful to me, but I guess it doesn't work for everyone!

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Strangers7 [2011-10-26 09:48:48 +0000 UTC]

I am inspired by this story, but now painfully aware of my authorly flaws. That and now I realize that I should be working on my story, a simple on pager that has turned into the never-effing-ending story. Anyways great story, love the sarcastic tone and diction.

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CrookiNari [2011-10-26 09:29:48 +0000 UTC]

Ahhhhh a kindred spirit
There's one bit in my story that I'm trying to write, but the problem is me. I know exactly what it is I want to write, but I'm so conservative that I can't bring myself to do it...

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LukeShadowhawk2788 [2011-10-26 08:39:12 +0000 UTC]

you speak truth. i have countless unfinished stories because of those very reasons! after reading this it puts things into perspective. bravo and congrats on your DD!

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Veniae [2011-10-26 08:33:33 +0000 UTC]

So true. Congrats on the DD, you deserve it!

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Lit-Twitter [2011-10-26 08:21:19 +0000 UTC]

Chirp, congrats on the DD, it's been twittered. [link]

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Jellie In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 08:16:12 +0000 UTC]

I know the exact feeling, well written!

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StormyWolf In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 07:48:48 +0000 UTC]

Agreed. I spent the majority of last year's NaNoWriMo researching (cause if I'm writing about a demon and I get something "wrong" then I'll totally be chastised by friends, family, and total strangers all at once!), trying to decide on the MC's name (cause if that doesn't work then the whole novel's ruined), trying to decide on how many supporting characters there are (too many friends and it's convoluted, too few and it's boring), and working on the cover art for my (future) WIP.

I blame school for my perfectionist tendencies. If they didn't force us to read and analyze literature to the -nth degree, then we wouldn't stress about writing it so that readers would understand our themes, subtext, context, metaphors, and poetic license... <_<

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Senex-de-Umbris In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 07:47:41 +0000 UTC]

Oh my, this is just how it is. It's so true!
And I think you are right when you say that it's really hard to move on to the next bit if the former bit is not as perfect as possible. Then again, everything about this is true, be it the thing about having just the right words or the right whatever...

This is actually pretty encouraging and it cheers me up Congratulations to a very well-deserved DD!

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Chrispy92 In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 07:37:19 +0000 UTC]

I know how you feel. I feel that way so much when I write.... When I get an idea, it just seems to snowball. I knew another person feels this way.

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GingerMoll In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 07:26:22 +0000 UTC]

I'm doing NaNoWrimo with my firend this year

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Vigilo In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 07:06:41 +0000 UTC]

Congratulations on your DD! This is very interesting to read and I have to agree, even though I'm a poet, with most of what you said. "If this bit is not perfect, then I simply cannot move onto the next bit" is definitely one. A very well-deserved DD.

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Stormsangel2 In reply to ??? [2011-05-31 19:23:46 +0000 UTC]

I am happy I read your story. I actually almost quit writing just because I was worrying about how much I was NOT WRITING. Now, I know that I should not blame myself that much.
I should not go easy on myself. But I shouldn't blame myself too much. Also, I love the way you wrote this. I read it more carefully than I have followed classes in the past couple of weeks...months...days... well, anyways, I don't always focus on them as much as I should. And your story has helped me remind just what it is like to actually LEARN something, and be interested. Anyways, thank you, it's wonderful, I think I'm going to try writing like this. (I tend to have difficulty thinking about my story because I keep on telling myself that I should be thinking, WHILST WRITING, but enfin, I guess that not my problem anymore right now. I can just go and take a bath and think Thank you.)

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Extroth In reply to ??? [2010-12-07 10:29:45 +0000 UTC]

Lol and truer words have never been spoken. I want to be a writer for a living and I keep running into this problem and then keep telling myself that if I don't just do it I'll never be a well known writer who can actually make a living off his work. At the end of the day I just have to keep going just like with any other dream.

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losingmyfaith In reply to ??? [2010-11-30 05:37:05 +0000 UTC]

SO TRUE. Well said (:

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Tisala In reply to ??? [2010-11-30 03:26:28 +0000 UTC]

"If the narration can't construct a sentence that flows in an aurally-pleasing way, then everything else just seems to fall flat." OMG, YES!!

At least you manage to take baths and clean while distracting yourself... I just tend to stare at the computer screen or surf the web and then I end up completely forgetting what I was trying to figure out in the first place. I wish there was a program that could block all access to irrelevant websites when I needed it to, but I didn't have to tell it when I needed it or what was relevant... Because then I'd cheat... After all, youtube can totally be used for research sometimes, right?

And Sock is going on my list.

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DNA-The-Authoress In reply to Tisala [2011-10-27 01:38:00 +0000 UTC]

I totally agree! It's even worse because I'm a writer AND an artist... and I just remembered that I'm an editor, too, who hasn't done more than glance at the first two pages of the last chapter my poor little author sent to me... DX I don't understand why she's always so nice to me when I take two weeks to send her something that I could edit in an hour or less... DX

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Tisala In reply to DNA-The-Authoress [2011-10-27 04:41:19 +0000 UTC]

She's nice because writers are always happy to receive feedback I know I am anyway... Well, useful feedback. The useless stuff is only so much a waste of my time.

And oh, procrastinating while trying to draw... Fun times and horrible smudges, how I remember thee. Yeah, no, those don't mix, do they?

Since uni's started up again, I've given up on reading/editing friends' stuff (which was my only editing)... Time mmanagement be damned, I need about 24 hours of leeway just for homework procrastination time

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DNA-The-Authoress In reply to Tisala [2011-10-27 04:58:03 +0000 UTC]

Yeah. She's one of those people who doesn't mind my random comments because they usually have to do with character development. So they're not entirely useless... they just seem that way. XD

Not at all! XD My friend wants me to draw an actor with no good reference pictures... DX I've been procrastinating on it SOOOO much! XD

Since I'm in uni, too, I've decided to only edit this one story because it's mostly easy fixes- she's originally from Thailand and English is her second language, so she mostly has conjugation errors, as her English is better than some native English speakers I know. The harder part is trying to keep one of the characters in character because even though I can relate to him, he's incredibly difficult to write. XD

"Time management be damned, I need about 24 hours of leeway just for homework procrastination time." Amen!!!

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Tisala In reply to DNA-The-Authoress [2011-10-27 18:34:53 +0000 UTC]

Any comment to do with character development is useful (unless it involves, 'wow, I love how you developed that character' that's just really nice to hear, but not helpful) generally because it implies that the reader is knowledgeable enough to understand what character development is and that they can actually put some thought behind their comments. So your comments are probably quite helpful

It does make life more interesting sometimes though... I have learned some very random facts while procrastinating. None of them could really be applied to anything, but meh. Some of my best procrastination though... watching BBC documentaries. Planet Earth, Life, Human Planet... I mean, really, inspiration on a dvd... or a bunch of dvds. Might not help so much for drawing an actor, but for animals and cultures and landscapes and...and... stuff!

Ah, editing for grammar and such is a little more straightforward... I still would take a month to actually get to it though So I commend you. And that's usually the case, non-native English speakers tend to have a better structural/mechanical grasp of the language. I used to have theories as to why... I forgot them.

I hate characters who don't want to stay in character. If they refuse, I kill them off (or just beg and cajole and offer puppies )

lol

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DNA-The-Authoress In reply to Tisala [2011-10-28 00:55:08 +0000 UTC]

I hope so... sometimes I start off with good intentions and then ramble a bit... but as long as I eventually get to the point, it all works, eh? (Sound so Canadian! XD Why am I suddenly becoming friends with Canadians...?)

Yes! I agree that nature programs really are interesting. I had two school projects that tied into my writing, so I alternated working on those and actually useful stuff... you see where my priorities lie... XD I'm THIS! close to finishing the bio project (on hemophilia, one of my many morbid obsessions) but instead I'm here commenting on a comment on a... well, you get the picture. XD

Haha, yeah. Except when I have to go and explain WHY they're wrong, as sometimes I do that for people... that takes a while sometimes... once I ended up commenting on almost every line of the first half of a short story (that seemed to go on forever). THen I finally figured out how to give him general advice and leave it at that. XD

Haha, nice! If they can't stay in character, it's usually because they end up being a bit split personality, so then I separate the halves and pick which one I like. XD

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