Going to a zen place while writing
May. 3rd, 2020 11:40 amI'm trying to get better about not apologising for not being around. So instead of doing that, I will put this sentence as a placeholder where the apology would go, and wish the best for you and yours. I am doing as well as can be (given the obvious). :)
Alright. Onto the thoughts. It's just a short post today, about something that I find myself thinking about every time I revisit my writing.
I love to reread my fic. I know for a lot of people it feels very uncomfortable or cringe-inducing, but I don't really feel that way about anything I've published. Before publishing, I get that so bad I can't bear to reread stuff even for editing — it's such a miserable job that I've not learned how to edit in the past decade plus of posting fic online. But once I've published it, it very much feels like my brain quite literally throws it out. It honestly stops feeling like something I wrote.
I think that's why I enjoy it so much. It's like reading fic perfectly tailored to myself — obviously, since I wrote it — with ideas that I was dying to read so badly I ended up writing them myself, or characterisation that hits just right — because, again, it came from me so of course it it's going to fit anyone's tastes, it'll be my own.
Actually, I really struggle to connect the writing as something I wrote myself. When I read, I think to myself, 'How did I put a sentence like that together?' or 'How did I remember what that word means when I had to google it just now?'. I don't think about what I'm putting on the page when I write, and I already knew that I go into a weird sort of mental zone where it's very much like I'm the video camera taping the scene itself, but I guess I just now put two and two together that maybe that's why I feel so disconnected from a story once it's finished.
I have no memory of where I was or what was happening in my real life once I've written something. It does sort of feel as if, when I sit down to write, I teleport for the duration. And when I look back at what I come up with, it's like, how on earth did I manage to do that? If I try to string a sentence together while consciously... thinking about it, for lack of a better term, it feels so awkward and stilted and impossible.
I wonder if this also ties into why I feel like I'm a pipe all backed up when I haven't written for ages. It feels strangely essential. Or maybe that's wholly unrelated — I'm tempted to believe it is lmao.
Anyway. Just some thoughts. And I want to say just as I round this up that while I'm writing, it does feel like pulling teeth sometimes. No peaceful zen feelings for me. Or, no, rather, the moments between putting the words on paper. But the physical act of actually writing is just that: very zen.
*shrug* I really miss writing and hate that I can't do it right now because work time constraints sighhhh. Three weeks. TwT
Alright. Onto the thoughts. It's just a short post today, about something that I find myself thinking about every time I revisit my writing.
I love to reread my fic. I know for a lot of people it feels very uncomfortable or cringe-inducing, but I don't really feel that way about anything I've published. Before publishing, I get that so bad I can't bear to reread stuff even for editing — it's such a miserable job that I've not learned how to edit in the past decade plus of posting fic online. But once I've published it, it very much feels like my brain quite literally throws it out. It honestly stops feeling like something I wrote.
I think that's why I enjoy it so much. It's like reading fic perfectly tailored to myself — obviously, since I wrote it — with ideas that I was dying to read so badly I ended up writing them myself, or characterisation that hits just right — because, again, it came from me so of course it it's going to fit anyone's tastes, it'll be my own.
Actually, I really struggle to connect the writing as something I wrote myself. When I read, I think to myself, 'How did I put a sentence like that together?' or 'How did I remember what that word means when I had to google it just now?'. I don't think about what I'm putting on the page when I write, and I already knew that I go into a weird sort of mental zone where it's very much like I'm the video camera taping the scene itself, but I guess I just now put two and two together that maybe that's why I feel so disconnected from a story once it's finished.
I have no memory of where I was or what was happening in my real life once I've written something. It does sort of feel as if, when I sit down to write, I teleport for the duration. And when I look back at what I come up with, it's like, how on earth did I manage to do that? If I try to string a sentence together while consciously... thinking about it, for lack of a better term, it feels so awkward and stilted and impossible.
I wonder if this also ties into why I feel like I'm a pipe all backed up when I haven't written for ages. It feels strangely essential. Or maybe that's wholly unrelated — I'm tempted to believe it is lmao.
Anyway. Just some thoughts. And I want to say just as I round this up that while I'm writing, it does feel like pulling teeth sometimes. No peaceful zen feelings for me. Or, no, rather, the moments between putting the words on paper. But the physical act of actually writing is just that: very zen.
*shrug* I really miss writing and hate that I can't do it right now because work time constraints sighhhh. Three weeks. TwT
Re: ♥
Date: 2020-05-09 06:53 am (UTC)fanfic is literally a custom-made story of stuff to make the author happy — ♥
Re: ♥
Date: 2020-05-09 06:14 pm (UTC)The two that nag at me the most are both short Game of Thrones stuff that I banged out quickly during the final season when I was very out of sync with what the show actually presented.
I don't even think either is badly-written just... embarrassingly "I reject your reality and substitute my own" which... now that I think of it, is kind of the point to a lot of this, isn't it? I'm probably just going to leave them be.
Re: ♥
Date: 2020-05-12 03:31 pm (UTC)Weirdly, I think it's only quite recent (like, within a year or two) of writing a fic that I think it's bad. If more than that time passes, I end up feeling nostalgic for it, even if I still think it's terribly written. Maybe because I'm detached enough from it not to care anymore. *shrug* One fan's trash is another fan's treasure haha.
Re: ♥
Date: 2020-05-14 04:17 am (UTC)Awhile back I signed up to do something for a gift exchange (I have since sworn off gift exchanges because they always stress me out) and I was going to do artwork and the artwork was just coming out garbage and the recipient had indicated they'd like fic or art so I quickly banged out a triple-drabble (literally the minimum word count required for the exchange) and then I decided the fic was garbage and that I had to try harder on the art, so I scrabbled together a photomanip. And I still thought that was garbage but hoped that giving the person multiple mediocre gifts would sort of count as one good gift. ...and now that photo-manip that I thought was so awful is one of my favorite icons.
Re: ♥
Date: 2020-05-22 10:59 am (UTC)That's a cute story, though. Goes to show how different our perceptions of our work can be to other people's, or even our own after some time. That picture of the "my cake isn't as good as the other one / wow, two cakes!" comes to mind, too.
Re: ♥
Date: 2020-05-22 10:13 pm (UTC)I love the "Two cakes!" thing and need to remember it more often. (Why is it so easy to forget?) Because it's true! Have you ever seen Cakewrecks? For some reason, the worst ones usually involve extra frosting so even as I'm laughing at how terrible it looks, there's a part of my brain going "That monstrosity looks delicious."