Post by account_disabled on Dec 7, 2023 8:20:57 GMT
I often wonder what I'm waiting for to write that damned book that I've been planning for years, many, too many years, the fantasy that has undergone changes after changes and total redesigns. I wonder what I'm waiting for to write that story to self-publish, a story about rain, but a rain you've never seen. Is it really fear of making mistakes? If she is there, she is recondite, well hidden, buried in the soul and submerged by the thoughts of existence.
Maybe it's the anxiety of the first time, that fear, not at all unfounded, that she'll catch you and hold you back, when you should just say “who cares if I'm wrong, if it's a failure”. After all, even big names make mistakes, Phone Number Data even established writers have collected their flops . And flop, therefore, if at least it gives me the possibility, the certainty indeed, of saying "I too am in this hubbub of writers, in this infinite Dantesque circle of authors that overflows onto small groups of readers." Here is Cristiana Tumedei's thought again. Now try to think about what we feel before dedicating ourselves to a post.
The feeling isn't the same, is it? It's as if something is holding us back: we know that someone will read us and that, perhaps, they are already waiting for our writing. So we work hard to give our best. We aim for perfection and this makes us less effective. We lose spontaneity and immediacy. We are like caged birds: we know how to fly, but we don't have enough space available. Let's take a step back: what did you feel when you published your first post? Yes, I know: there were anxieties, expectations, fears. Nonetheless, you took the plunge: one click and you were online. And do you know why you did it? Because the expectations and fears typical of the first times were far inferior to the sense of freedom you were feeling. You wanted to be there. And so it was.
Maybe it's the anxiety of the first time, that fear, not at all unfounded, that she'll catch you and hold you back, when you should just say “who cares if I'm wrong, if it's a failure”. After all, even big names make mistakes, Phone Number Data even established writers have collected their flops . And flop, therefore, if at least it gives me the possibility, the certainty indeed, of saying "I too am in this hubbub of writers, in this infinite Dantesque circle of authors that overflows onto small groups of readers." Here is Cristiana Tumedei's thought again. Now try to think about what we feel before dedicating ourselves to a post.
The feeling isn't the same, is it? It's as if something is holding us back: we know that someone will read us and that, perhaps, they are already waiting for our writing. So we work hard to give our best. We aim for perfection and this makes us less effective. We lose spontaneity and immediacy. We are like caged birds: we know how to fly, but we don't have enough space available. Let's take a step back: what did you feel when you published your first post? Yes, I know: there were anxieties, expectations, fears. Nonetheless, you took the plunge: one click and you were online. And do you know why you did it? Because the expectations and fears typical of the first times were far inferior to the sense of freedom you were feeling. You wanted to be there. And so it was.