#Writer Tag

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  • My current WIP is a ty fic. It's much filthier than what I usually write or go for.
  • I started writing it because it's for a fest. I like joining new ones just because, and this one actually had some anonymous user mention me as a writer they'd like to see join. I joined late, so I don't have much time to finish, but it's been rather fun so far.
  • When I can’t think of what to write, I just don't. Or I'll go over what I have written (if anything) and flesh it out more, just to make it seem like there's progress.
  • I overuse the word / phrase / punctuation—em-dash.
  • My biggest dream as a writer is to finish all my fics. When I dream, I dream BIG.
  • My favourite writing instrument is pencil. There's something about a nice soft pencil that even improves my penmanship. The downside is it smudges really bad...
  • My favourite stories are ones that focus on interpersonal relationships. Doesn't have to have much plot or intricate setting, just describe people in love and their love language. I also really love mysteries, so stories including a mystery to solve or something mysterious is interesting to me.
  • My favourite scenes to write are ones that don't really seem to accomplish much. The in-between, calm scenes.
  • I love to write in / on / at my aunt's kitchen table. Something about it is just perfect. Lighting, comfort, a nice view into the yard with all its overgrowth and bird feeders... It's just really really nice.
  • I would love my readers to not shy away from leaving honest comments. Keyboard smashing is valid! And very few writers do not welcome conversation and interaction; most of us are on Twitter, just a tweet or DM away. It's okay to say hi or gush about a fic.
  • Whenever I write, I worry about how much time I have to write and what else I could be doing, instead. I'm an anxious critter. Writing is very rarely relaxing for me.
  • My favourite thing about being a writer is creating worlds and ideas.
  • My greatest challenge as a writer is the actual writing part, notably the typing part of the writing part. I've got notebooks and scraps of paper, but it's like once something is written that's the only life it gets, and its usefulness expires.
  • I want other writers to know that quantity is not quality. Short stories can have just as much—even more—impact as something 100K or chaptered.

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